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A former Mafia family ended up here in Arizona after they left witness protection.

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Richard Cantarella – Wikipedia

Richard Cantarella (born 1944), also known as Shellackhead, was an American mobster who became a caporegime for the New York City-based …

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Richard Cantarella – Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias

Richard Cantarella, also known as “Shellackhead”, (b. 1944) was an New York mobster who became a caporegime for the Bonanno crime family and later a government …

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Bonanno Mafia family capo-turned-snitch now president of …

Richard Cantarella’s life is filled with twists and turns. Known by the nickname “Shellackhead,” he controlled the newsstands for New York’s …

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At home with the real mob of Arizona
At home with the real mob of Arizona

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  • Author: 12 News
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  • Date Published: 2017. 5. 19.
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Richard Cantarella

American mobster

Richard Cantarella (born 1944), also known as Shellackhead, was an American mobster who became a caporegime for the New York City-based Bonanno crime family and later a government witness.

Biography [ edit ]

Cantarella was born to Italian parents on the Lower East Side, Manhattan and raised in Knickerbocker Village, a public housing development that was home to many Bonanno family members. A skinny kid with jet-black hair, Cantarella got the name “Shellackhead” from his hair pomade. Cantarella was married to Lauretta Castelli and they had a son, Paul Cantarella.[1]

As a young man, Cantarella was introduced to the Bonanno family by his uncle, mobster Alfred Embarrato. Embarrato controlled the distribution center for the New York Post through local union of newspaper workers. In 1963, Embarrato obtained a job for Cantarella at the Post as a delivery truck driver. However, Cantarella and his cousin, Bonanno mobster Joseph D’Amico, actually served as enforcers on the newspaper’s loading docks, jobs they would perform for over thirty years. From 1988 until 1991, Cantarella was a so-called “tail man”, a worker who rides on the back of the delivery truck and unloads the newspaper bundles. However, Cantarella never showed up for work; he paid a laborer $20 a night to do his job while Cantarella collected his $700 a week in wages.[2]

Mazzeo execution [ edit ]

During the late 1970s, Cantarella became involved in criminal activities with Manhattan City Councilman Richard Mazzeo, the Director of Real Estate for the City of New York’s Marine and Aviation Department. Mazzeo dispensed leases for newsstands and parking lots at the Staten Island Ferry terminals in Lower Manhattan and Staten Island. In return for granting leases to certain individuals, Mazzeo received large kickbacks. Cantarella told Mazzeo that a newspaper vendor at the Lower Manhattan terminal was operating an illegal sportsbook operation. This information allowed Mazzeo to break the vendor’s lease and evict him. In return, Mazzeo installed Cantarella as the vendor’s replacement. By the 1980s, Cantarella controlled newspaper stands in both terminals. Cantarella and Mazzeo became close friends and briefly shared an apartment in Upper Manhattan. The two men made hundreds of thousands of dollars on their lease scams.

In 1983, Mazzeo lost his job as director, was convicted of tax evasion charges, and sent to jail for six months. Mazzeo started using illegal drugs and Cantarella started worrying that Mazzeo might become a government witness. After consulting with other Bonanno members, Cantarella decided to murder Mazzeo. On the evening of Nov. 14, 1983, Cantarella, Embarrato, D’Amico, and Patrick Romanello met Mazzeo at a sanitation garage in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Mazzeo was meeting them at the upstairs garage office about a possible job. As the men walked down the stairs, Cantarella shot Mazzeo in the head. After shooting and stabbing the body several times, they loaded it into a black plastic bag and dumped it. Mazzeo’s body was discovered five days later.

Mirra execution [ edit ]

In 1981, the Bonanno family was rocked by the revelation that one of their associates, Donnie Brasco, was actually a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) undercover agent named Joseph Pistone. Cantarella’s cousin Anthony Mirra was among those responsible for introducing Brasco into the family. After the family executed capo Dominick Napolitano, another Brasco friend, the terrified Mirra went into hiding.

Joseph Massino ordered Mirra’s two cousins Joseph D’Amico and Cantarella, and Alfred Embarrato. On February 18, 1982, D’Amico, lured him to a parking garage in Lower Manhattan. Embarrato and Cantarella were waiting in a getaway car. The pair went to the parking garage, climbed into Mirra’s car, and drove up to a locked security gate. D’Amico would later describe in a testimony, “He took out his key, put it in the box, but he didn’t get a chance to turn the box… I shot him at close range several times on the side of his head.”[3][4]

Family crime wave [ edit ]

Beginning in 1991, Cantarella started using his son as an accomplice in many of his criminal operations. In 1994, Cantarella and other mobsters kidnapped a wealthy businessman at his office, drove him home, forced him to deactivate the burglar alarm system, and robbed him of cash, jewelry and other valuables. They also forced the victim to start paying protection money to Cantarella.

