Calgary Herald

Ex mob boss’s son guilty of fraud

Group used $12M in less than a year, court told

- KATHY MATHESON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAMDEN, N.J. — The son of a former Philadelph­ia mob boss and another reputed mob associate were convicted Thursday of federal fraud charges for taking over a Texasbased mortgage company and then plundering its assets to buy homes, luxury cars and even a yacht.

Nicodemo S. Scarfo, the son of former Philadelph­ia Mafia leader Nicodemo D. Scarfo, was convicted of multiple counts including racketeeri­ng conspiracy, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, wire fraud and being a felon in possession of a gun.

A second lead defendant, Salvatore Pelullo, who prosecutor­s said ran the business takeover, was convicted of racketeeri­ng conspiracy, conspiracy to commit securities fraud and related counts.

The government said Scarfo and his co-defendants used threats of harm to take over the board of publicly held FirstPlus Financial Group, an Irving, Texas-based mortgage company, and then had the company buy shell companies they owned so they could take out the assets. The company is now defunct.

Prosecutor­s said the conspirato­rs plundered $12 million in less than a year, buying homes, weapons, ammunition, a plane, luxury cars, jewelry and an $850,000 yacht they named “Priceless.” They also alleged some of the money was used to pay organized crime debt.

The government said the men conspired in 2007 to get the money from FirstPlus two ways — first by hiring shell companies owned by Pelullo and Scarfo as consultant­s, then by buying other shell companies they formed.

John and William Maxwell, brothers who were executives at FirstPlus, were found guilty Thursday of wire fraud. The judge revoked their bail, saying they were facing more than 20 years in prison.

Scarfo and Pelullo had been in custody since their arrest.

Scarfo’s former lawyer, Donald Manno, and two lawyers for FirstPlus, David Adler and Gary Mc- Carthy, were also charged in the fraud case. They were acquitted of all counts.

During the trial, prosecutor­s played for jurors recordings that they said establishe­d that the business dealings were mob-related, including some jailhouse recordings of conversati­ons involving the elder Scarfo in which his son and Pelullo talk about the company takeover.

In one, the younger Scarfo says, “We’re a good six to 10 months off from being able to help everybody.” The government said “everybody” meant crime associates.

The elder Scarfo, who was also known as “Little Nicky,” led the Philadelph­ia Mafia until 1988 when he was convicted of racketeeri­ng and sent to prison.

In 1989, the younger Scarfo was the victim of what authoritie­s have described as an attempted mob hit in a South Philadelph­ia Italian restaurant. He was shot a half-dozen times. Pelullo’s relatives denied he was connected to the mob, saying his only mistake was becoming friendly with Scarfo.

“The prosecutor­s built a Mafia case without the Mafia, just the Scarfo name,” said his ex-wife, Lana Pelullo.

 ?? Andy Ritchie/Philadelph­ia Inquirer/The Associated Press/Files ?? Nicodemo S. Scarfo was convicted on multiple counts, including racketeeri­ng conspiracy, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, wire fraud and being a felon in possession of a gun.
Andy Ritchie/Philadelph­ia Inquirer/The Associated Press/Files Nicodemo S. Scarfo was convicted on multiple counts, including racketeeri­ng conspiracy, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, wire fraud and being a felon in possession of a gun.

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