The Hamilton Spectator

DRUG DEALER DUPED Burlington man gets prison term after ‘made member’ of New York crime family rats him out

- PETER EDWARDS

A Burlington man was sentenced to 10 ½ years in prison for drug traffickin­g and weapons offences after he was duped by a member of a New York City crime family who turned police agent.

Massimigli­ano Carfagna was sentenced in Milton court on Thursday after pleading guilty to traffickin­g in cocaine and the opioid fentanyl, a weapons charge and a drug importatio­n conspiracy charge.

His conviction came after a “made member” of the Bonanno La Cosa Nostra family of New York City agreed to turn police agent and work undercover in southweste­rn Ontario.

The Bonanno crime family is considered the oldest of the New York City Mafia families, with roots in the 19th century. A made member is someone with high status in the group, who has undergone a ritualisti­c initiation ceremony.

Carfagna’s sentence gave him credit for 17 months of pretrial custody.

Several others have yet to go to trial in the police bust, which resulted from a three-year RCMP-led project dubbed Project Otremens. Several undercover police officers assisted the made member of the Bonanno crime family, who agreed to co-operate with authoritie­s.

His guilty plea included an apology to the harm caused by illegal drugs, including fentanyl.

Carfagna has an American criminal record dating back to 1987, and includes conviction­s in Niagara Falls, N.Y. for criminal impersonat­ion and criminally negligent homicide.

In an agreed statement of facts, Carfagna agreed that between March 1 and October 28, 2016, he and Giuseppe “Joey” Violi, 47, of Hamilton agreed to import 200 to 300 kilograms of cocaine into Canada. They sought to use the police agent from the Bonanno crime family and his connection­s to provide transporta­tion for the cocaine.

Violi and his brother Domenico Paolo Violi, 51, have yet to be tried in the case.

Carfagna said that he and Violi believed they would make $10,000 per kilogram smuggled by ship into Canada through British Columbia, according to the agree statement of fact. They hoped to ship as much as 300 kilograms into the country from Colombia, but first agreed on a 200 kilogram shipment, court heard.

“As part of their plan to organize the cocaine shipment, Carfagna and Violi advised the agent that they had sent a male associate of Carfagna’s, identified as ‘Porkchop,’ to make arrangemen­ts to get the cocaine on consignmen­t in Colombia,” the agreed statement of fact says.

Court heard that in 2016,Carfagna also became a suspect in a Halton police case called Project Harland, which probed fentanyl traffickin­g. That led to a raid at a storage locker at 1207 Appleby Line in Burlington, where police found a stash of cocaine and fentanyl and handguns, a sawed-off, pump action rifle, a .22 calibre rifle, ammunition and nine bundles of cash containing $45,550.

Giuseppe and Domenico Violi are sons of mob boss Paolo Violi, who was murdered by the Rizzuto crime family in Montreal in 1978. They’re also grandsons of the late Giacomo Luppino of Hamilton, who was considered by police to be a founding member of the Crimine, a governing body for criminals in the Italian 'Ndrangheta crime group, and a long-standing associate of the Buffalo mob.

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