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Joey Merlino gives interview #710229
04/12/13 07:51 PM
04/12/13 07:51 PM
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IvyLeague Offline OP
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Thanks to Pogo for posting this...



Merlino Talks About Nicky Skins And Florida Life Without The Mob
By George Anastasia
Friday, April 12, 2013



They met in a Dunkin’ Donuts near the beach in Boca Raton.

Nicholas Stefanelli, a 60-something mobster from North Jersey, was full of propositions and ideas for “business” ventures.

Joey Merlino, recently turned 50 and out of jail for about a year, was all ears.

Merlino was looking for a fresh start in Florida, or so he said. Stefanelli had come recommended from a defense attorney in Newark who had worked on one of Joey’s cases.

They talked for about an hour. At first, Stefanelli focused on ideas for bars and restaurants, businesses he knew Joey was interested in. Money and backers were available, he said. They could make something happen, he promised. Then he steered the conversation to past events in the world in which they both operated.

Stefanelli, known as “Nicky Skins,” was a soldier in the Gambino crime family.

Merlino, who everyone knew as “Skinny Joey,” had been or was (depending on your frame of reference) the boss of the Philadelphia mob. He had just finished a 14-year stint in a federal prison. He had no desire to go back. So when Stefanelli started asking about some of the guys up north and talking about pending criminal cases, Merlino pulled back.

There are certain things you don’t talk about, especially with someone you’ve just met.

“He asked me about Joe (Ligambi, one of several prominent Philadelphia mob figures then awaiting trial on racketeering conspiracy charges),” Merlino recalled. “I said he was a nice guy and I hoped he beat the case.”

Then Stefanelli asked about Nicky Scarfo Jr., who was in federal prison awaiting trial on charges that he and an associate had looted a Texas-based mortgage company, siphoning out more than $12 million through bogus business deals and phony consulting contracts.

“When he asked me about Scarfo, I said it was a shame what happened to that kid,” Merlino said. “I said his father (jailed mob boss Nicodemo “Little Nicky” Scarfo, an unindicted co-conspirator in the fraud case) was going to get him 100 years … And I meant it.”

The meeting at the Dunkin' Donuts was in December 2010. A year later, Merlino learned that Stefanelli was recording everything they said when they sat down over coffee that day.

“The fuckin’ guy was wired,” Merlino said. “I got the tape. In fact, I got two from Joe Ligambi’s lawyer. He thought I had talked to the guy twice. But we had only met once."

"There were two tapes because the guy was wearing two wires, one on his body and one in his watch," Merlino said. "He shoulda fuckin’ been electrocuted. The feds sent him down here to set me up. I told him I’m legitimate. I don’t want nothing to do with any of that other stuff … What else could I say?”

Merlino is sitting in a posh restaurant in the W Hotel on Beach Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale, a short drive from the condo in Boca Raton where he has been living with his good friend and former South Philadelphia neighbor Donnie Petullo.

For the first time since his release to a halfway house in Florida over a year ago, Merlino has agreed to talk publicly about himself, about where he is and what he hopes to do with the rest of his life.

“It’s beautiful down here,” he says. “Great weather. No stress. People come here, they live to be 100.”

At 51 (his birthday was in March) he is a little over halfway there. And it’s clear he hopes to make it the rest of the way. He said repeatedly and emphatically during two days of interviews earlier this week that he has no intention of returning to Philadelphia.

The only things he misses, he said, are his family – and by that he meant blood relatives like his mother Rita, his sister Natalie, and others still living in South Philadelphia – and the Mummers Parade on New Year’s Day.

He hardly mentioned the other Family, but that was like the 500-pound gorilla in the room during two days of interviews. Always circumspect and cautious, Merlino is savvy enough to know what to say and how to say it. He also is aware that a return to the streets of South Philadelphia and the clubs and restaurants where his mere presence caused a stir – “Joey’s in the room. It’s Merlino.” – would attract major law enforcement attention and ultimately lead to potential criminal problems.

