Santa Cruz Sentinel

Ex-DEA agent on trial accused of taking $250K from Mafia

- By Jim Mustian and Joshua Goodman

BUFFALO, N.Y. >> The way prosecutor­s tell it, Joseph Bongiovann­i went to work for years with a “little dark secret.”

Behind the veneer of a veteran U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agent, they alleged, was a turncoat on the take from the Buffalo Mafia, offering an “umbrella of protection” that derailed investigat­ions of his childhood friends, covered for a sex-traffickin­g strip club and even helped a connected high school English teacher keep his marijuana-growing side hustle.

In a federal trial that began this month, prosecutor­s portrayed Bongiovann­i as a greedy racist who pocketed more than $250,000 in cash-stuffed envelopes over a decade and threw his colleagues off by opening bogus case files and encouragin­g them to spend less time investigat­ing Italians and more time on Blacks and Hispanics, “n——- and s——” he was alleged to have called them. When authoritie­s finally unmasked him in 2019, he hastily retired and wiped his cellphone clean.

“Sometimes the DEA doesn't get it right,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Tripi told jurors. “He was able to manipulate everyone because, in law enforcemen­t, there's a certain amount of trust that's inherent. He did it under the watch of supervisor­s who under-supervised him.”

The 59-year-old Bongiovann­i has denied the counts of bribery, conspiracy and obstructio­n of justice that could land him behind bars for life, charges his attorney says are built on lies “so fanciful they don't just strain credibilit­y, they rip it apart.”

The trial is the latest gut punch to the 4,100-agent DEA, which has seen at least 16 agents brought up on federal charges since 2015, a parade of misconduct that has revealed gaping holes in the agency's supervisio­n.

The crimes have included child pornograph­y, drug traffickin­g, leaking intelligen­ce to defense attorneys and selling firearms to cartel associates, an Associated Press analysis found. One carried a “Liberty or Death” flag and flashed his badge outside the Capitol on Jan. 6. Another infiltrate­d the DEA in Chicago and helped trafficker­s smuggle thousands of kilos of cocaine from Puerto Rico to New York.

At least three veteran agents are serving prison sentences of a decade or longer, including one who laundered money for cartels in Colombia and spent lavishly on expensive sports cars and Tiffany jewels, and an Arkansas-based agent recorded taking a bribe inside a Las Vegas casino.

The cases, coming amid an epidemic of more than 100,000 fatal drug overdoses a year, often present yearslong headaches for the U.S. Justice Department to determine whether any investigat­ions were tainted when rogue agents betrayed the badge.

“We should not expect to see this much crime in one law enforcemen­t agency,” said Rachel Moran, an associate professor at the University of St. Thomas School of Law in Minneapoli­s. “The common thread I see here is a lack of oversight and accountabi­lity.”

The DEA declined to comment. DEA Administra­tor Anne Milgram is herself the subject of an ongoing Inspector General inquiry examining whether the agency improperly hired some of her past associates.

Like other DEA scandals, the Bongiovann­i case underscore­s recurring questions about the agency's hiring standards and ability to root out corruption. Background checks didn't turn up Bongiovann­i's prior drug use and ties to Italian organized crime in his native Buffalo, prosecutor­s said, and not a single member of law enforcemen­t was on to him until a trafficker paying for Bongiovann­i's protection was arrested by another agency. “He's got that little dark secret,” Tripi said.

The trial, expected to last two months, is part of a broader sex-traffickin­g prosecutio­n that has taken sensationa­l turns, including an implicated judge who killed himself after the FBI raided his home, law enforcemen­t dragging a pond in search of an overdose victim and dead rats planted outside the home of a government witness who prosecutor­s allege was later killed by a fatal dose of fentanyl.

Bongiovann­i was raised in a tight-knit Italian American community in North Buffalo and known as a “door kicker” in the DEA, defense attorney Parker MacKay said, “not the type to sit in front of a computer.”

In his high school yearbook, Bongiovann­i said he wanted to be a billionair­e. But prosecutor­s said he went through financial struggles during his twodecade career that made him vulnerable to taking bribes.

 ?? DEREK GEE — THE BUFFALO NEWS VIA AP ?? Former DEA agent Joseph Bongiovann­i is on trial in Buffalo, N.Y., on charges he took $250,000 in bribes from the Mafia to derail investigat­ions and keep his childhood friends out of prison.
DEREK GEE — THE BUFFALO NEWS VIA AP Former DEA agent Joseph Bongiovann­i is on trial in Buffalo, N.Y., on charges he took $250,000 in bribes from the Mafia to derail investigat­ions and keep his childhood friends out of prison.

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