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Bonanno trial updates #881527
04/19/16 03:37 PM
04/19/16 03:37 PM
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gangstereport Offline OP
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http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2016/04/post_1379.html
n April 18, 2016 at 5:23 PM,

MANHATTAN, N.Y. — Anthony (Skinny) Santoro, his lawyer claims, was a broke hustler, and not the violent, money-making mobster the state has portrayed.

The Great Kills man undertook various failed business ventures, but none of them were used to benefit the Bonanno crime family, said his defense attorney, Adam Konta, during his summation Monday in Manhattan Supreme Court.

Santoro, 52, and his co-defendants -- Nicholas Santora, 73, Vito Badamo, 53, and Ernest Aiello, 36 -- are on trial for enterprise corruption, including loansharking, gambling and drug dealing after authorities say they busted a nine-man Bonanno crew in July 2013.

"Skinny is a hustler, but he wasn't good at it," Konta told the jury. "There is no evidence these businesses were used to further the Bonanno crime family. This has been a flawed investigation that has led to a flawed case.

"They didn't prove their case -- not even close."

Konta challenged the jury to hold the prosecution to what it promised during its opening arguments before the two-and-a-half month trial began, before rattling off what he perceives to be the state's missteps.

The prosecution claims the Staten Island man was involved in extortion and loansharking, gambling, drugs and guns, but they failed to prove Santoro's connection to any of these criminal activities, his lawyer said.

First, in regard to the loansharking, the state claims Santoro was a Bonanno soldier under Aiello and Badamo and helped collect money from loansharking victims, and a share of the cash flowed up through the crime family hierarchy and into alleged Bonanno boss Santora's hands.

But despite the years-long NYPD investigation and piles of surveillance and wiretapped recordings, Konta said, the prosecution only produced a blurry picture of Santoro and Badamo allegedly exchanging money and two questionable phone calls.

But one detective testified that he couldn't say if in fact the defendants were exchanging money in the surveillance photo.

"Where's the money?" Konta asked. "Where are the payments."

"The prosecution said they would show you a strict hierarchy within the family," Konta added. "Where's the proof? It's in the D.A.'s very vivid imagination.

"There is zero evidence. There was no money exchanged. That's a real problem."

In regard to gambling, Santoro, Konta claims, was constantly complaining about being broke and tried his hand at construction, real estate and ran a gambling site in Costa Rica, where gambling is legal.

The state argues that same site was used to make illegal sports bets.

During the trial, prosecutors played several wire-tapped phone recordings allegedly connecting Santoro to gambling and drugs.

The NYPD, the state said in the beginning of the trial, found 300,000 Cialis and Viagra pills during the search of Santoro's Tanglewood Drive home in Great Kills, but really only found 24 pills, his lawyer maintained.

The lead detective on the case admitted to making several erroneous conclusions about code words used for the prescription pills and drugs and the nicknames for the alleged crime family members, Konta claimed.

"There is no objective evidence, just speculation," the attorney said. "We've heard a lot of wrong conclusions about this case."

Guns and violence

In one phone call from September 2011, Santoro allegedly threatens someone who owes the organization money.

"'I'm gonna split his head with a hatchet,'" Konta says Santoro says on the tape. "'I will put two holes in his head. I will shoot him right now. I'll take a shower and shave and I'll go shoot him.'"

Konta, however, maintains his client was blowing off steam, and there was no proof of the alleged violence.

"The prosecution wanted you to believe these incidents happened," the lawyer said. "But not one person testified that Skinny tried to hurt them."

During the search of Santoro's home, the cops also seized seven guns, $45,000 in cash and several pounds of marijuana, police said.

But four of the guns were found in a rental apartment in the Tanglewood Drive home, which belongs to Santoro's girlfriend, Konta said. Also, a detective testified he didn't know if any of the items, including the guns, recovered from the home belonged to Santoro or if they were used in criminal activity.

"This case wasn't sexy like the movies," the lawyer said. "There was no violence and no money. There were no victims and no threats.

"This case has been like watching children putting puzzle pieces into spots that don't work. The pieces just don't fit."

Summations continue Tuesday and the jury should begin deliberations Wednesday.


Not connected with scott or anyone at gangsterreport

Sorry for the confusion
Re: Bonanno trial updates [Re: gangstereport] #881528
04/19/16 03:38 PM
04/19/16 03:38 PM
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gangstereport Offline OP
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http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-...ticle-1.2607234

Authorities followed an old man around town in a bid to paint him as the head of a mafia gambling, loan-sharking and drug-peddling crew, Nicholas (Nicky Cigars) Santora’s lawyer argued Monday.

Santora, 73, Vito Badamo, 53, Anthony (Skinny) Santoro, 52, and Ernest Aiello, 36, have been on trial for over two months in a Bonanno family enterprise corruption case brought by the Manhattan District Attorney's office.

The defendants each face up to 25 years behind bars for the alleged enterprise which prosecutors say involved peddling Viagra and Cialis.

ELDERLY BONANNO CAPO BACK BEHIND BARS AFTER VIOLATION OF SUPERVISED RELEASE

But in closing arguments, Santora’s lawyers said authorities’ surveillance showed him going about his mundane daily life — including visits to a restaurant for coffee and to Petco, where he bragged about his dogs to staff.

"They want you to believe this is a functioning crew, this well-oiled machine," Santora’s lawyer Michael Alber argued.

Alber said that between Jan. 1, 2011 and July 1, 2011, a significant part of the investigation, there was "zero interaction surveilled between Mr. Santora and the gentleman at that table."