Joey's life as a wiseguy during the 1990s was Entourage in the Underworld. The popular HBO series about four young, good looking guys making it in the movie business and making it with every beautiful broad they came in contact with was not that much different from Merlino's days as Philadelphia's one and only celebrity wiseguy.

Over lunch at Steak 954 – ironically a restaurant opened in Fort Lauderdale's W Hotel by Stephen Starr, the iconic Philadelphia restaurateur -- Merlino did some quick math to explain how and why he has decided to turn his life in another direction. By his own count, he has spent close to 19 years behind bars. If you add in the time he’s spent in halfway houses, the number is close to 20. That’s a big chunk of his adult life.

He missed his daughters – both now teenagers – growing but says he wants to be around to see them go off to college. They and his wife live in North Jersey where the girls attend school. He didn’t want to disrupt that, but they’ve visited on holidays and spent about six weeks with him last summer.

He’s working for an advertising agency, but looking to start his own business. He’s talked about restaurants, cafes, a Philly cheese streak shop -- "It's hard to get rolls down here" -- and a cigar bar. Nothing yet, but everything is still in play. There's also talk about a book, a movie and a reality TV show.

“Anybody can be an actor,” Merlino says at one point.

“Look at Kim Kardashian,” adds Petullo. “What did she ever do?”

Everyone at the table agrees that Kardashian has parlayed her physical attributes into a money-making career. Merlino doesn’t see any reason whey he can’t cash in as well. He may not have a big ass, but he's got a lot of other things going for him. The only stipulation, he said, is that whatever he does has to be legitimate.

“This Stefanelli said he had plenty of investors and said we could do things,” Merlino said over a lunch of lobster bisque and a crab cake. Then he rolled his eyes.

“When I mentioned the cheese steak shop, he said we should franchise it. Call it Merlino’s and get investors," Merlino said. "He started talking about selling 10 or 12 franchises. The 'Old’ Joey would have gone for that. But that’s not me now."

“I’m not gonna sell something I don’t have," he said. "If I had opened a cheesesteak place and was in business and somebody wanted to talk about a franchise, then it’s legit. But I’m not gonna sell something that doesn’t exist.”

That’s the 'New’ Joey.

He still looks and sounds like the guy who was the John Gotti of Passyunk Avenue, the reputed mob boss who held Christmas parties for the homeless and gave away turkeys at Thanksgiving in the housing projects.

He still has those same dark eyes that can shoot daggers and the quick, staccato delivery when he’s telling a story or asking a question. But if you take him at his word (and at this point there is no reason not to), he has a different perspective on life.

He’s seen too much.

He’s spent too much time in lockdown.

He’s tired of living a regimented life where others control when you get up, when you eat and when the lights get turned off.

Enough.

He’s also ultra cautious.

“Too many rats,” he said. “I want no part of that.”

Nicky Skins Stefaneilli is a case in point.

Skins had gotten jammed up in a drug case in Newark two years before he met with Merlino. And to get himself and his son out from under, he agreed to cooperate with the FBI. He had already recorded dozens of conversations in North Jersey, New York and Rhode Island when he headed to Florida.

(Two Stefanelli tapes, but not the Merlino meeting, were played at Ligambi's trial earlier this year.)

The idea was to get Joey to incriminate himself, to admit that he was still part of the crime family back in Philadelphia, to talk about the old days, maybe to brag or boast about how – and this is the fed's position not Merlino’s – he had gotten away with murder.

Talk to anyone who has tracked the Philadelphia mob in the past 30 years and they'll tell you that Skinny Joey was involved in more than a dozen gangland shootings. They have tried, but failed, to link him to ten different murders.

Even over a casual lunch, Merlino won’t go there.

The racketeering case in 2001 that earned him a 14-year sentence, included a half dozen shootings. The jury found the charges “not proven.” Two years later he was tried in federal court in Newark for one of the same murders that was part of the racketeering case. While it seems mind boggling and counter-intuitive to a layman, the racketeering statutes permit what on the face appears to be double jeopardy. In any event, Merlino beat the murder rap in North Jersey as well.

