United States v. Mario Riccobene, in No. 82-1399 v. Joseph Ciancaglini, in No. 82-1410 v. Charles Warrington, in No. 82-1411 v. Pasquale Spirito, in No. 82-1412 v. Joseph Bongiovanni, in No. 82-1413 v. Harry Riccobene, in No. 82-1414

709 F.2d 214
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1983
Docket82-1399
StatusPublished

This text of 709 F.2d 214 (United States v. Mario Riccobene, in No. 82-1399 v. Joseph Ciancaglini, in No. 82-1410 v. Charles Warrington, in No. 82-1411 v. Pasquale Spirito, in No. 82-1412 v. Joseph Bongiovanni, in No. 82-1413 v. Harry Riccobene, in No. 82-1414) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Mario Riccobene, in No. 82-1399 v. Joseph Ciancaglini, in No. 82-1410 v. Charles Warrington, in No. 82-1411 v. Pasquale Spirito, in No. 82-1412 v. Joseph Bongiovanni, in No. 82-1413 v. Harry Riccobene, in No. 82-1414, 709 F.2d 214 (3d Cir. 1983).

Opinion

709 F.2d 214

13 Fed. R. Evid. Serv. 564

UNITED STATES of America
v.
Mario RICCOBENE, Appellant in No. 82-1399
v.
Joseph CIANCAGLINI, Appellant in No. 82-1410
v.
Charles WARRINGTON, Appellant in No. 82-1411
v.
Pasquale SPIRITO, Appellant in No. 82-1412
v.
Joseph BONGIOVANNI, Appellant in No. 82-1413
v.
Harry RICCOBENE, Appellant in No. 82-1414.

Nos. 82-1399, 82-1410 to 82-1414.

United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.

Argued March 16, 1983.
Decided May 20, 1983.
As Amended June 13, 1983.
Rehearing Denied June 16, 1983.

Peter F. Vaira, Jr., U.S. Atty., E.D. Pa., Joel M. Friedman, Albert J. Wicks, Sp. Attys., Dept. of Justice, Philadelphia, Pa., William C. Bryson (argued), Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., for appellee.

Carmen C. Nasuti (argued), Nasuti & Miller, Philadelphia, Pa., for Mario Riccobene.

Robert F. Simone (argued), Philadelphia, Pa., for Jos. Ciancaglini.

Oscar N. Gaskins, Gaskins & McCaskill, Philadelphia, Pa., for Chas. Warrington.

Bonnie B. Leadbetter (argued), Philadelphia, Pa., for Pasquale Spirito.

Alan B. Epstein (argued), Jablon, Epstein & Wolf, Philadelphia, Pa., for Jos. Bongiovanni.

Mario J. D'Alfonso, Camden, N.J., for Harry Riccobene.

Before ADAMS and HUNTER, Circuit Judges and ACKERMAN, District Judge.*

OPINION OF THE COURT

ADAMS, Circuit Judge.

The appellants in this case challenge their convictions under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1961 et seq. ("RICO"), and the federal gambling statute, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1955. Their primary argument is that the evidence failed to show beyond a reasonable doubt either that they were engaged in the conduct of a single on-going enterprise, as required for the RICO count for which they were convicted, or that their activity constituted a single conspiracy. They also contend that the jury could not properly have found that each appellant committed the acts charged against him as predicate offenses of the RICO count. In addition, various appellants raise the following claims individually: that the evidence as to particular counts was insufficient; that the district court committed reversible trial errors; that certain confidential attorney-client communications were intercepted by the F.B.I. wiretaps; and that RICO violates both the fifth and eighth amendment rights of the appellants by permitting the imposition of unjustifiably harsh sentences. After considering all of the contentions raised by each defendant, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient in all respects and that no reversible errors were committed by the district court. Accordingly, the convictions will be affirmed.

I.

This RICO case involves a number of persons who were members of an alleged "crime family" in Philadelphia. The government asserts that during the period covered by the indictment, 1972 to 1978, there existed an on-going criminal enterprise, implicating each of the defendants, and that this enterprise engaged in activities that included illegal gambling, mail fraud, wire fraud, extortionate credit transactions and collection of unlawful debts. At trial, the bulk of the evidence consisted of tape recordings of conversations among the co-conspirators that were intercepted by government wiretaps at three locations: Frank's Cabana Steak House, the Tyrone DeNittis Talent Agency; and the C. Warren Check Cashing Company. The transcripts of these tapes fill eight volumes.

A. The Participants in the Enterprise

Angelo Bruno, a named co-conspirator, headed the enterprise; the "underboss" was co-defendant Philip Testa. Supervisors in the enterprise, who worked under Testa, included appellant Harry Riccobene, co-defendants Frank Narducci and Carl Ippolito, and co-conspirators Nicodemo Scarfo, John Simone and Frank Sindone. Appellant Joseph Ciancaglini was, to a lesser extent, part of the core group of the organization. He appears to have worked for Sindone, the most active of the supervisors, to oversee many of the gambling operations of the enterprise.

The other appellants were not major figures in the overall operation of the organization. Mario Riccobene was a partner of his half-brother Harry in the loan-sharking and numbers businesses that they operated out of the DeNittis Talent Agency in South Philadelphia; Mario also appears to have served occasionally as Bruno's driver. Joseph Bongiovanni worked for the Riccobenes.

Charles Warrington and Pasquale Spirito, the final two appellants, had virtually no direct contact with the Riccobenes and Bongiovanni. Warrington ran various gambling operations, both numbers and craps games, at which Spirito worked.1 These operations were supervised by Ciancaglini, who also oversaw the Riccobenes' numbers game.

By the time the trial took place, a number of the co-conspirators and defendants had been killed, including Bruno, Testa, Narducci, Sindone and Simone; Ippolito was declared incompetent to stand trial; and Scarfo is in federal custody on unrelated charges.2

B. The Activities

The indictment charges that the "pattern of racketeering activity" in this case is demonstrated by eight predicate offenses committed by various appellants. Some of these activities implicate just one appellant, acting with other co-conspirators. There is no single predicate offense in which all the appellants participated together.3

1. Chestnut Hill Lincoln Mercury Dealership

Three of the predicate offenses charged against appellant Ciancaglini arose from activities connected with the Chestnut Hill Lincoln Mercury car dealership. Harry Brown, the general manager of the dealership, testified that since 1969 he had borrowed money from Frank Sindone at a rate of 2 1/2% interest per week. After a time, Brown, with the permission of Testa and Sindone, lent money to Russell Wilmerton at unlawfully high interest rates. When Wilmerton could not repay the loan, Brown, Ciancaglini and another man went to his house twice. Ciancaglini remained silent as the other men threatened Wilmerton. Ciancaglini later told Harry Riccobene that he had gone to Wilmerton's house to help collect the debt. The collection of the Wilmerton debt is the basis for the racketeering acts of extortionate credit and unlawful debt collection charged against Ciancaglini.

Ciancaglini attended a meeting with Brown, Testa, Sindone and Brown's employer to discuss methods of generating cash so that Brown could repay some of his loans to Testa and Sindone. Brown proposed the staging of a robbery at the car dealership. Sindone and Testa agreed, and as part of the scheme, arranged that Ciancaglini be given a car free of charge. The records of the business were altered to show that Ciancaglini paid $3,000 in cash for the car on the day of the robbery, although he had in fact paid nothing.

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Bluebook (online)
709 F.2d 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mario-riccobene-in-no-82-1399-v-joseph-ciancaglini-in-ca3-1983.