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Frank Costello's legal troubles in the 50s #844783
06/06/15 12:16 AM
06/06/15 12:16 AM
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Dwalin2011 Offline OP
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Dwalin2011  Offline OP
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Does anyone know how much time did Frank Costello actually serve in prison for his tax evasion convictions? In most of the articles it's said he was convicted and acquitted on appeal several times on the same charges. Here is a quote from the book "Treasury agent" by Andrew Tully, writted in 1958s:
Quote:
On May 13, 1954, Costello was convicted on three counts of willful tax evasion — for the years 1947, 1948 and 1949. He was sentenced to serve five years on each of the counts, to run concurrently, and was fined $ 10,000 on each count — a total of $ 30,000. Costello appealed to the second circuit court of appeals, which upheld the 1948 and 1949 convictions but reversed the 1947 finding and reduced his fine to $ 20,000. Subsequently, the Supreme Court upheld the finding of the circuit court.

So what was the final penalty? The initial one was 5 years, what was the one handled down by the Supreme Court and how much did he actually serve?


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Re: Frank Costello's legal troubles in the 50s [Re: Dwalin2011] #844943
06/07/15 08:02 AM
06/07/15 08:02 AM
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mickey2 Offline
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he got out in '61, after serving 42 months of his 5yr term

Re: Frank Costello's legal troubles in the 50s [Re: Dwalin2011] #844951
06/07/15 08:23 AM
06/07/15 08:23 AM
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Giacomo_Vacari Offline
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Giacomo_Vacari  Offline
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Frank was in prison when, Vito made his big move. True that a lot of Costello's powerful allies in the family were dead, deported, or incarcerated, but Frank still had loyalists in the family that still mattered, and he ordered them not to do anything, especially after Appalachian. He did not want anymore heat on the family then there already was.


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Re: Frank Costello's legal troubles in the 50s [Re: Giacomo_Vacari] #844956
06/07/15 08:42 AM
06/07/15 08:42 AM
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mickey2 Offline
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Originally Posted By: Giacomo_Vacari
Frank was in prison when, Vito made his big move. True that a lot of Costello's powerful allies in the family were dead, deported, or incarcerated, but Frank still had loyalists in the family that still mattered, and he ordered them not to do anything, especially after Appalachian. He did not want anymore heat on the family then there already was.


thanks for this little story, i bet no one knew this before.


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