“Not guilty” said the jury.

He’s is content to rest on those jury verdicts, offering very little else about the murder and mayhem that authorities allege he unleashed on the South Philadelphia underworld during the bloody 1990s, a period when, prosecutors alleged, the Merlino faction of the Philadelphia mob went to war with a faction headed by John Stanfa.

“I was found not guilty,” Merlino said. “What else can I say?”

Probably a lot more, but there’s very little chance anyone will ever get Merlino to open up. Stefanelli, no doubt coached by his FBI handlers, was tap dancing around a volatile subject when he brought up the Scarfo name at the Dunkin’ Donuts meeting.

There is a history between the Scarfos and the Merlinos.

Joey’s father Salvatore “Chucky” Merlino was once the elder Scarfo’s top underworld associate and his underboss. But the volatile Scarfo had a fallen out with his one-time best friend and threatened to kill the entire Merlino clan.

There is more to the story which when told in full sounds like an underworld soap opera. But that’s for another day. Just know that in law enforcement circles, the conventional wisdom is that Skinny Joey tried to settle accounts on Halloween Night, 1989.

On that night, Nicky Jr. was having dinner in Dante&Luigi’s, a neighborhood restaurant located on the corner of 10th and Christian Streets in South Philadelphia. The joint had served up fine but inexpensive Italian dinners to three generations.

In the fall of 1989, the Philadelphia mob was in disarray. The elder Scarfo, along with Chucky Merlino and a dozen others had been convicted of racketeering-murder charges and were serving lengthy federal prison sentences. “Little Nicky” Scarfo, a psychopathic mob boss, had driven the organization into the ground. During his bloody reign about 20 mob figures had been killed. With a dozen more behind bars, the organization, which never had more than 60 or 70 members, was in shambles.

Scarfo was trying to maintain control from prison through his son, Nicky Jr. (While they called him Jr., in fact his name was Nicodemo Salvatore and his father was Nicodemo Domenic.)

The younger Scarfo was dining on clams and spaghetti that night, one of his favorites. Two associates, his cousin John Parisi and another man, were eating with him. None of them noticed the guy with the trick-or-treat bag who walked into the restaurant and headed straight for their table. He was wearing a mask, but it was Halloween. It was only after he pulled the Mac-9 machine pistol out of the bag and opened fire that he attracted any attention.

By then it was too late.

Scarfo was hit six times. The gunman turned and headed for the door. As he walked out amid screaming customers who were ducking for cover, he dropped the gun. A car pulled up. He got in and drove away.

About a week earlier, a Philadelphia police officer had been killed in the line of duty. Some drug dealer with a gun had started firing. The cop was wearing a bullet proof vest, but one of the bullets came in on an angle and ripped into his rib cage from the side. A fraction of an inch one way or the other and the bullet would have hit the vest. Instead, it tore into his heart. The cop died.

None of the bullets that hit Scarfo that night struck a vital organ. Less than a week after the shooting, he was released from the hospital.

“Can you fuckin’ believe it?” a Philadelphia police officer said at the time. “He’s not wearing a vest. He gets hit six times. And he walks away. How’s that fair?”

No one has ever been charged with the attempted murder of Nicky Scarfo Jr.

But Joey Merlino has long been the prime suspect. Underworld informants have fingered him as the triggerman. One, in fact, told the FBI how Merlino had deliberately dropped the gun that night because he wanted to send a message to “Little Nicky” Scarfo, who was serving a 55-year sentence for racketeering at the time.

The elder Scarfo loved gangster movies. One of his favorites, of course, was The Godfather. And one of his favorite scenes was the restaurant shooting where Michael Corleone settles the score after his father was shot and nearly killed. As Michael leaves the restaurant, he drops the gun.

