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Arthur “Artie” Nigro Archives – About The Mafia

Genovese crime family mobsters who were convicted back in 2011 of the murder of former Springfield mafia boss Adolfo…

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Source: aboutthemafia.com

Date Published: 3/28/2021

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More Inside Dope On Springfield Crew’s Geas Brothers and …

The hammer fell on the Geas brothers and Nigro after a three-week trial in New … Genovese acting boss Artie Nigro, who ran Springfield.

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Source: www.cosanostranews.com

Date Published: 1/26/2021

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About The Mafia – Arthur “Artie” Nigro

He would go on to testify at two separate trials sending two of his former crew along with former New York Mafia based acting Genovese family boss Arthur “Artie …

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Source: nigro53.rssing.com

Date Published: 11/28/2021

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116th Street Crew – Wikipedia

The 116th Street Crew, also known as the Uptown Crew, is a group of Italian-American … Acting 2004–2008 – Arthur “Artie” Nigro (released from prison in 2010.

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Source: en.wikipedia.org

Date Published: 5/12/2022

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Arthur “Artie” Nigro, 66, of the Bronx, NY, guilty of murder

Arthur “Artie” Nigro, 66, of the Bronx, N.Y., guilty of murder · View 89 · Download 5 · Category. Documents.

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Violent past of Fotios ‘Freddy’ Geas accused of killing Whitey …

Geas and his brother were offered the chance of a reduced sentence in return for informing on mob boss Arthur ‘Artie’ Nigro (pictured), but flatly refused.

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주제와 관련된 더 많은 사진을 참조하십시오 Peaky Blinders‬ S03E05 / Alfie Solomons \”apologizes\” to Arthur Shelby. 댓글에서 더 많은 관련 이미지를 보거나 필요한 경우 더 많은 관련 기사를 볼 수 있습니다.

Peaky Blinders‬ S03E05 / Alfie Solomons \
Peaky Blinders‬ S03E05 / Alfie Solomons \”apologizes\” to Arthur Shelby

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  • Author: Dave Fury
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  • Date Published: 2016. 6. 7.
  • Video Url link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1-KhODAwQs

Arthur “Artie” Nigro Archives

New York based gangster John Bologna has been sentenced to eight years in prison for his part in the…

More Inside Dope On Springfield Crew’s Geas Brothers and Artie Nigro

Scotto went to prison after informants identified him as a capo in the Gambino crime family. Scotto got five years and was released in 1984 and avoided indictment for the rest of his life. A source told us Scotto decided to retire after departing prison, though turncoat Salvatore (Sammy the Bull) Gravano named Scotto as a member of the Gambino family in the 1990s.

D

uring Arillotta’s testimony he mentioned a shooting that occurred outside of a bar in Springfield. Arillotta said this shooting involved Freddy and Ty. After the trial was done for the day, we escorted the Geas brothers and (Arthur) Nigro back into the holding area and down the elevator into the cellblock. Once we reached the cellblock, we—me and a contract guard, also known as a district security officer—were preparing to walk them over to MCC. (In the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York, DSOs are primarily comprised of retired NYPD cops that work on an hourly basis for the US Marshals Service going to court and transporting prisoners.) The particular DSO I was with that day was Clarence Cash. Cash subsequently—in 2011—shot and killed his wife. Our head marshal at the time, Joe Guccione, successfully kept the fact that Cash worked for the marshals out of the newspapers. I knew Cash to be a heavy gambler. ( As for Cash shooting his wife, the Daily News reported in 2011 : “A hulking ex-cop riddled his wife with bullets in their Queens apartment, furiously shooting her repeatedly in the face before meekly surrendering to police…” The wife, Tracey Young, was 42 when she died at around 11 p.m. at night from four shots to the torso and three to the face. The murder happened inside the eighth-floor Briarwood condo where the couple lived. As for motive, Cash, a retired cop from the 32nd Precinct in Harlem who married Young two years prior, told police he shot her after a romantic evening went sour, “going from candles and backrubs to yelling.”)Cash and I overheard Ty say to Freddy, in sum and substance, that Arillotta’s description of the caliber used for a particular shooting was not the correct caliber that was ACTUALLY used. Cash and I looked at each other in astonishment. Ty tried to continue his argument to Freddy that Arillotta could somehow be impeached as a witness if the actual caliber used from that shooting could somehow be verified. The shooting Arillotta testified about happened many years before the trial and went unsolved with the Springfield PD. Freddy, realizing that this argument clearly incriminated them, looked at Ty and told him to “shut the fuck up” through clenched teeth. I could see escalating tension between the two of them. Nigro would just stand there, as always, staring forward. No emotion, no opinion on the trial.The only time he would speak would be his daily joke in the elevator. It was always long and never funny. Ty and Freddy would always give a fake laugh, which indicated to me that they viewed him as someone they needed to placate.Side note about Nigro : One marshal named Jay, who was not assigned to the trial, worked as a BOP officer at Fort Dix in the same housing unit as Nigro years before. Jay told me that Nigro was respected tremendously inside the housing unit. Another inmate would always make his bunk (bunks always needed to be made at the Fort Dix camp). Jay told me another Italian inmate would always collect Nigro’s mail for him, something that was against BOP policy but Jay would allow it for continuity and peace within the housing unit. One day, one of the Italian inmates became verbally abusive with Jay over a routine cell search. Jay then announced to the housing unit that inmates were no longer allowed to collect mail on behalf of other inmates and that every inmate collecting mail had to wait in line with their ID. The next day, the verbally abusive Italian came to Jay with black eyes and a swollen face. Jay said it was clear he had been beaten up. The Italian inmate apologized to Jay and asked him to allow inmates to collect mail on behalf of other inmates again. Jay said ok. Jay explained that he regularly used inmates to police themselves in situations like this.

