The Guardian (USA)

Colombo crime family boss among a dozen arrested on racketeeri­ng charges

- Maya Yang

Federal prosecutor­s in Brooklyn busted approximat­ely a dozen members of the Colombo crime family, including the entire leadership of the mob clan, over racketeeri­ng and extortion charges on Tuesday.

The arrests included Andrew “Mush” Russo, the octogenari­an boss of the family, and Benjamin “Benji” Castellazz­o, the underboss. Others arrested include the family’s consiglier­e, captains, a soldier and associates.

The Colombo crime family is the youngest of what was once the “Five Families” that dominated organized criminal activities across New York City and within La Cosa Nostra, or the American Mafia’s nationwide criminal organizati­on. Additional arrests in the bust included an alleged soldier of the Bonanno crime family, also part of the “Five Families”, who was charged with loansharki­ng, fraud and drug traffickin­g offenses.

The charges relate to various schemes in a 20-year effort by the family to “infiltrate and take control of a Queens-based labor union … and its affiliated health care benefit program...that provides medical benefits … to the members of the Labor Union, and to a conspiracy to commit fraud in connection with workplace safety certificat­ion,” the US attorney office of the eastern district of New York said in a press release on Tuesday.

The crime family has been accused of making direct threats of bodily harm to control the labor union. According to the press release, since 2001, Colombo “captain” Vincent Ricciardo and his cousin, Domenick Ricciardo, have extorted a portion of the salary of a senior official in the labor union by threatenin­g to harm him and his family.

“I’ll put him in the ground right now in front of his wife and kids, right in front of his f----g house, you laugh all you want pal, I’m not afraid to go to jail, let me tell you something, to prove a point,” said Vincent Ricciardo in a consensual­ly recorded conversati­on on

21 June 2021. “I would f----g shoot him right in front of his wife and kids, call the police, f--k it, let me go, how long you think I’m gonna last anyway?”, he added.

The Colombo crime family has also been accused of devising schemes to launder money from the health fund’s contracts and payments through third parties.

Arraignmen­ts for the defendants are expected to begin at the Brooklyn federal court on Tuesday afternoon. If convicted, the defendants each face up to 20 years of imprisonme­nt.

“This Office and its law enforcemen­t partners are committed to dismantlin­g organized crime families, eliminatin­g their corrupt influence in our communitie­s and protecting the independen­ce of labor unions,” said acting US attorney Jacquelyn Kasulis.

Over the years, multiple members of the Colombo crime family have been arrested in major crime sweeps.

“Everything we allege in this investigat­ion proves history does indeed repeat itself. The underbelly of the crime families in New York City is alive and well. These soldiers, consiglier­es, under bosses, and bosses are obviously not students of history” said FBI assistant director-in-charge Michael Driscoll.

“Regardless of how many times they fill the void we create in their ranks, our FBI Organized Crime Task Force, and our law enforcemen­t partners are positioned to take them out again and again,” he added.

Several of the defendants’ lawyers declined to provide comments to the Guardian. Neverthele­ss, an attorney for Benjamin Castellazz­o, the family’s underboss, told the Guardian that he will be pleading not guilty.

 ?? Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters ?? Arraignmen­ts are expected to begin at the Brooklyn federal court on Tuesday afternoon. If convicted, the defendants each face up to 20 years of imprisonme­nt.
Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters Arraignmen­ts are expected to begin at the Brooklyn federal court on Tuesday afternoon. If convicted, the defendants each face up to 20 years of imprisonme­nt.

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