There was a purpose to the gunman doing the same thing at Dante&Luigi’s, or so the informant said. Joey Merlino was settling a score that night. At least that’s the theory that law enforcement has been working on for the past twenty-five years.

Scarfo Jr. never identified his shooter. But the New Jersey State Police have phone tapes in which he and his father, talking from prison, discuss the hit. On the tape, Little Nicky refers to Merlino as “a snake” and tells his son to “take him to dinner,” code, said investigators, for killing him.

Over lunch down in Florida, Merlino said he was home the night of the Dante & Luigi shooting. He was under a court-ordered curfew imposed in an unrelated case and had to be in his house by 7 p.m. each night.

He couldn’t have been the shooter, he said. Hardly a solid alibi, but his position none-the-less.

Several years later, word started to circulate in South Philadelphia that, from prison, Little Nicky had put a $500,000 contract out on Merlino’s life. When Joey was asked about this by TV reporter Dave Schratwieser, Joey calmly looked into the camera and in classic Merlino-style said, “Give me the half million dollars and I’ll shoot myself.”

Merlino has been charged with, but never convicted, of nearly a dozen other shootings. The brother of a witness who was about to take the stand in a mob racketeering trial, the ambush of a rival mob leader on a busy Philadelphia highway in the midst of the morning rush hour, the slaying of a mob capo who was balking about sending a monthly envelope filled with cash, the drive-by shooting of a video poker machine operator who had refused to pay a street tax.

The list goes on and on. Even after he was arrested in 1999, authorities believe, Merlino continued to sign off on street violence. Three unsolved murders that occurred while he was in federal prison are also part of the murderous menu that the FBI and police homicide detectives believe Merlino served up in the Philadelphia underworld.

Gambling, loansharking, extortion and robbery have landed him in jail for a big chunk of his life. But talk to any of the authorities who have been tracking him for the past twenty-five years and they’ll tell you Joey Merlino has literally gotten away with murder.

Lunch is over and Merlino is sipping a cup of coffee at 954 Steak. It's a sunny afternoon. The restaurant windows face Beach Boulevard and the sparkling Atlantic Ocean.

Merlino is tan and fit and looking forward to his next visit to the gym. From his perspective, it doesn't matter what they say or think back in Philadelphia. Juries have been shown the evidence and heard the witnesses.

Not proven. Not guilty.

"What else can I say?" he asks.

http://www.bigtrial.net/2013/04/merlino-talks-about-nicky-skins-and.html


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Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710235
04/12/13 08:41 PM
04/12/13 08:41 PM
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Kokomo
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Beanshooter Offline
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Didn't Scoops Licata say on the Nicky Skins tapes say that Joey M shot Nicky Jr?

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710238
04/12/13 09:08 PM
04/12/13 09:08 PM
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TonyBoy117 Offline
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Crazy like a fox meeting with that guy

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710244
04/12/13 09:41 PM
04/12/13 09:41 PM
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You believe him?


Frank Costello: Fucking rats. It's wearing me thin. Mr. French: Francis, it's a nation of fucking rats.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: vinnietoothpicks26] #710253
04/12/13 10:13 PM
04/12/13 10:13 PM
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IvyLeague Offline OP
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Originally Posted By: vinnietoothpicks26
You believe him?


If you mean, do people believe Joey is telling the truth about being done with the life, I don't. And I don't think Anastasia does either. But what else would one expect Merlino to say? A lot of time would have to go by before I'd even start to believe he was retired from the mob.


Mods should mind their own business and leave poster's profile signatures alone.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710258
04/13/13 12:36 AM
04/13/13 12:36 AM
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DiLorenzo Offline
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From mob boss to tv reality show ??

Can you see chin gigante in his bathrobe doing a reality show ??

Merlino's not a kid anymore, but still acts like one !!

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710259
04/13/13 12:46 AM
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In exile watching star wars an...
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In exile watching star wars an...
The price is right with.... The Chin!

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710281
04/13/13 09:28 AM
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Originally Posted By: IvyLeague
Originally Posted By: vinnietoothpicks26
You believe him?


