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http://www.americanmafia.com/Feature_Articles_16.html

               November 1999

                      A Tale Of Two Men

               By Kenneth J. Prendergast - Journalist - Cleveland,
               Ohio



              Post-mortem on the FBI's sting of Cleveland-area
              law enforcement officers.

              A couple of days before Christmas 1997, in a corner of
              Ferfolia Funeral Home in suburban Cleveland, reputed
              Mafia associate Salvatore J. Vecchio conversed quietly
              with his longtime friend, the embattled municpal
              prosecutor Thomas G. Longo. On that day, the Sagamore
              Hills funeral parlor was hosting the wake for Mafia
              Lieutenant Thomas J. "The Chinaman" Sinito who had
              died in prison. Sinito was first cousin to Longo.

              While no one overheard what Vecchio and Longo talked
              about, both men were under the gun by law enforcement
              officials. Though they faced criminal charges, hindsight
              shows the two friends may have done some extraordinary
              things to avoid hard time. An analysis of the two men,
              their criminal records, alleged associates and possible
              related incidents suggest that one of the biggest
              Cleveland news stories in recent years may have been
              nothing more than smokescreen.

              "The last time I saw Sam (Vecchio) was at Tommy Sinito's
              wake, `cuz he was huddling with Mr. Longo," said a
              witness who didn't wish to be identified. "It wasn't long
              after that that the whole cop thing went down."

              On Jan. 21, 1998, Greater Cleveland was rocked by the
              news that 44 law enforcement officers were arrested in a
                        massive FBI sting of a police-protected drug
                        courier ring. Most of the police officers and jail
                        guards thought they were protecting drug
                        shipments for a mobster named John Amico.
              However, Amico was an undercover FBI agent.

              Unknown to most Clevelanders is that Amico and the rest
              of the FBI began its investigation in March 1995 by
              targeting a regional network of organized crime figures --
              the cop drug courier sting was simply an offshoot.

              It wasn't until late 1996 that Michael W. "Guido" Joye, a
              Cuyahoga County corrections officer, small-time drug
              dealer, and Mafia wanna-be met up with Amico and sold
              him crack cocaine. Federal officials and Joye's attorney,
              Henry F. DeBaggis, would not comment on how Joye
              came to meet up with Amico. Joye told the undercover
              agent he knew other law enforcement officers who could
              help Amico protect drug shipments and aid the organized
              crime associates Amico had been working with since
              1995, according to federal prosecutor James R. Wooley.
              Joye apparently thought those men were Amico's mob
              friends. The FBI took things from there, even going so far
              as to "induct" Joye into the Mafia. On Nov. 12, 1997, Joye
              thought he became a member of La Cosa Nostra
              (translated as "This Thing of Ours") in a fake ceremony
              carried out by Amico and other undercover FBI agents at
              a high-rise apartment building in Lakewood.

              Also unknown to most Clevelanders is that 15 organized
              crime figures (seven in Northeast Ohio alone, and eight
              others in Buffalo, Toledo and Toronto) were arrested
              before indictments were ever brought against the
              Cleveland-area cops.

              It was the largest organized crime bust in Cleveland in
              nine years (in 1989, two separate cases -- the East
              Cleveland Hotel Sterling gambling operation and the
              Little Italy Card Shop gambling den -- netted a combined
              total of 14 arrests and a half-dozen convictions). But, the
              arrest of a police officer for protecting drug shipments
              will always attract more news cameras, to say nothing of
              the attention gained by slapping handcuffs on 44 cops.

              Buried in the news of the arrests of so many cops were
              indictments brought against Salvatore Vecchio, 69, his
              sons James, 48, and John, 37, Salvatore's nephew Angelo
              Santamaria, 37, as well as alleged associates Charles
              Columbo, 48, Frank J. Velotta Jr., 37, and Joseph Zenchak,
              54. A review of their criminal records shows that several
              of these men have a history of organized crime-related
              activities.

              Most prominent is Salvatore Vecchio, known to his
              friends as Sam, and to his rivals as El Porko. In the
              legitimate world, Vecchio is a real estate developer, doing
              business as Development Properties, Creekwood
              Development, Developers Unlimited and other
              companies. His activities and those of his family and
              alleged associates were the first to be targeted by the
              FBI's sting in 1995, through mob imposter Amico.

              From that investigation, the elder Vecchio was convicted
              in Sept. 1998 on charges of money laundering, conspiracy,
              illegal sale of a firearm and unlawful possession of a
              firearm. His record goes back much farther, however.

              Vecchio first came under scrutiny by law enforcement
              during the 1970s bombing wars between the Cleveland
              Mafia and Irish mobster Danny Greene and his gang.
              Vecchio's Developers Unlimited held title to the car which
              convicted mobsters Joe Gallo and the late William "Moe"
              Kiraly allegedly drove in 1975 to go bomb Greene's
              Collinwood apartment.

