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Calabrese denies roles in mob deaths
Courtroom sketch for the Chicago Tribune by Cheryl A.
Cook, August 16, 2007
Frank Calabrese Sr., a reputed mob enforcer alleged to have fatally strangled,
slashed, shot, beaten or bombed 13 victims, seemed more like a polite, chubby
grandpa than a hit man in court Thursday.
"Good afternoon, ladies and
gentlemen of the jury," Calabrese volunteered as he gave a slight nod in the
jurors' direction before taking a seat on the witness stand and aiming his good
ear toward his lawyer.
During a couple of hours of testimony, the balding
70-year-old with a short white beard described a gentler Outfit than others have
at the Family Secrets trial, though Calabrese emphatically denied being a made
member himself. He said he detested bullies like the ones who picked on him in
school and he repeatedly gave the same simple reply to questions about whether
he took part in specific murders: "No way," he said.
Calabrese acknowledged he put out street loans and that he paid a mob boss some
of the proceeds,
but he denied dishing out beatings to customers who didn't pay
up in a timely fashion.
"I would sit and talk to them and ask, 'What's
the least you can pay or what's the most you can pay?' " Calabrese said in a
voice higher than expected for a supposed tough guy. "Sit-downs" with bosses
would resolve any disputes over territory, he said, but profanity was frowned on
at these meetings. "Oh no," Calabrese said. "It was all done
diplomatically."
Calabrese's appearance on the witness stand marked that
rare event: a reputed mob boss testifying in court in his own defense.
Incredibly, he was the second one this week at the landmark trial, following
Joey "the Clown" Lombardo by a day.
Five men, all but one reputed to be
Outfit figures, are on trial in connection with 18 long-unsolved gangland
slayings. Federal authorities code-named the investigation Operation Family
Secrets after obtaining cooperation from Calabrese's brother and
son.
During the prosecution case, Calabrese's brother, Nicholas, detailed
how Frank Calabrese allegedly strangled many of his alleged 13 victims with a
rope and then slashed their throats. Many of the bodies were stuffed into car
trunks. In addition, Frank Calabrese's son, Frank Jr., testified about prison
conversations he secretly recorded with his father.
Prosecutors have
called Frank Calabrese Sr. a leader of the mob's 26th Street, or Chinatown,
crew. During his testimony, Calabrese often looked toward the jury, the people
who ultimately must decide if the Calabrese on the witness stand was believable
or simply trying to put on a convincing show in a last-ditch attempt to save
himself from dying in prison.
Calabrese told jurors his personal story,
how he grew up on the West Side and sold newspapers on Grand Avenue and ate
oatmeal for dinner when times were hard. But prosecutors seemed determined to
block as many of those sympathetic tales as possible, repeatedly objecting as
Calabrese testified.
U.S. District Judge James Zagel warned Calabrese's
lawyer, Joseph Lopez, to keep his client from going into too much
detail.
"How are these people supposed to know what I'm doing?" protested
Calabrese, looking toward the jury again.
Lopez, who has taken to wearing
pink on trial days that are important to Calabrese's case, chose a pink shirt
and a highlighter-yellow tie Thursday. He tried to calm Calabrese and walk him
through his testimony.
But Calabrese quickly veered off target when he
started discussing a favorite nightclub and its fashion shows. Lopez said
Calabrese loves to talk and blamed his Italian ethnicity, but Zagel told the
lawyer he was running low on the number of open questions he would be allowed to
ask.
"Can I have some extra ones, maybe?" Lopez asked.
"We'll see
how it goes," the judge responded.
When he finally got into the meat of
his testimony, Calabrese, who pleaded guilty in the 1990s in a mob loan-sharking
case, acknowledged he put loans on the street beginning in the
1960s.
Eventually he learned from mobster Angelo "the Bull" LaPietra that
he had missed one detail—paying LaPietra his cut of the action.
Calabrese
described LaPietra as his partner, but he insisted he never joined him in the
Outfit.
He went on to describe his meetings and dealings with
organized-crime figures such as Johnny "Apes" Monteleone, Jimmy LaPietra, James
"Turk" Torello, William "Butch" Petrocelli and John Fecarotta
Calabrese said his interests shifted to the Chinatown area after the death of
Frank "Skids" Caruso resulted in Angelo LaPietra assuming control over that
turf. Still, he denied being in the mob himself.
"Joe, Mr. Lopez, I'm
sorry," he began. "When they said Outfit, they're talking about guys like Angelo
and Jimmy and Johnny 'Apes' and John Fecarotta. Them are Outfit guys," said
Calabrese, calling the Outfit a group that hung out and did business
together.
Calabrese, who was implicated by his brother in the 1970 murder
of Michael "Hambone" Albergo, called Albergo a freelance agent who brought him
loan
Calabrese testified he knew Albergo had been subpoenaed to testify before a
crime commission, but he denied killing him.
"What did I do that he could
testify [about]?" Calabrese said. "There was no way that them loans meant that
much."
Calabrese denied ever getting involved in sports bookmaking,
telling jurors that he didn't even know how to run a betting ring. Calabrese
then launched into denials of murdering Paul Haggerty or burglar John Mendell.
He said he hadn't even heard of another murder victim, Henry
Cosentino.
He denied killing Donald Renno, Vincent Moretti or Petrocelli,
a mob figure whom Nick Calabrese said was ordered eliminated for being too
flamboyant.
He said he didn't kill federal informant William Dauber and
his wife, Charlotte, either. Neither did he plan the murder of Fecarotta, his
friend, the murder that broke the case when Nick Calabrese's DNA was found on a
glove that had been recovered at the murder scene.
Calabrese said he also
did not kill businessman Michael Cagnoni with bomb, as his brother testified. He
also denied his brother's account of how a blasting cap exploded in his hand
during a trial run for the bombing. And with that, he held his hands over his
head and wiggled his fingers for the jury to see he had no missing
digits.
Calabrese also denied extorting James Stolfe, the founder of the
Connie's Pizza chain, who told jurors he paid street tax to Calabrese for years.
Calabrese said Stolfe was a friend that he "loved."
Lopez asked what he
felt like when he learned that the Outfit was demanding a payment from Stolfe.
"A piece of [expletive]," Calabrese answered.
When the trial resumes
Monday, Calabrese will continue testifying and will eventually undergo grilling
by prosecutors who will likely try to use his own words against him, as they did
with Lombardo. On the secret tapes recorded by son Frank Jr. during prison
visits, Calabrese Sr. talked about mob business, murders and a secret "making"
ceremony. Calabrese may also have harsher words for his turncoat brother who
broke the Family Secrets case.
He told jurors Thursday that it was Nick
Calabrese who took the darker path into Outfit life.
"I even told him he
wasn't a man to do that," Calabrese Sr. said.
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