Archive for the ‘Crime’ Category

Louis Anthony (Bobby) Manna – Convicted of plotting to kill John Gotti

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

During the ’70s and ’80s, Casella’s Restaurant at the corner of First and Jackson in Hoboken was the Hudson County headquarters of the the Mafia.
During the ’70s and ’80s, Casella’s Restaurant at the corner of First and Jackson in Hoboken was the Hudson County headquarters of the the Mafia.

From La Cosa Nostra – State of New Jersey Commission of Investigation 1989 Report – The Genovese/Gigante Family

Manna’s New Jersey base of operation was Casella’s Restaurant in Hoboken, from where he oversaw gambling, loansharking, labor racketeering, corruption and pier thefts in the region. The owner of this restaurant, Martin Casella, is subordinate to Manna and is considered to be a significant member, acting as Manna’s deputy and chief assistant in the organization. Recent investigative findings reveal that Casella controlled portions of Hudson County once believed to be the domain of the late John DiGilio. Furthermore, there are strong indications that Casella acted as a conduit of information for Manna.

Manna, who had been jailed for three years in the 1970′s for refusing to answer questions about organized crime before the SCI, was successfully targeted by law enforcement in the 1980′s. He was convicted in June, 1989, of ordering the murder of New York businessman Irwin Schiff and of plotting the murder of Gambino boss John Gotti and Gotti’s brother, Gene. These convictions, along with those for racketeering and conspiracy, make it likely that Manna eventually will be replaced as consigliere of the Genovese family, but that designation has yet to be made. In fact, sources report that Manna continues to issue instructions from prison and had a voice in picking a successor to take over John DiGilio’s operations.

La Cosa Nostra – State of New Jersey Commission of Investigation 1989 Report

Did Earl Morgan spy on the Black Panthers in Jersey City?

Friday, March 26th, 2010

In 2004, the Urban Times News printed this statement concerning then Jersey Journal Reporter Earl Morgan:
. . .
It is the same thing driving Earl now that drove him when he was a police informant whose code name was Ugly Duckling, tipping the JCPD on the activities of the Jersey City Chapter of the Black Panther Party.
. . .
Read the complete Urban Times News article.

Jimmy King’s Jersey City Parking Authority

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010


May 14, 2003
Pat O’Melia’s Statement to the City Council of Jersey City Concerning the Parking Authority


. . .


MR. BYRNE: Patrol O’Melia, you
are our keynote speaker. You get five minutes
or less.


MR. O’MELIA: I will do it in
less, Robert.


MR. BYRNE: Okay. Sir.

MR. O’MELIA: Hello. My name is
Pat O’Melia. I reside at 130 Congress Street in
Jersey City. I am the public relations person
for the Jersey City Parking Authority. I come
before this Council today asking for a complete
investigation of the Parking Authority. And
now, if you want to ask me some questions as to
why, I will be happy to answer them; but I will
tell you right off the bat this is an
organization that is out of control. It is run
by intimidation and thuggery, for that matter.


Yesterday a 28-year employee of
Parking Authority, the deputy director, was
threatened with termination. There is no
conversation. There is no medium that you can
express your opinions at the Parking Authority
without it becoming confrontational and your
jobs are threatened. This goes from the
management right down to the PEOs who write the
tickets. If you contact the union, you will
find out complaints have been made there.


The morale at the Parking
Authority is the pits. And these are the same
people I put out on the streets with a ticket
book. We got to change the morale. And public
relations starts from the inside out, and it’s
going to have to start at the top.

I have spoken to the Mayor about
this. He is not interested in hearing this. So
I come before yous. I have just spoken to the
Mayor just prior to arriving here. I wanted to
tell him face-to-face that I was coming before
the Council. I will say he didn’t take that
well. But I am asking you to investigate the
Jersey City Parking Authority.


MR. SMITH: Alex.


MR. O’MELIA: Now, you people have
known me for three years with my other role as
the radio show; and you know I am a straight
shooter. I don’t screw around. We have been on
different end of the arguments sometimes, but
you know I don’t kid around. This is serious.
There is a tremendous problem at the Parking
Authority.


