Showing posts with label Investigation Discovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Investigation Discovery. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

I Married A Mobster: Lorraine Arias-Beliveau, Love’s Mother




Originally posted 11 August 2011.


I often blog about the family and friends of the mob wives and mistresses that we watch each week. It’s not only interesting reading, but it gives us a fuller and deeper understanding of the women and their lives. Instead of the one dimensional picture we are given about their life in the mob, it’s insightful to have some additional information into who they are and where they came from. And, although we haven’t seen Love Majewski’s episode of I Married A Mobster yet, I came across a very interesting article in the Daily News, written by her mother, Lorraine Arias-Beliveau, that tells one amazing story.  It's the story of the love of a sister for her brother, who was a hero.

Lorraine describes how her youngest brother, Adam Arias, was a hero who saved lives the day the second World Trade Center building was struck in the 9/11 attack. His office was on the 84th floor. Lorraine says that another of their brothers, Major Donald Arias, in the US Air Force, had called to warn him about the attack and told him to get out of the building immediately. Adam was concerned for the safety of others and gave no thought to hmself.  He raced through the office making sure all employees left the building. Many have said that he saved their lives that day. Adam was last seen outside the towers helping firefighters get people to safety. In his valiant efforts to save others, he stayed moments too long at the site. The towers collapsed, he was killed and his remains were discovered 8 days later.


Adam Arias

Lorraine tells of her own personal experience, in the Daily News, of how she sought justice for her brother, Adam, who died in the 9/11 terrorist attack while trying to save lives. In January, 2009 she went to Guantanamo Bay, where terrorist trials were being held. She went there with her brothers. Very few victims’ families were allowed to go, and those that did, were picked by a lottery system. She describes what she witnessed when she got there. There was a courtroom and five “detainees,” the co-conspirators of 9/11, were brought in. Among them, the alleged mastermind of the terrorist attacks on the United States, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed. She recalls how his lawyer stopped the proceedings to asked the court for a pillow for the accused to sit on and how this sparked a lot of heated discussion. Lorraine was in disbelief as she thought, this man was responsible for the death of more than three thousand innocent people and they were talking about a cushion for him to sit on?  Mohammed proudly declared his guilt, but the trial was soon postponed by President Obama.


All written content is exclusive property of The Mob Wives BlogSpot and is protected by copyrights or other intellectual property rights. You are prohibited from using, copying, altering, modifying, or changing our work. Unauthorized use of this is strictly prohibited. Violators are punishable under federal law. In simple English, stop f*cking jacking our work.


To read her personal and complete detailed account of her experience at Guantanamo go to: Lorraine's story of Guantanamo Bay


To read of the selfless, heroic efforts of Adam Arias on 9/11, go to: Adam Arias Hero


Picture Credit: Lorraine's Facebook, http://www.historycommons.org/

Monday, September 12, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Recap Of “Love Hurts”




Lorraine Majewski gave birth to Love in Staten Island, New York in 1971. After having two more children, Lorraine divorces her husband and gets three jobs to support her family. Still money was tight and they struggled financially. Love gets hand me downs from her grandmother’s well to do neighbors. One day a girl sees Love and confronts her, saying that those are her shoes. Love denies it, but the girl insists that she wrote her name on the bottom of the shoes and Love is forced to show them the bottom of her shoes. The girl’s name was there. Love was humiliated and decided right there and then she would never wear hand me downs or other people’s shoes again.



When a friend of Love’s gets pregnant at 14, Lorraine decides to move to a better neighborhood in Staten Island, not realizing that the area was full of mobsters. Lorraine sends Love to a private school where the other students are the sons and daughters of wise guys. Lorraine says she didn’t understand this world where the bad guys were good and the good guys were bad.

When Love is a teen she falls for Chris, a low level thief who goes from stealing car radios to cars. Chris hangs around Love’s house and Lorraine isn’t thrilled. He would show up in different cars all the time and Lorraine suspected he was stealing cars.




After one bad argument, Love decides not to take Chris’ calls. He decides to go to the house and pushes in the door and Love’s mother to get in the house. He grabs Love and drags her out to his car and shoves her in. They drive around a while until he calms down. Meanwhile, Lorraine calls the police and they handcuff Chris and take him in for questioning. Lorraine has finally saved up enough money to buy a new car. One night, soon after she buys it, she hears the dog barking outside. She looks out the window to see her car on fire. She had no fire insurance on it and knew it had to be one of Love’s friends.

Getting away from Chris wasn’t easy. One year later Love meets Ray of the “Untouchables.” She trades up. He has “Italian Stallion” on his license plate and she was in awe of him. Chris takes a back seat to Ray, once he becomes involved with Love. Ray has rules for his girlfriends: no drugs, no smoking, no more than three drinks. Love tells her mother that Ray has a nice family and she has Sunday dinner there.

Ray took care of her every minute of every day. There was plenty of cash and he never had to go to work. They spent their days making love, it was unbelievable, says Love. By 1991, Love and Ray were inseparable. But, both the FBI and the mob had their eye on Ray. Ray gets enforcers from the Gambino crime family.  Then there was a scheme regarding the theft of a high end boat. Chris and Ray steal the boat and alter it with a different paint job. When Ray and Chris are arrested for the crime they need Love’s help.

One dark and moonless night, Ray and Chris hide in the trunk of Love’s car as she drives over to Randall’s Island. They locate the boat and blow it up from the inside out. Chris lights the match and runs back to the car and Love takes off, back to Staten Island. Mission accomplished, evidence destroyed. That just reinforced the name that was given to them, "the untouchables."

After the incident, Chris skips town. He does a home invasion gone wrong, and someone is killed during the robbery. Ray and Love become engaged and he buys her a three carat, flawless diamond. Love is thrilled until her friend tells her to think about it; he will probably end up dead or in jail and she will be left with a baby to raise alone. Love decides to think it through and while she tries to make amends with her mother. She takes her mother on a trip to Cancun where they meet a friend of Ray’s.


Reneactment with Erika Schiff


They return one week later and Love learns that Ray has been seen with another woman, her best friend Stacy. Ray was parading her around town. When Love sees them at a bar together she explodes and breaks Stacy's nose. She breaks up with Ray and when they leave the bar, she shoots up his car. The cops show up and take them both in. After the incident they reconcile for a short time. But, then Ray tries to strangle her with a phone cord, she stabs him with a knife, he steals her car and she sets his house on fire.

Weeks later, the other woman moves in with Ray and Love is done. She just wants a normal guy and a normal life. She moves to New Jersey and meets a nerdy guy who is divorced with children. Love reinvents herself. They get engaged, she is happy. One day she is at home alone with the children, giving them baths and there is a knock at the door. It was 2009, and the organized crime task force was looking for her. They showed up after all these years wanting her to confess to the boat crime. They call her new life a scam. If she doesn’t cooperate they are going to have the children taken away from her and arrest her. They know her exe has been in the area and think he has made contact with her.

Love realizes that she has to come clean with her fiancĂ© and tell him who she is. He crumbles. She ends by saying that although she has made bad choices, she is not a bad person.


All written content is exclusive property of The Mob Wives Blogspot and is protected by copyrights or other intellectual property rights. You are prohibited from using, copying, altering, modifying, or changing our work. Unauthorized use of this is strictly prohibited. Violators are punishable under federal law. In simple English, stop f*cking jacking our work.