              In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the Beachwood
              (Cleveland suburb) offices of Developers Unlimited
              reportedly hosted meetings of alleged mob associates,
              including the late racketeers Ronald Bey and Kiraly, as
              well as the surviving members of Greene's crew. These
              men, including Gallo, were convicted of various roles in a
              Cleveland drug ring which involved another 70
              unindicted co-conspirators. Vecchio was never convicted,
              let alone indicted for his alleged role in hosting the
              meetings. According to a federal indictment, the drug ring
              was responsible for the murders of five men who were
              either drug-ring rivals or were going to turn as
              informants.

              As part of a continuing investigation by the Cleveland
              Organized Crime Strike Force in the 1980s, more mobsters
              posed for mugshots, though Vecchio wasn't among them.
              Reputed Mafia member Russell J. Papalardo, associates
              John F. Absher, Ronald Anselmo, Sam M. Bontempo Jr.,
              Dominic C. Lonardo (the late brother of former Cleveland
              mob boss Angelo A. "Big Ange" Lonardo), Kenneth W.
              Odom, Salvatore P. Scalish (nephew of the late Cleveland
              don John Scalish), Lester R. "Skip" Williams, and others
              were arrested. Another decade would pass until the Drug
              Enforcement Administration officials would uncover
              business ties between Williams, a Florida resident, and
              the prosecutor Longo.

              Despite nearly a dozen lawsuits against Vecchio and his
              companies during the 1980s and much of the 1990s,
              Vecchio stayed out of criminal trouble. Then, undercover
              agent Amico approached Vecchio in 1995, seeking to
              launder $10,000. Dominos began to fall, including
              Vecchio, several relatives, and three reputed associates.
              The elder Vecchio, who successfully argued that he was in
              ill health, was sent to a minimum security prison for
              several years. Prosecutors complained Vecchio got off too
              easy, describing his prison surroundings as "a boy scout
              camp."

              Vecchio's oldest son James was convicted for money
              laundering, conspiracy, illegal sale of a firearm and
              unlawful possession of a firearm. James Vecchio worked
              for his father at Development Properties Inc. and in the
              1980s was involved with his father in a trucking firm
              named Flash Transportation & Leasing, according to
              records obtained from the Cuyahoga County Court of
              Common Pleas.

              John Vecchio, Salvatore's second son, was arrested for
              conspiracy to transport slot machines, which were
              delivered to a self-storage facility on West 117th Street in
              Cleveland. Reportedly, the slot machines came from
              Tennessee. He pleaded guilty in May 1998.

              Santamaria, Salvatore Vecchio's nephew, was charged
              with gambling, plus money laundering from illegal drug
              and weapons sales. Anthony J. Vegh, the attorney for
              Santamaria and John Vecchio, told Cleveland Plain Dealer
              reporter Michele Fuetsch that the government's case was
              nonsense.

              "These men are not members of any organized crime
              group, period," Vegh said in a Jan. 22, 1998 Plain Dealer
              article. Santamaria later pleaded guilty.

              The three reputed associates of Vecchio also pleaded
              guilty in May 1998 of their charges stemming from the
              FBI sting. Columbo had been charged with possession of
              a firearm by a felon. His prior felony conviction was in
              1974, for possession of a hallucinogenic drug for sale.

              Velotta's charges included money laundering and
              distributing crack cocaine. Velotta's criminal record
              included a far more serious incident. He, along with two
              other men -- Thomas C. DiBiase and Thomas J. Salvano --
              had been convicted for the 1981 firebombing of an East
              Side Cleveland home.

              Lastly, Zenchak's charges were for money laundering and
              conspiracy. A resident of the Youngstown suburb of
              McDonald, Zenchak was the only one of the seven
              Northeast Ohio organized crime figures arrested in the
              FBI sting who was not from Greater Cleveland.

              Thomas G. Longo, Salvatore Vecchio's friend, had his
              own damage to minimize before the cop drug courier ring
              went down. Unlike Vecchio, Longo was a public figure.
              Longo's high-profile resume listed him as the municipal
              prosecutor for three East Side suburbs -- Bedford,
              Highland Hills, and Chagrin Falls Township. The
              ambitious Longo wasn't planning on stopping there. In
              May 1997, Longo announced his candidacy for Bedford
              Municipal Court Judge. Thomas G. Longo should not be
              confused with Garfield Heights Mayor Thomas J. Longo.