MR. MALDONADO: Can you highlight
some of these problems?


MR. O’MELIA: Intimidation is a
big deal there now with the new director.
Joining associations has become a big deal.
Purchasing tickets to events; whether you want
to go or not, you are going to buy a ticket.
Ticket quotas — believe me. we got to write a
certain amount of tickets. Don’t come back if
you don’t. If we don’t go forward with this
investigation — and we can leave the
individuals held harmless without —


MR. MALDONADO: Immunity?


MR. O’MELIA: You got it. You are
going — you are going to get a lot of
interesting stories, believe me. You don’t have
to have a rain coat and be Columbo to crack this
case.

MR. SMITH: Alex, would you —
would you — you and Carlton need to deal with
these allegations, particularly in regards to –
these are some serious allegations on the record
that we need to address.


Also, it brings me to mind,

Peter, in your ward I need to ask you about
between Stegman and Bergen Avenue. Bergen and
the Boulevard. Is that no parking for — from
three to nine for anyone, or is it two-hour
limit?


MR. BRENNAN: That is not zoned
parking there.

MR. SMITH: Huh?


MR. BRENNAN: That is not zoned
parking.


MR. SMITH: According to what I’m
told — I stopped and talked to Parking
Authority official who was booting cars, an
officer. He said that their hours there are
from — there is no parking except for
residents.


MR. BRENNAN: East of the
Boulevard you are talking?


MR. SMITH: Yes.


MR. BRENNAN: No, it’s west of the
Boulevard.


MS. RICHARDSON: Would have to be
posted, anyway.


MR. SMITH It was not posted; I
brought that point up. Alex, that is an issue think that needs to be addressed with the
Parking Authority. I was in this area last —
the beginning of the week. It was brought to my
attention. People were being booted, and there
was no sign posted. I was told by the — told
by the Parking Authority officer that this is
between Bergen Avenue and the Boulevard.


MR. MALDONADO: There is no
residential parking there?


MR. BRENNAN: No, it’s west of the
Boulevard. It’s from —


MR. SMITH: And I told them I
didn’t think the ordinance was in effect for
that area. So we need to clearly define what
that — what is happening there because we may
have illegally booted and fined people who were
parked there.


MR. BOOTH: Stegman Street?


MR. SMITH: Stegman — Stegman
Street between Bergen and the Boulevard. Is it
Stegman Parkway or Stegman Street?
22


MR. BRENNAN: Stegman Parkway.


MR. HEALY: Stegman Parkway is
west of the Boulevard.


MR. SMITH: Stegman Street, as

well as Culver Avenue between the Boulevard
and — between the Boulevard and Bergen Avenue.


MR. HEALY: Boulevard and
Westside.


MR. SMITH: Okay. It’s not
Culver: it’s Audubon. I’m sorry, Audubon.
Audubon Avenue.


MR. LIPSKI: Pat, have you ever
been the recipient of any of this intimidation
or coercion?


MR. McGEE: (This seems to be an error in the transcript. It appears to actually be Pat O’Melia speaking.) Oh, sure, but I am a
big boy: I can handle myself. There are
situations between me and the director, but that
I’m handling on my own. And for that matter, I
have just retained an attorney. But that is —
that I will take care of myself.


But this all came to a head
yesterday with the situation with the deputy
director. And this has just got to end. Today
I had a meeting with commissioners from the
Jersey City Parking Authority expressing the
same concerns as to an agency gone out of
control.


MR. HEALY: The commissioners
expressed that concern to you?

MR. O’MELIA: Yes, they did, at a
secret location called Vinnie’s Pizzeria on
Kennedy Boulevard today. But — I don’t know
why they picked that spot, but that’s where we
went. The Parking Authority meeting — I
haven’t attended any of the meetings in a while.
They now go about eight minutes. Somehow, some
way the contract is signed by the director,
supersedes the commissioners; they are no longer
required to vote on anything. The
commissioner —


MR. SMITH: That is not true.


MR. O’MELIA: — has the power to
hire and fire.