Picture Credit: Investigation Discovery

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Love’s Red Carpet & Premiere





Tonight on I Married A Mobster is Love Majewski’s story “Love Hurts.” Guess who was invited and is going to her Red Carpet and Premiere Event tonight? Give up?   It’s me, Chiara Soprano of mobwives.blogspot.com!   I can’t believe it either, but it’s true.   Love has graciously extended an invitation to me and I was thrilled to accept.

I never imagined myself at any premiere or on any red carpet and yet I am going to be at this one! It’s amazing what this little hobby of a blog has turned into. When we started this blog I pictured myself behind a computer screen typing away opinions, stories, recaps, history. I didn’t for one second think I would be meeting any of the women at clubs or premieres. This is an exciting and wonderful experience for me and you can bet that I will share as much of it as possible with everyone. So watch for my blog tomorrow, when I will give you all the details I can remember.

Right now I have to go get a mani and a pedi!

Be sure to watch Love's episode tonight, Love Hurts" on Investigation Discovery at 10:30 PM! 

Monday, September 5, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Love Majewski's Story

Love Majewski


Love Majewski's story, "Love Hurts" airs this Wednesday on Investigation ID.  We saw a little preview of it and it looks great.  I was able to get a couple of scenes from the reenactment clips, with Erika Schiff, the actress who plays Love.  This promises to be one of ID's best episodes of the series from all I have heard and read.  You won't want to miss it.  Tune in this Wednesday night at 10:30 ET and tell your friends!


Erika Schiff as Love


Erika as Love


Director Kevin Kaufman, of Kaufman Films, with Love and Erika


This is one episode everyone is going to be talking about!  If you want a sneak preview, click on the link below.  And watch for more blogs on Love and her story this week, right here!

Picture credit: Erika's Facebook

Thursday, September 1, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Recap Orena’s “Family Getaway”


Victor Orena Senior

Last night’s episode of I Married A Mobster was not about a mobster or someone married to a mobster. It was the story of Andrew Orena, youngest son of Victor Orena, who was a one time Colombo boss. So why did Investigation Discovery include him in the line up? My first thought is they couldn’t find a tenth woman to tell her story to the world. Perhaps they should have delayed production until they did? I don’t know. But the story that Andrew tells about his father and the Colombo wars gives us the “other side’s” point of view. Victor Orena and Greg Scarpa represented the two warring sides of the Colombo crime family and this is his story.


Victor Orena was the acting Colombo crime family boss. He was old school. He grew up without a father and looked up to wise guys as his role models. His mother was dating a local mobster who abused her. Though Victor was just a young boy, he got a zip gun from a friend of his, and when he encounters the mobster in front of his house--he shoots him. Victor is ironically told by the mob that he can’t go around shooting people. He tells them that if this guy raises his hand to his mother again, he will kill him. With his answer, he earns their respect.


Victor moves his family to Long Island. One day Andrew is outside waiting for the pretzel man to come by. The truck passes him up without stopping. Nick Santoro (a mobster played by Joe Pesci in Goodfellas) asks Andrew what’s wrong. Andrew tells him about the preztel guy. An angry Nick makes Andrew get into his car and they back up down the street till they catch up with the truck. Nick gets out of his car and into the truck, screaming at the guy for passing up Andrew on the street. He tells him he better pass by every day and stop. He gets off the truck with a half dozen pretzels in his hand.


Andrew soon wises up about his father when he reads familiars names of family friends in the newspapers. His older brothers, John and Victor Jr., became made men, but Andrew wanted no part of a lifestyle that would only end in death or jail. One day the FBI comes to their house and tells them there is a contract out on Victor Sr., he is a marked man. Victor tells the family he has to go to a “sit down” over an incident. He leaves his oldest son in charge of the family and says this meeting will decide if he lives or dies. Victor Sr. does return home, but visibly upset. He confided in Andrew, who was the closest to his father. Andrew laments that his father could have done anything with his life, like go into business, but he chose this lifestyle.
Andrew falls in love with his high school sweetheart, Denise. Denise was at the house when the FBI raided it. She was scared and had never experienced anything like that before in her life. By 1985 the Orena family has a lot to celebrate. Carmine Persico is in jail and Victor Sr. is made acting boss of the Colombos and Andrew and Denise marry. They have a big wedding and many mobsters attend, including John Gotti. She gets many envelopes. Andrew is a Pontiac dealer and a year later they have a baby boy, Andrew Jr.



By 1991 Carmine Persico is still in jail and Victor Sr. wants the official title of Colombo boss. However Greg Scarpa, a Perisco loyalist, has other plans. Scarpa sends guys out to shoot Victor Sr. When Victor spots a suspicious car nearby, he senses danger and goes home to his family. He calls his sons and they get the family together. He tells them he is a target of the mob. Their plan is to call all the other mobsters in the family. Those that answer are on their side. Those that don’t are against him.


Victor’s guys try to kill Greg Scarpa. They approach his car the day he is driving away with his daughter’s car following him, and start shooting. Greg decided to kill everyone involved in that incident, including Orena’s kids. Scarpa, known as “The Grim Reaper,” is the most notorious killer and they know all their lives are in danger. Andrew takes his family to a house in Montauk to hide out.

 
Andrew defends his father against Scarpa. They live in fear of stray bullets. Greg’s reputation is well known. Denise was scared, but she knew her husband had nothing to do with what was going on. After 4 months in hiding, they go home. Victor Sr. decides it is safe. The Feds arrest Victor Sr. and it is really a relief for the family because now he is safe in prison and they can breathe. Andrew works with his father’s attorneys on the case. Andrew’s business suffers greatly because he is guilty by association. The banks will not lend him money and the customers refuse to buy cars. He goes out of business. After the trial, Victor gets three life sentences plus 85 years for racketeering and murder. His brothers were also tried for crimes.


However, at the time, news broke that Greg had been an informant of the FBI for years and was paid for it. They used that information to show that the FBI was protecting a homicidal maniac. The lawyers challenged the FBI’s actions. Andrew’s brothers were acquitted because that did not sit well with the jury. They got out of the mob after that and made new lives for themselves. Victor Sr. is still in prison.


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Thursday, August 18, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Recap of Daddy’s Girl



“Daddy’s Girl” is the story of “Little” Linda Scarpa/Schiro, the daughter of Greg Scarpa and Linda Schiro. Linda was born in 1970. At that time, her father Greg, had two families, a legitimate one in Staten Island and one with Linda Schiro in Brooklyn.

Little Linda remembers that the family all got together for dinner, every night at 5 PM. That was a rule of the household. Family was very important to Greg, who was a mob enforcer for the Colombo crime family. Greg was, in fact, considered the most powerful guy in the crime family. He guarded his family and protected them and would think nothing of killing anyone who threatened them in any way.

Linda says she started to figure out who her father was in her mid-teens. His friends all dressed well. Linda relates how she and her brother were taken back and forth from school by a car service. One day Joey was sick and she went to school alone. The driver took her to Prospect Park and was going to rape her. He tore her shirt. Linda told him he didn’t have to do this, she would go with him after school later that day. So he dropped her off at school where Linda called her mother and told her what happened. Her mother picked up Linda from school. The next thing Linda knows, the driver was killed. She can only assume that he had no idea who her father was.

Linda says that mobsters came over to the house all the time. They would discuss mob business in front of Linda and Joey, but they didn’t want to hear about these things. She recalls how sometimes Greg’s friends would disappear and she figured out that they must have gotten killed. It was upsetting to her.

Linda has a Sweet 16 Party, but none of her friends show up. They are afraid of Greg. She says that Greg wanted her to be independent so he got her a job at the Stock Exchange. That didn’t work out too well, Linda did not want to start at the bottom and work her way up. She was too used to being a mob princess.

