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{{Short description|American mobster (1942–2020)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2018}}
{{Infobox criminal
{{Infobox criminal
| name = Anthony Casso
| name = Anthony Casso
| image_name = AnthonyCasso72.jpg
| image_name = AnthonyCassoNJmugshot.jpg
| image_size = 200px
| image_size =
| image_alt =
| image_alt =
| image_caption = NYPD mugshot 20-12-1972
| image_caption = 1993 FBI mugshot of Casso
| nationality = [[United States|American]]
| birth_name = Anthony Salvatore Casso
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{birth date|mf=yes|1942|5|21}}
| birth_place = [[New York City]], U.S.
| birth_date = May 21, 1940<!-- {{Birth date|YYYY|MM|DD}} -->
| death_date = {{Death date and age|2020|12|15|1942|5|21}}
| birth_place = [[Brooklyn]], New York, United States
| death_place = [[Tucson, Arizona]], U.S.
| death_date = <!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} (death date then birth date) -->
| death_place =
| other_names = Gaspipe
| cause =
| alias = Gaspipe
| allegiance = [[Lucchese crime family]]
| allegiance = [[Lucchese crime family]]
| motive =
| conviction = [[Racketeering]], [[extortion]], [[murder]] (1998)
| conviction_penalty = 455 years' imprisonment (1998)
| charge =
| conviction =
| occupation = [[Mobster]]
| spouse = {{marriage|Lillian Delduca|1968|2005|reason=her death}}
| conviction_penalty =
| conviction_status =
| children = 2
| occupation =
| spouse =
| partner =
| parents =
| children =
}}
}}


'''Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso''' (May 21, 1940) is a former New York City mobster who served as [[underboss]] and acting boss of the [[Lucchese crime family]] until he was arrested in 1993, becoming a cooperating witness for the Federal Government. During his criminal career he gained a reputation of being a "homicidal maniac."<ref>{{cite web|last=Ackman|first=Dan|title=Dispatches From a Mob Trial|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2138170/|work=Dispatches|publisher=Slate|accessdate=27 September 2011|date=17 March 2006}}</ref>
'''Anthony Salvatore Casso''' (May 21, 1942 December 15, 2020), nicknamed "'''Gaspipe'''", was an American mobster and [[underboss]] of the [[Lucchese crime family]]. During his career in [[organized crime]], he was regarded as a "homicidal maniac"<ref>{{cite web|last=Ackman|first=Dan|title=Dispatches From a Mob Trial|url=http://www.slate.com/id/2138170/|work=Dispatches|publisher=Slate|access-date=September 27, 2011|date=March 17, 2006}}</ref> in the [[Italian-American Mafia]]. Casso is suspected of having committed dozens of murders, and had confessed to involvement in between 15 and 36 murders.<ref name="Casso deal 1994"/><ref name=murder/>


Government witness [[Anthony Accetturo]], the former [[caporegime]] of [[The Jersey Crew]], once said of Casso, "all he wanted to do is kill, kill, get what you can, even if you didn't earn it".{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=507–09}} In interviews, and on the [[witness stand]], Casso confessed involvement in the murders of [[Frank DeCicco]], [[Roy DeMeo]], and [[Vladimir Reznikov]]. Casso also admitted to several attempts to murder [[Gambino crime family|Gambino family]] [[crime boss|boss]] [[John Gotti]].
==Early life==
Born in Brooklyn, Casso was the youngest of the three children of Michael and Margaret Casso (née Cucceullo). Each of Casso's grandparents had emigrated from [[Campania]], [[Italy]], during the 1890s. His godfather was [[Salvatore Callinbrano]], a [[made man]] and [[caporegime|captain]] in the [[Genovese crime family]], who maintained a powerful influence on the Brooklyn docks. Casso dropped out of school at 16 and got a job with his father as a [[longshoreman]]. As a young boy, Casso became a crack shot, firing pistols at targets on a rooftop which he and his friends used as a shooting range. Casso also made money shooting predatory hawks for pigeon tenders. Casso stands at 5'6 and weighs 185 pounds. He was a violent youth and member of the infamous 1950s gang, the [[South Brooklyn Boys]].<ref>Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires, by Selwyn Raab, [http://books.google.com/books?id=5nAt6N8iQnYC&pg=PA470&lpg=PA470&dq=%22south+brooklyn+boys%22&source=web&ots=FMBxlnZtDP&sig=5xTtbWazXj2DOalqkxZ3KGkRjC4#PPA470,M1 (Page 470)]</ref><ref>The Brotherhoods: The True Story of Two Cops Who Murdered for the Mafia By Guy Lawson, [http://books.google.com/books?id=NYGfl0YpZAsC&pg=PA147&lpg=PA147&dq=%22south+brooklyn+boys%22&source=web&ots=ThUF5oRmyw&sig=ZN7g9o1-gFkk02SrrN6PdNctNRs#PPA147,M1 (Page 147)]</ref> He is the [[father-in-law]] of [[Genovese crime family]] mobster Paul (Slick) Geraci. Casso soon caught the eye of [[Lucchese crime family|Lucchese]] ''capo'' [[Christopher Furnari|Christopher "Christie Tick" Furnari]]. Casso started his career with the [[American Mafia|Cosa Nostra]] as a loanshark. As a protege of Furnari, Casso was also involved in gambling and drug dealing, in addition to loansharking.


Following his arrest in 1993, Casso became one of the highest-ranking members of the Mafia to turn [[informant]]. After taking a [[plea agreement]], he was placed in the [[United States Federal Witness Protection Program|witness protection program]]. In 1998, it was rescinded and Casso was dropped from the program after several infractions. Later that year, a federal judge sentenced him to 455 years in prison for racketeering, extortion, and murder.
Over the years, there have been various stories of how Casso got the nickname "Gaspipe" - Casso himself claims it is from his father, a mob enforcer who used a gas pipe to threaten union dissidents and other victims, however others say it is because his father hooked up illegal gas connections. Even though Anthony detested the nickname, it stuck to him for life and though few would say it to his face, he allowed some close friends to call him "Gas". He married Lillian Delduca in 1968 and had a daughter and son. In the 1970s, Casso murdered a drug dealer who was suspected of cooperating with the government. In 1974, at age 32, Casso became a [[made man]], or full member, of the Lucchese family. Casso was assigned to Vincent "Vinnie Beans" Foceri's crew that operated from 116th Street in Manhattan and from Fourteenth avenue in Brooklyn.<ref>''Gaspipe'', [http://books.google.com/books?id=yrcsp_w8MeAC&pg=PA296&dq=lucchese+family+consigliere+1989&hl=en&ei=JEKOTYa6E8TE0QHRseGfCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=consigilere&f=false page 85-86].</ref><ref>National Council on Crime and Delinquency - 1969 Volume 44. [http://books.google.com/books?ei=s0WOTa34MKff0gGjzsigCw&ct=result&id=LIYvAQAAIAAJ&dq=vinny+beans+arrested&q=beans (Page 147) see ''Vincent Foceri'']</ref>


Casso died in prison custody from complications related to [[COVID-19]] on December 15, 2020.
Casso and another young soldier, [[Victor Amuso|Vittorio "Vic" Amuso]], soon started a criminal partnership that would last for years. They committed scores of crimes, including drug trafficking, burglary and murder. When Furnari became the Lucchese ''consigliere'', Casso's influence also increased. Casso and Amuso were chosen to handle the assassination of [[Gambino crime family|Gambino]] boss [[John Gotti]], but the attempt failed. Lucchese boss [[Anthony Corallo]], seeing a guilty verdict coming in his trial, picked Casso as new Lucchese boss. Casso refused and instead suggested that Amuso become new boss.


==Big Money==
== Early life ==
Casso was born on May 21, 1942, in [[South Brooklyn]], in New York City, the youngest of the three children to Michael and Margaret Casso, née Cucceullo. Casso's grandparents had immigrated to the United States from [[Campania]], Italy in the 1890s. His godfather was Salvatore Callinbrano, a [[made man]] and ''[[caporegime]]'' in the [[Genovese crime family]], which maintained a powerful influence on the Brooklyn docks. Casso dropped out of school at 16 and got a job with his father as a [[longshoreman]]. In his youth, he became a crack shot, firing pistols at targets on a rooftop which he and his friends used as a shooting range. Casso also made money shooting predatory hawks for [[pigeon keeping|pigeon keepers]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/mob-turncoat-sentence-reduced-article-1.753725|title=Mob Turncoat's Sentence Reduced|work=New York Daily News|date=June 12, 1997|first=Jerry |last=Capeci|via=www.nydailynews.com}}</ref>
[[Image:CassoAmusoFBI.jpg|right|250px|thumb|[[Federal Bureau of Investigation]] (FBI) surveillance photograph of Casso (right) with Lucchese family boss, Vittorio Amuso (left)]]


==Personal life==
[[File:Mobtalk.jpg|right|250px|thumb|[[FBI]] surveillance photograph of Amuso, Casso, Gotti and Gravano]]
Casso married fellow South Brooklyn native Lillian Delduca on May 4, 1968.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=46}} They had a daughter and son.


Prior to his marriage to Lillian, Casso had a serious relationship with fellow South Brooklyn native Rosemarie Billotti, whose parents hoped he would marry.<ref> Carlo (2008), pages 42-43.</ref> Without Lillian's knowledge, for decades after their wedding, Casso secretly kept Billotti as his [[mistress (lover)|mistress]] and set her up in a house in [[Mount Olive, New Jersey]].
Under new Lucchese leader Amuso, Casso became the family underboss replacing [[Mariano Macaluso]] who retired in 1989, although he wielded as much influence as Amuso. During this time, Casso maintained a glamorous lifestyle, wearing expensive clothes and jewelry (including a diamond ring worth $500,000), running restaurant tabs up to thousands of dollars, owning a mansion in an exclusive Brooklyn neighborhood and going on huge spending sprees. While at the top of the Lucchese family, Amuso and Casso shared huge profits from their family's illegal activities. These profits included: $15,000 to $20,000 a month from extorting [[Long Island]] carting companies; $75,000 a month in kickbacks from eight [[air freight]] carriers that guaranteed them labor peace and no union benefits for their workers; $20,000 a week in profits from illegal [[video gaming]] machines; and $245,000 annually from a major concrete supplier, the Quadrozzi Concrete Company."<ref>[[Selwyn Raab]], ''Five Families''</ref> Amuso and Casso also split more than $200,000 per year from the [[Garment District, Manhattan|Garment District]] rackets, as well as a cut of all the crimes committed by the family's soldiers.


During his marriage, Casso committed many other infidelities. In an interview with biographer [[Philip Carlo]], Casso recalled, <blockquote>Most all men in my life, everyone I know, had girlfriends. It goes with the territory. Women are drawn to us, the power, the money, and we're drawn to them. But only in passing. Some guys treated their mistresses better than their wife, but that's a fuckin' outrage. No class. Only a ''cafone'' does that. I never loved any woman but Lillian. She and my family always came first.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|pp=185–86}}</blockquote>
==Paying dues==
In one instance, Casso and Amuso split $800,000 from the [[Colombo crime family]] for Casso's aid in helping them rob steel from a construction site at the [[West Side Highway]] in Manhattan. In another instance, the two bosses received $600,000 from the Gambino crime family for allowing them to take over a Lucchese-protected contractor for a housing complex project in [[Coney Island, Brooklyn]].


Following his arrest inside the house in Mount Olive by the FBI in 1993, Lillian Casso "was incensed, and felt betrayed—violated—used" when she learned that her husband had secretly continued his relationship with Rosemarie Billotti. Even though she eventually agreed to visit her husband in federal prison, for the rest of her life, Lillian Casso, according to Philip Carlo, "could not understand how Anthony could be so deceitful, duplicitous—such a two-faced pig."<ref> Carlo (2008), pages 252–254.</ref>
Casso also controlled [[Greek-American]] gangster George Kalikatas, who gave Casso $683,000 in 1990 to operate a loan sharking and gambling operation in [[Astoria, Queens]].