MR. MALDONADO: Pat, what they do
is they vote on the consent agenda. So what
they do is they take whatever amount of items on
the agenda, whether it’s five or ten or 20, they
condense them to one vote; and they get through
the agenda rather quickly.


MR. O’MELIA: Junior, I think you
ought to talk to some of the commissioners,
then.


MR. SMITH: I don’t know if they
can legally do that. I don’t know if they can

legally do that.


MR. O’MELIA: For that matter —


MR. SMITH: You Sunshine a meeting
and you Sunshine the items in that meeting. We
need to —


MR. LIPSKI: Orders the —

MR. MALDONADO: They don’t have
the ability to hire and fire without board
approval.


MR. O’MELIA: You got it.


MR. MALDONADO: That’s one of the
reasons I had earlier, before you got here,
requested for records in terms of what the employment status or how many employees have
been hired in the City and all the autonomous
agencies and authorities within the City.


MR. O’MELIA: I can’t speak for
the other agencies, but I believe there is going
to be some interesting reading at the Parking
Authority.


MR. BYRNE: Okay. Thanks, Pat.


MR. O’MELIA: Is that it?


MR. BYRNE: I think so.


MR. VEGA: I just wanted to ask
our Corporation Counsel, would we be able to add
to our resolution that gives the municipality
investigatory powers to include the Parking
Authority as part of our purview and our
jurisdiction?


MR. BOOTH: You can declare
yourself an investigatory body for any purpose
connected with the City government. You can do
that. I don’t see any reason why we couldn’t
amend the resolution that you have for tonight
to include the Parking Authority or do a
separate one at another time. But if you want
to amend tonight’s, let’s do that.


MR. VEGA: I think it’s
appropriate for the severity of the allegations
that we amend this and schedule these
investigations at the appropriate time. They
don’t have to be scheduled for the 28th. But
they could be scheduled at a later date which
these allegations that — that are being made
can be tested, in fact, if there is any truth to
them.


MR. BOOTH: If we are not going to do anything before the 28th, which we are
probably not, it might be a good idea to hold
off and do a separate resolution.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: Talk into the
microphone, please. microphone.


MR. BYRNE: In the microphone.


MR. BOOTH: I could — I could —


MR. BYRNE: They need to hear you
in Harrison.


AUDIENCE MEMBER: Microphone.


MR. BOOTH: I could — I could
interview Mr. O’Melia maybe and find out a few
more specifics and prepare a resolution for your
consideration at the next meeting.


MR. VEGA: I would appreciate it,
if you did that.


MS. RICHARDSON: I have a question
for you. Alex. Do you need a resolution to vote
subpoena powers by this body?


MR. BOOTH: What you need to do is
to form a — a — to form yourselves as a
committee of the whole for purpose of conducting
an investigation. Then, as a — as a body under
that auspices you do have subpoena powers. If
you form an ad hoc committee, as opposed to a
committee of the whole, then, in my opinion,
it’s questionable whether you would have
2subpoena powers or not, and I would say that you
didn’t. So you have to form yourself as a
committee of the whole. Then you require
subpoena powers for City business.


MR. SMITH: Alex, I think it would
be hard for us to exclude anybody in matters
like this, so a committee where all of us would
be able to ask questions is a — an appropriate
action.


MR. BOOTH: I think that’s why the
legislation was designed that way. Subpoena
powers, it’s a very serious matter and really
shouldn’t — it’s better to conduct it with all
of you, rather than some of you. And you can —
you can have an ad hoc committee of a few of you
and with that you can — you can ask people to
come in and talk. But if they don’t come, you
don’t have the power to go to court and have
them held in contempt or — whereas, under
tonight’s resolution, as a committee of the
whole you have subpoena power. If people don’t
comply with the subpoenas, you go to court, hold
them in contempt: and judge takes care of
business.

. . .

Managing a Jersey City Bar in the late Sixties

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Early one hot and humid morning in the late sixties, Sal, a Downtown barkeep, drove up to his establishment. From a block away, he could hear the clanging burglar alarm. As he got out of the car, he spotted the fragments of broken glass on the sidewalk. Opening the door, even before he took the key out of the lock, it was obvious that the change drawer was gone out of the cash register. With a sinking feeling building in his stomach, Sal put one hand on the bar and jumped to the other side. Someone had taken a couple of dozen cases of liquor that were stocked in back room, well over a thousand dollars worth.