Arthur “Artie” Nigro – About The Mafia

Genovese crime family mobsters who were convicted back in 2011 of the murder of former Springfield mafia boss Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno have filed fresh appeals to have their life sentences vacated. Bruno was killed back in 2003 gun downed in a parking lot by a gunman acting on the orders or former Genovese family boss Arthur “Artie” Nigro, who was making a power play to take control of area rackets according to the feds. The Springfield mafia crew operated under the Genovese family of the New York mafia and was decimated by the convictions which followed Bruno’s murder. Three men were convicted of multiple murders which included Bruno which included Nigro and brothers Fotios “Freddy” Geas and Ty Geas.

“John Bologna (left) and Adolfo Bruno (right)“

According to witnesses in the case Nigro gave the green light on the Bruno hit and was pulling the strings from New York. The feds with the aid of turncoat co-conspirators were able to make their case and all three men received life sentences. Now these new motions mainly the one filed on behalf of Nigro are calling into question both key witnesses, former mobster John Bologna and wealthy Springfield businessman James Santaniello and the previous defenses handling of them. Bologna was a mid level mobster and Nigro’s former right hand man who jumped between crime families while also acting as an informant for the FBI since 1996. Nigro’s new lawyer claims his previous counsel fell short in many areas in his clients defense, including failing to make more of Bologna’s cross-examination.

Bologna worked as an informant for 14 years before being disavowed by the feds only after his role in the Bruno murder came to light via other witnesses. In the latest appeal a lawyer for Nigro labeled Bologna as the FBI New York office’s Whitey Bulger stating the feds knew about his criminal dealings during his 14 years as an informant and even tipped him off to mob investigations in Springfield according to previous reports. Nigro’s new defense is arguing that Bologna had orchestrated various extortion schemes in Springfield and was the one who actually ordered the hit on Bruno and not Nigro. An FBI agent who testified at the Nigro trial claimed that Bologna simply hid information about his criminal activities during briefings.

These last ditch motions are seen as long shots to get their life sentences set aside.

116th Street Crew

Faction of the Genovese crime family

For other uses, see 116th Street

The 116th Street Crew,[2] also known as the Uptown Crew,[3] is a group of Italian-American mobsters within the Genovese crime family. In the early 1960s, Anthony Salerno became one of the most powerful capos in the family. Salerno based the crew in the Palma Boys Social Club located at 416 East 115th Street in East Harlem, Manhattan. By the late 1970s and early 1980s, the 116th Street Crew had absorbed and initiated many former members of the vicious East Harlem Purple Gang, an Italian-American murder for hire and drug trafficking gang operating in 1970s Italian Harlem and acting generally independent of the Mafia.

