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Jan 21st, 2020
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Silvio DeVita #739087
09/09/13 05:06 PM
09/09/13 05:06 PM
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 92
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maverick Offline OP
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maverick  Offline OP
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Does anyone have any more info on this guy? all we really know about him is he is one of 5 Genovese capo's in jersey. seems to be old school, keeps a low profile. how did he come up through the ranks of the family?

Re: Silvio DeVita [Re: maverick] #739124
09/09/13 09:03 PM
09/09/13 09:03 PM
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,408
Snakes Offline
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Snakes  Offline
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He is a Sicilian native who started out in Andrew Gerardo's crew, eventually moving up the ranks to take over when Gerardo retired. Not sure of a birth date, but the guy has to be at least 80. [Edit, he'll be 82 in November according to his AC exclusion record linked to below]

He was also convicted of killing a cop (though he didn't pull the trigger) in 1954 in connection with an armed robbery and was actually on death row until the death penalty was declared unconstitutional in NJ. He was eventually paroled sometime in the eighties; how I don't know, as it would have to be the dumbest parole board ever to let an ex-death row inmate, mob associate, and cop killer back out on the streets but then again, it is Jersey.

Last edited by Snakes; 09/09/13 09:12 PM.

"Snakes... Snakes... I don't know no Snakes."
Re: Silvio DeVita [Re: maverick] #739126
09/09/13 09:07 PM
09/09/13 09:07 PM
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,408
Snakes Offline
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"Snakes... Snakes... I don't know no Snakes."
Re: Silvio DeVita [Re: Snakes] #739127
09/09/13 09:10 PM
09/09/13 09:10 PM
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,408
Snakes Offline
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The following is taken from DeVita's appeal that his Fifth Amendment rights had been infringed because of an "impartial" member of the jury:

Quote:
On March 30, 1951, juror Kuhnle, carrying a night deposit from the Western Union office where he was night manager, to the National State Bank, was held up on Broad Street, Newark, New Jersey, and robbed of $1,287.00. He regularly had a police escort when he made his nightly deposits. On November 9, 1951, seven months later, several blocks away on the same Broad Street, Thomas Lofrano, manager of the Universal Food Market, was taking his receipts to another Broad Street branch of the National State Bank for a nightly deposit. He and James Law, a uniformed special police officer, left the market and entered Law's automobile on Broad Street for that purpose. Appellant [De Vita] and Joseph Grillo held them up, took the receipts and in the course of the robbery Law was killed by a shot from Grillo's gun. Thereafter, "An investigation by the Newark police and the Essex County Prosecutor's office ensued, directed to the solution not only of the Law killing but of other then unsolved robberies in the area."2 Appellant [De Vita], Grillo, and one Rosania, an accomplice, were quickly apprehended. They signed confessions, admitted the facts, and actually had no defense to the charge of murder under the New Jersey felony-murder statute. The real problem before the trial jury was whether its verdict should be "guilty" without any recommendation (in which event the death penalty was mandatory) or "guilty" with a recommendation of life imprisonment. Court, counsel and everyone else concerned were aware of this.


Quote:
On the evening of November 9, 1951, Rosania, DeVita and Grillo proceeded to the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad station where was stored in a locker Grillo's brief case containing revolvers and ammunition. Rosania and DeVita went into the station and got the brief case. Rosania carried it out to Grillo and opened it. DeVita took from it a 32 automatic and Grillo a Beretta automatic; the murder weapon. Rosania then took the brief case back to the locker. The three men then proceeded to the Universal Food Market. They sat on a bench in the park facing the market and perfected the plan of operations. Rosania made a search for Law's car in a parking lot adjacent to the Universal Market but could not find it. He later pointed out Lofrano and Law while they moved about in the market. He then left after having arranged with DeVita and Grillo to call him at a diner after the holdup was completed. Some 10 or 15 minutes later Lofrano and Law emerged from the market, the former carrying a paper bag containing the day's receipts (some $5,000 in cash) and Law walking behind him. Reaching his car Law entered and sat in the driver's seat; Lofrano sat to his right. Grillo went to Law's side of the car with drawn revolver; DeVita to Lofrano's side with drawn revolver. This is a stickup, they said. It was at this juncture that Grillo's gun was fired and Law was fatally wounded, dying about two hours later. Grillo grabbed the money bag and he and DeVita fled the scene. Later they contacted Rosania and he picked them up in a friend's car. When DeVita phoned Rosania he asked what happened in the robbery. Several days later the three men were arrested, they confessed, some of the proceeds of the theft were discovered and the murder weapon recovered.

Last edited by Snakes; 09/09/13 09:13 PM.

"Snakes... Snakes... I don't know no Snakes."
Re: Silvio DeVita [Re: maverick] #739142
09/10/13 12:15 AM
09/10/13 12:15 AM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
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Joined: Aug 2008
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A fourth Genovese family crew is based out of Essex County and headed by capo Silvio P. DeVita. His name appears on the Casino Control Commission’s Exclusion List. The DeVita crew specializes in construction industry and labor racketeering, the infiltration of legitimate businesses, insurance fraud, gambling and loan-sharking. Andrew N. Gerardo, who reportedly retired from head of this crew in the early 1990s and moved to Florida, routinely returns to New Jersey to receive a share of the profits and assert his authority when key decisions need to be made.

http://mafianj.com/sci2004/genovese.shtml


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Re: Silvio DeVita [Re: Snakes] #739154
09/10/13 05:40 AM
09/10/13 05:40 AM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
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Secret location (WITSEC)
Originally Posted By: Snakes
He is a Sicilian native who started out in Andrew Gerardo's crew, eventually moving up the ranks to take over when Gerardo retired. Not sure of a birth date, but the guy has to be at least 80. [Edit, he'll be 82 in November according to his AC exclusion record linked to below]

He was also convicted of killing a cop (though he didn't pull the trigger) in 1954 in connection with an armed robbery and was actually on death row until the death penalty was declared unconstitutional in NJ. He was eventually paroled sometime in the eighties; how I don't know, as it would have to be the dumbest parole board ever to let an ex-death row inmate, mob associate, and cop killer back out on the streets but then again, it is Jersey.


While imprisoned, he and some other guys tried to break out by using a saw (!) but was caught by a prison guard. DeVita is a big guy, 6´3, 230. Born Nov 5, 1931. He has a criminal background for offenses including first-degree murder, robbery, criminal usury, and possession of a weapon by a convicted felon.



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Re: Silvio DeVita [Re: HairyKnuckles] #739187
09/10/13 10:28 AM
09/10/13 10:28 AM
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 92
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maverick Offline OP
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maverick  Offline OP
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wow, I didn't realize he's an old timer, looks like he's done a lot of work, seen alot


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