How did they get all the boxes out through the small space of the narrow broken window? Only one case at a time would fit through there, and only sideways at that. It would take at least two people — and more likely three or four. They’d have to put the cases on top of the bar. Then they’d have to hand them out the broken window. From there, they probably put the stuff in a car. If whoever did it had carried it all away, they must be no more than just down the block or around the corner.

Sal flipped a switch, resetting the alarm, putting an end to the metallic ringing noise. And the alarm was going off the whole time. The police never showed up? Nobody saw what was happening?

Pete, an affable loser who lived across the street, shuffled into the tavern. As Pete’s wife was collecting welfare on the claim that he had abandoned her, Pete could not be found at home between the weekday hours of 8AM and 4PM. That was when the welfare inspectors worked. To play it safe, Pete generally started hanging out in the bar an hour early and stayed an hour late. The regular customers derived great amusement watching as a welfare inspector with a clipboard rang the bell to Pete’s wife’s apartment in order to verify that Pete was still among the missing.

“Sal, I don’t know how much it’s gonna help, but I saw the whole thing.”

“Didja, recognise who did it?”

“Nah, but I can tell ya’ what happened. I was looking out the window. It was late, so I had the lights off. I was listenin’ to the game on the radio from out on the West Coast, but I had the sound down real low. Some hophead threw a rock through the window, jumped in and popped right out with the change drawer. He took off like a bat outta hell.”

“But what happened to all the scotch and whiskey?”

“That’s what I’m about to tell ya’. As I’m seein’ the guy disappear down the block, I’m tryin’ to figger out what to do, as we got no phone in the apartment. It bein’ so late, I didn’t know right off who to wake up to ask to use to use the phone to call the cops or if I should walk-like to a phone booth. Just then a cop car pulls up. He pokes his head inside for little bit and then goes back to the car and gets on the radio. Real fast, another car pulls up with two more cops. Two of them then climb in the window and start passing out cases to the guy outside who puts ‘em in the cop cars. They made two trips.”

“Pete, why din’ch’a do somethin’?”

“What was I gonna do, Sal? Call the cops? I couldn’t say nothin’, the wife on welfare and all that.”

“Yeah, you’re right. There was nothin’ ya’ could do.”

Pete handed Sal a sheet of paper, “Well, it isn’t like I didn’t do nothin’. I got the numbers and the plates of the cars.”

- – -

In the Jersey City of this era, it was “customary” for each tavern owner to give the captain of the local police precinct one thousand five hundred dollars in cash once a year, just before Christmas. In the strict sense, this was not a payoff, as the sum did not buy any relaxed vigilance from the police; that cost more. The fifteen hundred was a under-the-table cash licensing fee over and above that paid by check each year to City Hall. It was assumed by one and all that the money did not stop with the precinct captain — that most of the cash swam upstream to the mayor’s office and beyond. Everybody knew better than to ask any questions about that. And what if you didn’t pay? Innumerable Byzantine laws regulated running a bar in Jersey City. Going strictly by the book, the police could shut down a church social in a minute if they wanted to.

- – -

Six months after the burglary, snow had replaced the mosquitoes. There was a pretty good crowd in the bar and a Bing Crosby Christmas song played on the juke box. Red was tending bar. Sal was watching TV. The door opened and the Precinct Captain made his way through the swirly, smokey air to where Sal was sitting.

“Hey, Captain McCulligan! Good to see ya’!”

Sal got up and walked around the bar to pour the police officer a drink.

“Still Chivas?”

Sal chatted on about the weather, old timers who had died, local kids serving in Viet Nam. The Precinct Captain was beginning to become perplexed.

“Isn’t there something that you’d like to talk to me about? In private?”

“Like what?”

Captain McCulligan, turning red with rage, walked right up to Sal and spoke in a low voice, “Follow me to the shithouse. NOW!”