Linda liked to party and go to clubs. Greg wanted her to go to the clubs where his friends were, so they could keep an eye on her. Linda didn’t like that. When she left those clubs she would tell the valet that a particular car was hers, even though it wasn’t, and drive it home. Her father would see these cars in the driveway and told her she shouldn’t be doing that.

Linda had a hard time meeting people, everyone was afraid of Greg, so she couldn’t make real friends. But, in 1990 she married Freddie Assini and had a son. Greg couldn’t be prouder.

Then Greg contracts AIDS from a blood transfusion and becomes ill. At this time the Colombo family is falling apart. There is fighting amongst the family for control and power. They all know how powerful Greg is and want to get rid of him to make it easier for themselves. One day, Linda says, she was leaving the house the same time as her father and a van pulls up between them. The next thing she knows, a group of men, all dressed in black, with ski masks, jump out of the van and begin shooting at Greg’s car. Linda’s car in in the crossfire. She is terrified and her baby son is sitting right next to her. The assassins speed away and Linda runs back to her mother’s house screaming and believing that her father had been killed. Ten minutes later Greg walks through the door crying and swearing he would kill everyone involved in that shootout.

Greg is an irate maniac. He would drive around with his crew every night to track down those responsible and shoot them. The family never knew if he was going to some home at night. Linda realizes that her father is not invincible and neither are they. Even innocent family isn’t safe from the mob. She has nightmares and can’t get over the incident. She is afraid to do anything. All this while there is a Colombo civil war going on with members killing each other.

Joey gets himself into some trouble. Someone pulls a gun on him. Greg overhears him telling his mother about it. He goes wild and gets his gun. Sick as Greg is, he goes out looking for the guy. Linda hears gunshots and screaming a block and a half away. Five minutes later Greg comes through the door, he is bleeding, but doesn’t want Linda to touch him because he has AIDS. Linda runs out to look for her brother. She checks the car and he is not in it, but his friend is in the backseat, shot and in bad shape. She says this scarred her for the rest of her life, she never got over it.

Joey finally comes through the door in shock. He thought his father and friend were both dead and he felt responsible. Linda tells him they are both in the hospital. He tells her he was there when they got hit, but he blacked out. When he came to, he started to run. Joey’s friend died two days later. Greg was taken to jail where he died soon after.

The Scarpa curse doesn’t go away. It hangs over the head of Joey Scarpa, the heir apparent. After Greg dies, Little Linda picks up the pieces of her life, but Joey goes into the life himself. He rips off a drug dealer from another family. He has no protection on the street now that his father is dead. Joey is shot and killed. Linda goes to tell her mother, after calling an ambulance first. She knows her mother is going to take the news hard. She tells her mother that Joey is with Daddy now. Little Linda is so upset she couldn’t go to her brother’s funeral. She said she went to the cemetery after everyone left and stayed there all day.

She ends by saying that the mob life is a horror filled with misery, death and nightmares. She would give up everything she has if she could spend a one more second with her brother.


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Friday, August 12, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Dion Nicosia “Ebony and Ivory”



Dion Nicosia was interviewed on the Joy Behar show, but until now, she has not been on Investigation Discovery’s website. According to their summary, being married to a mobster was expected to be especially difficult for Dion, as an African American woman.

She had no previous knowledge of the mob so when she gets involved with Angelo Nicosia she enters a new world. Her perspective, as an outsider not being raised in the lifestyle, should be very interesting.

There was a lot of money while Angelo worked for the mob and she enjoyed the lifestyle, but when Angelo went to prison, there was no money left. The lawyers ended up with most of it. Surprisingly, Dion says that she did not experience racism from the other mobsters. They all treated her well. Dion said that Angelo was arrested on extortion charges and will be released from prison in March 2012.

There will be more information on Dion and Angelo as we get closer to her episode. In the meantime, this Wednesday’s episode, “Daddy’s Girl” will focus on the life of Linda Scarpa, daughter of Greg Scarpa. We have many blogs up on the site on the Scarpa family, so just do a search in the box on the bottom right hand side of our blog for more information.

Picture Credit: Investigation Discovery

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

I Married A Mobster: John Sonny Franzese and John Franzese Jr.


Denyce Franzese's story airs tonight on Investigation Discovery at 10:30 PM ET.  Here is a little more background informtion on her ex-husband and father-in-law.


Denyce’s father in-law, John “Sonny” Franzese, underboss of the Colombo crime family, was ratted out by his own son, John Franzese Jr. This is the first known case of a son ratting out and testifying against his own father. John Jr. was addicted to drugs for a long time, is HIV positive, and was desperate for money, but still no one can understand how he could have turned on his dad in such an unforgivable way. 


At 93 years old, in poor health and feeble, “Sonny” was once a feared man. Even Frank Sinatra was said to have kissed the man’s ring in public. A mobster all his life, he was a top earner and financed the movie “Deep Throat.” This last trial, the one his son testifies at, concerns charges of extortion and racketeering for which he was found guilty thanks to the help of his son, John.


After his trial his daughter and grandchildren wrote to the judge asking for leniency because of his age and health. But in June 2010, at the end of his trial, Sonny was reportedly sentenced to eight years in prison and might be 100 before he can be considered for parole.

Yet, as sympathetic as we may want to be, concerning Sonny and his advanced age and poor health, the man has a very dark past.  According to Federal authorities, Sonny was allegedly involved in numerous murders. And, although never convicted of murder, he reportedly told an informant that he was involved in at least 60 murders. He has been recorded telling associates how to get rid of bodies. One of his reported comments was: "Today, you can't have a body no more. ... It's better to take that half an hour, an hour, to get rid of the body than it is just to leave the body in the street." In another incident he allegedly tells someone how to dismember a body in a kid’s pool, microwaving them, and then putting them in a garbage disposal.

When his son, John Jr., who was a former Colombo associate, turned into an FBI informant, he wore a wire to record his father’s words as evidence against him. John’s brother, Michael, said the reason his brother turned on his father was that the FBI offered him $50,000 for his testimony. When Sonny learned of John's involvement against him, it was said that he have wanted his son killed. It had to be a low blow for Sonny to hear that John helped the FBI and planned to be a witness against him in court. Meanwhile, John Jr. wrote a tell-all book about growing up as the son of an underboss, called, "The John Franzese Story: Family, Crime, Drugs, Redemption,” He did this despite the fact that he promised athorities not to write a book as a condition of entering the witness protection program.

Watch ID tonight and hear the entire story in Denyce's own words!

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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Denyce Franzese's Story



Denyce Franzese was left virtually penniless after her husband, John Franzese Jr., 50, disappeared in 2006. She lost everything and had to resort to sleeping in her car. Her husband, John, turned FBI informant on his on father, John “Sonny” Franzese, 93, an alleged Colombo underboss and then went into the witness protection program alone. He claimed he did not take Denyce with him because of her drug addiction. Denyce claims John lied about her addiction, as she had been clean and sober since 1987. In fact, she says she has never been addicted to drugs, alcohol was the only substance she abused.

Denyce was once a party girl in Hollywood and became an alcoholic.  She enters a rehab and gets herself clean and sober and back on track.  Part of that involves getting a job as a counselor at Odessa.  John needed was addicted to drugs and flew out to the California Rehab from his home in Long Island, New York.  Fate takes a turn on Denyce when she meets John, at the Odessa rehab facility, in 2001 and marries him in 2004.