== Lucchese crime family ==
==The Russian Mafia==
=== Early criminal career ===
Casso had a close alliance and with [[Ukraine|Ukrainian]] mob boss [[Marat Balagula]], who operated a multi-billion dollar gasoline bootlegging scam in [[Brighton Beach]]. Balagula, a Soviet Jewish refugee from [[Odessa]], had arrived in the United States under the [[Jackson-Vanik Amendment]]. After Colombo captain [[Michael Franzese]] began shaking down his crew, Balagula approached Lucchese [[consiglieri]] [[Christopher Furnari]] and asked for a sit-down at Brooklyn's ''19th Hole'' [[social club]]. According to Casso, Furnari declared, <blockquote>"Here there's enough for everybody to be happy... to leave the table satisfied. What we must avoid is trouble between us and the other families. I propose to make a deal with the others so there's no bad blood.... Meanwhile, we will send word out that from now on you and your people are with the Lucchese family. No one will bother you. If anyone does bother you, come to us and Anthony will take care of it."<ref>{{Harvnb|Carlo|2008|p=120}}</ref></blockquote>
Casso was a violent youth, and a member of the infamous [[South Brooklyn Boys]] street gang.{{sfn|Raab|2005|p=147}} In 1958, he was arrested after a "rumble" against a rival [[Irish American]] gang. Casso later told Carlo that his father Michael visited him at the police station and tried in vain to scare his son straight. He soon caught the eye of [[Christopher Furnari|Christopher "Christie Tick" Furnari]], a Lucchese family mobster and leader of the "19th Hole Crew" in Brooklyn. With Furnari's support, Casso started his career in the [[American Mafia|Mafia]] running a small [[loan shark]]ing operation. Furnari also used Casso as muscle for his [[gambling]] and [[drug dealing]] rackets. Casso's second arrest, for [[attempted murder]], occurred in 1961, but he was [[acquittal|acquitted]] when the alleged victim refused to identify him as the attacker.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}


===19th Hole Crew===
Street tax from Balagula's organization was not only strategically shared, but also became the [[Five Families]]' biggest moneymaker after [[narcotics trafficking]].
[[File:Lucchese crime family - Chart 1991.jpg|250px|thumb|The Lucchese crime family, 1991]]
In 1974, at age 32, he became a "made man" (full member) of the Lucchese family. Casso joined Vincent Foceri's crew that operated from [[116th Street (Manhattan)|116th Street]] in [[Manhattan]] and from Fourteenth Avenue in [[Brooklyn]].{{sfn|Carlo|2008|pp=85–86}}<ref>National Council on Crime and Delinquency – 1969 Volume 44. [https://books.google.com/books?id=LIYvAQAAIAAJ&q=beans (Page 147) see ''Vincent Foceri'']</ref> Shortly after becoming a made, Casso became close to another rising star in the family, [[Victor Amuso]], and began a partnership that lasted for two decades. The two men committed scores of crimes, including [[drug trafficking]], [[burglary]], the elimination and disposal of police informants, and murder. Casso and Amuso were noticed for their success, and subsequently moved to the more prominent crew operated by Casso's mentor Furnari.


Within Furnari's "19th Hole Crew" both Casso and Amuso led a burglary ring known as "The Bypass Gang", which included expert [[locksmith]]s, [[safe cracker]]s, and experts in security alarm systems.<ref name="Casso Amuso">{{cite book |last1=Raab |first1=Selwyn |title=Five Families The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires |date=October 4, 2016 |publisher=St. Martin's Publishing Group |isbn=9781250101709 |pages=472 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VhRmDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA472 |access-date=20 December 2020}}</ref> The Bypass Gang is still suspected of committing burglaries in banks and jewelry stores throughout New York City and [[Long Island]].<ref name="Casso Amuso"/> Authorities estimated the Bypass gang stole more than $100 million from safety deposit boxes and vaults during the 1970s and 1980s.<ref name="Casso Amuso"/>
According to Philip Carlo, <blockquote>"It didn't take long for word on the street to reach the Russian underworld: Marat Balagula was paying off the Italians; Balagula was a punk; Balagula had no balls. Balagula's days were numbered. This, of course, was the beginning of serious trouble. Balagula did in fact have balls -- he was a ruthless killer when necessary -- but he also was a smart diplomatic administrator and he knew that the combined, concerted force of the Italian crime families would quickly wipe the newly arrived Russian competition off the proverbial map."<ref>{{Harvnb|Carlo|2008|p=152}}</ref></blockquote>


When Furnari was promoted to act as the Lucchese family's ''[[consigliere]]'', he decided to promote Casso to succeed him as ''caporegime'' of the 19th Hole Crew.<ref name="Casso Amuso"/> Casso declined, suggesting that Amuso be promoted instead; he subsequently became Amuso's trusted right hand.<ref name="Casso Amuso"/>
Shortly afterward, on June 12, 1986, Balagula's rival, a fellow Russian named [[Vladimir Reznikov]], entered the Rasputin nightclub in Brighton Beach. Reznikov pushed a [[9mm]] [[Beretta]] into Balagula's skull and demanded $600,000 as the price of not pulling the trigger. He also demanded a percentage of everything Balagula was involved in. After Balagula promised to get the money, Reznikov snarled, "Fuck with me and you're dead -- you and your whole fucking family; I swear I'll fuck and kill your wife as you watch -- you understand?"<ref>''Gaspipe'', page 153.</ref>


In December 1985, Casso was approached by ''caporegime'' [[Frank DeCicco]] regarding a planned coup in the [[Gambino crime family]].{{sfn|Carlo|2008|pp=134–36}} Gambino ''caporegime'' [[John Gotti]], whose crew had worked with Casso to conduct drug deals, and other captains, were planning to kill [[crime boss|family boss]] [[Paul Castellano]] believing that he was too weak to lead them. Gotti and DeCicco were looking for support among the other Four Families affected by the ongoing [[Mafia Commission Trial]].{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=371–75}} According to [[Sammy Gravano]], another of Gotti's co-conspirators, DeCicco returned from the meeting saying that Casso had offered the conspirators his unconditional support.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=473–75}}
Shortly after Reznikov left, Balagula suffered a massive heart attack. He insisted, however on being treated at his home in Brighton Beach, where he felt it would be harder for Reznikov to kill him. When Anthony Casso arrived, he listened to Balagula's story and seethed with fury. Casso later told his biographer [[Philip Carlo]] that, to his mind, Reznikov had just spat in the face of the entire [[Cosa Nostra]]. Despite Balagula's warning that Reznikov was, "a [[psychopath]]," Casso said, "Send word to Vladimir that you have his money, that he should come to the club tomorrow. We'll take care of the rest."<ref name="Gaspipe, page 154">''Gaspipe'', page 154.</ref> Casso also requested a photograph of Reznikov and a description of his car.<ref name="Gaspipe, page 154"/>


According to Casso, DeCicco alleged during their meeting that Castellano's carelessness in allowing his own house to be bugged was reason enough to kill him. Casso later told Carlo that he tried to talk DeCicco out of killing a boss without first asking for [[The Commission (Mafia)|The Commission]]'s permission. Otherwise, he said, killing Castellano would be a cardinal violation of the rules and all the participants would have to be murdered by the other Four Families.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|pp=134–36}} Castellano's murder went ahead anyway on December 16, 1985.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=371–75}} Casso later denounced Gotti's actions to Carlo as "the beginning of the end of ''our thing''."{{sfn|Carlo|2008|pp=134–36}}
The following day, Reznikov returned to the Rasputin nightclub to pick up his money. Upon realizing that Balagula wasn't there, Reznikov launched into a barrage of profanity and stormed back to the parking lot. There, Reznikov was shot dead by [[DeMeo crew]] veteran [[Joseph Testa]]. Testa then jumped into a car driven by [[Anthony Senter]] and left [[Brighton Beach]]. According to Casso, "After that, Marat didn't have any problems with other Russians."<ref>Robert I. Friedman, ''Rad Mafiya; How the Russian Mob has Invaded America'', 200 Page 55.</ref>


As Casso had warned, Lucchese boss [[Anthony Corallo]] and Genovese boss [[Vincent Gigante]] decided to kill Gotti, DeCicco, and every other conspirator in Castellano's murder. Amuso and Casso were chosen to handle the assassinations, and were instructed to use a car bomb to try and shift suspicion to [[Sicilian Mafia|Sicilian mobsters]], or [[Zips]], related to Castellano. While New York City ''mafiosi'' had long been officially banned from using bombs due to the risk of collateral damage, Sicilian mafiosi and members of the [[Cleveland crime family]] were notorious for blowing up their targets. Amuso and Casso made one attempt on the lives of Gotti and DeCicco, planting a bomb in DeCicco's car when the two were scheduled to visit a social club on April 13, 1986. Gotti cancelled at the last minute, and the bomb instead only killed DeCicco and injured a passenger they had mistaken for Gotti.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=473–75}}
==Fugitive boss==


=== Taking over the family with Amuso ===
Following the imprisonment of Amuso in 1991, Casso became the de facto boss of the family. In Ernest Volkman's book "Gangbusters", it is alleged that while both Casso and Amuso were on the run from the law, Casso wanted complete control of the family and set up Amuso to be taken down by the FBI. This theory is contradicted, however, by Casso's biographer [[Philip Carlo]]. According to Carlo, Casso had no desire to be boss of the Lucchese family and attempted to arrange for Amuso's escape from Federal custody after his arrest. To the great disappointment of Casso and the Lucchese captains, Amuso refused to leave prison out of fear for his life. As a result, the Lucchese captains asked Casso to replace him as boss. Casso reluctantly accepted.
[[File:CassoAmusoFBI.jpg|right|200px|thumb|A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso (right) with Lucchese family boss Vittorio Amuso]]
[[File:FBI Anthony Casso, Anthony Baratta and Peter Chiodo of Lucchese crime family.jpg|right|250px|thumb|A [[FBI]] surveillance photograph of Baratta, Casso and Chiodo]]
[[File:FBIAmusoCassoLastorino.jpg|right|250px|thumb|A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso, Victor Amuso and Frank Lastorino]]


In November 1986, Lucchese family boss Anthony Corallo sensed that the Commission Trial would result in a guilty verdict that would ensure the entire Lucchese leadership would die in prison.<ref name="new boss Amuso p.477">{{cite book |last1=Raab |first1=Selwyn |title=Five Families The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires |date=October 4, 2016 |publisher=St. Martin's Publishing Group |isbn=9781250101709 |pages=477 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VhRmDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA472 |access-date=20 December 2020}}</ref> Corallo, wanting to maintain the family's half-century tradition of a seamless transfer of power, called both Casso and Amuso to Furnari's Staten Island home.<ref name="new boss Amuso p.477"/> Casso turned down the promotion to boss and instead suggested that Amuso become the new boss.<ref name="new boss Amuso p.477"/> Amuso formally took over the family in 1987 and Casso succeeded Furnari as ''consigliere.''<ref name="new boss Amuso p.477"/> Casso later took over as Underboss in 1989 after Mariano Macaluso retired.
While evading authorities for over three years, Casso maintained control over the Lucchese family. In the process, he ordered 11 mob slayings as well as plotting with Genovese leader [[Vincent Gigante|Vincent "the Chin" Gigante]] to murder [[John Gotti]]. Casso and Gigante were deeply disgusted that Gotti had murdered [[Paul Castellano]] without the sanction of the Mafia's Commission. All attempts on Gotti's life were stymied, however, by the constant presence of news reporters around the Gambino boss.