Some poor drunk was trying to shave in the bathroom. Seeing the bar owner and the police officer, the guy hustled out without even wiping off the shaving cream that still covered one side of his face.

“Alright. I don’t know what kind of game ye’r playin’. Alls I wants to know is do you have the fifteen hunnerd, or what?”

“Ways I sees it, we’re even.”

Captain McCulligan actually began to shake, “What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Some of your boys stopped by last June. Had quite a party. Cleaned me out. Here’s the numbers of the cars.”

McCullingan took the paper, scrutinized it for a moment, and then stomped out.

- – -

A few days later, first thing in the morning, Sal was counting out some singles to put in the cash register. The door opened. Captain McCulligan stood there, but didn’t walk inside.

“I just wanted to tell you that I’m sorry about what happened. You’re right. We’re even this year.”

Sal wondered if the patrolmen responsible for the burglary had to pay the the fifteen hundred dollars. But he knew better than to ask any questions about that.

Jersey City triple murder remains unsolved.

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Jersey City triple murder

In 1994, Barbara Waterman, her daughter Bianca Wilson and Felicia Council were slain in Ms. Waterman’s Lafayette Gardens Jersey City apartment. Death was by gunshot. There was no sign of forced entry. To highten the horror, the younger child’s corpse was stuffed in the toilet.

The Jersey Journal and the New York Times ran stories on the murders.

Unless God has since meted out justice or the killer is in custody on an unrelated charge, the perpetrator remains a public menace.

Anyone with information should call the Jersey City Police at 201-547-JAIL or the Hudson County Prosecutor’s Homicide Unit at 201-795-6000.

Jersey City policeman Vito Massa shot at St. Nicholas on Ferry Street

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

On 01/15/1981, Jersey City policeman Vito Massa was shot during an armed robbery at St. Nicholas on Ferry Street in Jersey City. The two perpetrators escaped with the cash.

Notable Hudson County doctors

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

As might be expected, Hudson County has produced some extraordinary physicians:

  • A Union City doctor went to jail for performing abortions. After Roe v. Wade, the governor pardoned the doctor. Having developed a taste for adventure, the doc wound up back in prison for selling machine guns. An ex-inmate reported that this doctor essentially continued to practice on the inside.
  • Around forty years ago, a Downtown Jersey City doctor and nurse were murdered and the bodies brutally mutilated. The bizarre crime was hushed up and remains unsolved. In 2006, when Jaime Vazquez confronted hate-monger Hal Turner, I was surprised to see the slayings discussed on a Neo-Nazi Web Site. In the best tradition of the Big Lie, the post pointed out that the homicide took place in Downtown Jersey City and that Jaime Vazquez was a Councilman for that area — as if this somehow tied him to the incident. The message failed to explain that at the time of the crime Jaime was either serving with the Marines in Viet Nam or recently returned home — after receiving a Purple Heart. But, how did the White Supremacist know about something from so far back in the past? Was the author somehow connected to the Jersey City police? Or to the murderer?
  • A local doctor loved deep sea fishing. Sharks were his specialty. He ended up getting eaten by a shark.
  • Dr. X was arrested for using curare to murder patients. As the method employed to detect the drug in the exhumed cadavers was inadmissible in court, the charges were dropped.
  • One doctor was a drunkard. Figuring that the dead were beyond harm, the local medical establishment offered their tipsy colleague a deal — take a job as coroner. He even managed to screw this up, declaring a gunshot victim a death by heart attack.
  • A North Hudson physician developed a controversial cancer “treatment” consisting of injections of a cocaine-like substance. One patient admitted that he really didn’t think that his health was improving, but his attitude was much better after a shot.
  • A Jersey City resident was one of the medical students that Reagan sent the Marines to rescue in Grenada.
  • A Jersey City physician, as a contractor to drug companies, claimed to be performing large-scale clinical trials. The office, apartment and “research facility” all were in a two-family walk-up on Kennedy Boulevard. The data turned out to be a lot softer than the invoices.
  • Newspaper reports described Jersey City doctor Magdy Elamir as a financier to Osama Bin Laden.