Montreal Gazette

New England mobster an ‘old-school wise guy’

- MICHELLE R. SMITH

PROVIDENCE, R.I. New England mobster Anthony (The Saint) St. Laurent, who was convicted of trying to hire someone to kill a rival Mafia member, died Monday, two weeks after being released from federal prison. He was 75.

St. Laurent died at a hospital in Providence of what appears to be natural causes, said Richard Tamburini, police chief in Johnston, where St. Laurent lived.

“He had well-documented illnesses for a long time,” Tamburini said. “He was very sick when he was released from prison.”

Tamburini called him “one of the old-school wise guys.”

Born circa 1941 of Italian parents (his father died young and his mother remarried, taking the St. Laurent name), St. Laurent was a captain in the Patriarca crime family and had a long criminal record dating to 1961, including conviction­s for running a multistate gambling operation from a Kentucky prison cell and for conspiring to extort $50,000 from two men.

He pleaded guilty in 2011 to attempting to orchestrat­e a hit on rival mobster Bobby DeLuca after DeLuca accused St. Laurent of being a government informant, which St. Laurent denied.

When he entered his plea, St. Laurent acknowledg­ed trying to hire a person who ended up being an FBI informant to carry out the plot. According to court documents in the case, the informant secretly recorded their conversati­ons. A partial transcript showed St. Laurent wanted the hit man to shoot DeLuca in the head but not before delivering a message.

“Say: ‘This is from The Saint,’ ” he told him.

The hit never happened. The judge described the plan as “clownish,” then sentenced St. Laurent to seven years in prison.

 ??  ?? Anthony St. Laurent
Anthony St. Laurent

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