^^^^
The mp3 is more than five minutes long. :-)

But here are some takeaways:

*Callocchia's murder is probably the most significant Montreal Mafia murder in the last year, rivalled only perhaps by that of Roger Valiquette (in December 2013). (Callocchia and Valiquette were very close; Valiquette, considered one of the most significant loansharks in the Montreal area, was close to Desjardins).

*Renaud saw Callocchia this past September when the latter was in court in relation to charges stemming from threats made. (Callocchia was charged in May 2013 for threatening a businesswoman, who is considered close to Desjardins, over a significant amount of money owed.)

*Although a construction-company businessman in name, Callocchia was considered to be in the very heart of the Montreal Mafia, who saw his star rise after Vito Rizzuto's death in December 2013, was tapped as a godfather candidate (possibly by Vito himself), and was apparently part of the mafia roundtable (that supposedly was used to resolve conflicts between those who sat on it and used to determine the direction of the Montreal Mafia).

*Callocchia was considered to have several enemies.

*Callocchia was known for importing coke. (Recall that Callocchia is the brother-in-law of Vincenzo Armeni, the Calabrian-Canadian drug trafficker who is very influential in Quebec. Personally, I consider Vincenzo Armeni and his relatives to have remained loyal to the Rizzutos before and during the war. Those familiar with some of Lee Lamothe's posts on other organized-crime forums know that after his and Adrian Humphreys's book The Sixth Family... came out, Lamothe described the Rizzuto organization as a multifaceted one that included Calabrian crime groups or cells.)

*According to Renaud, Callocchia was not respected.