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Trial begins for Bonanno-linked drug ring #1056748
04/17/23 06:37 PM
04/17/23 06:37 PM
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,526
LuanKuci Offline OP
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LuanKuci  Offline OP
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https://www.timesunion.com/news/art...ady-father-son-mafia-linked-17901290.php

Trial begins of Schenectady father and son, Mafia-linked N.J. man
Construction businessman and son accused of conspiring to traffic cocaine; jury selected
Robert Gavin — April 17, 2023

ALBANY — A jury was selected in U.S. District Court in Albany on Monday to hear the trial of a Schenectady businessman, his son and a Mafia-linked New Jersey man charged with conspiring to traffic an estimated $600,000 worth of cocaine between Schenectady and New York City.
Jeffrey Civitello, 51, and his 23-year-old son, Jeffrey Civitello Jr., are standing trial with Richard Sinde, 58, of Fort Lee, N.J., a reputed associate of the Bonanno crime family, in a case before U.S. District Judge Mae D'Agostino. The jury and three alternates were sworn in late Monday afternoon  in a packed first-floor courtroom.  
Opening statements are set to begin on Tuesday at 9 a.m.   
Federal prosecutors allege the elder Civitello, who owns Focus Construction in Schenectady, conspired with his son as well as Sinde and two others to move the cocaine starting on March 31, 2021, when they allegedly met on Albany Street in Schenectady to discuss transporting the drugs downstate from Schenectady in the younger Civitello's blue Jeep Grand Cherokee. Sinde and the other the two other men allegedly went downstate in three separate cars, with Sinde in the Jeep.
Investigators with the  U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration had placed a GPS tracking device on that vehicle. It recorded the Jeep traveling from Schenectady, staying in Fort Lee that night, then traveling over the George Washington Bridge into Manhattan and eventually a residence in the Breezy Point section of Queens. The vehicle then went back to Fort Lee, prosecutors said.

On April 2, 2021, State Police acting at the direction of the DEA stopped the Jeep on the Thruway in Greene County. Investigators seized 9 kilograms of cocaine that was in a hidden compartment in the SUV. Neither of the Civitellos were in the car at the time. But a man driving the vehicle, 76-year-old Robert Ingrao of Lodi, N.J., was charged. Sinde and another conspirator were allegedly following the Jeep when it was intercepted.

A four-count superseding indictment handed up last May charges the defendants with conspiring to distribute and possess with intent with intent to distribute cocaine. Ingrao pleaded guilty in November to conspiring to move the drugs. Ingrao, who is not cooperating with prosecutors, has not yet been sentenced.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael Barnett and Dustin Segovia are prosecuting. The elder Civitello is being represented by Capital Region attorney Eric Galarneau, the younger Civitello by the local team of James Knox and Julie Nociolo. Sinde is being represented by Bronx attorney Stacey Richman. 
When the judge individually asked all the defendants if they were OK with the jury that was selected, the elder Civitello said no. His attorney then told the judge he was OK with the panel.
In pre-trial rulings, D'Agostino held off deciding on whether jurors will be able to learn about the elder Civitello's previous conviction in federal court for conspiring to sell cocaine. Whether or not that information is heard would appear to depend on whether he testifies in his own defense. The judge will not allow jurors to hear about Sinde's conviction in 1992 for conspiring to possess heroin with intent to distribute it. 
The judge will also not allow jurors to hear evidence about organized crime. In court documents, federal prosecutors have identified Sinde as an associate of the Bonanno crime family, one of five Cosa Nostra clans based in New York City. 
The younger Civitello faces another case, set for trial next month before D'Agostino, on charges that he possessed a firearm in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime.