If you mean, do people believe Joey is telling the truth about being done with the life, I don't. And I don't think Anastasia does either. But what else would one expect Merlino to say? A lot of time would have to go by before I'd even start to believe he was retired from the mob.

Yeah that is what I meant. I am not saying I believe the guy but, he does have a point. He's done so much time in his life and now the organization is decimated. If he can make a go of it he should. Btw, what advertising agency is hiring Joey?


Frank Costello: Fucking rats. It's wearing me thin. Mr. French: Francis, it's a nation of fucking rats.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710283
04/13/13 10:27 AM
04/13/13 10:27 AM
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id hire him in a second...hes a good looking guy

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710291
04/13/13 11:36 AM
04/13/13 11:36 AM
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this is a boss saying listen I didn't give the ok to the guy to clip someone in broad daylite. at the same time how the hell can you be a boss from 3000 miles away that's a insult to any one in philly. im guessin the 15 or so guys on the street would be like we respect him but he's not are boss he's legit or went legit. could you say he's probably the most powerfull mobster in south florida. it seems guys trust him from other family and he got the younger guys. he took over the trafficante family. the jab he took at scarfo sr. was nice. he's probably steaming mad ploting with vic amuso how there gonna take back the lcn.

Last edited by pmac; 04/13/13 11:37 AM.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: pmac] #710293
04/13/13 11:49 AM
04/13/13 11:49 AM
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Five_Felonies Offline
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Originally Posted By: pmac
this is a boss saying listen I didn't give the ok to the guy to clip someone in broad daylite. at the same time how the hell can you be a boss from 3000 miles away that's a insult to any one in philly. im guessin the 15 or so guys on the street would be like we respect him but he's not are boss he's legit or went legit. could you say he's probably the most powerfull mobster in south florida. it seems guys trust him from other family and he got the younger guys. he took over the trafficante family. the jab he took at scarfo sr. was nice. he's probably steaming mad ploting with vic amuso how there gonna take back the lcn.

what makes you think he took over the trafficante family? for a while now, the remnants of the trafficante's have worked with the gambino's. as far as being the most powerful mobster in south florida, not by a long shot. does joey even have any rackets going on down there, who knows, but its a fair bet to say that either the point man for the gambino or genovese family would be the most influential in south florida.


It's either blue cheese with wings or go fuck yer mudda!
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710296
04/13/13 11:54 AM
04/13/13 11:54 AM
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pmac Offline
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it was a joke if he wants to start making his young guys in florida under the philly flag whose gonna stop him. I guess the nyc guys wouldn't respect them maybe, but with nick corrozo's guy recording him, he don't give ashit. I final vote on merlino he's quit the boss job, maybe one of scarfo guys is calling shots, or scarfo himself

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: pmac] #710297
04/13/13 12:20 PM
04/13/13 12:20 PM
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my hypothesis is that while joey might still hold the title of official boss, it might be in name only mostly. i'm sure that he still has the ABILITY to have his say if he chooses, and its a safe bet that he still recieves cash, but as far as having any kind of control over the day to day workings, i think those days are long gone, and i bet he's happy about that. mazzone is the one calling the shots now as far as i'm concerned.


It's either blue cheese with wings or go fuck yer mudda!
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710329
04/13/13 04:09 PM
04/13/13 04:09 PM
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22 Offline
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Who was the capo that didn't want to stuff the envelopes with cash,I'm drawing a blank

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: 22] #710330
04/13/13 04:11 PM
04/13/13 04:11 PM
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TonyBoy117 Offline
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Originally Posted By: 22
Who was the capo that didn't want to stuff the envelopes with cash,I'm drawing a blank
Im not sure put it sounds like Joe Sodano from Newark

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710332
04/13/13 04:20 PM
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streetbossliborio Offline
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def wanna see more of merlino!! dis guy is kool

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710334
04/13/13 04:27 PM
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why is there not more of this guy? movie, book, mobsters episode. this guy has done it all?