Cantarella also extorted $250,000 from another businessman, using part of the money to purchase a Pontiac convertible automobile for Lauretta.

Perrino execution [ edit ]

In 1992, the State of New York started investigating allegations of racketeering and fraud at the New York Post. The target was the Bonanno family and its control of the newspaper. During the investigation, the family became concerned that Robert Perrino, a delivery superintendent at the paper, would cooperate with prosecutors. Perrino had been operating a number of criminal scams at the Post, victimizing both fellow employees and the company. Perrino’s main contact with the Bonanno family was Salvatore Vitale

Vitale approached Cantarella and asked him if he would murder Perrino. Vitale suggested to Cantarella that he could take Perrino’s job at the Post. Cantarella, a lifelong friend to Perrino, raised no objections. Vitale then told Bonanno consigliere Anthony Spero that Cantarella wanted to eliminate Perrino. Spero gave Cantarella permission. On May 5, 1992, Perrino was lured to a Bonanno club in Bensonhurst, where he was murdered. In December 2003, Perrino’s skeleton was excavated from the floor of a construction company in Staten Island. Perrino had been shot multiple times to the head.[5][6]

Cantarella was eventually convicted of grand larceny for his “no show” job at the Post and served seven months in prison.

Government witness [ edit ]

With Vitale’s conviction in 2001, Cantarella became acting underboss for the family. Unknown to Cantarella, however, he had become a target of an unorthodox FBI investigation. Jack Stubing, the head of the FBI’s Bonanno Squad, had been at a loss to find a way to bring down Massino. He ultimately persuaded his bosses to let him borrow Jeff Sallet and Kim McCaffrey, a pair of forensic accountants normally used on fraud cases, believing that they could pinpoint participants in the family’s money laundering schemes. He believed that enough conspirators would be frightened by the prospect of long prison terms that they would easily be willing to cooperate.[7]

After two years, the effort paid off when McCaffrey and Sallet discovered that Massino, Vitale and Cantarella were partners in several parking lots owned by parking lot mogul Barry Weinberg. Cantarella’s stake was held in the name of his wife, Lauretta. The Bonanno Squad put Weinberg under surveillance, and discovered Weinberg and one of his friends, restaurant owner Augustino Scozzari, frequently met with Cantarella and his crew. While this was going on, McCaffrey and Sallet found evidence that Weinberg hadn’t filed tax returns in over a decade—in the process, evading over $1 million in taxes. They collared him in January 2001 and told him that he was headed to prison unless he turned state’s evidence and obtained evidence against Bonanno mobsters. While being debriefed, Weinberg revealed that Cantarella had wrung a total of $1.25 million in extortion payoffs from him—much of it laundered through Scozzari’s restaurant. Confronted by the FBI, Scozzari also agreed to become an informant.[8]

Over the next few months, Weinberg and Scozzari recorded over 100 tapes of incriminating statements from Cantarella and his crew. While Cantarella broke off contact with Weinberg in the fall of 2001, he continued talking freely with Scozzari well into the summer of 2002—presumably because Scozzari was Italian. While talking with Scozzari, Cantarella made several incriminating statements about Massino.[9]

Largely on the strength of Weinberg and Scozzari’s tapes, on October 2, 2002, Cantarella was arrested and indicted on a 24-count RICO indictment. Among the specific acts were the Perrino murder, arson, kidnapping, loansharking, extortion, illegal gambling, and money laundering.[10] Lauretta and Paul Cantarella were also indicted on racketeering charges.

While in prison, Cantarella learned that capo Frank Coppa, also arraigned in the October roundup, had become the first member of the Bonanno family ever to become an informant. Coppa told investigators that Cantarella had bragged about his role in setting up the Perrino hit, as well as being the getaway driver in the Mirra hit. Realizing that Coppa’s testimony would all but assure that he would die in prison, in December 2002, Cantarella accepted a plea bargain deal and became a government witness. Lauretta and Paul also accepted plea deals. In early 2003, Massino realized that Cantarella had become an informant.[11]