Denyce had some harsh and bitter words for John Jr. for ratting out his 93 year old father, Sonny.  "When I heard he was testifying against his father, it made me sick," she said. "I absolutely feel terrible for Sonny." She repeatedly refers to her husband as a liar and goes so far as to add, "John was never a gangster, he's a wanna-be. John is lazy, he doesn't want to work."

Denyce said that he left her one day in September, 2006 and just never returned.  He walked out on Denyce and her 12 year old son, and left them to fend for themselves, without giving them a second thought.

Denyce's story airs on ID this Wednesday night at 10:30 PM ET.  Be sure to watch and catch our recap Thursday!


All written content is exclusive property of The Mob Wives Blogspot and is protected by copyrights or other intellectual property rights. You are prohibited from using, copying, altering, modifying, or changing our work. Unauthorized use of this is strictly prohibited. Violators are punishable under federal law. In simple English, stop f*cking jacking our work.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Andrea Giovino’s “Bruno”

ANNOUNCEMENT to Anthony Bruno Indelicato’s Alleged Wife:  Please seek up from a reputable doctor.  You may be popping more than prescribed or drinking while typing.  We know.  We know.  We know.  You married him.  He is a good man.  If you have a problem with this blog entry STOP COMING BACK to it.  We sincerely wish you the very best.  

 Anthony Bruno Indelicato

The second episode of I Married A Mobster, featured the story of Andrea Giovino. In her story she mentions a couple of incidents involving a man named “Bruno,” who beats up his girlfriend and throws her down some stairs, at a club as Andrea watched. Witnessing this attack troubles Andrea. But, she also has her own run in with “Bruno,” when he comes into her house looking for drugs and then gets on the bed with her. Fortunately, for her, her girlfriend comes home and “Bruno” takes off.

What about this “Bruno?” Who is he and what is his story? Andrea has been around the biggest mobsters of our day and age, so that peeked my curiosity to do a little research on this man. The man’s name is Anthony “Bruno” Indelicato. I almost want to say it’s so familiar, it rings a bell. It turns out there is a lot to tell about “Bruno” so maybe I have heard of him before.

Besides the name “Bruno,” Anthony Indelicato had a couple of other nicknames including “Whack Whack” and Anthony Indelligado. He was a well known capo for the Bonanno crime family. His father, Alphonso “Sonny Red” Indelicato, was also a capo for that crime family. In 1979, “Bruno” took part in the murder of Bonanno boss, Carmine Galante. Galante was corrupt in his power and refused to share profits made from heroine trafficking. Galante made so many enemies that the Mafia Commission allowed the Bonanno capos to assassinate him over lunch, at Joe and Mary’s Restaurant in Bushwich, Brooklyn. Galante was blasted in the face and chest gangland style, by gunmen wearing ski masks. Anthony was promoted to capo for his participation in Galante’s murder.

The Bonanno family was a house divided and the two sides were now at war with each other. One side gets permission from the Mafia Commission to murder their rival’s captains. A meeting was arranged in which “Bruno’s father, Alphonso, was murdered, but Anthony never showed up and escaped death. The family wanted Anthony dead fearing he would try to avenge his father’s murder and they assigned the job to Donnie Brasco. The hit was called off and Brasco was warned that Anthony was dangerous and often high on cocaine.

“Bruno” had been on and off cocaine several times. It was during one of these times that he broke into Frank Lino’s Florida home, where Andrea Giovino was staying, and began looking for drugs while she was asleep. His behavior was unpredictable. When he was off drugs he was great to be around, but when he was on them he was violent, angry and paranoid. Frank told Andrea that all the crime families had been concerned about Anthony and there had been a few sit downs to discuss what to do. Anthony was allegedly ordering unnecessary murders and killing him was under discussion. Andrea never did tell Frank what happened the night Bruno paid her a visit.

In 1986, Anthony Indelicato was convicted of the 1979 Murder of Galante and sentenced to 40 years in prison. While in prison, he met and married Catherine Burke. Then in 1998, Anthony was released from prison and moved into his home in Howard Beach with his wife, Catherine. He went back to work for the Bonannos.

In February, 2006, Anthony was once again tried for murder and racketeering. He pleaded guilty in 2008 to lesser charges and was sentenced to 20 years in prison in Fort Dix, NJ. His release date is estimated to be in 2023. 


All written content is exclusive property of The Mob Wives Blogspot and is protected by copyrights or other intellectual property rights. You are prohibited from using, copying, altering, modifying, or changing our work. Unauthorized use of this is strictly prohibited. Violators are punishable under federal law. In simple English, stop f*cking jacking our work.


Sunday, July 31, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Love Majewski’s “Veritas” Cosmetics Contest!

Exclusive Contest Announcement!
For our Readers Only!

The Mobwives Blogspot, has some pretty exciting news! Love Majewski, from ID’s new show I Married A Mobster, was inspired by one of our recent blogs, about her cosmetics line, “Veritas.” She has created a contest specifically for our readers. She is introducing a new Femme Fatales Fall Colour Line and she needs to name 20 new lip colors. Readers are being invited to submit their suggestions. Winners, whose submissions are chosen for their new products, will receive a complimentary Veritas product!

Love reveals, “The lip colors are all deep plums & blue based reds with a pink and brown thrown in for variety."

The rules are no obvious profanity & keep them down to one or two words.  There is limited space on the bottom of a lipstick.  For example think up some names that remind you of famous, sultry, powerful women and the lifestyles they live. No proper names (eg. Cheryl Caruso's Cinnamin) will be considered.  Love requests that entries be no more than 15 characters in length.  Submit your entry to Mob Mistress @ mobmiztress@gmail.com.  We need your full name, mailing address in order to ship product.  Do not type your private information in the comment box.

You have 1 week to submit your suggestions; Saturday, August 6th will be the last day.  We will forward all suggestions to Love for consideration. Start thinking!  Meanwhile, checkout the website Veritas Cosmetics and in Love Majewski's words Peace, Love and Lipstick!

Do NOT forget to vote on our latest poll.  As always our poll is located to the right & quick scroll up.

Scroll down for our latest posts!

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Picture Credit: Veritas Cosmetics

I Married A Mobster: Fama's Drug Infested Home




Barbara Fama is one of the mob wives on Investigation Discovery’s new show, “I Married A Mobster.” Her episode is entitled, “Meet The Famas” and it airs August 3rd. I wanted to get a little background information on Barbara before viewing the show and I came across a US Court of Appeals document that was argued in December, 1984 and ruled on in March, 1985.


The background to this case are as follows: in April, 1984 a search was done of the Fama home, with a warrant, and a large quantity of evidence was seized. The list is incredible and includes the following: 13 pounds of heroin, 2.5 pounds of cocaine, about 100 pounds of marijuana, over 3.4 million dollars in cash, over 25 firearms, large quantities of drug diluents and other drug related material. This discovery led to the arrest of Barbara, Joe, her husband, and all four of their children.

Barbara was released on bail in June, 1984 and then rearrested in September, 1984 on new charges having to do with a large drug trafficking ring. The ruling of the court stated that the search performed in April was valid, but the search done in September was reversed and the evidence seized at that time suppressed.

All this trouble was the result of greed. Joe was supposed to sell drugs for the mob until his gambling debts were paid off. But, Joe got hooked on all the extra money and the things that went along with it. He ended up continuing his work with the mob until, like it always does, it caught up with him and his family. By that time, the whole family was involved and arrested. It reminds me of Sammy Gravano’s ecstasy ring in Arizona, where his whole family was arrested. 