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710352
04/13/13 05:42 PM
04/13/13 05:42 PM
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What history does he really have that would make him appealing to viewers/buyers ??

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: streetbossliborio] #710373
04/13/13 06:35 PM
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Dwalin2011 Offline
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Originally Posted By: streetbossliborio
why is there not more of this guy? movie, book, mobsters episode. this guy has done it all?

Maybe it's because he is still alive, free and never convicted for the worst things he has done. If they tell everything as it really was, Merlino's lawyers will sue them, and telling only about the crimes he was convicted for wouldn't be much of a story.


Willie Marfeo to Henry Tameleo:

1) "You people want a loaf of bread and you throw the crumbs back. Well, fuck you. I ain't closing down."

2) "Get out of here, old man. Go tell Raymond to go shit in his hat. We're not giving you anything."
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: DiLorenzo] #710375
04/13/13 06:42 PM
04/13/13 06:42 PM
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streetbossliborio Offline
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Originally Posted By: DiLorenzo
What history does he really have that would make him appealing to viewers/buyers ??


youngish good looking, john gotti quality. and a mob boss. dad was underboss, uncle was capo then informant, sister was engaged to prince capo sal testa. merlinos been in the game all his life. and has spent 20 years in the can. how much history do ya want lol?! funny merlino fact - he pulled off a huge 350 000 armed heist in philly. instead of paying the others he told em where to go and kept the lot.they flipped on him and he got sent down for 4 years. he goes 350 000 for 4 years thats a good deal! (back in the 80's). dont forget the quote after hearing scarfo sr got 500 000 on his head, 'give me 500 000 ill shoot myself.' if this guy aint tv material for viewers who is!

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: Dwalin2011] #710376
04/13/13 06:44 PM
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Originally Posted By: Dwalin2011
Originally Posted By: streetbossliborio
why is there not more of this guy? movie, book, mobsters episode. this guy has done it all?

Maybe it's because he is still alive, free and never convicted for the worst things he has done. If they tell everything as it really was, Merlino's lawyers will sue them, and telling only about the crimes he was convicted for wouldn't be much of a story.


i agree thanks for clearing that up for me! i still would of thought there would be a lil more out there about him though. guys a lcn legend

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: streetbossliborio] #710379
04/13/13 06:56 PM
04/13/13 06:56 PM
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Posts: 160
Jenkins Offline
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Jenkins  Offline
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What ever happened to the piece of shit Gambino soldier that tried to record Joey. I mean I realize we are in a different era today but that pisses me off. There is truly no honor left in LCN.

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710386
04/13/13 07:19 PM
04/13/13 07:19 PM
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 1,769
Massachusetts, USA
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123JoeSchmo Offline
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Massachusetts, USA
He committed suicide. Took the easy way out when the Feds told him he would have to take the stand


"Don't ever go against the family again. Ever"- Michael Corleone
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: pmac] #710392
04/13/13 07:44 PM
04/13/13 07:44 PM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
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IvyLeague Offline OP
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Joined: Aug 2008
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Originally Posted By: pmac
at the same time how the hell can you be a boss from 3000 miles away that's a insult to any one in philly. im guessin the 15 or so guys on the street would be like we respect him but he's not are boss he's legit or went legit.


He could be the official boss the same way Carmine Persico has been the official boss even though he's been in prison all these years. As long as he has the clout to retain the position, and the followers on the street to enforce his will, he can be wherever he wants. It's why bosses have acting bosses or other guys run things for them day-to-day when they're not there for whatever reason.

Now, only time will tell if Merlino is not only really retired, but is really serious about staying in Florida for good. As soon as he can meet guys directly, without getting in trouble, he may be visiting Philly a lot more.