In June 2004, Cantarella testified at Massino’s racketeering trial. Earlier, he’d told investigators that Massino was displeased with Vitale and wanted him whacked.[12] On the stand, he admitted his own role in the 1983 Mazzeo killing. Also in 2004, Cantarella testified that he attended the Bonanno family induction ceremony for Perry Criscitelli, who was then the president of the Feast of San Gennaro Association.[13] In July 2007, Cantarella testified at the murder and racketeering trial of Bonanno mobster Vincent Basciano.[14]

Leaving Witness Protection [ edit ]

In April 2017, Oxygen Channel launched Unprotected, a reality television program starring the Cantarella family, chronicling their attempt to start their lives over again after having opted out of Witness Protection.[15]

Further reading [ edit ]

Crittle, Simon, The Last Godfather: The Rise and Fall of Joey Massino Berkley (March 7, 2006) ISBN 0-425-20939-3

Richard Cantarella

Richard Cantarella, also known as “Shellackhead”, (b. 1944) was an New York mobster who became a caporegime for the Bonanno crime family and later a government witness.

Biography

Cantarella was born to a Mr. Cantarella from Giarre , Italy and Mrs. Mirra from Florence, Italy on the Lower East Side, Manhattan and raised in Knickerbocker Village , a public housing development that was home to many Bonanno family members. A skinny kid with jet-black hair, Cantarella got the name “Shellackhead” from the hair oil that he used. In 1963, Cantarella started working at the nearby ” New York Post ” distribution center as a delivery truck driver. The Bonanno family controlled the distribution center through a local union of newspaper workers. Cantarella and his cousin, Bonanno mobster Joseph D’Amico , would serve as “hired muscle” on the newspaper’s loading docks for over thirty years. Starting in 1988 and lasting until 1991, Cantarella became a so-called “tail man”, a worker who rides on the back of the delivery truck and unloads the newspaper bundles. However, Cantarella paid a laborer $20 a night to do the work while he collected his $700 a week in wages.

Cantarella is a brother to Frank Cantarella and cousin to Bonnano soldier Anthony Mirra and uncle to Bonanno soldier Joseph Padovano. Cantarella’s uncle is Bonanno capo Alfred Embarrato . Cantarella is married to Lauretta Castelli and is the father of Bonanno crime family mobster Paul Cantarella and daughter Tracey.

Entrepreneur

During the late 1970s, Cantarella became friends with Manhattan City councilman Richard Mazzeo , the Director of Real Estate for the City of New York ‘s Marine and Aviation Department. Mazzeo controlled the dispensing of leases for newsstands and parking lots at the terminals for the Staten Island Ferry , which commutes between Manhattan and Staten Island in New York Harbor . In return for granting leases, Mazzeo received large kickback s from the leasees. Cantarella had told Mazzeo that a newspaper vendor at the Lower Manhattan terminal was operating an illegal sportsbook operation. This information allowed Mazzeo to break the vendor’s lease and evict him. In return, Mazzeo installed Cantarella as the vendor’s replacment. By the 1980s, Cantarella controlled newspaper stands on both Staten Island and Manhattan. Cantarella and Mazzeo became close friends and briefly shared an apartment in Upper Manhattan . The two men made hundreds of thousands of dollars on their lease scams.

However, things changed in 1983. Mazzeo lost his job, was convicted of tax charges, and spent six months in jail. Mazzeo started using illegal drugs and Cantarella started worrying that Mazzeo might become a government witness. After consulting with other Bonanno members, Cantarella decided to murder Mazzeo. On the evening of Nov. 14, 1983, Cantarella, Embarrato, D’Amico, and Patrick Romanello met Mazzeo at a sanitation garage in Bushwick, Brooklyn . Mazzeo was meeting them at the upstairs garage office to see about getting a job. As the men walked down the stairs, Cantarella shot Mazzeo in the head. After shooting and stabbing the body several times, they loaded it into a black plastic bag and dumped it. The body was discovered five days later.

Executing his cousin Tony

In 1982, the Bonanno family was rocked by the revelation that one of their associates for several years, Donnie Brasco , was actually a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) undercover agent named Joseph Pistone . Cantarella’s cousin Mirra was among those responsible for introducing Brasco into the family. After the family executed capo Dominick Napolitano , another Brasco friend, the terrified Mirra went into hiding. Family boss Joseph Massino ordered Cantarella to murder Mirra. On February 18, 1982, Cantarella convinced Mirra to meet him at a parking garage in Lower Manhattan . As Cantarella and uncle Alfred Embarrato kept watch, D’Amico climbed into Mirra’s silver Volvo and shot him in the temple at point blank range.