All written content is exclusive property of The Mob Wives Blogspot and is protected by copyrights or other intellectual property rights. You are prohibited from using, copying, altering, modifying, or changing our work. Unauthorized use of this is strictly prohibited. Violators are punishable under federal law. In simple English, stop f*cking jacking our work.

Picture Credit: Investigation Discovery

Thursday, July 28, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Recap Of “The Grim Reaper”


Recap of Episode 3: The title of last night’s episode says it all, “The Grim Reaper.” The title is the name that was given to Greg Scarpa, a mafia capo who was known for his countless, violent murders. Linda Schiro was his mistress for decades and this was her story.

Linda Schiro grew up around mobsters. Her grandmother ran crap and numbers games from her house. It was part of her childhood and all she knew.

When Linda was 17, she was having an affair with Larry Pistone, a made member of the Gambino crime family. One night, while she was out, Greg Scarpa asked her to dance. He complimented her eyes saying, they were black, like olives. He asks for her number, but she tells him she will call him. She doesn’t. Instead, two days later she has a big argument with Larry and goes straight to Greg. Larry is outside blowing the horn and telling her to get in the car. Greg tells him she is going with him. Greg reaches for something under his seat. Linda gets scared and gets in the car with Larry and they drive off. Linda had just saved Larry’s life.

Greg was a huge money maker for the Colombo crime family and he was a notorious hit man. Both Greg and Larry wanted Linda so the two families had a sit down. Greg came out the winner. He treated her like a queen and she became his mob mistress. They celebrated her birthday at the Copacabana. She got a lot of gifts. In the mob, the girlfriends get everything and the wives, not so much. Linda describes him as caring and giving, but do him wrong and he will kill you.

One night Greg gets out of his car to go speak to a guy in another car, leaving Linda to wait across the street. Greg shoots the guy and this was the first mob hit that Linda witnessed. Then Greg tells her he has a secret, he is working for the FBI. After he was arrested in 1962 for armed robbery, he became an informant to avoid going to jail. She asks if he is a “rat.” He says no, he just does jobs for the FBI.

One day, in 1964, the FBI asks him to go to Mississippi where three civil rights workers had disappeared. Hoover and the FBI knew Scarpa would do anything and was afraid of nothing. They needed him to talk to the KKK and find out where he bodies were. An FBI agent gives him a gun. Greg handles it. He kidnaps one of the klansmen and tortures him for the information and he gets it. The FBI pays him money for a job well done.

After four years of being with Greg, Linda wants to get married and have children. Greg cannot leave his wife, it’s not what mobsters do. Linda marries a guy named Charlie, who worked with insurance, but she still went out with Greg every night and sometimes didn’t come home. Charlie never said anything. Then she got pregnant and had her daughter, Linda. Linda is Greg’s daughter. Greg has it all. He has two families, he is well respected in the mob and he works for the FBI so he can rest assured he will not go to jail.

Linda is Greg’s partner in crime. Mistresses know far more than the wives and Greg shared everything with Linda. When Linda gets pregnant with Greg’s son, Charlie leaves and Greg moves in. Linda was very happy.


Then, Greg becomes ill with a bleeding ulcer. He needs massive blood transfusions. At the time AIDS was a huge problem, so he got his friends to donate the blood for him. One of his friends was HIV positive, but his blood had never been tested. Greg gets AIDS. Orena and Scarpa were at war to get control of the family. One day while he was pulling out of his driveway with his daughter Linda and her baby in the car behind him, they are shot at, it’s a mob hit. Linda runs screaming back into the house thinking her father was hit. Greg soon follows, no one was hurt. But now, the war was personal. Linda says there were 5 holes in her car where the baby was sitting. Greg goes out every night looking for Orena’s crew. He went out himself, with his health declining, to get them all. He is arrested and the judge sentences him to house arrest because he is so ill.

One day Joey, their son, gets into trouble on the streets. They hide it from Greg. Someone had pulled a gun on Joey, Greg finds out. Greg goes out and starts shooting punks on the street. He drives back home. He is shot through his nose and his eye was out. He doesn’t even realize it. They take him to the hospital where he is arrested by US Marshals. Linda wants to take him home to die. They want to know if his trigger finger still works? As long as it does, they are taking him to jail. Greg died two days later, in prison at the age of 68.

Greg’s sonJoey rips off a drug dealer who was protected by a made guy. Linda is worried sick, but Joey tells her Vinnie’s dad has it under control. Linda knows what that means, she has been part of the mob lifestyle for decades. She tells him that mean they are going to kill you. Joey doesn’t believe it. But, the next day, Joey is killed. He didn’t have his father’s protection any more.

Linda says of Greg, “he was my life.”

In my opinion, there is so much to Linda’s story that 30 minutes could not do it justice. They just scratched the surface of her life with Greg Scarpa. She spent decades with the man and knew all his business. They did mange to get quite a bit of information into the episode. It was very well executed and the story was coherent. I felt the same way about last week’s episode with Andrea Giovino. Both of these women had much more to their stories, they filled up books, and what we got was the condensed “Reader’s Digest” version. Still they were fascinating and left me wanting to know and see more.

In both episodes, they show the lavish lifestyle side by side with violent murder as part of the woman’s daily routine. It’s impossible to even imagine greeting your significant other at the door, knowing that he may very well have committed murder that day or having to wash out his blood stained clothes. I don’t know how they dealt with it, accepted it, and went about their business. I wish someone would do a psychological study on the mindset of mob wives and mistresses.

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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Linda Schiro’s Grocery Boy


Fruits and vegetables aren’t the only things that Linda hand picked at the grocery store. Lawrence Mazza, was a supermarket delivery boy who caught Linda‘s eye in 1978. Mazza was in college and worked in the neighborhood store. Linda told Greg about her attraction to Mazza and Greg gave her permission to pursue the boy, who later became a member of Greg Scarpa’s crew.


Mazza, who delivered the goods to Linda, who was 15 years older than he, began an intimate relationship that would last for years, until 1986, when he got involved with another woman.. Greg was fine with the relationship, as long as it was kept quiet between the three of them. Mazza remained a member of Scarpa’s crew until he was arrested and turned informant on him to the FBI.

Mazza, Colombo crime family associate, was called as a witness to testify against Scarpa in DeVecchio’s trial, the FBI agent working with Greg Scarpa. Mazza recounted his activities with the mob and what he knew of Scarpa‘s murders. When asked about he got involved in the mob, the mobster was reduced to tears. He testified that he was a student in John Jay College of Criminal Justice when he met Schiro. He had planned to be like his father, a FDNY lieutenant. He was so emotional the judge had to call a recess so he could compose himself enough to go on. Mazza told of how he met Schiro, delivering groceries to her home, and became sexually involved with her and eventually turned into a murderer for the mob.

Mazza had many derogatory things to say about his former “capo” Scarpa, including, “He was a horrible human being” and “[he was] a vicious, violent animal” who could have easily named dozens of murders that he had a hand in. Mazza worked very closely with him. Scarpa started Mazza out with small jobs and gradually gave him more and more responsibility. Mazzo admits to being the hitman for four murders. When he was arrested by the FBI, he agreed to turn informant.

Linda Schiro's episode airs tonight, Wednesday, July 27th, on ID at 10:30 PM. 