More info about the bust:
https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/Schenectady-father-and-son-eyed-in-Mafia-linked-16820105.php

Schenectady father, son eyed in Mafia-linked cocaine investigation
Robert Gavin — February 1, 2022

ALBANY — A penthouse apartment. A job at a family-run construction company.  A baby on the way.
At 22, Jeffrey Civitello Jr. appeared to be riding high, but his story took a downward turn on Oct. 21 when federal drug investigators raided his home on the top floor of a Schenectady building on Albany Street and seized 75 pounds of marijuana, loaded weapons and hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Now, the Notre Dame-Bishop Gibbons School graduate is facing federal drug and weapon charges in Albany – and is being investigated in a separate cocaine-trafficking case involving a reputed Bonanno crime family associate from New Jersey, according to court papers filed in U.S. District Court.
Attorneys for Civitello, who is being held in the Albany County jail, are hoping to convince U.S. Magistrate Judge Daniel Stewart to reconsider an earlier order to detain him without bail. They noted in a motion that Civitello has no criminal history and strong family ties in Schenectady, lessening his risk of flight. He has pleaded not guilty.
In court papers opposing Civitello’s release, Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Barnett suggested the defendant's family ties did not entirely help his case. The prosecutor described Civitello and his 50-year-old father, Jeffrey Civitello Sr., who owns a construction company located in the same building where the raid took place, as sophisticated drug dealers with numerous criminal associates.
On Oct. 21, when officers with a federal Drug Enforcement Administration task force raided what they called a penthouse, they found a gun in the first-floor office of Focus Construction, a company owned by the senior Civitello, who as a convicted felon is prohibited from possessing firearms. Civitello Sr. has prior federal convictions for cocaine trafficking and money laundering, the prosecutor stated.
Barnett said investigators also found two boxes for Glock handguns, including one purchased in Kentucky by a known gun trafficker. 
And the prosecutor said the younger Civitello and his father are being investigated in connection with the DEA’s seizure on April 2 of 9 kilograms of cocaine found in a hidden compartment of Civitello’s blue 2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Civitello was not in the Jeep at the time, but had been spotted by investigators two days earlier meeting with the three men charged in that case, including Richard Sinde, 56, a reputed Bonanno crime family associate from Fort Lee, N.J, the prosecutor said.
On March 31, Sinde, Robert Ingrao, 74, of Lodi, N.J., and a third man, Christopher Kelly, 54, of Brooklyn, met in Schenectady with both Civitello and his father to borrow the Jeep. On April 2, when the vehicle was stopped in Greene County, police found the 9 kilos of cocaine in a trap compartment in the trunk, Barnett told the judge at Civitello’s detention hearing in October.
At the hearing, Barnett said Civitello had been using the Jeep every day and was well aware that it had been seized.
"This would have been a good time for the defendant to say, 'You know what? That was a close call. I'm a smart guy. Maybe I should go to college. Maybe I should try something other than drug dealing.' And that was more than six months ago," Barnett told the judge. "And we know now that the defendant did not choose that path."
In court papers, Barnett told the judge that Civitello had also  exchanged messages over Snapchat that appeared to be related to the distribution of opioid pills.
Barnett said investigators seized more than $856,000, including $407,545 found in Civitello's apartment, another $319,387 found in the home of a relative alleged to be a co-conspirator and an additional $128,860 in Coinbase cryptocurrency. The prosecutor said the  Coinbase figure was nearly all traced to a transfer of $101,440 from Civitello's father to him.
"This transfer reinforces the government’s argument that the defendant is involved in drug trafficking activities with his father," Barnett said. He said it took place at a time when both the father and son were receiving unemployment insurance benefits when each was "dubiously claiming"  that they had lost their jobs at the father's construction company.
Barnett said the younger Civitello's 2020 tax return listed his business as "sales" and placed his total income at $66,273. He alleged that Civitello and his family are falsely claiming to work at the family business.
"Of the several dozen character reference letters submitted by the defendant, not a single one is from a co-worker, and no letter appears to reference his supposed construction job," the prosecutor stated. 
Civitello is now on his third and fourth attorneys, Syracuse-based attorneys Robert G. Wells and Derek S. Andrews. They sent the judge 25 letters from Civitello's mother, sister, other family members, a former teacher, assistant principal and ex-tenants all attesting to Civitello's good character. That was in addition to a photo of the defendant with his girlfriend announcing that a baby is on the way.
Photos show Civitello working on construction sites and posing with family members. In one photo, a tattoo is visible on Civitello's arm which states: "La Famiglia è tutto." In Italian, it translates to "The Family is Everything."