BONANNO MOBSTER BACK IN PRISON, VIOLATED RELEASE TERMS WITH APPEARANCE AT STATEN ISLAND CHRISTMAS BASH

Aiello's lawyer, Stacey Richman, claimed that the charges were fabricated, in part, by cooperating witnesses who were working the system.

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
JEFFERSON SIEGEL/NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Nicholas "Nicky Cigars" Santora, Anthony "Skinny" Santoro and Ernest Aiello (seated left-right) and Vito Badamo (not pictured) face up to 25 years behind bars for an alleged enterprise which prosecutors say involved peddling Viagra and Cialis.
"Only you stand between these men, wrongly accused, and the cliff of wrongful conviction," Richman argued to the jury.

She said that groups of young black men are labeled gangs but "when Italians get together they call them the mafia."

"These are four people of Italian-American descent who know each other," Richman said. "They know each other but they're not criminal."

Santoro's lawyer Adam Konta, who was the first to address the jury Monday, echoed that argument.

"You cannot railroad these men just because they are Italians," he said.

Konta said that police surveillance of thousands of calls and other parts of the investigation amounted to nothing.

"From the very beginning this was just not the case they told you it would be or even close to it," he said.

The prosecutor's summation was set to start Tuesday, along with the closing argument from Badamo's lawyer.


Not connected with scott or anyone at gangsterreport

Sorry for the confusion
Re: Bonanno trial updates [Re: gangstereport] #881530
04/19/16 04:33 PM
04/19/16 04:33 PM
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mightyhealthy Offline
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Honestly, it sounds like the case against Santora is pretty weak.

Re: Bonanno trial updates [Re: mightyhealthy] #881531
04/19/16 04:51 PM
04/19/16 04:51 PM
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gangstereport Offline OP
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Originally Posted By: mightyhealthy
Honestly, it sounds like the case against Santora is pretty weak.


i think he will beat all the charges. Some of the others will get convicted like aiello and santoro but even they will beat the serious charges

This case is very weak especially against nicky i dont understand why they indicted him he is not even mentioned on tape or caught on surveillance. One government witness has not spoken to him since 2003 the others never spoke to him. I think they have hit just hit nicky with some charges and hope he will get convicted on one of them nicky is right to take this to trial the plea deal they offered him 8 years was ridiclous


Not connected with scott or anyone at gangsterreport

Sorry for the confusion
Re: Bonanno trial updates [Re: gangstereport] #881547
04/19/16 11:38 PM
04/19/16 11:38 PM
Joined: Jan 2016
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Kash Offline
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In the last thread on this trial I mentioned it looked Ike they had nothing on Santora and I'm sticking with that. Now I'm starting to think the others won't get hit with much either. They'll get something but this looks like a pretty weak case all around.

Re: Bonanno trial updates [Re: gangstereport] #881553
04/20/16 07:56 AM
04/20/16 07:56 AM
Joined: Apr 2016
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Scutari Offline
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Wiseguy
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Nicky is old school. Real tough crew.

Re: Bonanno trial updates [Re: gangstereport] #881569
04/20/16 01:38 PM
04/20/16 01:38 PM
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gangstereport Offline OP
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http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2016/04/prosecutor_skinny_santoro_was.html

MANHATTAN, N.Y. — Anthony (Skinny) Santoro was the key player in the Bonanno crime family's illegal gambling operation, the organization's easy moneymaker, the prosecution claims.

"Anthony Santoro is at the center of the crew and functions as a soldier below (co-defendants) Aiello and Badamo,"Assistant District Attorney Gary Galperin said during his summation Tuesday in Manhattan Supreme Court. "The gambling brings the defendants together the most."

Santoro, 52, of Great Kills, and his co-defendants -- Vito Badamo, 53, Nicholas Santora, 73, and Ernest Aiello, 36 -- are accused of enterprise corruption, including loansharking, gambling and drug dealing after authorities say they busted a nine-man Bonanno crew in July 2013.

The Staten Island man, Galperin claimed, oversaw the gambling. He set the prices for drugs and decided on opening and freezing gambling accounts.

He also, the prosecutor said, ran an illegal online gambling site, allaction247.com, which was a wire room in Costa Rica.

Many of the intercepted communications, including texts and calls, connect Santoro to money, gambling and drugs, Galperin said.

The prosecutor displayed an international gambling flow chart that showed Santoro in the middle of the operation with three associates below him.

However, Santoro's lawyer, Adam Konta, said Monday during his closing arguments his client tried many business ventures, including legal gambling site.

"They (the defense) would have you believe they were all just friends or business men trying to survive," Galperin said.

The state claims Santora, nicknamed "Captain Crunch," was an undisputed member of the organized crime family who worked his way up to capo and oversaw a crew that engaged in various criminal activities.

He was in charge of an Internet gambling site, sold prescription drugs, such as oxycodone and Viagra, on the black market, and the other three defendants were his associates.

The prosecution maintains that money made from any illegal activity flowed to Santora, proving the organized crime family's hierarchy.

"The purpose of the Bonanno family is to make money and they do so by doing criminal activity," Galperin said. "These defendants came together and committed crimes."

During summations, a couple of the defense attorneys argued the co-defendants were targeted because they were Italian-American and their mob ties was based on social stereotypes.

But Galperin was offended by the implication.

"How unfounded and insulting that is," Galperin told the jury.

"There is no reasonable doubt these co-defendants are guilty of pattern acts of enterprise corruption," he added. "Announce to this captain and this crew that their ship will set sail no more."

After a nearly three-month trial, the judge will charge the jury Wednesday morning before the panel begins deliberations.


Not connected with scott or anyone at gangsterreport

Sorry for the confusion

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