5 MOST WANTED Mafia Bosses Reacting to LIFE Sentence
Number 5. Tommaso Buscetta
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Tommaso Buscetta, 71, a top Mafia turncoat who helped convict hundreds of mobsters in Italy and testified in the "pizza connection" trial in the United States, passed away of cancer April 1 in the United States, his lawyer Luigi Ligotti announced in Rome. Ligotti said he did not know where his client passed away because Mr. Buscetta was in the witness protection program.
Number 4. Big Tony
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Anthony “Big Tony” Moscatiello was sentenced to life in prison without parole for the mob-connected 2001 slaying of a prominent South Florida businessman during a battle over control of a fleet of gambling ships. Broward County Circuit Judge Ilona Holmes imposed the sentence after a jury rejected the execution sentence sought by prosecutors following more than three hours of deliberation. Holmes said she had little choice but to follow the jury’s advice. Moscatiello, 76, showed no reaction when the jury’s decision was announced. He was convicted in July of slaying and conspiracy in the fatal shooting of Konstantinos “Gus” Boulis during a dispute over lucrative gambling ships.
Number 3. DiNunzio
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The reputed head of the New England mafia was sentenced to 6-1/2 years in prison for his role in a scheme to extort protection money from Rhode Island adult clubs and adult bookstores. Anthony DiNunzio, 53, had pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Providence, Rhode Island, to one count of conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise, in a deal with federal prosecutors. He faced up to 20 years in prison, but prosecutors asked for a reduced sentence as part of the agreement.
Number 2. James Whitey Bulger
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Convicted Boston gangster James “Whitey” Bulger displayed no emotion, his arms by his side, as he was sentenced to two life terms plus five years as architect of a criminal enterprise that, in the words of a federal judge, committed “unfathomable” acts that terrorized a city. The two-day sentencing hearing was a final chapter in the life of one of the country’s most notorious criminals and fugitives. A federal jury found Bulger, 84, guilty of 31 counts, including racketeering, extortion, money laundering, drug dealing and weapons possession. The jury held Bulger responsible for 11 slayings from 1973 through 1985.
Number 1. Robert Deluca
A longtime Rhode Island Mafia captain, who denounced the mob in a letter to a federal judge in Boston, was quietly sentenced for his role in an infamous Federal Hill gangland slaying. But the mobster, Robert DeLuca, was spared any more prison time because he cooperated with the government in a high-profile organized crime trial that led to the conviction of a former mob boss. DeLuca, 75, was sentenced to 10 years by Superior Court Judge Brian Stern after pleading guilty to slaying conspiracy in the 1993 shooting slaying of mob enforcer Kevin Hanrahan. Stern suspended 69 months of the sentence, and credited DeLuca for time served dating back to his June 2016 arrest. Kristy dosReis, a spokesperson for R.I. Attorney General Peter Neronha, said in an email that state and federal prosecutors supported the sentence because of “DeLuca’s cooperation” as well as “his current health, and pending motion for compassionate release before the federal court.”
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