Lawrence Ricci

Bowers Steps Down as President, No. 2 Man Hughes Takes Over

For the last two years the International Longshoremen’s Association has been operating under a Justice Department civil racketeering indictment.  But whether the change in leadership at New York City headquarters this month suggests the feds will drop its suit remains to be seen.  As expected, John Bowers resigned on July 26 as president of the ILA at the union’s quadrennial convention in Hollywood, Fla., having held the job since 1987.  Bowers, 84, had been indicating for some time that he would not seek re-election.  His close ally, Richard Hughes, Jr., 74, the ILA executive vice president, takes over at the top spot, having run uncontested.  Hughes’s replacement is Harold Daggett, assistant general organizer and president of the nearly 2,000-member Local 1804-1 across the river in New Jersey, long under control of the Genovese crime family.  Daggett had been acquitted in November 2005 after an emotionally draining waterfront criminal trial that saw, among other things, the discovery of the dead body of missing witness Lawrence Ricci.  Hughes had gotten his job in 2005 as a replacement for Albert Cernadas, who retired after pleading guilty in the case.

Body in Car Trunk Was Ricci’s; Funeral Held

Not too many people thought Lawrence Ricci disappeared on his own accord.  He’d already testified before a federal courtroom jury in Brooklyn, N.Y.  And when he remained missing even after being acquitted of conspiracy and wire fraud charges related to a union benefit diversion scheme, the likelihood his vanishing was voluntary became even more remote.  Now everyone’s worst suspicions have been confirmed:  Ricci was killed.  And his death – his body was discovered in the trunk of a car – has all the marks of a mob hit.  Ricci, 60, a reputed acting capo of the Genovese crime family, had been on trial along with two top officials of the International Longshoremen’s Association, Harold Daggett and Arthur Coffey, both of whom, like Ricci, wound up acquitted.  Another union official, Albert Cerna

Thug’s Testimony for Prosecutors Influenced Jury Acquittals

At first reading, it seems like a travesty of justice.  But the acquittals of all three defendants in the recent criminal trial of two highly-paid ranking Longshoremen officials and an underworld associate should be placed in context.  The jury in that Brooklyn, N.Y.

Union Officials, Mobster Found Not Guilty; Questions Remain

In the end, the jury wasn’t convinced.  But that hardly means the prosecution wasn’t convincing.  On Tuesday, November 8, a federal jury in Brooklyn, N.Y. acquitted all three defendants of conspiracy and fraud charges related to allegations they steered Longshoremen union benefit funds toward a mobbed-up pharmaceutical company.  The fortunate ones are:  Harold Daggett, the union’s assistant general organizer; Arthur Coffey, ILA vice president and Miami chieftain; and Lawrence Ricci, a reported Genovese crime family captain.  While the verdict was a clear victory for the union, nagging questions remain – like the whereabouts of Ricci.    

One Mobster Testifies to Being Bagman; Another Vanishes

Peter Gotti may not get the press enjoyed by his late younger brother, Gambino crime boss John Gotti.  But as his successor to the family business, even if from a federal prison cell following racketeering and money-laundering convictions, Peter Gotti is every bit as versed in the art of putting the fear of God in a witness.  A convicted Gambino family soldier, Primo Cassarino, personally can vouch for that.  Another mobster, Genovese family capo Lawrence Ricci, isn’t talking – he recently “disappeared.”

 

Reputed Mobster Joins 3 Top Bosses as Racketeering Defendant

A reputed Genovese mob captain from New Jersey has joined three top Longshoremen union bosses as a co-defendant in a federal racketeering indictment that claims the ILA is under Mafia influence, according to the Journal of Commerce.  The extortion and wire-fraud charges against Lawrence Ricci are the latest development in a case scheduled to go to trial May 31 in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn.

 

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