History [ edit ]

The 116th Street Mob [ edit ]

In the early 1890s, a group of four brothers (Giuseppe Morello, and his half-brothers Nicholo, Vincenzo and Ciro Terranova) arrived in New York City from Corleone, Sicily.[1] The Morello-Terranova brothers soon started taking over the growing Little Italy in East Harlem, by using the black hand technique of extorting small business and running illegal gambling operations. The group became known as the 116th Street Mob (or Morello gang). With their increasing power the Morello’s sought to control Lower Manhattan’s Little Italy. The Little Italy in lower Manhattan was under the control of Ignazio “Lupo the Wolf” Saietta,[4] Before a gang war erupted, the two sides decided on joining forces. Giuseppe Morello became the Capo di tutti capi (or boss of bosses), but before long he and Ignazio Saietta were arrested and charged with counterfeiting in 1910. In 1910 The Lomonte Brothers cousins of Morello ran East Harlem till 1915, Fortunto Lomonte killed 1914 on East 108th st., Tomasso Lomonte killed 1915 on East 116th st[1][5][6]

Nicholo Morello took over and became embroiled in the Mafia-Camorra War.[1][7] This conflict was between the Sicilian Morello-Terranova family and Brooklyn Camorra gangs led by Pellegrino Morano. Each side wanted to completely control all the Italian gangs in New York City and across the United States. On September 7, 1916 Nicholas Terranova was murdered, giving the Camorra gangs the advantage.[1][7] The next leaders of the Morello family were brothers Vincenzo and Ciro. They continued the war and within months police began arresting top members of the Camorra gangs.[7] This allowed the Sicilians to maintain dominance and control over New York City and the remaining Camorra gangs joined forces with Sicilian gangs.[7] Vincent continued operating from Brooklyn, and Ciro continued expanding his operations in East Harlem and The Bronx.[1][5][7]

The Artichoke King [ edit ]

Ciro “The Artichoke King” Terranova controlled the 116th Street Crew during the prohibition era. In his later years, after being “encouraged” by younger gangsters to retire in 1935 and subsequently declaring bankruptcy and losing his Pelham Manor home to foreclosure, Terranova and his wife moved into the building long owned by the Morello-Terranova family at 338 East 116th Street (the headquarters of the Ignatz Florio Co-operative Association).[8]

Coppola’s policy racket [ edit ]

Michael “Trigger Mike” Coppola was a top lieutenant in the 116th Street Crew of Ciro Terranova. He took over the crew sometime between 1932 and 1936, after Terranova was “put on the shelf” (i.e. forced into retirement) by the new Luciano-Genovese-Costello regime of the Luciano crime family. Coppola was also supervising the illegal numbers racket that was once controlled by Dutch Schultz before his murder. The numbers racket controlled bookmaking and illegal gambling throughout Harlem and The South Bronx, making thousands of dollars a year.

When boss Vito Genovese was imprisoned in the late 1950s, various influential members began running the crime family through a ruling panel/committee. The panel consisted of acting/front boss Thomas “Tommy Ryan” Eboli, underboss Gerardo “Gerry” Catena and consigliere Michele “Big Mike” Miranda, while others served in the advisory capacity. Mike Coppola, an influential capo, also helped the panel. In the early 1960s, Mike Coppola was imprisoned on tax evasion charges and followed in the footsteps of his predecessor Ciro Terranova, being put on the shelf after his release from prison in 1963. Coppola later moved to South Florida and effectively retired. His crew, with his vast illegal interests went to Anthony Salerno.

Palma Boys crew [ edit ]

Anthony Salerno

Anthony “Fat Tony” Salerno started as a soldier in the 1930s under capo “Trigger Mike” Coppola. As the years went by, Salerno worked his way up the ranks of the crew and the crime family, controlling his own lucrative gambling and loansharking operations. In the early 1960s, his capo Coppola was imprisoned on tax evasion charges and demoted in rank. The crew then split, allowing Coppola’s top lieutenants to break up his vast illegal interests that included his numbers empire. Salerno based the 116th Street Crew from the Palma Boys Social Club located at 416 East 115th Street in East Harlem.

