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Rabu, 20 Juni 2018

Jack Wasserman, Carlos Marcello, Santo Trafficante, Frank Ragano ...
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Frank Ragano (January 25, 1923 - May 13, 1998) is a fake "mafia lawyer" from Florida, who makes his name represent organized criminal figures such as St. Trafficante, Jr. and Carlos Marcello, and also served as a lawyer for Teamsters leader, Jimmy Hoffa. In his 1994 autobiography Mobi Ryderyer Ragano recounts his career in defense of organized crime members, and made controversial accusations that the Florida mob boss Santo Trafficante, Jr. confessed to him shortly before his death in 1987 that he and Carlos Marcello had arranged for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963. This Kennedy assassination conspiracy theory has been called into serious question by others.


Video Frank Ragano



Kehidupan awal

Born in Ybor City, Tampa, Florida to Sicilian parents, Ragano attended Stetson Law School and enrolled for the Florida Supreme Court before entering the Florida Bar in 1952 and started his trial practice in Tampa, Florida. In 1954 he was recruited by another lawyer to represent several defendants who were arrested in Tampa for being involved in the illegal bolt operation of St. Trafficante, Jr. He immediately became friends with Trafficante, who then put him into the inner circles of an organized crime scene in Florida.

Ragano became a frequent visitor to the Havana nightclub traffic. During that visit Trafficante told Ragano that in 1957 he and others had founded Senator John F. Kennedy in a Havana hotel room with some prostitutes, and that Trafficante canceled a day when he failed to maintain a moment in a secret recording record that could be used for bribery purposes.

In 1959, after Fidel Castro overthrew Fulgencio Batista's regime in Cuba, the Trafficante casino was closed and he was imprisoned by the new government. Ragano undertook various attempts to free Trafficante, released in early 1960 and returned to the United States.

Maps Frank Ragano



Hoffa and Marcello

In 1960, thanks to Trafficante's recommendation, Ragano was hired by Jimmy Hoffa to represent him on allegations of union corruption, thus starting a long relationship with a renowned labor leader. He uses his position with Hoffa to help put the loan out of the Teamsters pension fund in return for "search costs." Liberace, the entertainer, is one of the clients who are trying to get a loan from Teamsters. Ragano witnessed a multimillion-dollar bribe to Hoffa from the Teamsters retirement fund.

In 1963, again on the recommendation of Trafficante, Ragano began serving as a lawyer for Carlos Marcello, head of the New Orleans crime family. In his book, Ragano claims that Hoffa, who was hounded by Attorney General Robert Kennedy on corruption and jury allegations, ordered him to deliver a message to Trafficante and Marcello that President Kennedy's assassination must be regulated. When Kennedy was shot and killed later that year, Ragano wrote that Hoffa always assumed that Trafficante and Marcello had actually executed the plan. Trafficante did "celebrate" with Ragano after hearing the words of the Kennedy assassination, but made no admission to Ragano at the time that he was involved in everything. He informs Ragano later that the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) once asked him to assist in the Castro killing of Cuba.

In 1975, Ragano was asked by Trafficante to convey an important message to Hoffa for "being very careful and not taking risks." Within days, Hoffa disappeared under mysterious circumstances, never found.

History & Heritage: Tampa helped arm Castro's revolution | tbo.com
src: www.tbo.com


Next life

In 1966, when representing Trafficante in connection with the capture of some of the top mafia in New York City, Ragano was photographed during lunch with Trafficante, Marcello and others, and was identified by Time magazine as "top Cosa" Nostra hoodlum. "He then sued Time due to defamation and was represented by a famous lawyer, Melvin Belli.At the trial of defamation he was called" home advisor to the masses. "He lost his jacket Belli had previously represented Jack Ruby , the man who killed Lee Harvey Oswald, the assassin of the accused Kennedy, and Ragano claims that Trafficante warned him not to ask Belli about Ruby.

In relation to the famous incident in the movie Martin Scorsese Goodfellas, Ragano helped represent four mobs, including Burke's "Jimmy the Gent" and Henry Hill, accused in 1972 of extortion in collecting gambling debt in Tampa. , Florida.

Ragano himself became a defendant when he was accused of tax evasion in 1972. Despite his conviction reversed during his appeal, he was later punished and convicted on related charges. As a result, he was suspended from legal practice in 1976, and claimed that Trafficante did not provide support and abandoned it.