While at the top of the Lucchese family, Amuso and Casso shared huge profits from their family's illegal activities. These profits included: $15,000 to $20,000 a month from extorting Long Island delivery and carting companies; $75,000 a month in kickbacks from eight [[air freight]] carriers operating in the New York area in exchange for guaranteed labor peace and no protests from workers over their low benefits; $20,000 a week in profits from illegal, unlicensed [[video game]] machines set up in businesses with connections to the Lucchese family; and $245,000 annually from a major family-owned concrete supplier.{{sfn|Raab|2005|p=?}} Amuso and Casso also split more than $200,000 per year from the [[Garment District, Manhattan|Garment District]] protection [[racket (crime)|racket]]s, as well as a cut of all the crimes committed by the family's soldiers.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}
In early 1991, Amuso and Casso ordered the murder of capo [[Peter Chiodo]], a fellow windows case defendant who had pled guilty without the administrations' approval. Chiodo barely survived the assassination attempt and subsequently agreed to turn state's evidence.<ref>Raab, pp. 496-498</ref> In September that year acting boss Al D'Arco, convinced he had also been ordered killed by Casso following his failure to kill Chiodo, also surrendered himself and agreed to testify. Both of these defections opened the door for new murder indictments against Amuso and Casso.<ref>Raab, pp. 499-501</ref>


In one instance, Casso and Amuso split $800,000 from the [[Colombo crime family|Colombo family]] for Casso's aid in helping them rob steel from a construction site at the [[West Side Highway]] in Manhattan. In another instance, the two bosses received $600,000 from the Gambino family for allowing it to take over a Lucchese-protected contractor for a housing complex project on [[Coney Island]]. Casso also controlled [[Greek-American]] [[crime boss]] George Kalikatas, who gave Casso $683,000 [[protection money]] in 1990 alone to operate a [[loan sharking]], [[extortion]], and [[illegal gambling]] organization in [[Astoria, Queens|Astoria]], [[Queens, New York|Queens]].<ref>Raab, ''Five Families'', page 489.</ref>
In another incident toward the year of 1993, Casso used the [[Brooklyn, New York|Brooklyn]] faction-leaders [[George Zappola]], Frank "Bones" Papagni as well as the family [[Consigliere]], [[Frank Lastorino|Frank "Big Frank" Lastortino]], to kill former Lucchese Underboss and [[Bronx, New York|Bronx]] faction leader [[Steven Crea|Stephen "Wonderboy" Crea]]. However, due to the massive indictments at the time, all members of the plot were eventually incarcerated on various charges, including Casso, who was arrested at a [[Mistress (lover)|mistress]]'s home in [[Mount Olive, New Jersey]], on January 19, 1993.<ref>Raab, p. 511</ref> Later that year the imprisoned Amuso, who had also come to believe Casso was responsible for his capture, had Casso demoted.<ref name="FF513">Raab, pp. 513-514</ref>

=== Eastern European connections ===
[[File:Mobtalk.jpg|right|250px|thumb|A FBI surveillance photograph of Amuso, Casso, Gotti and Gravano]]
[[File:FBICassoGravano.png|right|250px|thumb|A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso and Sammy Gravano]]

Casso had a close alliance with [[Russians|Russian]] boss [[Marat Balagula]], who operated a multibillion-dollar gasoline [[Counterfeit|bootlegging]] scam in [[Brighton Beach]]. Balagula, a [[History of the Jews in the Soviet Union|Soviet Jewish refugee]] from [[Odessa]], had arrived in the US under the [[Jackson-Vanik Amendment]]. After Colombo ''capo'' [[Michael Franzese]] began shaking down his crew, Balagula approached Christopher Furnari, consigliere for the Lucchese crime family, and asked for a sit-down at the 19th Hole Crew's [[social club]] in Brooklyn. According to Casso, Furnari declared,
<blockquote>Here there's enough for everybody to be happy...to leave the table satisfied. What we must avoid is trouble between us and the other families. I propose to make a deal with the others so there's no bad blood...Meanwhile, we will send word out that from now on you and your people are with the Lucchese family. No one will bother you. If anyone does bother you, come to us and Anthony will take care of it.<ref>{{Harvnb|Carlo|2008|p=120}}</ref></blockquote>

Street tax from Balagula's organization was not only strategically shared, but also became the [[Five Families]]' biggest moneymaker after drug trafficking. According to Carlo,
<blockquote>It didn't take long for word on the street to reach the Russian underworld: Marat Balagula was paying off the Italians; Balagula was a punk; Balagula had no balls. Balagula's days were numbered. This, of course, was the beginning of serious trouble. Balagula did in fact have balls—he was a ruthless killer when necessary—but he also was a smart diplomatic administrator and he knew that the combined, concerted force of the Italian crime families would quickly wipe the newly arrived Russian competition off the proverbial map.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=152}}</blockquote>

Shortly afterward, Balagula's rival, a fellow [[Russia]]n immigrant named [[Vladimir Reznikov]], drove up to the former's office building in the [[Midwood, Brooklyn|Midwood]] section of Brooklyn. Sitting in his car, Reznikov opened fire on the building with an [[AK-47]]. One of Balagula's close associates was killed and several secretaries were wounded.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=152}} Then, on June 12, 1986, Reznikov entered the Rasputin [[nightclub]] in Brighton Beach and placed a [[9mm]] [[Beretta]] against Balagula's head, demanding $600,000 in exchange for not pulling the trigger. He also demanded a percentage of everything Balagula was involved in. After Balagula promised to get the money, Reznikov threatened him and his family.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=153}}

Shortly after Reznikov left, Balagula suffered a massive [[Myocardial infarction|heart attack]]. He insisted on being treated at his home in Brighton Beach, where he felt it would be harder for Reznikov to kill him. When Casso arrived, he listened to Balagula's story and seethed with fury. Casso later told Carlo that, to his mind, Reznikov had just spat in the face of the entire [[Cosa Nostra]].<ref name="archive.org">{{cite book |title=Russian Organized Crime in the United States |year=1996 |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |isbn=9780160536328 |url=https://archive.org/stream/russianorganized00unit/russianorganized00unit_djvu.txt}} p. 45</ref> Casso told Balagula, "Send word to Vladimir that you have his money, that he should come to the club tomorrow. We'll take care of the rest."{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=154}} Balagula responded, "You're sure? This is an animal. It was him that used a machine gun in the office."{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=153}} Casso responded, "Don't concern yourself. I promise we'll take care of him...Okay?" Casso then requested a photograph of Reznikov and a description of his car.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=154}}

Following the meeting, Casso and Amuso received Furnari's permission to have Reznikov killed.<ref name="archive.org"/> The following day, Reznikov returned to the nightclub, expecting to pick up his money. Upon realizing that Balagula wasn't there, Reznikov launched into a barrage of profanity and stormed back to the parking lot. There, [[Roy DeMeo|DeMeo crew]] veteran [[Joseph Testa]] walked up behind Reznikov and shot him dead. Testa then jumped into a car driven by [[Anthony Senter]] and left Brighton Beach. According to Casso, "After that, Marat didn't have any problems with other Russians."{{sfn|Friedman|2000|p=55}}

===Cementing power===
[[File:FBICassoDArco.jpg|right|250px|thumb|A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso and Al D'Arco]]
In 1988, ''Caporegime'' [[Paul Vario]] died in Federal Prison, and Amuso promoted [[Alphonse D'Arco]] to capo of [[The Vario Crew]]. In 1990, Amuso selected D'Arco to organize a "Lucchese construction panel". A committee of Lucchese family members, the panel would oversee the Lucchese-controlled unions and construction companies and co-ordinate joint business ventures with the other [[Five Families]] of the New York City [[Cosa Nostra]].

Many years later, D'Arco explained his role under Amuso and Casso's leadership of the Lucchese family, "When a job needed to be done, whenever they needed to do something unpleasant to someone, I was the prick chosen by them."<ref>Raab, p. 500</ref>

For example, in the infamous "whack Jersey order", Amuso and Casso ordered Al D'Arco and the [[Vario Crew]] to murder the Lucchese family's entire [[the Jersey Crew|Jersey Crew]], after [[caporegime]] [[Anthony Accetturo]] refused a direct order to increase the family's share of their profits.<ref name="mgmt tool">{{cite news|last=Marriott|first=Michel|title=Mob Witness Talks of Murder as Management Tool|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/05/28/nyregion/mob-witness-talks-of-murder-as-management-tool.html?scp=4&sq=|accessdate=1 November 2011|newspaper=New York Times|date=May 28, 1992}}</ref> Acceturo was particularly enraged that Casso and Amuso also had ordered the assassination of his wife. Casso alleged during interviews with Philip Carlo that Accetturo had involved his wife in the running of [[the Jersey Crew]] and that therefore Accetturo alone was responsible for the contract put on her. Accetturo considered the contract on his wife a violation of the [[American Mafia]]'s longstanding rule against killing mobsters' relatives who are not involved in the life, and he chose accordingly to break his blood oath and cooperate with the Feds.<ref> Carlo (2008), pages 232-237.</ref>

=== Fugitive ===
[[File:Rodman Gun (2).jpg|right|thumb|The Civil War-era Rodman Gun at [[John Paul Jones Park]], near [[Verrazano Bridge]] in [[Bay Ridge, Brooklyn]].]]
In January 1991, Casso received an early warning, from a secret law enforcement source he referred to as his "crystal ball", about an upcoming federal indictment.<ref>Carlo (2008), pages 209-212.</ref> Shortly before he and Amuso both went into hiding, Casso summoned Alphonse D'Arco, the ''caporegime'' of [[The Vario Crew]], to a meeting at the [[Rodman gun]] at [[John Paul Jones Park]], in [[Bay Ridge, Brooklyn]]. Casso gave D'Arco a list of [[phone booth]] numbers and secret addresses and informed D'Arco that he was in charge of the Lucchese crime family until further notice.<ref>Carlo (2008), pages 213-214.</ref>

D'Arco met with Casso and Amuso twice in [[Scranton, Pennsylvania]], and several times at [[safe house]]s in Brooklyn.<ref>Raab, p. 495</ref>

In early 1991, Amuso and Casso ordered the murder of made man and ''[[caporegime]]'' [[Peter Chiodo]], a fellow Windows Case defendant who had pleaded guilty without asking their permission. Casso assigned the murder to acting boss Alphonse 'Little Al' D'Arco. The order shocked D'Arco, who knew that Chiodo had been a close friend and confidant of Casso for years.