              Less than five months after announcing his candidacy,
              Longo, along with Lester "Skip" Williams and an
              unknown third man were indicted on racketeering and
              drug charges. The indictment said they tried to buy a
              1,000-pound truck trailer-load of marijuana in March
              1996 in Buffalo from a federal undercover agent working
              for the Drug Enforcement Agency. Longo countered that
              he was framed by Williams, his old friend and a former
              client of his private law practice. With the federal
              indictment hanging over his head, Longo lost the race for
              municipal court judge.

              Things would soon turn in Longo's favor, however. The
              case in Buffalo against him suffered a serious setback
              when William Cope, 53, of Perry Township, a government
              witness against Longo, was found dead on Nov. 6, 1997.
              There was no evidence to suggest foul play.

              Months passed and, throughout 1998, as the cop drug
              courier ring came to the fore of the media and the courts,
              no trial was scheduled to hear the case against Longo.
              Instead, in January 1999, Williams was arrested for his
              alleged role in a 1985 hit on Ralph Barone, who may have
              been a courier for former drug-ring leader Zagaria.
              Barone was found shot to death Nov. 14, 1985 inside a
              rental car parked in the vicinity of East 52nd Street and
              Prospect Avenue, near downtown. The Mafia-financed
              Zagaria drug ring relied on rental cars to transport illegal
              drug shipments from Florida and Atlanta to Cleveland.

              Who tipped off the authorities to William's alleged hit on
              Barone? Zagaria had turned informant in the 1980s and
              helped convict local Mafia leaders "Big Ange" Lonardo,
              Sinito, Gallo, and other mob associates. The question is,
              did Zagaria come forward to help in the arrest of
              Williams, or did Longo offer incriminating evidence
              against his former client and alleged drug co-conspirator?
              In return, did Longo get a delayed trial or did he quietly
              plead down his charges? The media never noticed that the
              case against Longo wasn't progressing. Perhaps they were
              too preoccupied with the cop-protected drug courier
              operation.

              Another event begs several questions. Longo's son,
              Dominic, 27, pleaded guilty in April 1999 for the murder
              of Clevelander David Williams (no direct relationship
              between David Williams and Lester "Skip" Williams --
              Thomas Longo's former client -- has yet been found while
              researching this article). Exactly a year earlier, while his
              father's case seemed destined for the courtroom, Dominic
              Longo drugged David Williams, drove him to a high
              bridge over the New River Gorge in West Virginia, and
              threw him over the side.

              Prosecutors said the junior Longo was afraid Williams
              would expose his role in the theft of more than $150,000
              from a wealthy couple in Hunting Valley, an eastern
              Cleveland suburb. The younger Longo also was facing
              dozens of theft and drug trafficking charges for posing as
              a doctor to bring drugs into an Ohio prison. As part of his
              murder plea, all but one of the drug and theft charges
              were dropped. While there is no apparent connection
              between the incidents involving the Longos, the timing of
              the incidents are intriguing, particularly if a relationship
              between the two Williams can be established.

              Even more intriguing is the timing of the charges against
              Thomas Longo and Salvatore Vecchio, especially in light
              of the meeting between the two men witnessed at Ferfolia
              Funeral Home in late 1997.

              In March 1996, when Longo allegedly tried to buy the
              shipment of marijuana from a DEA agent in Buffalo,
              Vecchio, his family members, and their alleged associates
              had already been dealing with FBI undercover agent
              Amico for the past year, according to prosecutors. Did
              Longo or someone in Vecchio's crew learn soon thereafter
              that Amico was an FBI agent and set into motion a
              diversionary tactic? It should be noted that, six months
              after Longo was arrested in Buffalo, corrections officer
              Joye approached Amico to sell drugs and arranged the
              cop-protected drug shipments. The Ferfolia witness,
              along with a man near to Vecchio, argued that the FBI
              sting against the Cleveland-area cops was actually a
              campaign by both Vecchio and Longo to mitigate their
              own damages.

              "It's possible that El Porko (Vecchio) helped Mr. Longo do
              some trading," said Jack, the source close to Vecchio who
              didn't want his last name publicized. "Information for
              freedom as well as silence. Hence partners stay partners."

              "Maybe someone ratted out the cop thing in return for
              Longo being overlooked?" the Ferfolia meeting witness
              queried. "I certainly think by this time there should be
              some news about his (Longo's) plight. Now who could
              that someone have been, hmmm? The same thing
              happened years back in similar fashion with El Porko and
              his (Beachwood) property that he rented to Sinito and
              Gallo. All the dominos fell again but him! This is the issue
              of loyalty in it's pure essence regarding This Thing of
              Ours. It's similar to Gotti going down for hitting the Irish
              dude responsible for (the death of) Gambino's nephew.
              That is the acid test. The essence of Omerta!"

              END

              © 1999 Kenneth J. Prendergast





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                                        Copyright © 1999 PLR International


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