Mods should mind their own business and leave poster's profile signatures alone.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710418
04/13/13 10:04 PM
04/13/13 10:04 PM
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22 Offline
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Posts: 636
I think sometimes he's getting more credit from a lot of people and what they hear than there really is.I find it hard for him to still be the one calling the shots because usually you need some sort of backing for that.The NY guys never really recognized him and it just seems odd to me that he can be in Florida soaking up the sun and getting this so called big envelope every month.I mean say if someone does buck his authority who does he go to,not saying it can't happen but it seems like the feds would be the first to know if Joey ordered any hits or beatings or whatever.If he really is staying away I guess only time will tell but how long can he go on the straight and narrow.He should listen to himself because he does make a lot of sense but even if you have it as good as it can get I'll never forget a line by Sammy the Bull when he first went in to the WP Program.Something like you wake up in the morning get the morning paper but there's nobody to whack.I guess to him that was complete boredom.

Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: 22] #710419
04/13/13 10:09 PM
04/13/13 10:09 PM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
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IvyLeague Offline OP
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Posts: 8,534
Originally Posted By: 22
I think sometimes he's getting more credit from a lot of people and what they hear than there really is.I find it hard for him to still be the one calling the shots because usually you need some sort of backing for that.The NY guys never really recognized him and it just seems odd to me that he can be in Florida soaking up the sun and getting this so called big envelope every month.I mean say if someone does buck his authority who does he go to,not saying it can't happen but it seems like the feds would be the first to know if Joey ordered any hits or beatings or whatever.If he really is staying away I guess only time will tell but how long can he go on the straight and narrow.He should listen to himself because he does make a lot of sense but even if you have it as good as it can get I'll never forget a line by Sammy the Bull when he first went in to the WP Program.Something like you wake up in the morning get the morning paper but there's nobody to whack.I guess to him that was complete boredom.


Apparently, there was enough on those tapes to convince the feds he is still the boss. One example being Ligambi talking about Joey making certain guys himself after he got home. Now, maybe he really does want to retire. But only time will tell. And, right now, I see no reason to give him the benefit of the doubt. The feds sure as hell won't.


Mods should mind their own business and leave poster's profile signatures alone.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710422
04/13/13 10:24 PM
04/13/13 10:24 PM
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So-Cal
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The feds aren't always right, but they always error on the side of caution. I think hes out, but for my own entertianment purposes I hope that he goes back when his parole expires.


Frank Costello: Fucking rats. It's wearing me thin. Mr. French: Francis, it's a nation of fucking rats.
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710442
04/14/13 12:33 AM
04/14/13 12:33 AM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
Vigil Offline
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Vigil  Offline
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Nuevo Mexico
Skinny Joey is the man. No doubt about it!


*** il capo di tutti capi ***

"You'll never meet another guy like me if you live to be 5, 000." -John Gotti
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: IvyLeague] #710466
04/14/13 09:54 AM
04/14/13 09:54 AM
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cheech Offline
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cheech  Offline
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I say leave the poor bastard alone. Guy did his time. Who gives a fuck what he's doing now. Just another ex gangster in south Florida. No news to me. Plus he answered maybe four questions throughout the whole article. It's basically George writing the same shit over and over. Unless you woke up this morning and didn't know Joey was the article doesn't say much except skins wearing two wires and Joey getting the tapes from Ligambi's lawyer


When Interpol?
Re: Joey Merlino gives interview [Re: cheech] #710467
04/14/13 10:00 AM
04/14/13 10:00 AM
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Dwalin2011 Offline
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Originally Posted By: cheech
I say leave the poor bastard alone. Guy did his time.

Not enough. He got away with all the murders. If I had killed somebody, I would have gotten life, because I don't have the right connections and criminal capabilities, so why should he be left alone? Just because he is smart and knows how to behave himself in public? Nearly everybody else is doing life or some decades, so why make an exception for him? The only reason to defend him I can understand is that with Merlino gone, somebody worse than him might take his place.


Willie Marfeo to Henry Tameleo:

1) "You people want a loaf of bread and you throw the crumbs back. Well, fuck you. I ain't closing down."

2) "Get out of here, old man. Go tell Raymond to go shit in his hat. We're not giving you anything."
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