More info on Bonanno associate Sinde:
https://nypost.com/2013/10/01/pot-arrest-proves-costly-for-bonanno-associate/

Pot arrest proves costly for Bonanno ‘associate’
Rebecca Rosenberg — October 1, 2013

Reputed Bonanno associate Richard Sinde was tossed in jail Tuesday after a judge learned he was arrested for marijuana possession and having a brass knuckle outfitted with a knife just a month after he made $300,000 bail on charges in Manhattan.

Sinde, 49, was arrested last July as part of a takedown of a Bonanno crew that was allegedly selling Viagra and Cialis on the black market.
Sinde’s doting mom put up her $600,000 home in Englewood Cliffs, NJ to spring her son from Rikers.
But only a month later, the mama’s boy was caught in the Bronx with pot and a weapon during a traffic stop, prosecutors told Manhattan Criminal Court Judge Melissa Jackson who swiftly remanded the recidivist ruffian.

“He was upset, very upset,” said his defense lawyer Joel Winograd. “He has a young child and his mother’s sick. It was like a kamikaze attack out of nowhere.”

Winograd, who has referred to his client as a “degenerate gambler,” said he was contesting the allegations. The matter will be heard at an October 10th hearing, he said
Prosecutors believe Sinde was major Viagra dealer and helped to run a $9 million-a-year bookmaking business.
Sinde possessed a money counter and kept meticulous computer records, according to court papers.

Re: Trial begins for Bonanno-linked drug ring [Re: LuanKuci] #1057471
04/23/23 01:25 PM
04/23/23 01:25 PM
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,526
LuanKuci Offline OP
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LuanKuci  Offline OP
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Brooklyn drug dealer says he supplied Schenectady businessman with cocaine
Robert Gavin April 21, 2023

https://www.timesunion.com/news/article/brooklyn-drug-dealer-says-supplied-schenectady-17909045.php

ALBANY — A gravel-voiced drug dealer from Brooklyn told jurors in U.S. District Court on Thursday he repeatedly supplied a Schenectady businessman with $40,000 kilos of cocaine — only for the illicit ring to unravel when an elderly drug mule was stopped on the state Thruway.

Christopher Kelly, 56, a nail salon manager who has at least four felony convictions — including one that involved packages of cocaine being wrapped in Minnie Mouse wrap — recalled his astonishment when an SUV carrying an estimated 20 pounds of cocaine was stopped on the Thruway in Greene County on April 2, 2021.

"What was your reaction?" Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Barnett asked Kelly.

“Holy s—t,” Kelly responded from the witness stand in the federal drug trial of Jeffrey Civitello Sr., 51, his son, Jeffrey Civitello Jr., 23 and Richard Sinde, 58, of Fort Lee, N.J.

“Maybe it’s just a ticket,” Sinde told him, he said.

But it was not. Police had stopped Robert Ingrao, now 76, of Lodi, N.J. whom they detained after investigators found the cocaine in a hidden compartment of the blue Jeep Cherokee, which belonged to the younger Civitello. Federal drug investigators had secretly placed a GPS device on the vehicle earlier in the year, to track its movements.

Prosecutors allege the Civitellos and Sinde, a reputed associate of the Bonanno crime family, conspired to move $600,000 worth of cocaine between New York City and Schenectady.

Kelly told jurors he has known the elder Civitello for almost a decade. Kelly said he was serving time in state prison when he forged a business partnership with a man named “Phil” to move marijuana through Schenectady. Kelly said Phil, who worked for Civitello, later died. But Kelly said he supplied Civitello with marijuana and cocaine, the latter of which he said he delivered “maybe 10 times.”