On May 8, 1991, two Lucchese shooters ambushed Chiodo while he was working on a car at a gas station in [[Staten Island]]. Chiodo received 12 bullet wounds in the arms, legs, and torso, but survived the attack.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1991/05/09/nyregion/window-case-figure-shot-and-wounded-by-pair-of-gunmen.html "Window Case Figure Shot and Wounded by Pair of Gunmen"] New York Times May 9, 1991</ref> Doctors credited Chiodo's [[obesity]] with saving his life, as none of the slugs penetrated a vital organ or artery.<ref name="people">[https://books.google.com/books?id=6uQCAAAAMBAJ&q=Peter+Chiodo+&pg=PA26 "People Do Whatever They Feel Like"] New York Magazine Jan 9, 1995 page 26</ref> However, he sustained several abdominal wounds and permanent damage to his right arm.<ref>Raab, p. 497.</ref>

Following the unsuccessful assassination attempt, Casso delivered a blunt threat through Chiodo's lawyer that, if Chiodo testified, his wife would be murdered. Despite being common practice in the [[Calabria]]n [['Ndrangheta]], Casso's threat was a violation of a longstanding [[American Mafia]] rule against killing mobsters' relatives who are not involved in, "The Life". While Chiodo had angrily refused every previous offer to flip, Casso's threat to kill his wife was the last straw. He broke his blood oath and become a government witness, by his own account, to protect his family.<ref name="wife">[https://www.nytimes.com/1991/09/17/nyregion/witness-in-bid-rigging-case-tells-of-mob-threat-to-his-wife-s-life.html "Witness in Bid Rigging Case Tells of Mob Threat to his Wife's Life"] New York Times September 17, 1991</ref>
{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=496–98}}

Meanwhile, Alphonse D'Arco knew that Amuso and Casso blamed him for having failed to murder Peter Chiodo and grew certain that they were planning to kill him. In July 1991, in a [[Staten Island]] meeting, Amuso and Casso replaced D'Arco as acting boss with a four-man panel of capos. While D'Arco was named to this panel, he remained certain that Amuso and Casso no longer trusted him.<ref name="raab 498">Raab, pp. 498-499</ref>

On July 29, 1991, due to a tipoff from an unidentified Lucchese insider, Amuso was arrested and Casso became the ''[[de facto]]'' boss of the family.<ref>{{cite news|last=McQuiston|first=John|title=Fugitive In Mob Case Is Arrested|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/07/30/nyregion/fugitive-in-mob-case-is-arrested.html|access-date=August 26, 2012|newspaper=The New York Times|date=July 30, 1991}}</ref>{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=499–501}} It has been speculated that Casso himself was the source of the leak, as only a few people were privy to Amuso's location.{{sfn|Volkman|1998|p=281}} This theory is contradicted by Carlo, who states that Casso was not only determined to find out who betrayed Amuso and kill them, but that Casso immediately sent the $250,000 that was due to Amuso to his wife in a shoe box.<ref> Carlo (2008), pages 238-239.</ref> Casso, according to Carlo, had no desire to be boss of the Lucchese family and attempted to arrange for Amuso's escape from federal custody after his arrest. To the disappointment of Casso and the Lucchese ''capos'', Amuso refused to leave prison out of fear for his life. As a result, the Lucchese ''capos'' asked Casso to take over as acting boss. Casso reluctantly accepted.<ref> Carlo (2008), pages 243-249.</ref>

[[File:FBI and NYPD poster of Anthony Casso.png|250px|thumb|A FBI/NYPD Wanted poster of Anthony Casso]]

By September 21, 1991, Alphonse D'Arco was certain that Amuso and Casso had marked him and his family for death. That afternoon, D'Arco telephoned the [[suburb]]an [[Connecticut]] home of FBI Agent Robert Marston. D'Arco explained that his life was in danger and that the Lucchese family had started killing the entire families of suspected informers, which had never previously been allowed. After some hesitation, D'Arco told Agent Marston that he and his family were in hiding at his mother's house in Long Island. Later that night, D'Arco and his family entered [[WITSEC]].<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Pages 1-11.</ref>

The defections of both D'Arco and Chiodo opened the door for new murder indictments against Amuso and Casso.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=499–501}}

In a further violation of the Mafia's code, Chiodo's extended family in [[Brooklyn]] soon suffered retaliation from Amuso and Casso. On March 10, 1992, Vario Crew enforcer Michael Spinelli shot Chiodo's sister, Patricia Capozallo, while she was driving in [[Bensonhurst]]. Capozallo sustained bullet wounds in the arm, back and neck but survived.<ref>[http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/1998/11/04/1998-11-04_hit_target_recalls_how_she_d.html "HIT TARGET RECALLS HOW SHE DUCKED RUBOUT ATTEMPT"]{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} New York Daily News November 4, 1998</ref><ref>[http://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/1998/11/03/1998-11-03_mobster_trial_opens_with_toi.html "MOBSTER TRIAL OPENS WITH TOILET TALK"]{{dead link|date=March 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} New York Daily News November 3, 1998</ref><ref> Carlo (2008), page 228.</ref>

Also in 1993, Casso ordered [[George Zappola]], Frank "Bones" Papagni, and Lucchese ''[[consigliere]]'' [[Frank Lastorino]], to murder the Lucchese family's [[Bronx, New York|Bronx]] ''capo'', [[Steven Crea]].

Meanwhile, investigators from the Brooklyn District Attorney's office were using new technology to trace the location of [[cell phone]]s. [[Frank Lastorino]], they found, was regularly calling a cell phone near [[Budd Lake, New Jersey]]. The DA's Office informed FBI Agent Richard Rudolph, who arranged for a Federal warrant allowing Lastorino's phone to be tapped. As FBI Agents listened in, they recognized Casso's voice.<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 437.</ref> On January 19, 1993, Casso was arrested while coming out of the shower at the house he shared with his [[Mistress (lover)|mistress]], Rosemarie Billotti, in [[Mount Olive Township, New Jersey|Mount Olive, New Jersey]].{{sfn|Raab|2005|p=511}}<ref> Carlo (2008), pages 252-254.</ref>

As FBI Agents searched the house, they found a rifle, $340,000 in cash, a stack of FBI reports that had been provided to Amuso's defense attorneys, and meticulous paperwork about the inner workings of the Lucchese family.<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 437-438.</ref>

The paperwork included monthly tabulations of how much money Casso and Amuso had received from each of their criminal operations. Casso had also written down a detailed list of the [[Christmas]] tribute money he and Amuso had received from each Lucchese crew. There was also a neatly typed list of proposed [[made man|made men]], which was disguised as a list of wedding guests.<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 438">Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 438.</ref>

===Incarcerated boss===
Casso was held at New York's [[Metropolitan Correctional Center, New York City|Metropolitan Correctional Center]] pending trial. Facing charges that would have all but assured he would die in prison, he continued ordering hits outside, but also began making [[Prison escape|escape]] plans.{{sfn|Lawson|Oldham|2007|p=257}} One plan almost succeeded when a [[bribe]]d guard cleared him through security. Casso nearly walked out of jail, but was spotted by another guard and thwarted at the last minute.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=512–14}} Afterwards, Casso began making plans for Lucchese members to find out what prison buses would be transporting him and arrange an ambush,{{sfn|Lawson|Oldham|2007|pp=261–62}} as well as assassinating the presiding judge, [[Eugene Nickerson]], to buy himself more time.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=512–14}}

On February 2, 1993, the body of Frank Signorino, Peter Chiodo's uncle, was found frozen solid in the trunk of a car in [[East New York]]. Signorino had been slain by multiple gunshot wounds to the head, which was wrapped in a black plastic bag.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/1993/02/03/nyregion/uncle-of-mafia-informant-is-found-slain-in-brooklyn.html "Uncle of Mafia Informant is Found Slain in Brooklyn"] New York Times February 3, 1993</ref><ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 438"/>

On February 12, 1993, the Lucchese family burned down the garage of Annette Signorino, Peter Chiodo's 95-year-old grandmother, in [[Gravesend, Brooklyn]]. Chiodo later told the FBI, that he "couldn't believe someone would try to harm an old woman".<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 438"/>

Casso's power came undone when Amuso stripped Casso of his title of underboss, and declared that all Lucchese ''mafiosi'' should consider him a [[Outcast (person)|pariah]]—in effect, banishing Casso from the family.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=512–514}} Amuso had long been suspicious of Casso's failure to use his law enforcement contacts to find out who had betrayed him,{{sfn|Lawson|Oldham|2007|p=264}} and finally concluded Casso did it himself to take control of the family.{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=512–14}}

The two lead prosecutors on the case, Charles Rose and Gregory O'Connell, later told [[Jerry Capeci]] that they had hoped to use Sammy Gravano as a witness against Casso. Gravano refused, as he reportedly feared that Casso would start killing members of his extended family.<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 440">Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 440.</ref>

[[Alphonse D'Arco]], however, was reportedly very eager to testify against his former friend. According to FBI Agent Lucien Gandolfo, "He thought he was standing for what was right, but also for the old values that had been abandoned by the mob."<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 440"/>


==Informant==
==Informant==
Facing the prospect of a trial at which D'Arco, Acceturo, and Chiodo were due to be star witnesses against him, as well as spending the rest of his life in prison, Casso reached out to FBI Agent Richard Rudolph and offered to turn informant. Casso was immediately moved to the [[Federal Correctional Institution, La Tuna|Federal Prison at La Tuna]], near [[El Paso, Texas]] and housed in the famous "Valachi Suite" as he debriefed.<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 441">Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 441.</ref>
Shortly before his trial commenced, Casso offered to turn state's evidence. He finalized a deal at a hearing on March 1, 1994, where he pled guilty to all 72 counts he had been indicted on, now including 15 murders.<ref name="FF513"/><ref>{{cite news |title= Wiseguy Won't Get Fed Aid On Sentence|author= Helen Peterson|url= http://articles.nydailynews.com/1998-07-01/news/18076496_1_casso-prosecutors-jail-term|newspaper= New York Daily News|date= 1998-07-01|accessdate=August 7, 2011}}</ref><!-- Five Families puts it at 15. Anyone have a more complete review of the indictment? -->


At the beginning of the first session, Casso joked, "Every time I stepped out of the house I committed a crime. You expect me to remember all of them?".<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 441"/> The agents urged Casso to start by revealing his "crystal ball."<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 441"/>
Casso disclosed that two NYPD detectives were on the Lucchese payroll. These detectives were later determined to be [[Louis Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa]], who committed eight of the eleven murders Casso had ordered. Carracappa and Eppolito had also given Casso information which led to many others as well, revealing the names of potential informants. However, when Casso revealed similar corruption within the FBI, no one was interested. Casso further enraged Federal prosecutors by accusing Gambino turncoat [[Sammy Gravano]] of committing multiple felonies which were never disclosed as part of his immunity deal. Most seriously, Casso accused Gravano of paying [[Richard Kuklinski]] to murder [[NYPD]] Detective Peter Calabro. Once again, no one was interested.hi


In response, Casso disclosed that decorated [[New York City Police Department|NYPD]] Detectives [[Stephen Caracappa and Louis Eppolito]] had been on his payroll and had committed eight murders under his orders. Casso further explained that Detectives Carracappa and Eppolito, who had also served on the Federal Organized Crime Strike Force, had also leaked the names of both Police and FBI informants, which had resulted in many other murders.<ref name="Tom Robbins 2015 Page 441"/>
After his information was used to completely dismantle the Lucchese family, Casso was dropped from the [[Witness Protection Program]]. He is currently serving a life sentence without parole at the [[Supermax]] [[ADX Florence]] prison in [[Florence, Colorado|Florence]], [[Colorado]].


Federal Prosecutors Charles Rose and Gregory O'Connell flew from New York City to Texas as the debriefing continued. Casso named scores of other mobsters he had conspired with, including Genovese boss [[Vincent Gigante]]. Casso also confessed to having sent hitmen to Federal Prosecutor Charles Rose's home with the intention of having him murdered. Casso also admitted to having plotted the assassination of Federal Judge Nickerson in order to delay his own trial.<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Pages 441-442.</ref>
According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, in March 2009 Anthony Casso was transferred to the [[List of U.S. federal prisons|Federal Medical Center]] (FMC) at the [[Federal Correctional Complex, Butner]] in [[North Carolina]] for the treatment of [[prostate cancer]].<ref>[http://www.thechicagosyndicate.com/2009/02/can-mobster-anthony-gaspipe-casso.html Can Mobster Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso Answer a Mystery Around the French Connection Case?]</ref> However, by July 2009, he had been returned to ADX Florence.


