New York Daily News

D’oh! Pizza big pay rap

Grimaldi’s owner indicted, accused of stiffing staff for $20K

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

The owner of famed Manhattan pizzeria Grimaldi’s was indicted Thursday on charges alleging he regularly refused to pay employees and stiffed them when he did.

Anthony Piscina, 63, and the manager of his Flatiron offshoot, Frank Santora, 71, pleaded not guilty in Manhattan Supreme Court to one count of scheme to defraud and seven counts of failure to pay wages for allegedly withholdin­g $20,000 owed to seven employees at Grimaldi’s Coal Brick-Oven Pizzeria on Sixth Ave near W. 20th St. Both were released on their own recognizan­ce.

“Please, I have an emergency. My grandmothe­r died. I need my money, please,” read a text message Piscina received from one unpaid worker, among several read aloud by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg at a press conference.

“I sure need money to pay my rent. Please,” read another text.

Bragg said the messages were among dozens obtained by prosecutor­s showing employees pleading with the pizzeria owner to pay them what they were owed.

“We allege that for years, Grimaldi’s pizzeria owner Anthony Piscina and Manhattan manager Frank Santora schemed to defraud at least seven workers, pizza makers, salad preppers, bus boys and dishwasher­s of … wages that they were entitled to for doing an honest day’s work,” Bragg said. “Wages that, as these text messages make devastatin­gly clear, were desperatel­y, desperatel­y needed.”

According to the DA’s office, one busboy alone is owed $8,000 from his former boss. Prosecutor­s say Piscina and Santora, who appeared on “Fox & Friends” last summer to complain about a crackdown on wood-fired pizza ovens, strung their employees along amid not paying them, whether by giving them paychecks that bounced, paying them partially on money-sending apps, scheduling appointmen­ts to pay them and then standing them up, or paying them less than minimum wage.

“I’ve got three complaints on me. The state is not gonna do a thing,” Piscina is quoted telling one employee who threatened to call a lawyer, who he allegedly also prohibited from wearing a cap with an America flag because he wasn’t born in the U.S.

Prosecutor­s quote Piscina in another piece of correspond­ence with a different employee of six years saying, “I owe you $4,559,” noting that worker was never paid.

An attorney for Piscina and Santora, Gerard Marrone, could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

 ?? ?? Workers at Grimaldi’s Pizzeria on Sixth Ave. in Manhattan lost wages they “desperatel­y needed,” said Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg (below).
Workers at Grimaldi’s Pizzeria on Sixth Ave. in Manhattan lost wages they “desperatel­y needed,” said Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg (below).
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