Prosecutors allege that on March 29, 2021 and March 31, 2021, Kelly delivered a total of six kilos of cocaine to Civitello, each worth $40,000. The other nine kilos were also worth $40,000 a piece, leading to the overall cost of $600,000.

Kelly testified that the younger Civitello instructed him on how to use the hidden compartment in the Jeep.

Kelly, Sinde and Ingrao drove three separate cars back down the Thruway, according to Kelly, who said a state trooper stopped Sinde for speeding but let him go without a ticket. The next day, Kelly said he met Sinde in a parking lot in the Breezy Point section of Queens. Kelly said he loaded nine kilos of cocaine into the Jeep's hidden compartment. The next day, he testified, Ingrao was driving the SUV when it was stopped.

At the time of the alleged conspiracy, Kelly was facing sentencing in Manhattan for his role in a similar cocaine trafficking ring — the one involving the Minnie Mouse patterned-wrapped cocaine packages being moved in his Mill Basin neighborhood

Ingrao and Kelly have both pleaded guilty to charges in the Albany case; Ingrao is not cooperating with prosecutors.

Kelly, testifying in a white dress shirt and khaki slacks, explained that while in prison later in 2021 he instructed a family member to inform Civitello in a letter that he was not worried about being charged in a new case involving the alleged Brooklyn-to-Schenectady pipeline.

The letter was signed by “Mr. Pickles,” a moniker Kelly said he used to give the impression that he had a powerful drug partner.

“To let (Civitello Sr.) know I’m not named in the new case and I’m OK,” Kelly told Barnett.

Kelly’s criminal history includes being arrested in a sprawling cross-country marijuana case with his brother, John Kelly, that also included reputed members and associates of New York’s five Mafia families. Kelly divulged his past, which includes drug dealing, use of cocaine and alcohol, as well as pre-paid phones to throw off investigators. He said he, Sinde and the elder Civitello threw away pre-paid phones after the traffic stop.

Kelly said he still met cocaine customers even as he was struggling with COVID-19. He said he lied to the customers and claimed he was virus free.

Kelly said he wanted to lessen the knowledge of others involved in the drug ring, such as Ingrao, by having Ingrao not be present at Civitello’s property on Albany Street known as “the yard.”

Still, Kelly readily admitted that he brought his elderly mother and his daughter on treks to Schenectady in which he was trafficking cocaine. And Kelly, who said he experiences panic attacks, admitted that he has a very difficult time abiding by the law when he gets around cocaine — and even downplayed his ability as a trafficker.

“Honestly, I’m not the best drug dealer,” Kelly admitted.

Under cross-examination by Sinde's attorney Stacey Richman, Kelly admitted that he has been planning to make money legally off marijuana in California through a pot farm.

Kelly claimed he was moving the drugs, in part, to help Sinde repay a $160,000 debt to a New York City-based drug supplier named "Abi" who he said also supplied him. James Knox, the attorney for the younger Civitello, questioned why Kelly did not know the man's last name or give it to prosecutors.

"I was trying to help Richard get out of debt," Kelly testified.

"Why would you pay another man's debt?" Knox pressed.

"People help each other," Kelly replied.

Kelly concluded his testimony later Thursday. The trial continues before U.S. District Judge Mae D’Agostino on Friday.

Re: Trial begins for Bonanno-linked drug ring [Re: LuanKuci] #1057523
04/24/23 07:50 AM
04/24/23 07:50 AM
Joined: Oct 2022
Posts: 155
Peoria,Illinois
S
SonnyfromPeoria Offline
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SonnyfromPeoria  Offline
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This case sounds really interesting...alot of people tied up in differebt familys...i wonder where the cocaine was coming from tho Mexico or Colombia...i noticed they didnt mention anything about actual supplier other then Chris Kelly.