In 1978, Ragano testified before the House Select Committee on Assassinations, which re-investigated the Kennedy assassination, and he denied any involvement in JFK plots. In 1981, Ragano was reinstated as a lawyer by The Florida Bar, and eventually transformed into Trafficante, which he represented in 1986 in a famous blackmail case in the movie Donnie Brasco. Trafficante, who is also represented by others, is exempt from all charges.

In 1990, Ragano was again punished for tax evasion. In 1993 he spent 10 months in prison. On May 13, 1998, in Tampa, Frank Ragano died in his sleep. He survived by his second wife (former lady) and their two children, and his first wife and their three children. In 1995, A & amp; E Network aired the episode of American Justice devoted to his career as a "mass defender".

Leave the Gun, Take the Cannoli: New York's Top Mob Hot Spots ...
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Mob attorney

In 1994, Ragano's autobiography was Mob Lawyer published by Charles Scribner's Sons. This book was co-written with Selwyn Raab, a reporter for The New York Times.

Kirkus describes the Mafia Lawyer as "a fascinating record of life in the mafia assassins of St Traffic chief and Teamster boss Jimmy Hoffa, by their personal lawyers" and "insiders "it is impossible to put the life account in 'The Honorable Society'. "In a review for ABA Journal, Martin Kimel called it" a smart memoir "and wrote:" Apart from its flexibility. character actors, Mob Lawyers are reading and learning objects in the lifestyle of the rich and famous. " The Weekly Publishers says:" The story, which benefits from the subtle style of the New York Times crime reporter, Raab, has a smaller impact as the account of a man who wakes up late than the revelation of the momentous events of our time. "Ronald Goldfarb reviews the book for The Washington Post which states:" Ragano's biography of his career is full of naïve rationalizations about the virtues of the people he represents and is represented..., and self-serving criticism of Gestapo tactics such as government, selective prosecution, the use of spies as witnesses and intimidation of the families of the suspects. "Goldfarb added," Cynics will wonder if Mob Lawyer is just the latest entry in the book-by-rogue genre. Except for the startling disclosure of his former dead client, there is no reason to read this book. However, with them, joining a select few who provide an important link in the deep case that the masses are planning a JFK assassination. "

The Other Mystery: Was Jimmy Hoffa involved in John F....
src: media.clickondetroit.com


JFK assassination claim

On January 14, 1992, Ragano told Jack Newfield of the New York Post that he delivered a request from Hoffa to Trafficante and Marcello requested that two Mafia bosses kill Kennedy. He repeated his claim two days later on ABC Good Morning America, in a Newfield report called "JFK, Hoffa and Mob , which was broadcast in November 1992, and again in his 1994 autobiography Mob Lawyers .

According to Ragano, he met Hoffa at the Teamsters headquarters in Washington D.C. then delivered the message to Trafficante and Marcello a few days later at a meeting at the Royal Orleans Hotel in New Orleans. He claims he was chosen by Hoffa because, as Hoffa and Trafficante's lawyers, he can be convinced of the attorney-client privilege. Ragano says that Jim Garrison served as patsy for the New Orleans masses by spreading a theory that serves to distract from the mafia figures involved in the plot.

Although Ragano believes he has received some clues from both Trafficante and Marcello that they somehow have been involved in the Kennedy assassination, it was not until before he died in 1987 that Trafficante, according to Ragano, made a direct confession to him. Ragano wrote that on March 13, 1987, a dying Trafficante (he died four days later) asked to meet him in Tampa for a rush meeting. While driving a Ragano car, Trafficante allegedly told Ragano in Sicily: "Carlos e 'futtutu, Non duvevamu ammazzari a Giovanni.Duvevamu ammazzari a Bobby," translated by Ragano as: "Carlos is screwed We should not kill John We should kill Bobby. "Ragano said three witnesses could support his statement that he met Trafficante in Tampa. He declined to say they added: "One person is afraid of vengeance, others are two doctors, who say they will testify if they are summoned to court."

In his book Historical Reclamation: The assassination of President John F. Kennedy Vincent Bugliosi has shown many shortcomings in Ragano's claims, including the fact that Trafficante is most likely not in Tampa on the day, but rather in North Miami Beach who received dialysis treatment. Bugliosi argues that it does not make sense to think that Marcello and Trafficante will be involved in a plan to kill a president, especially since it is nothing more than Jimmy Hoffa's proper help. Bugliosi also pointed out that by allegedly conveying a message in 1963 to that effect, and by connecting this recognition from a suspected conspirator, Ragano himself would have admitted to being part of a murder conspiracy.

