Benjamin Ruggiero

Benjamin Ruggiero

Infobox Person
name = Benjamin Ruggiero


image_size = 150px
caption = FBI surveillance photo of Benjamin Ruggiero leaving a bank after planning a robbery c.a. 1980
birth_date = birth date|1926|4|19|mf=y
birth_place = Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan, New York, U.S.
death_date = death date and age|1994|11|24|1926|4|19
death_place = U.S.

Benjamin Ruggiero a.k.a Lefty, a.k.a Lefty Guns, a.k.a Lefty Two Guns, a.k.a Half Cock, a.k.a Horse Cock (April 19, 1926 - November 24, 1994) was a member of the Bonanno crime family best known for his close association and mentorship of Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI undercover agent Joseph Pistone aka "Donnie Brasco".

Early life

Born in the fourth ward neighborhood of Manhattan, Ruggiero grew up in the Knickerbocker Village private housing development in Little Italy, Manhattan. Knickerbocker Village was home to many future members of the Bonanno family. Ruggiero joined the Bonanno family as a young man, serving as a street soldier under capo Michael Sabella. Ruggiero soon became successful in bookmaking, extortion and loansharking rackets. During this period, Ruggiero became good friends with future family boss Philip "Rusty" Rastelli and fellow mobster Anthony Mirra. Ruggiero was also a hitman, allegedly murdering at least 26 people during his criminal career.

Ruggiero became the part owner of a fishery in the Fulton Fish Market in Manhattan. As a part-owner, Ruggiero was able to put himself on the company payroll with a $5,000-a-month "no-show" job. During the 70's, he purchased a social club in Little Italy.

Ruggiero relished his life as a mobster. He explained it this way to another Bonanno mobster (who was actually an undercover FBI agent): "Tony, as a wiseguy you can lie, you can cheat, you can steal, you can kill people: LEGITIMATELY. You can do any goddamn thing you want, and nobody can say anything about it. Who wouldn't want to be a wiseguy?".Fact|date=June 2008

Personal life

Ruggiero was a six-foot tall, lean-bodied man with a narrow face, intense eyes, slightly stooped shoulders, and a cigarette-raspy voice. Ruggiero reportedly earned his nickname from tossing dice left-handed while playing craps. He lived in an apartment on Monroe Street in Manhattan in the same building as his friend and fellow Bonanno mobster Anthony Mirra. Ruggiero reportedly owned a cigarette boat that he kept docked on the East River in New York.

Ruggiero had three daughters and one son, Thomas Sbano, with his first wife. In the late 1950s, Ruggiero left his first wife, eventually moving in with his future second wife, Louise. In September 1977, Ruggiero married Louise in a small ceremony at New York City Hall. Ruggiero was reportedly very protective and faithful to Louise, but not especially sensitive.

Ruggiero's son Thomas struggled with a heroin dependency until he checked into a drug rehabilitation center in 1979. After Thomas' release, Ruggiero got him a job at the Fulton Fish Market. Ruggiero's younger daughter worked at a New York hospital and managed a booth at the Feast of San Gennaro in Little Italy. Two of Ruggiero's daughters reportedly married mobsters. The Bonanno family allegedly discovered that Ruggiero's son-in-law Marco was cheating the family and told Ruggiero to eliminate him. Marco disappeared, and his body was never recovered.

Donnie Brasco

Around the time that Ruggiero became a member of the Bonanno family, he met Donnie Brasco. Fellow mobster Mirra introduced Brasco, a small-time jewelry thief, to Ruggiero in a Manhattan bar. What Ruggiero didn't realize was that Brasco was really Joseph D. Pistone, an undercover FBI agent. Pistone's original mission had been to infiltrate a jewelry fencing ring; Pistone prepared for this assignment by taking gemology classes. However, the friendships Pistone developed (as Brasco) with Mirra, Napolitano, and Ruggiero now gave the FBI the chance to infiltrate the Bonanno family itself.