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Tuesday, July 26, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Joey Scarpa, Linda Schiro’s Son



Joey Scarpa was the beloved son of Linda Schiro and Greg Scarpa Sr. and sister of Linda Scarpa.  He was murdered a few months after his father died of AIDS in prison. Joey was reportedly killed by a friend, Vincent Rizzuto, over a drug deal.  His death was tragic and devastating to both his mother and sister.  Her story is being featured tomorrow night on Investigation Discovery at 10:30 PM ET.

Joey, like his older brother Greg Jr.,  looked up to and respected his father.  But, Joey was also a rebellious teenager and often didn’t agreed with the things his father asked of him. Joey’s best friend was Patrick Porco. The two boys grew up together, almost like brothers. Patrick spent a lot of time at the Scarpa home.   Both Joey and Patrick starting selling drugs on the street, mainly marijuana and cocaine. Actually it was quite a bit of cocaine. Linda and Greg both worried about Joey’s safety, he was only 17 at the time. Joey and Patrick got into a dispute with a dealer from another crime family, Domenick Masseria, and ended the argument with the alleged killing of Masseria. Greg was very worried for his son’s safety and sent him away, while he tried to negotiate with the other family to save Joey and Patrick’s lives.

According to a 2005 affidavit, sworn to by Sandra Harmon, author of Mafia Son, Linda told her that Greg got a call from FBI agent DeVecchio, telling him that Patrick was going to snitch on Joey about Masseria's murder. Greg Sr's focus was on killing Patrick to protect his son.  He needed Joey to help him with his plan.   Joey never believed his friend would rat on him and protested. However, in the end, at his father's insistence, he went along with his father’s orders. But, the guy who was ordered to whack Patrick had car trouble that day and Greg told Joey he had to go do the job himself. Joey went with his friend John, to take care of Patrick, but when he came home he was inconsolable and sick with grief. Greg wanted Joey to attend Patrick’s funeral, but Joey was too upset to go.

All written content is exclusive property of The Mob Wives Blogspot and is protected by copyrights or other intellectual property rights. You are prohibited from using, copying, altering, modifying, or changing our work. Unauthorized use of this is strictly prohibited. Violators are punishable under federal law. In simple English, stop f*cking jacking our work.


For the entire affivadit of Susan Harmon: http://www.mafiason.com/AFFADAVIT.pdf

Monday, July 25, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Greg Scarpa Jr., Linda’s “Stepson”


Linda Schiro will be featured on Investigation Discovery's "I Married A Mobster" Wednesday night at 10:30 PM.  We have several blogs about the events and people in her life already up.  You can find them all by using the search feature at the bottom right hand side of the blog.
  
Linda Schiro’s “stepson” Greg Jr., was also involved in mafia business. In order to write her book about the Scarpa family, Mafia Son, Sandra Harmon corresponded with Greg Scarpa, Jr. while he was in prison. In an interview with David Amoruso of Gangsters, Inc, she says she initially got involved in the story when she began having meetings with Linda Schiro, who was very open about the details of her life. It was during these conversations that Linda suggested to Sandra that she contact Greg Jr., which she did and he became a valuable source of her research.

Greg Jr. looked up to and respected his father and became involved in the mafia by working for his father. He was a capo in the Colombo crime family. When his father was ill with AIDS and facing arrest, he convinced his son to confess to his crimes, promising that he and DeVecchio, an FBI agent working with Greg Scarpa Sr., would make sure he did not get sentenced to more than a couple of years at a prison close to home. Greg took his father at his word. However, after his trial, he was sentenced to 20 years and sent to a Federal prison a long distance from his family in Brooklyn. A deal he makes with the Feds goes sour as Greg delivers on his end, but the Feds reneg on their promise to shorten his sentence. Instead he is sent to a maximum security prison where he remains in his cell 23 hours a day. Sandra Harmon offers to try to help Greg Jr. by looking into pro bono attorneys and he begins to send her endless pages about his life. One of the most shocking revelations included in their conversations was information that Greg Jr. provided the FBI, concerning the 9/11 attacks, that he got from an inmate and were ignored.

Ms. Harman had gotten so involved and had so much information she was called by both the prosecution and defense for DeVecchio’s trial.

For the entire interview and many more details go to: Gangsters Inc

To read a chapter of Ms. Harmon’s book and letters from Greg Jr: Mafia Son

Please take a moment to vote on our poll at the upper right hand side of the blog. If you haven't seen Lee D'Avanzo we have a blog for that!

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Sunday, July 24, 2011

Mob Wives: Mob Wives vs. I Married A Mobster


Women associated with the mob on television was strictly taboo not too long ago. Now we have two series running back to back on the air: VH1’s Mob Wives and Investigation Discovery’s I Married A Mobster. What is the difference between these two shows?

After watching two episodes of I Married A Mobster, and all ten episodes of Mob Wives, I am prepared to give my answer to that question. The only thing the shows have in common are that the women have some connection or ties to the mob, otherwise, the format and genre is totally different.

One is a reality based show, the other more of a documentary. In Mob Wives the cameras follow the women’s daily lives and record any drama that is going on at the time. They really never speak of anything related to the mob, name names or divulge crimes. They are concerned with living their lives today, under the stigma of being associated/related to mobsters and coping as single mothers while their husbands and fathers are doing time. It’s really very similar to the Real Housewives reality shows, but much more action packed. The arguments on the Real Housewives never rises to the level that it does in Mob Wives. They have petty arguments that they tend to beat like a dead horse and never get over. I don’t have the patience to watch any of the Real Housewives regularly, to be honest. I may catch a show here and there, but get turned off at their childish, spiteful behavior. In Mob Wives the arguments are much more intense and can get very physical. No one walks off in an insulted “huff.” You never know what is going to be said or what will happen next, but you do know they are not going to divulge any insider mob information.



I Married A Mobsteris a whole different show. They invite mob wives and mistresses to speak in great detail about their mobsters and lifestyles. The women speak freely and candidly about all the mob crimes they are aware of: things they have witnessed and heard, crimes they themselves have had a hand in, details they have been told by mob members. Nothing is off limits. It’s shocking really, considering the code of silence that has been a long tradition of the mafia. In addition, the show provides four reenactments of specific events being discussed by each of the women in each episode. Pictures and documents are provided to further give credibility to the stories we are watching. It doesn’t hurt that Lorraine Bracco narrates parts of the story either. Her well known, unique voice brings back images of her character, Dr. Jennifer Melfi, from The Sopranos…always the voice of reason. Unlike the Mob Wives, we do not get much of a glimpse into what the women are doing today, it’s their past that is focused on. And, we don’t get too invested in any one woman because we only get to see each one for one 30 minute episode. We can appreciate their stories for what they are and then move on to the next woman.

Trying to compare the two shows is like comparing apples to oranges really. They are both different, but they are enjoyable and entertaining each in their own way. And one thing is for sure, we are getting a great education in the mafia by those who know!


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Thursday, July 21, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Giovino’s “Working Mom” Recap

Author and Speaker, Andrea Giovino

Andrea Giovino’s I Married A Mobster episode, entitled “Working Mom,” aired last night and boy does she have a story to tell! I know from all my research that they were only able to cover a slice of her life in 30 minutes. There is so much more to know. But, if you missed the show or any part of it, here is my recap.

Andrea grew up in Brooklyn, New York during the 1960’s. Her father was a bus driver, but with 10 children in the family, his salary did not stretch far enough for all their basic necessities. Andrea’s mom was very resourceful in making ends meet. She taught her kids to be “street kids” at an early age. Andrea, for example, was sent out early in the mornings, at the age of 5, to steal from the bakery so they could have breakfast.