Casso initially confessed to twelve murders, but when pressed for details, he admitted to a further twenty-four. At the same time, Casso was found to have lied about how much money he possessed. He also denied all involvement in the murder of Peter Chiodo's uncle or in the arson at the home of Chiodo's elderly grandmother. Increasingly sceptical, the FBI Agents made Casso take a [[polygraph|lie detector test]], which he failed.<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 442.</ref>
==References==

'''Notes'''
Gregory O'Connell later told [[Jerry Capeci]] that the decision not to use Casso as a witness was made in the Valachi Suite, while Casso, "with apparent delight", gleefully laughed as he described how he [[live burial|buried alive]] a young drug smuggling associate in the [[Florida Everglades]].<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Pages 442-443.</ref>

As Casso spoke, Federal Prosecutors O'Connell and Rose, "read each other's thoughts. The story would probably not go over well with a jury." Both prosecutors flew back to New York City convinced that Casso's knowledge of Mafia secrets did not matter. O'Connell later told Capeci, "It gets to a point where somebody is just too evil to put on the stand."<ref>Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), ''Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness'', St. Martin's Press. Page 443.</ref>

Casso finalized a plea agreement at a hearing on March 1, 1994, where he pleaded guilty to 70 crimes, including racketeering, extortion and 15 murders.<ref name="Casso deal 1994">{{cite web|author=leagle.com |url=http://www.leagle.com/xmlResult.aspx?xmldoc=19982089FSupp2d199_1183.xml&docbase=CSLWAR2-1986–2006 |title=U.S. v. Casso |date= June 29, 1998 |publisher=Leagle.com |access-date=2012-11-16}}</ref> The two lead prosecutors on the case, Charles Rose and Gregory O'Connell, later said they'd feared Casso could be acquitted at trial, since they did not have any taped conversations as evidence. However, with Casso's guilty plea, O'Connell said they had Casso "tied up six ways to Sunday."{{sfn|Raab|2005|pp=512–14}}<ref name=murder>{{cite news |title= Wiseguy Won't Get Fed Aid On Sentence|first=Helen |last=Peterson|url= http://articles.nydailynews.com/1998-07-01/news/18076496_1_casso-prosecutors-jail-term|newspaper= New York Daily News|date= July 1, 1998|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120609134018/http://articles.nydailynews.com/1998-07-01/news/18076496_1_casso-prosecutors-jail-term |access-date=August 7, 2011|archive-date=June 9, 2012 }}</ref> While remaining in prison, Casso was placed in the [[United States Federal Witness Protection Program|witness protection program]].

According to Carlo, when Casso revealed that he also had an [[Federal Bureau of Investigation|FBI]] Agent on the payroll, prosecutors ordered him to keep quiet. Casso alleges that he further enraged the US government by accusing Gambino turncoat [[Sammy Gravano]], who had denied ever having dealt in drugs, of buying large amounts of [[cocaine]], [[heroin]], and [[Cannabis (drug)|marijuana]] from Casso over two decades. However, Casso was vindicated to some extent when Gravano pleaded guilty in 2000 to operating a massive narcotics ring, which included selling [[ecstasy (drug)|ecstasy]] to adolescents.{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=?}} He was the second confessed underboss of a New York crime family to break his blood oath and turn informer, after Gravano.

In 1998, Casso was removed from the witness protection program after prosecutors alleged numerous infractions, in 1997, including bribing guards, assaulting other inmates and making "false statements" about Gravano and D'Arco. Casso's attorney tried to get Judge [[Frederic Block]] to overrule federal prosecutors in July 1998, but Block refused to do so.<ref name=rescind>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1998/07/01/nyregion/plea-deal-rescinded-informer-may-face-life.html |title=Plea Deal Rescinded, Informer May Face Life |first=Selwyn |last=Raab |date=July 1, 1998|work=The New York Times |via=nytimes.com}}</ref><ref name=appeal>{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2000/11/23/nyregion/mafia-informer-s-2nd-appeal-says-his-plea-deal-was-undercut.html|title=Mafia Informer's 2nd Appeal Says His Plea Deal Was Undercut|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=November 23, 2000}}</ref> Shortly afterward, Judge Block sentenced Casso to 455 years in prison without possibility of parole—the maximum sentence permitted under sentencing guidelines.{{sfn|Raab|2005|p=522}}<ref name=appeal/>

Casso later told ''[[The New York Times]]''{{'}} organized-crime reporter [[Selwyn Raab]] that, before turning informer, he was seriously considering a deal that would have allowed him the possibility of parole after 22 years. "I help them and I get life without parole," he said. "This is really a fuckin' joke".{{sfn|Raab|2005|p=525}} Casso lost two subsequent appeals to get his sentence reduced.<ref name=appeal/>

In a 2006 letter to Carlo, Casso declared, <blockquote>Dearest Carlo
I am truly regretful for my decision to cooperate with the Government. It was against all my beliefs and upbringing. I know for certain, had my father been alive, I would never have done so. I have disgraced my family heritage, lost the respect of my children and close friends, and most probably added to the sudden death of my wife and confidant for more than 35 years. I wish the clock could be turned back only to bring her back. I have never in my life informed on anyone. I have always hated rats and as strange as it may sound I still do. I surely hate myself, day after day. It would have definitely been different if the Government had honest witnesses from inception. I would have had a second chance to start a new life, and my wife Lillian would still be alive. It seems that the only people the Government awards freedom to are the ones who give prejudiced testimony to win convictions. "[[The truth will set you free]]", means nothing in the Federal courts. Even at this point in my life, I consider myself to be a better man than most of the people on the streets these days.
With contempt and disdain
Tony Gaspipe{{sfn|Carlo|2008|p=337}}</blockquote>

== Incarceration and death ==
Casso began serving his sentence at the [[supermax]] prison [[ADX Florence]] in [[Florence, Colorado]]. Casso was transferred to the [[Federal Medical Center, Butner|Federal Medical Center]] (FMC) at the [[Federal Correctional Complex, Butner|Federal Correctional Complex]] in [[Butner, North Carolina]], for the treatment of [[prostate cancer]] in March 2009.<ref name="french 2009">{{cite news|last=Blumenthal|first=Ralph|title=Mobster Makes Offer on French Connection Case|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/22/nyregion/22french.html|access-date=November 23, 2012|newspaper=The New York Times|date=February 21, 2009}}</ref> He was returned to ADX Florence in July 2009. In 2013, Casso was transferred to the Federal Residential Reentry Management Office in [[Minneapolis, Minnesota]].<ref name=locator>{{cite web|url=http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/InmateFinderServlet?Transaction=NameSearch&needingMoreList=false&FirstName=Anthony&Middle=&LastName=Casso&Race=W&Sex=M&Age=&x=0&y=0|title=Inmate Locator|website=www.bop.gov|access-date=March 4, 2011|archive-date=June 29, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629133436/http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/InmateFinderServlet?Transaction=NameSearch&needingMoreList=false&FirstName=Anthony&Middle=&LastName=Casso&Race=W&Sex=M&Age=&x=0&y=0|url-status=dead}}</ref> This was not a prison facility, but an administrative designation for inmates assigned to home confinement, "[[halfway house]]s", or state and county correctional facilities.<ref name=locator/>

As of May 2018, he had been transferred to the [[United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners]], an administrative security/medical prison in [[Springfield, Missouri]].<ref name=locator/> He was later transferred to [[United States Penitentiary, Terre Haute|USP Terre Haute]]. From March 25, 2020, he was serving his sentence at [[United States Penitentiary, Tucson|USP Tucson]], a high security prison in [[Arizona]].<ref name=locator/><ref name=death>{{cite web|url=https://www.bop.gov/resources/news/pdfs/20201216_press_release_tuc1.pdf|title=Inmate Death at USP Tucson|publisher=bop.gov|date=December 16, 2020}}</ref> In his later years, Casso had developed complications related to prostate cancer, coronary artery disease, kidney disease, hypertension, bladder disease and lung issues from years of smoking.<ref name=death/>

On November 5, 2020, Casso tested positive for [[COVID-19]] while incarcerated, amidst [[COVID-19 pandemic in Arizona|the pandemic in Arizona]]. He was placed in medical isolation at USP Tucson.<ref name=death/><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-anthony-gaspipe-casso-mafia-covid-release-20201130-mm5wnfbsa5b2jnkuck4maartve-story.html|title=Jailed mobster Anthony 'Gaspipe' Casso has COVID-19, judge rejects motion for release|publisher=nydailynews.com|date=November 30, 2020}}</ref> On November 9, he was transported to a local hospital due to respiratory distress, and on November 17, 2020, was put on a [[ventilator]].<ref name=death/> His lawyers requested [[compassionate release]], but that motion was rejected on November 28.<ref name=dead/> Casso died from complications related to COVID-19 on December 15, 2020, at the age of 78.<ref name=death/><ref name=dead>{{cite web|url=https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-mobster-anthony-gaspipe-casso-death-20201216-35ykrc6d6jdqnj4ttmebmwjmde-story.html|title=Mobster Anthony 'Gaspipe' Casso, who murdered dozens and caught COVID-19 behind bars, dead at 78|publisher=nydailynews.com|date=December 16, 2020}}</ref>

== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


== Works cited ==
'''Sources'''
* {{cite book|last=Carlo|first=Philip|author-link=Philip Carlo|title=Gaspipe: Confessions of a Mafia Boss|year=2008|publisher=HarperCollins|location=New York|isbn=978-0061429842|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/gaspipeconfessio00carl}}
*Kelly, Robert J. ''Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United States''. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2000. ISBN 0-313-30653-2
* {{cite book|first=Robert I. |last=Friedman |author-link=Robert I. Friedman|title=Red Mafiya: How the Russian Mob Has Invaded America|publisher=[[Little, Brown and Company]] |location=Boston; New York; London|isbn=0316294748|year=2000}}
*Raab, Selwyn. ''Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires''. New York: St. Martin Press, 2005. ISBN 0-312-30094-8
* {{cite book|last1=Lawson|first1=Guy|last2=Oldham|first2=William|title=The Brotherhoods|publisher=Pocket Books|year=2007|isbn=978-1-4165-2338-3}}
*Capeci, Jerry, and Mustain, Gene. ''Gotti: Rise and Fall''. Penguin Books Canada, Limited (1996)
* {{cite book|last=Raab|first=Selwyn|author-link=Selwyn Raab|title=Five Families: The Rise, Decline and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires|year=2005|publisher=Thomas Dunne Books|location=New York|isbn=978-0312361815|edition=2006|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5nAt6N8iQnYC&q=%22south+brooklyn+boys%22&pg=PA470}}
*Lawson, Guy, and Oldham, William. ''The Brotherhoods'', Pocket Books (2007) ISBN 1416523383
* {{cite book|last=Volkman|first=Ernest|author-link=Ernest Volkman|title=Gangbusters: The Destruction of America's Last Great Mafia Dynasty|year=1998|publisher=Avon Books|location=New York|isbn=0380732351|edition=1999 paperback}}
*[[Philip Carlo|Carlo, Philip]]. ''Gaspipe: Confessions of a Mafia Bs.'' William Morrow (2008) ISBN 978-0061429842
*[[Joseph D. Pistone]], and [[Charles Brandt]]. ''Donnie Brasco: Unfinished Business'', Running Press Book Publishers (2007) ISBN 978-0762427079
*Blumenthal, Ralph. [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/22/nyregion/22french.html ''Mobster Makes Offer on French Connection Case''], New York Times. February 22, 2009.