Brasco was soon placing bets with Ruggiero and helping him make collections for the bookmaking operation in Ruggiero's social club. Ruggiero became a mentor to Brasco and eventually sponsored him for membership in the family. Ruggiero's good relationship with Brasco soon caused friction with old friend Mirra, who had originally introduced Brasco to Ruggiero. Ruggiero and Brasco became good friends; Brasco served as best man at Ruggiero's 1977 wedding and frequently advised Ruggiero on handling his son's drug dependency.

At one point, Ruggiero almost discovered Brasco's true identity. Ruggiero and Brasco were sitting in a Miami Beach, Florida restaurant one day and Ruggiero was reading a copy of "Time" magazine. The article was about the infamous Abscam scandal and detailed how FBI agents posed as rich Arab businessmen to catch U.S. Congressmen taking bribes. What caught Ruggiero's eye was a picture of a white yacht that the FBI used to entertain the congressmen. Suddenly, Ruggiero recognized the boat; it was the same craft that Brasco had provided several months before for a party with Ruggiero and other Bonanno mobsters. Fortunately for Brasco, he was able to convince Ruggiero that this was a different yacht.

Gambling addiction and financial instability

By the 1970s, Ruggiero had acquired a gambling dependency; he was betting and losing heavily on horse races at Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens. Soon he was borrowing money from mobster Nicholas Marangello to feed this addiction. By 1977, Ruggiero owed Marangello $160,000. The Bonanno family finally told Ruggiero that he would have to repay Marangello before he could become a made man, or full family member. By the summer of 1977, Ruggiero had paid most of his debt to Marangello and the family accepted his membership. However, by 1978, Ruggiero was back in debt again to Marangello. To settle the debt this time, the family arranged to transfer the revenues from part of Ruggiero's criminal operations directly to Marangello. Due to his gambling problem, Ruggiero was always trying to hide his few assets from his creditors Marangello and Sabella, and was always scheming on how to make money.

During a later criminal enterprise, Ruggiero met the mafia boss of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. During the process of collaborating a scam in Milwaukee, Ruggiero openly admitted to Pistone that he felt threatened while in the presence of Milwaukee mob boss Frank Balistrieri. In 1979, Ruggiero converted his social club into a candy store and gave it to one of his daughters to manage. At the same time, Ruggiero and Brasco started a bookmaking operation out of the store. However, Ruggiero was soon dropped from the partnership because he was unable to provide the initial required investment of $2,500.

Family turmoil

In 1979, Bonanno boss Carmine Galante was murdered, creating a power vacuum in the family. After Galante's murder, Philip Rastelli took over, running things from prison. However, one faction in the family rebelled at Rastelli's assumption of leadership. At this time, Ruggiero joined the crew of Dominic "Sonny Black" Napolitano, a strong Rastelli supporter. On May 5, 1981, three rebel capos were lured to a meeting and murdered. Alphonse Indelicato's body was discovered in a vacant lot in Queens, but the bodies of Philip Giaccone and Dominick Trinchera were never found. Ruggiero and Napolitano were prime suspects in these murders. After the deaths of the three capos, the rebellion against Rastelli was quashed.

Incarceration and death

In 1981, the FBI decided to end the Brasco investigation and terminate Pistone's assignment. FBI agents soon visited both Ruggiero and Napolitano at a social club and informed them of Brasco's true identity. After the Bonanno leadership learned the truth about Brasco, they immediately went after the men who brought Brasco into their midst. Mirra and Napolitano were murdered, and a contract was put out on Ruggiero. On August 30 1981, the FBI intercepted Ruggiero as he was going to a meeting at Marangello's social club and placed Ruggiero under protective custody. If Ruggiero had attended that meeting, the family would have murdered him.

After the FBI put Ruggiero in protective custody, they tried several times to persuade him to become a government witness and join the Witness Protection Program. However, Ruggiero refused to cooperate with the FBI and even tried to bail himself out of jail. In 1982, Ruggiero was charged with violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO Act) in both New York and Florida. The specific charges included conspiring to murder the three capos in New York, distributing methaqualone in New York, and committing extortion, the planning of a bank robbery, and the running of illegal gambling operations in Florida.