Salerno, and his brother Cirino (known as “Charles” or “Charlie Speed”) led the crew, operating in Italian Harlem and the Bronx. The Salerno brothers oversaw a multimillion-dollar gambling racket based in East Harlem that expanded into the South Bronx. Salerno’s gambling empire included numbers, bookmaking and floating dice games. Even when the East Harlem neighborhood went from a predominantly Italian to a predominantly black neighborhood, Salerno managed to hold onto their interests and employ over 200 people in their street rackets.

FBI surveillance photo in the 1980s of the Palma Boys Social Club

Salerno was a highly respected and feared gangster, and a well-known New York Mafia powerhouse who continued to rise through the ranks of the Genovese crime family becoming consigliere from 1972–75, underboss in 1975, and eventually the acting–front boss from 1981-86. In the late 1970s, the FBI managed to place a listening device in his East Harlem headquarters, the Palma Boys Social Club. By the early 1980s, Salerno had been caught on the bug discussing crime family affairs and business with various members, including top underlings such as capo Matthew “Matty the Horse” Ianniello, Salerno driver and right-hand-man Vincent “Fish” Cafaro, and even Lucchese crime family boss Anthony “Tony Ducks” Corallo, whose own Jaguar, where Corallo conducted much of his affairs, had also been bugged. In February 1985, the information obtained through the FBI bug was used to eventually indict Salerno and the bosses of New York’s Five Families, who sat on The Commission. The Mafia Commission Trial began in September 1986 and ended in November. Tony Salerno, along with five other New York bosses were convicted under the RICO statute and sentenced to 100 years in prison in January 1987.

Bellomo era [ edit ]

Liborio “Barney” Bellomo took over the crew in the early 1980s, operating in Harlem and the Bronx. In the early 1990s, Bellomo was promoted to street boss for imprisoned boss Vincent “The Chin” Gigante. On July 27, 1992, former capo Anthony Salerno died in prison. Bellomo was imprisoned, and various acting leaders such as Frank “Farby” Serpico and Ernest “Ernie” Muscarella controlled the crew.

Historical leadership [ edit ]

Caporegimes [ edit ]

References [ edit ]

Arthur “Artie” Nigro, 66, of the Bronx, N.Y., guilty of murder

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Is this guy related to former medical examiner and sex predator Geno Nigro?????

Violent past of Fotios ‘Freddy’ Geas accused of killing Whitey Bulger

The former hitman accused of beating Whitey Bulger to death in prison had a reputation for extreme violence as he rose through the Mafia’s ranks in the 2000s.

Fotios ‘Freddy’ Geas, 51, was serving a life sentence for the murders of Gary Westerman and Adolfo ‘Big Al’ Bruno when he allegedly helped beat Bulger to death with a lock in a sock and partially gouged out his eyes with a shiv on Tuesday.

Those who knew Geas described him as a feared killer around his hometown of Western Springfield, Massachusetts, who was prone to outbursts of violence and operated alongside his younger brother, Ty.

Fotios ‘Freddy’ Geas, now 51 (pictured left and right in the late 2000s), is the former mob muscle-man suspected of beating Whitey Bulger to death in prison on Tuesday

Geas (far right) and brother Ty (center) worked as muscle for Mafia boss Anthony Arillotta (second left), carrying out beatings and killings at his behest

Being Greek, the pair grew up outside of Mafia circles but quickly became associated with organised crime following their first convictions.

Those came in 1989 when, aged just 17, Ty Geas fired a rifle into the air during a brawl at a high school hockey game and was sent to jail, Mass Live reports.

Freddy, then aged 22, exhibited what would become a lifelong hatred of ‘rats’ when he threatened to murder a witness against his brother, and was also jailed.

While inside, Ty met and befriended Anthony Arillotta, and up-and-coming Mafia figure who recruited the brothers as ‘muscle’.

Over the course of the next two decades the brothers went to work for Arillotta, racking up a total of 75 convictions between them by the late 2000s, including beatings, vandalism, and robbery.

They were never inducted into the Mafia themselves, because all ‘made’ men must have Italian blood, but were known as Arillotta’s close associates.

Indeed, the brothers helped the aspiring Arillotta ascend through the ranks of the Mafia by whacking his enemies and rivals within it.

On the night of November 4, 2003, the pair murdered Arillotta brother-in-law, their former friend and low-level criminal Gary D Westerman because they correctly suspected he was a ‘rat’.

They carried out the murder by luring Westerman to what he believed was a marijuana stash-house with the promise they were going to rob it.