Shortly after the initial allegations, Jeffrey Hart compared Ragano's account to that presented in the recently released JFK's Oliver Stone movie. According to Hart, Ragano presents "worldly motifs, far more plausibly than film theory." Hart quotes G. Robert Blakey as stating that he believes Ragano and that his testimony "will reinforce the conclusion" of HSCA. Hart also quoted Frank Mankiewicz, press secretary Robert Kennedy, for discovering Ragano's scenario as "the most plausible theory (murder)".

When Ragano was questioned by the Assassination Records Review Board, created in 1992 to re-examine JFK's conspiracy theory after releasing the Stone film, he claimed to have a contemporary record of his conversation about the JFK plot, but when they were produced, "he can not definitively state whether the note taken during a meeting [with a mob]... or later when he's working on his book. "His records were subjected to the Secret Service test to determine when they were really ready, but the results were inconclusive.

CURRENTS- 2015 Frank Ragano & Mariannah Amster | Santa fe nm and ...
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Billy Jean King-Bobby Riggs Accusations

In August 2013, the newspaper The Tampa Tribune and ESPN published an allegation by a former employee of Palma Ceia Country Club in Tampa, claiming that in 1973, the employee heard of Ragano, Trafficante and Marcello discussed plans by Bobby Riggs to throw a famous tennis match with female tennis star Billie Jean King. That year, Riggs and King held a nationally televised tennis match called "The Battle of the Sexes," in which the King defeated Riggs in three straight sets after Riggs had mocked the women's tennis players and had defeated Margaret Court. According to Hal Shaw, former employee of Palma Ceia Golf & amp; Country Club (exclusive private club near downtown Tampa, Florida), he heard Ragano tell Trafficante and Marcello that Riggs owed more than $ 100,000 to the masses, and that in return for throwing the game, his debt would be released.

Chris Ragano, Tampa lawyer and son Frank Ragano, responded to this accusation by stating that the Ragano family had not moved to Tampa until 1979. That is certainly not true because the Ragano family has been in the Tampa Bay area since the early 1960s.. In 1974, Frank Ragano was found guilty of five separate tax fraud charges. Furthermore, Hal Shaw's reflection that he gave tennis lessons to Frank Ragano's wife was not confirmed by Mrs Ragano, who has no memory of such a lesson in Tampa. Trafficante and Marcello are not known for frequent visits to Palma Ceia Country Club, preferring a meeting at Malio's Steakhouse in Tampa or La Tropicana Cafe in Ybor City to discuss mafia business.

Robert J. Cipriano, in 2016 acquired the film rights for Lawyer Mob of Mrs. Nancy Ragano and Son, Chris Ragano. Redemption Film Partners, a division of The AllHumanity Group works with David Traub of Epiphany Films to bring this most up-to-date story to life. Cipriano originally gained the right in 1986 to work directly with Frank Ragano. Cipriano was introduced to Ragano by Thomas Lipscomb from the New York Times Book Review in early 1986, while Cipriano produced films and television projects with Parkinson Friendly Productions in Los Angeles, California.

Selwyn Raab, who co-authored Mobi Rythyer with Ragano, when notified of this allegation, stated that Ragano never mentioned this in his notes or in the FBI file. "It's kind of a good story, I do not think (Ragano) will put it aside."

Interview: Dan Moldea, author 'The Hoffa Wars'
src: media.clickondetroit.com


Books

  • Attorney Mob (1994), Frank Ragano and Selwyn Raab, Charles Scribner's Sons, ISBN 0-684-19568-2
  • Cigars City of the Mafia: The Complete History of Tampa Underworld (2004), Scott M. Deitche, Barricade Books, ISBNÃ, 1-56980-266-1
  • The Silent Don: The Criminal Underworld of St. Trafficante, Jr. (2007), Scott Deitche, Barricade Books, ISBNÃ, 1-56980-322-6
  • Reclamation History: The assassination of President John F. Kennedy (2007), Vincent Bugliosi, W.W. Norton & amp; Company, Inc., ISBN 978-0-393-04525-3

Producing Breaking Bad: An Audience with Stew Lyons | Cinematic Arts
src: cinematicarts.unm.edu


References

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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