Ruggiero was convicted in both New York and Florida and sentenced to 20 years in prison. In 1992, Ruggiero was released from prison after serving 11 years, sick with lung and testicular cancer.cite web
title = THE JOSEPH PISTONE/DONNIE BRASCO INTERVIEW
publisher = "Gangsters Inc."
url = http://gangstersinc.tripod.com/PistoneInterview.html
accessdate = 2008-06-21
] On November 24, 1994, Benjamin Ruggiero died of lung cancer at age 68.

In popular culture

Ruggiero was portrayed by Al Pacino in the 1997 film "Donnie Brasco".

References

* Pistone, Joseph D.; & Woodley, Richard (1999) Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia, p. 402, Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-66637-4.

External links

* [http://www.angelfire.com/blog/organizedcrime/bonanno/ruggiero.html American Organized Crime - Bonanno Crime Family - Benjamin "Lefty Guns" Ruggiero] Dead link|date=August 2008
* [http://www.ipsn.org/court_cases/us_v_ruggiero_726_f2d-913.htm UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. BENJAMIN RUGGIERO]
* [http://cases.justia.com/us-court-of-appeals/F2/754/927/ Justia.com UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. BENJAMIN RUGGIERO]
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,966489,00.html?promoid=googlep Time Magazine: Strife And Death in the Family] by DAVID BRAND


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Ruggiero — or Ruggero is the Italian version of the Germanic name Roger and may refer to:As a Surname *Adamo Ruggiero (b. 1986), a Canadian actor *Angela Ruggiero (b. 1980), an American hockey player *Benjamin Ruggiero (1926 1994), a member of the New York… …   Wikipedia

  • Nicholas Santora — Nicholas Angelo Nicky Mouth Santora (born June 21, 1942) is the reputed underboss of the Bonanno crime family. Contents 1 Biography 1.1 The three capos murder …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph D. Pistone — Donnie Brasco redirects here. For the 1997 crime drama film, see Donnie Brasco (film). Joseph D. Pistone FBI surveillance photo of Donnie Brasco Retired Federal Bureau of Investigation …   Wikipedia

  • Nicholas Marangello — (right) with Joseph Massino in a February 23, 1977 FBI surveillance photo Nicholas Marangello (died December 30, 1999), also known as Nicky Glasses , Nicky Cigars , Nicky the Butler and Little Nicky , was the underboss of the Bonanno crime family …   Wikipedia

  • Anthony Mirra — also known as Tony (c. 1922 Lower East Side, Manhattan February 18, 1982 Lower Manhattan) was a street soldier for the Bonanno crime family who worked under caporegime Michael Zaffarano, involved in extortion, gambling and drug trafficking. He is …   Wikipedia

  • Dominic Napolitano — Dominick Napolitano Born June 16, 1930(1930 06 16) Greenpoint, Brooklyn, U.S. Died August 17, 1981(1981 08 17) (aged 51) Flatlands, Brooklyn Dominick Napolitano (June 16, 1930 – August 17, 1981), also known as Sonny Bla …   Wikipedia

  • Donnie Brasco (film) — Donnie Brasco Theatrical release poster Directed by Mike Newell Produced by …   Wikipedia

  • Donnie Brasco — Données clés Réalisation Mike Newell Scénario Paul Attanasio Acteurs principaux Al Pacino Johnny Depp Michael Madsen Pays d’origine …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Dominick Trinchera — Born December 20, 1936 (1936 12 20) Rockland, New York Died …   Wikipedia

  • Joseph Massino — Infobox Person name=Joseph Big Joey Massino right|frame caption= birth date=Birth date and age|1943|1|10|mf=y birth place=New Haven, Connecticut, U.S. death date= death place=Joseph C. Big Joey Massino (January 10, 1943), known in the media as… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”