== Further reading ==
'''External links'''
* {{cite book|last1=Capeci|first1=Jerry|author-link1=Jerry Capeci|last2=Mustain|first2=Gene|title=Gotti: Rise and Fall|publisher=Penguin Books Canada, Limited|year=1996}}
*[http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/InmateFinderServlet?Transaction=NameSearch&needingMoreList=false&FirstName=Anthony&Middle=&LastName=Casso&Race=W&Sex=M&Age=&x=0&y=0 Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator: Anthony Casso] (Life)
* {{cite book|last=Kelly |first=Robert J.|title=Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United States|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofor0000kell |url-access=registration |location=Westport, Connecticut|publisher=Greenwood Press|year=2000|isbn=0-313-30653-2}}
* {{cite book|last1=Pistone|first1=Joseph D.|author-link1=Joseph D. Pistone|last2=Brandt|first2=Charles|author-link2=Charles Brandt|title=Donnie Brasco: Unfinished Business|publisher=Running Press Book Publishers|year=2007|isbn=978-0-7624-2707-9|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/donniebrascounfi00joep}}


== External links ==
{{Lucchese crime family}} {{American Mafia}}
*[http://www.biography.com/people/anthony-casso-17113580 Anthony Casso] – [[The Biography Channel|Biography.com]]
*[http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/gangsters_outlaws/family_epics/lucchese1/1.html The Lucchese Family] – [[TruTV]] [[Crime Library]]
*[http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/InmateFinderServlet?Transaction=NameSearch&needingMoreList=false&FirstName=Anthony&Middle=&LastName=Casso&Race=W&Sex=M&Age=&x=0&y=0 Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator: Anthony Casso] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629133436/http://www.bop.gov/iloc2/InmateFinderServlet?Transaction=NameSearch&needingMoreList=false&FirstName=Anthony&Middle=&LastName=Casso&Race=W&Sex=M&Age=&x=0&y=0 |date=June 29, 2011 }} (Life)

{{s-start}}
{{s-bus}}
{{s-bef|before=[[List of Lucchese crime family mobsters#Mariano Macaluso|Mariano "Mac" Macaluso]]}}
{{s-ttl|title=[[Lucchese crime family]]<br />Underboss|years=1989–1993}}
{{s-aft|after=[[Steven Crea]]}}
{{end}}

{{Lucchese crime family}}
{{American Mafia}}

{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Casso, Anthony
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH = May 21, 1940
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Brooklyn]], New York, United States
| DATE OF DEATH =
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Casso, Anthony}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Casso, Anthony}}
[[Category:1940 births]]
[[Category:1942 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:2020 deaths]]
[[Category:FBI informants]]
[[Category:American drug traffickers]]
[[Category:American mobsters of Italian descent]]
[[Category:American Mafia cooperating witnesses]]
[[Category:American gangsters of Italian descent]]
[[Category:People of Campanian descent]]
[[Category:American people convicted of murder]]
[[Category:American prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment]]
[[Category:American people who died in prison custody]]
[[Category:Consiglieri]]
[[Category:Criminals from Brooklyn]]
[[Category:Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Arizona]]
[[Category:FBI informants convicted of crimes]]
[[Category:Fugitives]]
[[Category:Inmates of ADX Florence]]
[[Category:Lucchese crime family]]
[[Category:Lucchese crime family]]
[[Category:Gangsters sentenced to life imprisonment]]
[[Category:People who entered the United States Federal Witness Protection Program]]
[[Category:Mobsters sentenced to life imprisonment]]
[[Category:Organized crime memoirists]]
[[Category:Organized crime memoirists]]
[[Category:Prisoners at ADX Florence]]
[[Category:People convicted of racketeering]]
[[Category:People who entered the United States Federal Witness Protection Program]]
[[Category:People convicted of murder by the United States federal government]]
[[Category:Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by the United States federal government]]
[[Category:Prisoners who died in United States federal government detention]]
[[Category:Prisoners who died from COVID-19]]

Latest revision as of 15:13, 11 December 2024

Anthony Casso
1993 FBI mugshot of Casso
Born
Anthony Salvatore Casso

(1942-05-21)May 21, 1942
DiedDecember 15, 2020(2020-12-15) (aged 78)
Other namesGaspipe
OccupationMobster
Spouse
Lillian Delduca
(m. 1968; died 2005)
Children2
AllegianceLucchese crime family
Conviction(s)Racketeering, extortion, murder (1998)
Criminal penalty455 years' imprisonment (1998)

Anthony Salvatore Casso (May 21, 1942 – December 15, 2020), nicknamed "Gaspipe", was an American mobster and underboss of the Lucchese crime family. During his career in organized crime, he was regarded as a "homicidal maniac"[1] in the Italian-American Mafia. Casso is suspected of having committed dozens of murders, and had confessed to involvement in between 15 and 36 murders.[2][3]

Government witness Anthony Accetturo, the former caporegime of The Jersey Crew, once said of Casso, "all he wanted to do is kill, kill, get what you can, even if you didn't earn it".[4] In interviews, and on the witness stand, Casso confessed involvement in the murders of Frank DeCicco, Roy DeMeo, and Vladimir Reznikov. Casso also admitted to several attempts to murder Gambino family boss John Gotti.

Following his arrest in 1993, Casso became one of the highest-ranking members of the Mafia to turn informant. After taking a plea agreement, he was placed in the witness protection program. In 1998, it was rescinded and Casso was dropped from the program after several infractions. Later that year, a federal judge sentenced him to 455 years in prison for racketeering, extortion, and murder.

Casso died in prison custody from complications related to COVID-19 on December 15, 2020.

Early life

[edit]

Casso was born on May 21, 1942, in South Brooklyn, in New York City, the youngest of the three children to Michael and Margaret Casso, née Cucceullo. Casso's grandparents had immigrated to the United States from Campania, Italy in the 1890s. His godfather was Salvatore Callinbrano, a made man and caporegime in the Genovese crime family, which maintained a powerful influence on the Brooklyn docks. Casso dropped out of school at 16 and got a job with his father as a longshoreman. In his youth, he became a crack shot, firing pistols at targets on a rooftop which he and his friends used as a shooting range. Casso also made money shooting predatory hawks for pigeon keepers.[5]

Personal life

[edit]

Casso married fellow South Brooklyn native Lillian Delduca on May 4, 1968.[6] They had a daughter and son.

Prior to his marriage to Lillian, Casso had a serious relationship with fellow South Brooklyn native Rosemarie Billotti, whose parents hoped he would marry.[7] Without Lillian's knowledge, for decades after their wedding, Casso secretly kept Billotti as his mistress and set her up in a house in Mount Olive, New Jersey.

During his marriage, Casso committed many other infidelities. In an interview with biographer Philip Carlo, Casso recalled,

Most all men in my life, everyone I know, had girlfriends. It goes with the territory. Women are drawn to us, the power, the money, and we're drawn to them. But only in passing. Some guys treated their mistresses better than their wife, but that's a fuckin' outrage. No class. Only a cafone does that. I never loved any woman but Lillian. She and my family always came first.[8]

Following his arrest inside the house in Mount Olive by the FBI in 1993, Lillian Casso "was incensed, and felt betrayed—violated—used" when she learned that her husband had secretly continued his relationship with Rosemarie Billotti. Even though she eventually agreed to visit her husband in federal prison, for the rest of her life, Lillian Casso, according to Philip Carlo, "could not understand how Anthony could be so deceitful, duplicitous—such a two-faced pig."[9]

Lucchese crime family

[edit]

Early criminal career

[edit]

Casso was a violent youth, and a member of the infamous South Brooklyn Boys street gang.[10] In 1958, he was arrested after a "rumble" against a rival Irish American gang. Casso later told Carlo that his father Michael visited him at the police station and tried in vain to scare his son straight. He soon caught the eye of Christopher "Christie Tick" Furnari, a Lucchese family mobster and leader of the "19th Hole Crew" in Brooklyn. With Furnari's support, Casso started his career in the Mafia running a small loan sharking operation. Furnari also used Casso as muscle for his gambling and drug dealing rackets. Casso's second arrest, for attempted murder, occurred in 1961, but he was acquitted when the alleged victim refused to identify him as the attacker.[citation needed]

19th Hole Crew

[edit]
The Lucchese crime family, 1991

In 1974, at age 32, he became a "made man" (full member) of the Lucchese family. Casso joined Vincent Foceri's crew that operated from 116th Street in Manhattan and from Fourteenth Avenue in Brooklyn.[11][12] Shortly after becoming a made, Casso became close to another rising star in the family, Victor Amuso, and began a partnership that lasted for two decades. The two men committed scores of crimes, including drug trafficking, burglary, the elimination and disposal of police informants, and murder. Casso and Amuso were noticed for their success, and subsequently moved to the more prominent crew operated by Casso's mentor Furnari.

Within Furnari's "19th Hole Crew" both Casso and Amuso led a burglary ring known as "The Bypass Gang", which included expert locksmiths, safe crackers, and experts in security alarm systems.[13] The Bypass Gang is still suspected of committing burglaries in banks and jewelry stores throughout New York City and Long Island.[13] Authorities estimated the Bypass gang stole more than $100 million from safety deposit boxes and vaults during the 1970s and 1980s.[13]

When Furnari was promoted to act as the Lucchese family's consigliere, he decided to promote Casso to succeed him as caporegime of the 19th Hole Crew.[13] Casso declined, suggesting that Amuso be promoted instead; he subsequently became Amuso's trusted right hand.[13]

In December 1985, Casso was approached by caporegime Frank DeCicco regarding a planned coup in the Gambino crime family.[14] Gambino caporegime John Gotti, whose crew had worked with Casso to conduct drug deals, and other captains, were planning to kill family boss Paul Castellano believing that he was too weak to lead them. Gotti and DeCicco were looking for support among the other Four Families affected by the ongoing Mafia Commission Trial.[15] According to Sammy Gravano, another of Gotti's co-conspirators, DeCicco returned from the meeting saying that Casso had offered the conspirators his unconditional support.[16]

According to Casso, DeCicco alleged during their meeting that Castellano's carelessness in allowing his own house to be bugged was reason enough to kill him. Casso later told Carlo that he tried to talk DeCicco out of killing a boss without first asking for The Commission's permission. Otherwise, he said, killing Castellano would be a cardinal violation of the rules and all the participants would have to be murdered by the other Four Families.[14] Castellano's murder went ahead anyway on December 16, 1985.[15] Casso later denounced Gotti's actions to Carlo as "the beginning of the end of our thing."[14]

As Casso had warned, Lucchese boss Anthony Corallo and Genovese boss Vincent Gigante decided to kill Gotti, DeCicco, and every other conspirator in Castellano's murder. Amuso and Casso were chosen to handle the assassinations, and were instructed to use a car bomb to try and shift suspicion to Sicilian mobsters, or Zips, related to Castellano. While New York City mafiosi had long been officially banned from using bombs due to the risk of collateral damage, Sicilian mafiosi and members of the Cleveland crime family were notorious for blowing up their targets. Amuso and Casso made one attempt on the lives of Gotti and DeCicco, planting a bomb in DeCicco's car when the two were scheduled to visit a social club on April 13, 1986. Gotti cancelled at the last minute, and the bomb instead only killed DeCicco and injured a passenger they had mistaken for Gotti.[16]

Taking over the family with Amuso

[edit]
A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso (right) with Lucchese family boss Vittorio Amuso
A FBI surveillance photograph of Baratta, Casso and Chiodo
A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso, Victor Amuso and Frank Lastorino

In November 1986, Lucchese family boss Anthony Corallo sensed that the Commission Trial would result in a guilty verdict that would ensure the entire Lucchese leadership would die in prison.[17] Corallo, wanting to maintain the family's half-century tradition of a seamless transfer of power, called both Casso and Amuso to Furnari's Staten Island home.[17] Casso turned down the promotion to boss and instead suggested that Amuso become the new boss.[17] Amuso formally took over the family in 1987 and Casso succeeded Furnari as consigliere.[17] Casso later took over as Underboss in 1989 after Mariano Macaluso retired.