Family crime wave

Beginning in 1991, Cantarella started using his son as an accomplice in many of his criminal operations. In 1994, Cantarella and other mobsters kidnapped a wealthy businessman at his office, drove him home, forced him to deactivate the burglar alarm system, and robbed him of cash, jewelry and other valuables. As part of the plan, they forced the victim to start paying protection money to Cantarella.

Cantarella also extorted $250,000 from another businessman, using part of the stolen proceeds to purchase a 1962 Pontiac convertible automobile for his wife.

“New York Post” investigation

In 1992, the State of New York started investigating allegations of racketeering and fraud at the “New York Post”. The target was the Bonanno family and its control of the newspaper. During the investigation, the family became concerned that Robert Perrino, a delivery superintendent at the paper, would cooperate with prosecutors. Perrino had been operating a number of criminal scams at the Post, victimizing both fellow employees and the company. Perrino’s main contact with the Bonanno family was Salvatore Vitale

Vitale approached Canterella and asked him if he would murder Perrino. Vitale suggested to Cantarella that he could take Perrino’s job at the Post. Cantarella, a lifelong friend to Perrino, raised no objections. Vitale then told Bonanno consigliere Anthony Spero that Cantarella wanted to eliminate Perrino. Spero gave Cantarella permission and the following week Perrino disappeared. In December 2003, Perrino’s skeleton was excavated from the floor of a construction company in Staten Island . Perrino had been shot multiple times to the head.

Government witness

With the imprisonment of Vitale in the early part of this decade, Cantarella became acting underboss for the family. However, in October 2002, Cantarella was himself indicted on racketeering charges that included the Perrino murder, arson , kidnapping , loansharking , extortion , illegal gambling , and money laundering. In December 2002, Perrino accepted a deal to avoid prison time and became a government witness along with his son Paul and his wife. In early 2003, the Bonanno family realized that Cantarella had become an informant.

In June 2004, Cantarella testified at the murder trial of Bonanno boss Joseph Massino, admitting in court his own role in the 1983 Mazzeo killing. In July 2007, Cantarella testified at the murder and racketeering trial of Bonanno mobster Vincent Basciano . As of 2008, it is assumed that Canterella and his family are part of a Witness Protection Program .

References

*Crittle, Simon, “The Last Godfather: The Rise and Fall of Joey Massino” Berkley (March 7, 2006) ISBN 0425209393

*”It’s A Family Affair” GangLand News The Online Column Jerry Capeci October 10, 2002

*”Feds: Yes, We Have Some Bonannos” GangLand News The Online Column Jerry Capeci January 9, 2003

External links

Bonanno Mafia family capo-turned-snitch now president of Arizona’s Italian American club

By Gangsters Inc. Editors

Richard Cantarella’s life is filled with twists and turns. Known by the nickname “Shellackhead,” he controlled the newsstands for New York’s Bonanno crime family and worked his way up to become a capo. Confronted with life in prison, he decided to snitch. Now, he is president of the Arizona Italian American Club in Phoenix.

Despite being branded a “rat” by his former mob colleagues, Cantarella (photo above by Alex Gould/The Republic) isn’t hiding. Matter of fact, after a flopped reality tv show in 2017, he recently did an in-depth interview with The Arizona Republic.

He posed for several photos – alongside his son Paul, who was also connected, and his grandson – and talks openly about his crimes and the regrets he has.

Such as the murder of Rick Mazzeo.

Killing your friend

“Word came back to us he was cooperating with the government and coming after me,” Cantarella told The Arizona Republic. “So the proper people gave me the OK to do what had to be done.”

In the late 1970s, Mazzeo began working as director of New York’s Department of Marine and Aviation, where he dispensed leases for the newsstands and parking lots at the Staten Island Ferry terminals.

Cantarella controlled newsstands for the Bonanno family because it exerted influence over the newspaper deliverers’ union. The two men were bound to cross paths. But it wasn’t strictly business. They became friends, their wives did too, he tells the Arizona Republic.

But when Mazzeo lost his job as director and did six months for tax evasion, things took a turn for the worse. He got hooked on cocaine and was seen as a liability by the Mafia. Addicts tended to talk, no?

After getting the okay, Cantarella shot his friend in the head in a Brooklyn parking garage.

“Out of three people, he’s the one that I regret with all my heart,” he told The Arizona Republic. “He wasn’t a bad guy. He was an average working man. He lived a very fast life and he went downhill.”