In 2003 Geas murdered Gary D Westerman (left), Arillotta’s brother-in-law, by shooting him in the head and beating him with shovels. A few weeks later he ordered a hitman to take out Adolfo ‘Big Al’ Bruno (right), who was shot repeatedly in the head and groin

Westerman showed up with a ski mask and a stun gun ready for the raid, but was instead shot twice in the head by the Geas brothers.

The pair then attempted to drag his body to a freshly-dug grave in the back yard, but Westerman somehow survived the bullet wounds and broke free.

Not to be deterred, the murder team – which included Arillotta and another associate, Emilio Fusco – beat him to death with shovels and buried him.

Just a few weeks later Freddy Geas was told to whack Adolfo ‘Big Al’ Bruno, Arillotta’s boss, who he wanted out of the way because he was not making enough money, and out of suspicion that he was also an informant.

After getting permission for the murder from high-ranking mob boss Arthur Nigro, the task was passed to Geas.

Geas and his brother were offered the chance of a reduced sentence in return for informing on mob boss Arthur ‘Artie’ Nigro (pictured), but flatly refused

Rather than carry out the killing himself, Geas paid hitman Frank Roche $10,000 to take out Bruno.

On November 23, Roche walked up to Bruno as he was leaving the Our Lady of Mount Carmel club in Springfield and called out his name.

When Bruno turned, Roche shot him six times in the head and groin, killing him.

Geas also acted as the getaway driver in the attempted murder of Bronx union boss Frank Dabado, who was shot nine times in the same year, but survived.

Nigro had ordered that Dabado be killed after the pair got into a fight over some Tony Bennett concert tickets.

However, the criminal enterprise fell apart when both Roche and Arillotta turned informant in order to bring down the Geas brothers and Nigro.

Prosecutors did attempt to flip Freddy Geas, but according to his defense lawyer Daniel D. Kelly, he simply refused.

‘He didn’t even blink an eye. He didn’t flinch. He just said no,’ Kelly said.

The trio were put on trial and in 2011 were each given life sentences for their parts in the murders of Westerman and Bruno, as well as a host of other charges including racketeering.

On Monday, three inmates at US Penitentiary Hazelton in West Virginia dragged a wheelchair-bound Bulger into a corner and killed him.

According to reports, the men attempted to gouge his eyes out with a shiv and beat him over the head with a lock in a sock.

Geas is suspected of instigating the death of James ‘Whitey’ Bulger (pictured in 2011) in prison on Tuesday. The former gang boss was beaten to death with a lock inside a sock

Bulger ran the infamous Winter Hill Gang in south Boston between the 1970s and the 1990s (pictured here in mugshots from the 1980s)

Geas’s name quickly emerged as a potential killer, and according to the Boston Globe he has not denied his role.

He has also refused to help prison officials identify his co-conspirators.

Among potential suspects are Paul Weadick, 63, was sent to Hazelton this summer after his murder conviction alongside Francis ‘Cadillac Frank’ Salemme – Bulger’s co-defendant in a sweeping federal racketeering indictment in 1999.

Salamme and Weadick were convicted in June of the 1993 murder of Steven DiSarro, a nightclub owner in South Boston.

Bulger’s right-hand man, Stephen ‘The Rifleman’ Flemmi, was the star witness in the prosecution of Salamme and Weadick – though Flemmi also testified against Bulger himself in 2013.

Bulger was one of the FBI’s most wanted fugitives for 16 years until his 2011 arrest in Santa Monica, California.

His 2013 trial, which featured 72 witnesses and 840 exhibits, produced chilling testimony worthy of a pulp novel.

It heard harrowing tales of teeth being pulled from the mouths of murder victims to foil identification and the strangulation of a mobster’s girlfriend who ‘knew too much.’

The Federal Bureau of Prisons said in a statement Tuesday: ‘Life-saving measures were initiated immediately by responding staff. Mr. Bulger was subsequently pronounced dead by the Preston County Medical Examiner.’

The BOP said that no other staff or inmates were injured and that an investigation was underway.

In a statement, Bulger’s lawyer J.W. Carney Jr blasted the prison system over the mobster’s death.

‘He was sentenced to life in prison, but as a result of decisions by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, that sentence has been changed to the death penalty,’ he said.

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