While at the top of the Lucchese family, Amuso and Casso shared huge profits from their family's illegal activities. These profits included: $15,000 to $20,000 a month from extorting Long Island delivery and carting companies; $75,000 a month in kickbacks from eight air freight carriers operating in the New York area in exchange for guaranteed labor peace and no protests from workers over their low benefits; $20,000 a week in profits from illegal, unlicensed video game machines set up in businesses with connections to the Lucchese family; and $245,000 annually from a major family-owned concrete supplier.[18] Amuso and Casso also split more than $200,000 per year from the Garment District protection rackets, as well as a cut of all the crimes committed by the family's soldiers.[citation needed]

In one instance, Casso and Amuso split $800,000 from the Colombo family for Casso's aid in helping them rob steel from a construction site at the West Side Highway in Manhattan. In another instance, the two bosses received $600,000 from the Gambino family for allowing it to take over a Lucchese-protected contractor for a housing complex project on Coney Island. Casso also controlled Greek-American crime boss George Kalikatas, who gave Casso $683,000 protection money in 1990 alone to operate a loan sharking, extortion, and illegal gambling organization in Astoria, Queens.[19]

Eastern European connections

[edit]
A FBI surveillance photograph of Amuso, Casso, Gotti and Gravano
A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso and Sammy Gravano

Casso had a close alliance with Russian boss Marat Balagula, who operated a multibillion-dollar gasoline bootlegging scam in Brighton Beach. Balagula, a Soviet Jewish refugee from Odessa, had arrived in the US under the Jackson-Vanik Amendment. After Colombo capo Michael Franzese began shaking down his crew, Balagula approached Christopher Furnari, consigliere for the Lucchese crime family, and asked for a sit-down at the 19th Hole Crew's social club in Brooklyn. According to Casso, Furnari declared,

Here there's enough for everybody to be happy...to leave the table satisfied. What we must avoid is trouble between us and the other families. I propose to make a deal with the others so there's no bad blood...Meanwhile, we will send word out that from now on you and your people are with the Lucchese family. No one will bother you. If anyone does bother you, come to us and Anthony will take care of it.[20]

Street tax from Balagula's organization was not only strategically shared, but also became the Five Families' biggest moneymaker after drug trafficking. According to Carlo,

It didn't take long for word on the street to reach the Russian underworld: Marat Balagula was paying off the Italians; Balagula was a punk; Balagula had no balls. Balagula's days were numbered. This, of course, was the beginning of serious trouble. Balagula did in fact have balls—he was a ruthless killer when necessary—but he also was a smart diplomatic administrator and he knew that the combined, concerted force of the Italian crime families would quickly wipe the newly arrived Russian competition off the proverbial map.[21]

Shortly afterward, Balagula's rival, a fellow Russian immigrant named Vladimir Reznikov, drove up to the former's office building in the Midwood section of Brooklyn. Sitting in his car, Reznikov opened fire on the building with an AK-47. One of Balagula's close associates was killed and several secretaries were wounded.[21] Then, on June 12, 1986, Reznikov entered the Rasputin nightclub in Brighton Beach and placed a 9mm Beretta against Balagula's head, demanding $600,000 in exchange for not pulling the trigger. He also demanded a percentage of everything Balagula was involved in. After Balagula promised to get the money, Reznikov threatened him and his family.[22]

Shortly after Reznikov left, Balagula suffered a massive heart attack. He insisted on being treated at his home in Brighton Beach, where he felt it would be harder for Reznikov to kill him. When Casso arrived, he listened to Balagula's story and seethed with fury. Casso later told Carlo that, to his mind, Reznikov had just spat in the face of the entire Cosa Nostra.[23] Casso told Balagula, "Send word to Vladimir that you have his money, that he should come to the club tomorrow. We'll take care of the rest."[24] Balagula responded, "You're sure? This is an animal. It was him that used a machine gun in the office."[22] Casso responded, "Don't concern yourself. I promise we'll take care of him...Okay?" Casso then requested a photograph of Reznikov and a description of his car.[24]

Following the meeting, Casso and Amuso received Furnari's permission to have Reznikov killed.[23] The following day, Reznikov returned to the nightclub, expecting to pick up his money. Upon realizing that Balagula wasn't there, Reznikov launched into a barrage of profanity and stormed back to the parking lot. There, DeMeo crew veteran Joseph Testa walked up behind Reznikov and shot him dead. Testa then jumped into a car driven by Anthony Senter and left Brighton Beach. According to Casso, "After that, Marat didn't have any problems with other Russians."[25]

Cementing power

[edit]
A FBI surveillance photograph of Casso and Al D'Arco

In 1988, Caporegime Paul Vario died in Federal Prison, and Amuso promoted Alphonse D'Arco to capo of The Vario Crew. In 1990, Amuso selected D'Arco to organize a "Lucchese construction panel". A committee of Lucchese family members, the panel would oversee the Lucchese-controlled unions and construction companies and co-ordinate joint business ventures with the other Five Families of the New York City Cosa Nostra.

Many years later, D'Arco explained his role under Amuso and Casso's leadership of the Lucchese family, "When a job needed to be done, whenever they needed to do something unpleasant to someone, I was the prick chosen by them."[26]

For example, in the infamous "whack Jersey order", Amuso and Casso ordered Al D'Arco and the Vario Crew to murder the Lucchese family's entire Jersey Crew, after caporegime Anthony Accetturo refused a direct order to increase the family's share of their profits.[27] Acceturo was particularly enraged that Casso and Amuso also had ordered the assassination of his wife. Casso alleged during interviews with Philip Carlo that Accetturo had involved his wife in the running of the Jersey Crew and that therefore Accetturo alone was responsible for the contract put on her. Accetturo considered the contract on his wife a violation of the American Mafia's longstanding rule against killing mobsters' relatives who are not involved in the life, and he chose accordingly to break his blood oath and cooperate with the Feds.[28]

Fugitive

[edit]
The Civil War-era Rodman Gun at John Paul Jones Park, near Verrazano Bridge in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn.

In January 1991, Casso received an early warning, from a secret law enforcement source he referred to as his "crystal ball", about an upcoming federal indictment.[29] Shortly before he and Amuso both went into hiding, Casso summoned Alphonse D'Arco, the caporegime of The Vario Crew, to a meeting at the Rodman gun at John Paul Jones Park, in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. Casso gave D'Arco a list of phone booth numbers and secret addresses and informed D'Arco that he was in charge of the Lucchese crime family until further notice.[30]

D'Arco met with Casso and Amuso twice in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and several times at safe houses in Brooklyn.[31]

In early 1991, Amuso and Casso ordered the murder of made man and caporegime Peter Chiodo, a fellow Windows Case defendant who had pleaded guilty without asking their permission. Casso assigned the murder to acting boss Alphonse 'Little Al' D'Arco. The order shocked D'Arco, who knew that Chiodo had been a close friend and confidant of Casso for years.

On May 8, 1991, two Lucchese shooters ambushed Chiodo while he was working on a car at a gas station in Staten Island. Chiodo received 12 bullet wounds in the arms, legs, and torso, but survived the attack.[32] Doctors credited Chiodo's obesity with saving his life, as none of the slugs penetrated a vital organ or artery.[33] However, he sustained several abdominal wounds and permanent damage to his right arm.[34]

Following the unsuccessful assassination attempt, Casso delivered a blunt threat through Chiodo's lawyer that, if Chiodo testified, his wife would be murdered. Despite being common practice in the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta, Casso's threat was a violation of a longstanding American Mafia rule against killing mobsters' relatives who are not involved in, "The Life". While Chiodo had angrily refused every previous offer to flip, Casso's threat to kill his wife was the last straw. He broke his blood oath and become a government witness, by his own account, to protect his family.[35] [36]

Meanwhile, Alphonse D'Arco knew that Amuso and Casso blamed him for having failed to murder Peter Chiodo and grew certain that they were planning to kill him. In July 1991, in a Staten Island meeting, Amuso and Casso replaced D'Arco as acting boss with a four-man panel of capos. While D'Arco was named to this panel, he remained certain that Amuso and Casso no longer trusted him.[37]

On July 29, 1991, due to a tipoff from an unidentified Lucchese insider, Amuso was arrested and Casso became the de facto boss of the family.[38][39] It has been speculated that Casso himself was the source of the leak, as only a few people were privy to Amuso's location.[40] This theory is contradicted by Carlo, who states that Casso was not only determined to find out who betrayed Amuso and kill them, but that Casso immediately sent the $250,000 that was due to Amuso to his wife in a shoe box.[41] Casso, according to Carlo, had no desire to be boss of the Lucchese family and attempted to arrange for Amuso's escape from federal custody after his arrest. To the disappointment of Casso and the Lucchese capos, Amuso refused to leave prison out of fear for his life. As a result, the Lucchese capos asked Casso to take over as acting boss. Casso reluctantly accepted.[42]

A FBI/NYPD Wanted poster of Anthony Casso

By September 21, 1991, Alphonse D'Arco was certain that Amuso and Casso had marked him and his family for death. That afternoon, D'Arco telephoned the suburban Connecticut home of FBI Agent Robert Marston. D'Arco explained that his life was in danger and that the Lucchese family had started killing the entire families of suspected informers, which had never previously been allowed. After some hesitation, D'Arco told Agent Marston that he and his family were in hiding at his mother's house in Long Island. Later that night, D'Arco and his family entered WITSEC.[43]

The defections of both D'Arco and Chiodo opened the door for new murder indictments against Amuso and Casso.[39]

In a further violation of the Mafia's code, Chiodo's extended family in Brooklyn soon suffered retaliation from Amuso and Casso. On March 10, 1992, Vario Crew enforcer Michael Spinelli shot Chiodo's sister, Patricia Capozallo, while she was driving in Bensonhurst. Capozallo sustained bullet wounds in the arm, back and neck but survived.[44][45][46]

Also in 1993, Casso ordered George Zappola, Frank "Bones" Papagni, and Lucchese consigliere Frank Lastorino, to murder the Lucchese family's Bronx capo, Steven Crea.

Meanwhile, investigators from the Brooklyn District Attorney's office were using new technology to trace the location of cell phones. Frank Lastorino, they found, was regularly calling a cell phone near Budd Lake, New Jersey. The DA's Office informed FBI Agent Richard Rudolph, who arranged for a Federal warrant allowing Lastorino's phone to be tapped. As FBI Agents listened in, they recognized Casso's voice.[47] On January 19, 1993, Casso was arrested while coming out of the shower at the house he shared with his mistress, Rosemarie Billotti, in Mount Olive, New Jersey.[48][49]

As FBI Agents searched the house, they found a rifle, $340,000 in cash, a stack of FBI reports that had been provided to Amuso's defense attorneys, and meticulous paperwork about the inner workings of the Lucchese family.[50]

The paperwork included monthly tabulations of how much money Casso and Amuso had received from each of their criminal operations. Casso had also written down a detailed list of the Christmas tribute money he and Amuso had received from each Lucchese crew. There was also a neatly typed list of proposed made men, which was disguised as a list of wedding guests.[51]

Incarcerated boss

[edit]

Casso was held at New York's Metropolitan Correctional Center pending trial. Facing charges that would have all but assured he would die in prison, he continued ordering hits outside, but also began making escape plans.[52] One plan almost succeeded when a bribed guard cleared him through security. Casso nearly walked out of jail, but was spotted by another guard and thwarted at the last minute.[53] Afterwards, Casso began making plans for Lucchese members to find out what prison buses would be transporting him and arrange an ambush,[54] as well as assassinating the presiding judge, Eugene Nickerson, to buy himself more time.[53]

On February 2, 1993, the body of Frank Signorino, Peter Chiodo's uncle, was found frozen solid in the trunk of a car in East New York. Signorino had been slain by multiple gunshot wounds to the head, which was wrapped in a black plastic bag.[55][51]

On February 12, 1993, the Lucchese family burned down the garage of Annette Signorino, Peter Chiodo's 95-year-old grandmother, in Gravesend, Brooklyn. Chiodo later told the FBI, that he "couldn't believe someone would try to harm an old woman".[51]

Casso's power came undone when Amuso stripped Casso of his title of underboss, and declared that all Lucchese mafiosi should consider him a pariah—in effect, banishing Casso from the family.[56] Amuso had long been suspicious of Casso's failure to use his law enforcement contacts to find out who had betrayed him,[57] and finally concluded Casso did it himself to take control of the family.[53]

The two lead prosecutors on the case, Charles Rose and Gregory O'Connell, later told Jerry Capeci that they had hoped to use Sammy Gravano as a witness against Casso. Gravano refused, as he reportedly feared that Casso would start killing members of his extended family.[58]

Alphonse D'Arco, however, was reportedly very eager to testify against his former friend. According to FBI Agent Lucien Gandolfo, "He thought he was standing for what was right, but also for the old values that had been abandoned by the mob."[58]

