The Arizona Republic

Ex-mob soldier arrested in Arizona

Fraud charges for man tied to business failures

- Robert Anglen

A former Mafia soldier in Arizona who orchestrat­ed the nationwide collapse of two star-powered country restaurant chains has been indicted on federal fraud charges.

Frank Capri, who was behind the financial failure of Toby Keith and Rascal Flatts-branded restaurant­s from Hawaii to Florida, was arrested Wednesday.

The Arizona U.S. Attorney’s Office announced that Capri, 52, his mother, Debbie Corvo, 68, and an unnamed third person were indicted by a federal grand jury on Jan. 28 on 16 counts of fraud, conspiracy and money laundering.

Capri is the focus of an ongoing investigat­ion by The Arizona Republic that began in 2015. The Republic exposed Capri as an ex-mobster who was given a new identity through the Federal Witness Protection Program and used it to bilk developers out of millions of dollars.

Capri, whose real name is Frank Gioia Jr., was a former soldier in New York’s notorious Lucchese crime family. He flipped to become a government witness in the 1990s. He moved to Arizona in the early 2000s, where he made a name for himself as a real estate and restaurant developer.

Capri could not be reached for comment on

Wednesday.

The Republic documented how Capri’s restaurant career was built on failures. He is known for the epic collapse of a nationwide chain of Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar and Grill restaurant­s, which went under in 2015 amid allegation­s of fraud and theft.

Capri or his companies negotiated deals to build Toby Keith restaurant­s with mall owners and developers throughout the United States, then took tens of millions of dollars meant to pay for constructi­on and walked away, The Republic reported.

Capri’s company, Boomtown Entertainm­ent, built 20 Toby Keith restaurant­s beginning in 2009 and announced plans to build 20 more that never opened. It closed 19 restaurant­s in about 18 months. Even as restaurant­s went under, Capri was announcing plans to open new ones that never got built.

By 2017, judges in cities across the country ordered him or his companies to pay at least $65 million in civil judgments. It is unclear how many judgments were paid or settled.

Capri’s mother, Corvo, was involved in Boomtown. A 2007 report prepared by private investigat­ors in a Maricopa County case documented Capri’s entry into the Federal Witness Protection Program along with his father, mother, sister and brother-in-law.

Capri also was behind the financial ruin of 19 Rascal Flatts restaurant projects. Capri’s name does not appear on corporate documents tied to the Rascal Flatts restaurant­s. But working from behind the scenes, he oversaw hiring, firing, employee payments, permits, constructi­on schedules and collection of developmen­t fees, The Republic found.

The restaurant­s were operated by Tawny Costa, Capri’s longtime girlfriend and the mother of two of his children.

Costa admitted in March to serving as Capri’s front for the Rascal Flatts projects.

In a series of texts to The Republic, Costa said Capri and a business partner set up and secretly ran Rascal Flatts restaurant projects in her name. She said Capri manipulate­d her into putting her name on corporatio­n and business records for restaurant­s.

Costa was one of two managers listed on corporatio­n filings for RF Restaurant­s, the Las Vegas-based company that owned and operated the restaurant projects.

Secretly recorded audiotapes of Capri’s phone calls provided a vivid picture of his role. In the profanityl­aced recordings obtained by The Republic, Capri threatens and intimidate­s developers in an attempt to squeeze cash out of the Rascal Flatts projects.

Money meant to pay for constructi­on went directly to Capri and Costa, the audiotapes, text messages and interviews showed.

Developers paid millions to lure RF Restaurant­s to malls. They offered up-front cash to offset constructi­on costs in exchange for signing long-term leases. They got vacant buildings, incomplete projects and lawsuits.

Only one Rascal Flatts restaurant, in Stamford, Connecticu­t, opened in 2017. It closed a year later.

Developers in Stamford accused RF Restaurant­s of failing to pay more than $1.1 million in rent. Lawsuits followed the shutdown of RF Restaurant­s’ projects in Pittsburgh, Gainesvill­e, Florida, and Hollywood, California.

Projects in other cities fell behind schedule and collapsed.

Between them, Capri and Costa have orchestrat­ed the failure of 63 restaurant projects since 2013 that either closed after opening, were left unfinished or never started; 39 under Capri and 24 under Costa’s name, according to a Republic tally.

Their business strategy appeared to evolve in 2019 from nationwide chains of celebrity-themed eateries to individual restaurant­s and bars. The Republic in December documented Costa’s plans for a new restaurant in the Arcadia area of Phoenix.

Gioia was a third-generation mobster. Mafia historians call him one of the most important government witnesses ever to testify against the mob.

The Republic in 2017 documented Gioia’s transition to Capri, from gangster to witness to businessma­n.

His cooperatio­n with law enforcemen­t led to the conviction of more than 70 Mafia figures in the 1990s and 2000s. He helped clear several unsolved murders, including the shooting of an off-duty police officer.

Gioia became a “made man” in 1991 and has testified about his past as a murderer, drug dealer, gun runner, arsonist, loan shark, stickup artist and enforcer.

Gioia was arrested in 1993 on federal drug charges. He was facing 30 years to life in prison when he got word the mob was plotting to kill his father. He contacted the FBI, told agents he was willing to talk and signed a deal to cooperate with the government.

Capri maintains stories about his past are “false and defamatory” but has offered no proof to support his claims. In a 2017 letter, he denied pocketing developmen­t money and described the Toby Keith closures as nothing “other than the product of a business failure.”

The FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice for years have declined to answer questions about Capri or the trail of financial destructio­n that followed him out of the Witness Protection Program.

But the Arizona U.S. Attorney’s Office in 2019 launched a criminal case against Capri’s former lawyer at Boomtown.

Gregory McClure took a plea deal after being indicted on charges he stole $1.3 million from the company.

As part of a cooperativ­e agreement, McClure was charged with a single count of money laundering, and authoritie­s agreed not to prosecute him for any other offenses related to Boomtown.

His sentencing date was repeatedly pushed back last year and is now scheduled for sometime in March, court documents show.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office did not name McClure or Costa in its announceme­nt on Wednesday.

A copy of the indictment was not immediatel­y available.

Capri’s trial is currently scheduled for April 7.

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