Shellackhead becomes a rat

After the feds busted him in 2002, Cantarella realized he needed an out. “Everybody makes an excuse why they cooperated,” he said. “I have no excuse. I didn’t want to spend the rest of my life in jail.”

He wasn’t the only one in the Bonanno family with that attitude. His boss, Joseph Massino, did the same, sending shockwaves through the New York underworld.

For these guys living “the life” wasn’t what they hoped it would be. But talking about “the life” never gets old and offers interesting opportunities – from a get-out-of-jail-free card to a reality show and everything that comes with it.

How did he end up as president of the Arizona Italian American Club? Find out at The Arizona Republic.

For more on Cantarella’s life and current activities, check out the entire article here.

Copyright © Gangsters Inc.

From the big house to the ‘burbs: Scottsdale ‘Mafia’ family stars in reality show

Richard Cantarella’s family moved to Arizona after leaving witness protection due to the ties to a Mafia crime family.

Check out Monique Griego’s full story on the Cantarella family’s transition from a life of crime to life in the Sonoran Desert TONIGHT on 12 News at 10.

It’s a lifestyle most of us only know about from the movies: The Mafia life.

“It was a great life — there wasn’t anything we couldn’t have,” said Richard Cantarella.

As a former mobster with the Bonanno crime family, Cantarella and his son Paul grew up in the Mafia. But in 2002, their world came crashing down when the FBI came knocking.

“I got arrested in 2002 and I wound up cooperating with the government,” Cantarella told 12 News.

Cantarella faced life in prison for his alleged ties to a string of Mafia hits and Paul was looking at 20 years for racketeering.

Both decided to cooperate with Paul heading into witness protection as his father waited in prison.

“I chose to be loyal to my family rather than my boss,”

Back then, he never imagined he and his wife Lauretta would end up out west, far away from New York.

“My son picked the state. He flew here, found a home and loved it,” Cantarella said.

In 2004, Paul left witness protection for sunny Scottsdale.

“It was like paradise to me,” said Paul, “The palm trees and your pool was open all year.”

Cantarella later followed, leaving the big house for the Phoenix suburbs.

“You know what I notice out here? There’s a lot of money out here,” Cantarella said. “I’ve never seen so many Bentleys, Maseratis … This would actually be a haven for the Mafia.”

Once in Arizona, the Cantarellas traded a life of crime for a legit family business.

Their Valley car washes are also now serving as the backdrop for the family’s latest endeavor: Unprotected, a reality show on the Oxygen network.

“I’m not a camera person so it was tough for me but they had a ball,” said Kim Cantarella, Paul’s wife.

The show, which just wrapped up its first season, mixes the family’s tight bond with some of their East Coast attitude.

When 12 News sat down with the Cantarellas at their home, we asked them a question many people are probably wondering about: After spending more than a decade distancing themselves from their past, are they concerned the reality show could out them to people they know?

“By the time I came out of prison it was all said and done,” Cantarella said. “My boss cooperated, my underboss cooperated, so there was really nothing to me to be concerned about. I’m not saying there aren’t people capable.”

His wife Lauretta was more nervous about mean soccer moms than Mafia men.

“I just thought they would that they wouldn’t like us as much and I wanted them to see another side of us,” she said.

If they expected animosity, what they ended up getting was a lot more curiosity.

“People are mesmerized by the mob,” said Cantarella.

“When we were younger, it was different because we weren’t really supposed to say anything or talk about it,” said Toni Ann Cantarella, Paul’s 17-year-old daughter.

Paul’s 18-year-old son Richie echoed that same thing, saying sometimes the topic of his family would take over the class discussion when he was in high school.

Now with everything out in the open, the Valley of the Sun is helping them create a new legacy to go along with that famous last name.

“We like it here — we have no reason to leave,” said Cantarella.

The family is waiting to find out if Unprotected is picked up for a second season.

Richard Cantarella

Richard, the 73-year-old patriarch, is a former mob captain who turned on his associates in order to protect his family and remove them from the dangers associated with life within the mafia. Richard grew up on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and knew everyone there was to know in town. At 18 years old, Richard met the love of his life, Lauretta, right down the block from where he grew up, and the two have been married for 52 years. Richard has always been a businessman, dabbling in a wide array of industries from restaurants to newspapers, real estate, and parking lots. In 2005, the family relocated to Scottsdale, Arizona, and in 2006 they opened up their first car wash, followed by another in 2008. Richard’s hobbies include drawing and painting, and in the future he hopes to resume his interest in real estate.

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사람들이 주제에 대해 자주 검색하는 키워드 At home with the real mob of Arizona

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