Informant

[edit]

Facing the prospect of a trial at which D'Arco, Acceturo, and Chiodo were due to be star witnesses against him, as well as spending the rest of his life in prison, Casso reached out to FBI Agent Richard Rudolph and offered to turn informant. Casso was immediately moved to the Federal Prison at La Tuna, near El Paso, Texas and housed in the famous "Valachi Suite" as he debriefed.[59]

At the beginning of the first session, Casso joked, "Every time I stepped out of the house I committed a crime. You expect me to remember all of them?".[59] The agents urged Casso to start by revealing his "crystal ball."[59]

In response, Casso disclosed that decorated NYPD Detectives Stephen Caracappa and Louis Eppolito had been on his payroll and had committed eight murders under his orders. Casso further explained that Detectives Carracappa and Eppolito, who had also served on the Federal Organized Crime Strike Force, had also leaked the names of both Police and FBI informants, which had resulted in many other murders.[59]

Federal Prosecutors Charles Rose and Gregory O'Connell flew from New York City to Texas as the debriefing continued. Casso named scores of other mobsters he had conspired with, including Genovese boss Vincent Gigante. Casso also confessed to having sent hitmen to Federal Prosecutor Charles Rose's home with the intention of having him murdered. Casso also admitted to having plotted the assassination of Federal Judge Nickerson in order to delay his own trial.[60]

Casso initially confessed to twelve murders, but when pressed for details, he admitted to a further twenty-four. At the same time, Casso was found to have lied about how much money he possessed. He also denied all involvement in the murder of Peter Chiodo's uncle or in the arson at the home of Chiodo's elderly grandmother. Increasingly sceptical, the FBI Agents made Casso take a lie detector test, which he failed.[61]

Gregory O'Connell later told Jerry Capeci that the decision not to use Casso as a witness was made in the Valachi Suite, while Casso, "with apparent delight", gleefully laughed as he described how he buried alive a young drug smuggling associate in the Florida Everglades.[62]

As Casso spoke, Federal Prosecutors O'Connell and Rose, "read each other's thoughts. The story would probably not go over well with a jury." Both prosecutors flew back to New York City convinced that Casso's knowledge of Mafia secrets did not matter. O'Connell later told Capeci, "It gets to a point where somebody is just too evil to put on the stand."[63]

Casso finalized a plea agreement at a hearing on March 1, 1994, where he pleaded guilty to 70 crimes, including racketeering, extortion and 15 murders.[2] The two lead prosecutors on the case, Charles Rose and Gregory O'Connell, later said they'd feared Casso could be acquitted at trial, since they did not have any taped conversations as evidence. However, with Casso's guilty plea, O'Connell said they had Casso "tied up six ways to Sunday."[53][3] While remaining in prison, Casso was placed in the witness protection program.

According to Carlo, when Casso revealed that he also had an FBI Agent on the payroll, prosecutors ordered him to keep quiet. Casso alleges that he further enraged the US government by accusing Gambino turncoat Sammy Gravano, who had denied ever having dealt in drugs, of buying large amounts of cocaine, heroin, and marijuana from Casso over two decades. However, Casso was vindicated to some extent when Gravano pleaded guilty in 2000 to operating a massive narcotics ring, which included selling ecstasy to adolescents.[64] He was the second confessed underboss of a New York crime family to break his blood oath and turn informer, after Gravano.

In 1998, Casso was removed from the witness protection program after prosecutors alleged numerous infractions, in 1997, including bribing guards, assaulting other inmates and making "false statements" about Gravano and D'Arco. Casso's attorney tried to get Judge Frederic Block to overrule federal prosecutors in July 1998, but Block refused to do so.[65][66] Shortly afterward, Judge Block sentenced Casso to 455 years in prison without possibility of parole—the maximum sentence permitted under sentencing guidelines.[67][66]

Casso later told The New York Times' organized-crime reporter Selwyn Raab that, before turning informer, he was seriously considering a deal that would have allowed him the possibility of parole after 22 years. "I help them and I get life without parole," he said. "This is really a fuckin' joke".[68] Casso lost two subsequent appeals to get his sentence reduced.[66]

In a 2006 letter to Carlo, Casso declared,

Dearest Carlo

I am truly regretful for my decision to cooperate with the Government. It was against all my beliefs and upbringing. I know for certain, had my father been alive, I would never have done so. I have disgraced my family heritage, lost the respect of my children and close friends, and most probably added to the sudden death of my wife and confidant for more than 35 years. I wish the clock could be turned back only to bring her back. I have never in my life informed on anyone. I have always hated rats and as strange as it may sound I still do. I surely hate myself, day after day. It would have definitely been different if the Government had honest witnesses from inception. I would have had a second chance to start a new life, and my wife Lillian would still be alive. It seems that the only people the Government awards freedom to are the ones who give prejudiced testimony to win convictions. "The truth will set you free", means nothing in the Federal courts. Even at this point in my life, I consider myself to be a better man than most of the people on the streets these days. With contempt and disdain

Tony Gaspipe[69]

Incarceration and death

[edit]

Casso began serving his sentence at the supermax prison ADX Florence in Florence, Colorado. Casso was transferred to the Federal Medical Center (FMC) at the Federal Correctional Complex in Butner, North Carolina, for the treatment of prostate cancer in March 2009.[70] He was returned to ADX Florence in July 2009. In 2013, Casso was transferred to the Federal Residential Reentry Management Office in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[71] This was not a prison facility, but an administrative designation for inmates assigned to home confinement, "halfway houses", or state and county correctional facilities.[71]

As of May 2018, he had been transferred to the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners, an administrative security/medical prison in Springfield, Missouri.[71] He was later transferred to USP Terre Haute. From March 25, 2020, he was serving his sentence at USP Tucson, a high security prison in Arizona.[71][72] In his later years, Casso had developed complications related to prostate cancer, coronary artery disease, kidney disease, hypertension, bladder disease and lung issues from years of smoking.[72]

On November 5, 2020, Casso tested positive for COVID-19 while incarcerated, amidst the pandemic in Arizona. He was placed in medical isolation at USP Tucson.[72][73] On November 9, he was transported to a local hospital due to respiratory distress, and on November 17, 2020, was put on a ventilator.[72] His lawyers requested compassionate release, but that motion was rejected on November 28.[74] Casso died from complications related to COVID-19 on December 15, 2020, at the age of 78.[72][74]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ackman, Dan (March 17, 2006). "Dispatches From a Mob Trial". Dispatches. Slate. Retrieved September 27, 2011.
  2. ^ a b leagle.com (June 29, 1998). "U.S. v. Casso". Leagle.com. Retrieved November 16, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Peterson, Helen (July 1, 1998). "Wiseguy Won't Get Fed Aid On Sentence". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on June 9, 2012. Retrieved August 7, 2011.
  4. ^ Raab 2005, pp. 507–09.
  5. ^ Capeci, Jerry (June 12, 1997). "Mob Turncoat's Sentence Reduced". New York Daily News – via www.nydailynews.com.
  6. ^ Carlo 2008, p. 46.
  7. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 42-43.
  8. ^ Carlo 2008, pp. 185–86.
  9. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 252–254.
  10. ^ Raab 2005, p. 147.
  11. ^ Carlo 2008, pp. 85–86.
  12. ^ National Council on Crime and Delinquency – 1969 Volume 44. (Page 147) see Vincent Foceri
  13. ^ a b c d e Raab, Selwyn (October 4, 2016). Five Families The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. St. Martin's Publishing Group. p. 472. ISBN 9781250101709. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  14. ^ a b c Carlo 2008, pp. 134–36.
  15. ^ a b Raab 2005, pp. 371–75.
  16. ^ a b Raab 2005, pp. 473–75.
  17. ^ a b c d Raab, Selwyn (October 4, 2016). Five Families The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. St. Martin's Publishing Group. p. 477. ISBN 9781250101709. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  18. ^ Raab 2005, p. ?.
  19. ^ Raab, Five Families, page 489.
  20. ^ Carlo 2008, p. 120
  21. ^ a b Carlo 2008, p. 152.
  22. ^ a b Carlo 2008, p. 153.
  23. ^ a b Russian Organized Crime in the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1996. ISBN 9780160536328. p. 45
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  25. ^ Friedman 2000, p. 55.
  26. ^ Raab, p. 500
  27. ^ Marriott, Michel (May 28, 1992). "Mob Witness Talks of Murder as Management Tool". New York Times. Retrieved November 1, 2011.
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  29. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 209-212.
  30. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 213-214.
  31. ^ Raab, p. 495
  32. ^ "Window Case Figure Shot and Wounded by Pair of Gunmen" New York Times May 9, 1991
  33. ^ "People Do Whatever They Feel Like" New York Magazine Jan 9, 1995 page 26
  34. ^ Raab, p. 497.
  35. ^ "Witness in Bid Rigging Case Tells of Mob Threat to his Wife's Life" New York Times September 17, 1991
  36. ^ Raab 2005, pp. 496–98.
  37. ^ Raab, pp. 498-499
  38. ^ McQuiston, John (July 30, 1991). "Fugitive In Mob Case Is Arrested". The New York Times. Retrieved August 26, 2012.
  39. ^ a b Raab 2005, pp. 499–501.
  40. ^ Volkman 1998, p. 281.
  41. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 238-239.
  42. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 243-249.
  43. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Pages 1-11.
  44. ^ "HIT TARGET RECALLS HOW SHE DUCKED RUBOUT ATTEMPT"[permanent dead link] New York Daily News November 4, 1998
  45. ^ "MOBSTER TRIAL OPENS WITH TOILET TALK"[permanent dead link] New York Daily News November 3, 1998
  46. ^ Carlo (2008), page 228.
  47. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 437.
  48. ^ Raab 2005, p. 511.
  49. ^ Carlo (2008), pages 252-254.
  50. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 437-438.
  51. ^ a b c Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 438.
  52. ^ Lawson & Oldham 2007, p. 257.
  53. ^ a b c d Raab 2005, pp. 512–14.
  54. ^ Lawson & Oldham 2007, pp. 261–62.
  55. ^ "Uncle of Mafia Informant is Found Slain in Brooklyn" New York Times February 3, 1993
  56. ^ Raab 2005, pp. 512–514.
  57. ^ Lawson & Oldham 2007, p. 264.
  58. ^ a b Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 440.
  59. ^ a b c d Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 441.
  60. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Pages 441-442.
  61. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 442.
  62. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Pages 442-443.
  63. ^ Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins (2015), Mob Boss: The First Boss to turn Government Witness, St. Martin's Press. Page 443.
  64. ^ Carlo 2008, p. ?.
  65. ^ Raab, Selwyn (July 1, 1998). "Plea Deal Rescinded, Informer May Face Life". The New York Times – via nytimes.com.
  66. ^ a b c "Mafia Informer's 2nd Appeal Says His Plea Deal Was Undercut". The New York Times. November 23, 2000.
  67. ^ Raab 2005, p. 522.
  68. ^ Raab 2005, p. 525.
  69. ^ Carlo 2008, p. 337.
  70. ^ Blumenthal, Ralph (February 21, 2009). "Mobster Makes Offer on French Connection Case". The New York Times. Retrieved November 23, 2012.
  71. ^ a b c d "Inmate Locator". www.bop.gov. Archived from the original on June 29, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2011.
  72. ^ a b c d e "Inmate Death at USP Tucson" (PDF). bop.gov. December 16, 2020.
  73. ^ "Jailed mobster Anthony 'Gaspipe' Casso has COVID-19, judge rejects motion for release". nydailynews.com. November 30, 2020.
  74. ^ a b "Mobster Anthony 'Gaspipe' Casso, who murdered dozens and caught COVID-19 behind bars, dead at 78". nydailynews.com. December 16, 2020.

Works cited

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Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Business positions
Preceded by Lucchese crime family
Underboss

1989–1993
Succeeded by