Re: Trial begins for Bonanno-linked drug ring [Re: LuanKuci] #1057895
04/28/23 02:57 AM
04/28/23 02:57 AM
Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,526
LuanKuci Offline OP
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LuanKuci  Offline OP
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https://www.justice.gov/usao-ndny/p...rafficking-kilograms-cocaine-schenectady

Jury Convicts Three Men of Trafficking Kilograms of Cocaine to Schenectady

Wednesday, April 26, 2023
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Northern District of New York

ALBANY, NEW YORK – A jury voted today to convict three men of trafficking kilograms of cocaine to Schenectady, New York, in March and April 2021.

Jeffrey C. Civitello, Sr., age 51, of Schenectady, his son Jeffrey C. Civitello Jr., age 23, of Schenectady, and Richard D. Sinde, age 58, of Fort Lee, New Jersey, were convicted on all counts following an 8-day trial.

United States Attorney Carla B. Freedman and Frank A. Tarentino III, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), New York Division, made the announcement.

The trial evidence demonstrated a conspiracy between five men: the three defendants on trial, as well as Christopher J. Kelly, age 56, of Brooklyn, New York, and Robert J. Ingrao, age 76, of Lodi, New Jersey.

As part of the conspiracy, Kelly delivered 3 kilograms of cocaine to Civitello Sr. in Schenectady on March 29, and Kelly and Sinde delivered an additional 3 kilograms of cocaine to Civitello Sr. on March 31.

Also on March 31, the Civitellos ordered more cocaine and suggested that Kelly and Sinde use, as a transportation vehicle, a 2018 Jeep Grand Cherokee owned by Civitello Jr., which contained, in its trunk, a sophisticated, hidden compartment, also known as a “trap.” Unbeknownst to the conspirators, the DEA had placed a court-authorized tracker on the Jeep several months prior, as part of an investigation of Civitello Jr.

On March 31, Sinde then drove the Jeep from Schenectady to his residence in Fort Lee, and the following evening met Kelly in Breezy Point, New York, on the Rockaway Peninsula, where Kelly and Sinde loaded up the Jeep’s hidden compartment with 9 kilograms of cocaine to be delivered the following day to the Civitellos in Schenectady. Sinde then drove the Jeep home to Fort Lee.

The following day, on April 2, 2021, Ingrao went to Sinde’s house and got into the Jeep, and drove it north on Interstate 87 toward Schenectady. A New York State Police Trooper, at the DEA’s request, conducted a stop on Ingrao in Greene County. The Trooper then located 9 kilograms of cocaine in the Jeep’s hidden compartment.

The jury voted to convict all defendants of conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute a controlled substance, as well as possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance for the 3 kilograms of cocaine delivered on March 31. The jury also voted to convict Sinde of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance, and the Civitellos of attempted possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance, for the 9 kilograms of cocaine they tried to transport to Schenectady on April 2.

Following the jury’s verdict, Sinde and Civitello Sr. were remanded to custody. Civitello Jr. has been in custody since October 21, 2021, when he was arrested by the DEA in Schenectady on unrelated charges of possessing firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, and possessing and intending to distribute marijuana. Those charges are merely accusations, and as to those charges, Civitello Jr. is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

United States District Judge Mae A. D’Agostino will sentence the Civitellos on September 6, and will sentence Sinde on September 8. Each man faces at least 10 years and up to life in prison, as well as at least 5 years of post-imprisonment supervised release. A defendant’s sentence is imposed by a judge based on the particular statute the defendant is charged with violating, the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other factors. Ingrao’s sentencing and Kelly’s sentencing are also pending.

This case was investigated by the DEA’s Capital District Drug Enforcement Task Force, which includes DEA Special Agents and investigators from state and local police agencies, including the Saratoga Springs Police Department, the Saratoga County Sheriff’s Office, the Washington County Sheriff’s Office, the Columbia County Sheriff’s Office, and the New York State Police. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael Barnett and Dustin C. Segovia are prosecuting this case.


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