Andrea says she was taught to be a good care giver and marrying a husband who was a good provider was her ticket out of poverty. The “street guys” were the ones who had the money and respect in the neighborhood, they were considered the “elite.”

Andrea married young, but was divorced at the age of 21. She meets an older man, Frank Lino, who invites her to dinner and a show. She accepts the invitation. The following Friday she was fired from her job and finds out Lino was responsible. When she questions him about it he says, “no girlfriend of mine should be working.” Her older brother tells her that Lino is a capo in the Bonanno crime family. This is her meal ticket, her way out of poverty. Soon Andrea is living “larger” than her mother ever dreamed. Frank teaches her all about the good life and the mob life, including extortion, prostitution rings and drugs rings. She heard it all.

The men in the mob used women as trophies. One day Frank introduces Andrea to a man named Bruno. Andrea witnesses him talking down to his girlfriend and then, for no reason, he throws her down a flight of stairs. This bothered Andrea and she thinks, that could have been her. Andrea doesn’t like Bruno. One day he comes into her home looking for pills while Andrea is in bed. He gets on the bed and starts touching her hair and talking--she was terrified. She picks up her telephone and cracks him in the head with it. Then her girlfriend, Julia, returned and he left. She never told Frank Lino what happened that night. After a time Andrea wanted to leave Frank because she didn’t love him. She talks to him and he accepts the fact and lets her go. She decides there and then that she no longer wants to be with criminals or live that lifestyle.  The incident with Bruno scares her straight. She wants to settle down with a nice decent man, who will treat her right and doesn’t hurt others. Andrea falls in love and gets marred. She misses the excitement. Her resolve was short lived.

After divorcing, Andrea goes to Club A with a friend to dance. A club often frequented by mobsters.  Before long she is approached by a very handsome man, Mark Reiter. Mark worked for John Gotti, but was not a made man because he was Jewish. Andrea meets Gotti through Mark and says Gotti was always a gentleman, he never allowed men to use profanities in front of women. Mark was a drinker, a gambler and a mobster and Andrea hangs out with him and Gotti night after night, partying at club and spending money. One night she is at a club with Gotti at her side, when a woman starts to bad mouth Andrea’s friend. Andrea warns her to stop, but the woman keeps it up. Andrea is fed up. She pushes a table in to pin the woman down. She then hits babble mouth over the head with a bottle of champagne and pounds her to finish the job. When she is done she earns the nickname “Rocky,” which stuck with her. Mark gets in trouble with the law. He had hidden his money at Andrea’s apartment in Queens. He picks up his money one day and goes on the lam. Eventually he gets caught and is sentenced to life in prison.

Andrea moves on to a guy from Staten Island, John Fogarty. He had a construction company and was also running cocaine from Florida to New York, by the kilos. John is the “love of her life.” She wanted to be with one man and settled down, so she moved to Staten Island to be with him. Then the chaos started.

Andrea is settled with her two boys when she discovers that John is abusing his own coke. She wanted him in rehab. John attends a rehab in Tennessee where he meets a guy and cuts a drug deal with him there. John ends up in prison and Andrea had two babies to take care of. She does what she has to do, she goes out on the street to collect the money that is owed to John so her family can survive. Andrea was shaking people down for the money like she was the Godmother. When they pay up, Andrea uses the money to become a loan shark, to make more money on the street.

One day her brother tells her that a guy won’t or can’t pay back the loan. It was for $20,000. Andrea gets extremely upset. She tells her brother to get that money and do whatever he has to do. Her brother understands, so does law enforcement. The DEA hears her 1982 conversations through wire taps. Andrea and 22 other crew members were arrested.

The Feds take Andrea into an interrogation room. They know her history and all the mobsters she had been with. She can’t play dumb. The Feds say either she tells them everything she knows or she will be facing 10 years in prison. They play her the tapes they have, including some that have recorded threats on her life. If she goes to prison she is sure to lose her kids. The mob wanted her dead. So , Andrea tells the Feds everything she knows. Andrea cannot go into the witness protection program because she shares joint custody of one of her children with her ex-husband, and that child would not be allowed to enter.

The Feds reneg on their promises to Andrea of $75,000 and relocation of her family. She goes home angry and feel she has nothing to lose. She calls Mary Jo White’s office and tells her what she plans to do. She is making up signs, “Marked For Death,” and placing them on her babies, she is calling all the news media people, and she is staging a huge protest. She is going to get the message out there that if you inform the government will leave you high and dry and a target to be killed. She tells her office when I am done no one will ever speak to the government again! That convinced the Feds to help her by extending her funding for 18 more months. The Feds were defeated, Andrea managed to extort the government.

Andrea goes legit and becomes a model citizen. She makes sure her kids do not repeat her mistakes; the cycle is broken and her kids were saved.

Great episode! I am going to order a copy of Andrea’s book, Divorced From The Mob, and read what I am missing!

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Thursday, July 14, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Recap of Episode 1 “Cheryl & Philly: A Love Story”


The women of this new show break the mob rule of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” In “A Love Story,” Cheryl accepts a dinner invitation from Phil even though she was engaged to another man. Phil was very taken by Cheryl and he asks to see her ring. He takes the ring off her finger, throws it across the restaurant and tells her you aren’t engaged any more, you are with me. And that’s how the “Love Story” begins.

Philly brings Cheryl presents every time he picks her up. He romances her. He owns a successful printing business in Manhattan. He never tells her he worked for the Colombo crime family as part of Sonny Franzese’s crew, or that he did printing for Sonny. Philly also laundered money for the mob. They were paying him $150,000 a week. That’s how he made the money that allowed them to take trips to the Bahamas, buy a four bedroom house and he even had car painted pink for her.

One day he calls Cheryl and tells her they are going furniture shopping. Philly picks up Cheryl and he brings her a single red rose. She is so busy talking about the furniture they are going to buy that she doesn’t realize that inside the rose is a 3.5 carat diamond engagement ring. Philly tells her to smell the rose. That’s how he proposed to her. They married and went on honeymoon, taking a 7 day cruise to the islands. Eight months later they had a baby girl, Melissa, and Philly gives Cheryl one million dollars. Two years later they have another daughter. Cheryl says her life was always picture perfect and always full of surprises.

This was far from the life Cheryl had known. Her father abandoned the family when she was five years old. Her mother had to raise four children by herself. Cheryl had three brothers and her hand me downs left a lot to be desired. So Philly’s romancing had swept her totally off her feet.

On September 22, 1993, after three years of marriage, Cheryl had to kiss her fantasy good bye as she woke up to a nightmare. The Feds were after Philly. One day, when he stops to fill up his gas tank, he is surrounded by law enforcement agents and taken into custody. A detective calls Cheryl to let her know. Cheryl says they really wanted to get Sonny Franzese and wanted Philly’s cooperation. They tell him that Sonny is his ticket out of jail and into the witness protection program. But Philly clamed up and gets his father to bail him out of jail. Cheryl still knows nothing about why Philly is in jail. He tells her time and time again not to worry, it’s not serious. Philly thinks he is protecting her by not telling her why he is in trouble. If she doesn’t know anything she can’t say anything. But in the end, Philly ends up being convicted of drug trafficking, racketeering and wire fraud.
Phil Caruso

One day, before he leaves the house, Philly takes off all his jewelry, puts it in his jewelry box and kisses Cheryl good bye. She gets a bad feeling. She decides to go down to the courthouse and arrives for what is the last day of his trial. She walks in during the judges sentencing and hears him read a list of crimes and then pronounce sentence, 15 years to life. That is all Cheryl heard. She didn’t know what to do. Philly was handcuffed and taken away and she was told to go home. The children were in day care for a couple of hours so she knew she needed to pick them up. Philly did not “flip” and refused to talk, so he ended up getting a long sentence. He was a “stand up” guy.

