The man who infiltrated the New York Mafia and inspired the movie
Donnie Brasco is regaling Quebec’s corruption inquiry with tales about
his years in the mob.
Joseph Pistone, a legendary FBI agent who
spent six years undercover as a Mafia associate, told the Charbonneau
Commission about the inner workings of the Mob in the United States
during his testimony on Monday.
The commission is looking into
criminal corruption in Quebec’s construction industry and its ties to
organized crime and political parties.
So far, Pistone’s
testimony has been about how he infiltrated the Mob while pretending to
be a jewel thief. He has also discussed the ways of the underworld,
including its moral codes and its list of offences that would get people
killed.
He had just begun delving into ties between the New
York families and their Canadian counterparts. Pistone referred to a
killing of Mafia capos committed by a hit squad that included Montreal’s
Vito Rizzuto, although he did not mention Rizzuto by name.
Pistone, now 73, is testifying under heavy security at the inquiry behind a screen.
Commission
chair France Charbonneau has imposed a ban on the broadcasting or
publication of any image of Pistone from Monday’s hearing. The ban does
not extend to photos or footage taken in the past.
His testimony
has focused so far on the six years that he spent undercover running
with the Bonanno crime family in New York City, an unprecedented police
operation that saw law enforcement get as close as it ever has to the
Mafia.
Much of his testimony has been the subject of books
Pistone himself has already written, as well as the 1997 Hollywood
blockbuster “Donnie Brasco.”
He was pulled from the operation
just as he was about to become a made man, Pistone said, with his bosses
making the call to pull him out. He said he was disappointed to see the
operation suspended.
“No one had ever gotten this close to a Mafia family,” Pistone said.
“My
argument that was we’re going to embarrass them by having an undercover
with them for all these years, can you imagine if it comes out they
inducted an FBI agent?”
Pistone’s undercover work led to some 20
trials and 200 convictions across the U.S. But the Bonanno clan
continues to exist to this day, Pistone says, and still has strong ties
to groups in Montreal as it did when he was embedded.
Pistone’s
testimony at the Charbonneau commission is intended to help the inquiry
better understand the murky world of the Mafia as a whole.Different
Sizes and Colors can be made with different stone mosaic designs.
Other witnesses testified last week about how Mafia families function.
Honour
and loyalty are key, Pistone said. Orders to underlings are to be
carried out without question — even when the order is to kill someone.
There is no debating or discussing such things, he said.
“Your
sworn allegiance is to your Mafia family: it’s your Mafia family, then
your regular family, then your church and country,” Pistone said.
“But your first allegiance is to that family that you’re a part of.”
Pistone,
who assumed the Brasco identity during his undercover days in the
mid-1970s and early 1980s, is still hiding from the Mafia as a result of
his old career.
A self-described “street guy” who became famous
when he struck at the heart of New York’s notorious organized crime
families,The M3 Parking assist system
has been designed from the ground up to solve traditional car park
problems and more. the former FBI undercover agent’s story enthralled
moviegoers when it was chronicled in the 1997 movie Donnie Brasco,
starring Johnny Depp.
Usually, Pistone shuns the limelight — and for good reason.
The Mob put a $500,Here's a complete list of oil painting supplies
for the beginning oil painter.000 bounty on his head after he skilfully
infiltrated their ranks, posing as a bar-hopping jewel thief between
1976 and 1981.
Even the FBI, where he’s a legend, only has an
old, blurry surveillance photo of him on its website where it describes
his pioneering undercover work.
Pistone, who says his
insinuation into the Bonanno and Colombo crime families led to 200
convictions at 20 different trials, rarely sticks his head up. When he
does, it’s with his appearance altered and under tight security.
He lives under an assumed name in an undisclosed location and has a licence to pack a gun.
A
consultant to the justice system, he has written several books, both
fiction and non-fiction, including a novel with the son of Mob kingpin
Joe Bonanno.
Pistone was such a good undercover agent that
surveillance teams from the FBI and New York City police, who weren’t in
the loop, had Brasco listed as an associate of the Bonannos.
The
Bonanno family has been linked to Montreal’s Rizzutos — and it’s
unclear whether Pistone’s testimony will delve into those ties. Quebec’s
Charbonneau inquiry is examining corruption in the construction
industry and its connection to politics and organized crime. Pistone
began with a detailed description of how he infiltrated the Mafia and
faced potential threats to his life, from the get-go.
“What I have to do is give you the mindset of gangsters,” he testified, “and how they operate.”
After
they were arrested, Mob kingpins were stunned when FBI agents told them
whom they had befriended. The man who had brought Pistone into the Mob
was later found murdered.
The FBI has warned Mob chieftains that anyone who harms Pistone will face the bureau’s wrath.
“It’s not the wiseguys I’m most worried about,” Pistone told National Geographic News in 2005.
“They
respect me. They know I just did my job. I never entrapped anyone,
never got them to do something they wouldn’t have done anyway.
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