The news media were calling Cheryl, they were saying Philly was pushing cocaine. She didn’t know what to believe so she locks herself up in her house with her girls. Her fairy tale ended and everything after that was hell. She had no income, no money and the bills were coming in. Cheryl went into survival mode and got three jobs, working practically around the clock, 17 hour days, waitressing, hostessing and bartending, while her mother watched her children. She waited for 5 years and even drove the 11 hour trip to the prison, near the Canadian border, to talk to Phil and get answers, but he never told her about his involvement with the mob. She says, she couldn’t do it any more; she couldn’t handle his pain and hers. She stopped going to the prison and didn’t have time to read and answer the ten letters a day he was writing to her.
Reenactment Scene

While Philly was serving time, Cheryl was busy becoming financially independent and stable. She didn’t need Philly any more. When he is released in February 2000, after serving 7 years, he expects to be able to return home and take over, but Cheryl says no, it’s not happening. When they first met she says she was naĂŻve, quiet and fun loving. She didn’t know anything. But, after everything that happened, she now understood everything and she could never go back to the way things were with him. She even gets an order of protection.

Philly felt rejected and he decides to teach her a lesson “mob style.” One day, at 8:00 at night, two sheriffs show up at her door. She thinks Philly has gotten into more trouble and tells them Phil is not there. They tell her they are there for her. Phil’s lawyer convinced a judge that she was abusing her children. They removed Cheryl from the home. She had to prove her innocence and the judge was livid. She also started her divorce case, which lasted five years. Philly was never allowed to come home again.

I found Cheryl’s story interesting. I have heard some skepticism about her claiming she didn’t know Philly was in the mob or where all the money was coming from. But, after watching this episode twice, I really tend to believe Cheryl. She was never involved in the mob or been around that lifestyle as far as we know. Phil had a successful printing business in Manhattan which could have afforded them a lavish lifestyle. I don’t think she had much reason to suspect him of being connected except for one thing which might have been a red flag. She asked about his business associates and he told her that they used to be connected, but weren’t any more. Most people know you do not just “retire or quit” the mob after you’ve made your money. But maybe she was naĂŻve about things like that. It just goes to show she knows nothing about mob life.
The other thing that troubled me was that a year into their marriage, after she had their first child, Philly gives her one million dollars. I would love to know what happened to all that money? He was arrested two years later and she says there was no money, no income. But they already had the house, the furniture, the cars…so where did the million dollars go? I know it would be easy to spend all that money in two years, but Philly was still making money and supporting the family up until his arrest. It’s just a question that nagged at me after I watching the episode again.

I don’t think Cheryl is you typical mob wife. She didn’t “wait” for Philly, she drove to the prison to get answers, and she didn’t let him back into her life when he got out. She just seems to have “fallen” into the mob world, clueless and then pulled herself out for the sake of her girls. I think she did a damn good job.

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Picture Credit: Investigation Discovery

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

I Married A Mobster: Joy Behar Grills Mobster’s Wives


Joy Behar never tires of mob wives. She had a nice chat with the women of VH1’s Mob Wives when their show premiered a few months ago. Last night she chatted with three women, who will tell their stories, from ID’s “I Married A Mobster,” which premieres tonight at 10:30 PM.

The three women featured on the show were Cheryl Caruso, whose story airs tonight, Linda Scarpa and Dion Nicosia, a new addition to the lineup. The ever curious Joy, fired questions faster than a semi-automatic, trying the get the most information out of them in the 30 minute segment. She scored some “hits.“ The women all were very forthcoming about their stories and why they appreciated the opportunity to tell people what they went through.

Cheryl speaks first. She has been divorced from Philly a long time now. She says she never knew he was involved with the mob. As far as she knew, he was a businessman with a successful printing business in Manhattan. She never asked any questions about his work or how much money he made. When he went to jail, she had no money and was completely in debt with two very young daughters to raise. Up until that point, Philly had taken care of everything. She finally learned of his crimes when she walked into court and heard the judge rattled over a long list of crimes and sentence him to 15 years to life. That was all she heard and she couldn’t comprehend it. The bottom feel out of her ideally perfect world. She had to get three jobs to pay the bills and was literally working around the clock, while her mother helped her raise the children. She had to rebuild everything. When Phil was released, after serving 7 years, he was on her doorstep begging for her to take him in. Cheryl said she couldn’t allow him back in the home, she didn’t know who he was. She worked too hard to establish herself and make a life for her and the girls. Sure she liked the perks that the mob life afforded her, but she didn’t know that was where the money was coming from. One day her life was perfect and the next it was ruined. She is telling her story to close the door on it and move on.

Dion says that after her husband went to prison there was no money left. The lawyers ate it up. She knew her husband, Angelo Nicosia, was well connected in the mob. It was nice and she enjoyed the lifestyle. Joy wants to know if Dion, who is African American, experienced any racism from the mob. Dion answers, “No, she was surprised, everyone was wonderful to her. The men were all charming.” Joy adds, “Yeah, other than the murders.” Dion says her husband was arrested and convicted in 2008 of extortion and will be out in March 2012. Joy asks, if her husband has ever gotten violent with her. Dion says, “no he hasn’t, but I have hit him a few times.’ She says people are fascinated with the mob and she finds telling her story is very therapeutic.

Finally, we hear from “Little” Linda Scarpa, whose father was Greg Scarpa. Greg was known as a notorious killer and because of that earned the nickname, The Grim Reaper. He was head of the Colombo family. Linda comes across as quiet, demure woman with an air of sadness about her. She begins by saying that her father was a great dad, a typical dad, and that she grew up in Brooklyn. She found out about her father’s lifestyle when she was 16 years old. She had a Sweet 16 Party and she said about 200 made men showed up. She says, if you see the video of it, it was pretty morbid. Joy pipes in, “I’d love to see it.” She tells the story of when there was an attempt made on her father’s life. She was in the car behind his, which her baby boy in the back seat. They were pulling out of the driveway, her car behind her dad’s, when men jumped out of a van across the street and started firing shots at her father’s car. She was “in the way,” so some stray shots entered her car. She was 21 at the time. She says she loves her father, but she has anger and resentment towards “the life.”

She has four children, but is not currently married. She says that when you marry someone in the mob or are conceived by someone in the mob there is really no way out of it. There is so much pain you can’t get over. She says she has never spoken about her pain before. She has never gotten over the death of her brother. Her brother died from being shot on the streets because he no longer had protection from the mob. But, she never felt she had the right to express her grief because her father killed so many people and caused so much pain for others. Her father, Greg Scarpa, died of AIDS while in prison. He was sick and needed a transfusion. One of his friends, who had AIDS, donated blood which was never screened because he was a friend. Linda says she wanted to speak openly about what she went through and show the lifestyle is not glamorous. She says she is speaking because there is no one left to speak about it. No one who is left to worry about what she has to say. The Colombos were at war with each other, killing each other, and there is no one left. The only ones left to talk about the mob lifestyle are the women and children.

All in all, a very informative set of interviews skillfully “executed” by Joy Behar. I wouldn’t be surprised if she was made an honorary “mob wife” at some point in the future. The mob wife phenomena is quickly catching on and we are keeping on the look out for new shows in the near future. Are you listening Jenn Graziano, from JustJenn Productions? We need to know!


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