Sun Sentinel: Mob Crackdown Shows South Florida Still Home to Organized Crime

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  • Of the alleged mafia bosses named in a sweeping indictment last week, seven were from South Florida
  • ”The mafia has never gone away,” says retired FBI agent. “Italian organized crime families have always had their tentacles in South Florida”
  • ”Every type of scam goes on here – there’s a lot of money to be made,” retired agent Joe Cicini added
  • The so-called “Boss of the Philadelphia Crime Family” owns Italian restaurant in South Florida and is out on bail after posting $3 million bond Friday

The Sun Sentinel of Fort Lauderdale and Broward County Sunday morning features a piece on the strong presence of organized crime in South Florida.

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Though some say the glory days of La Cosa Nostra are over, experts say this month's indictment of 46 alleged mafia bosses, members and associates — including seven men from Palm Beach and Broward counties — shows there's still plenty of life left in the mob.

"The mafia has never gone away. It's just the American public's attention was refocused on terrorism after 9/11," said Joe Cicini, a retired FBI agent who spent half his 23-year career investigating domestic and international mafia cases.

"Italian organized crime families have always had their tentacles in South Florida. It's kind of a playground for them. It's still lucrative territory. The great weather, the tourism, every kind of scam goes on here — there's a lot of money to be made," said Cicini, the former supervisor in charge of South Florida's organized crime task force.

The Sentinel piece goes on to paint South Florida as a primary haven for Mob activity, focusing heavily on the most colorful figure taken down as part of the investigation, one Joey “Skinny Joe” Merlino, who just happens to own a restaurant in the region.

Merlino, for whom investigators claim to be "the Boss of the Philadelphia Crime Family," was ordered released from jail on $5 million bond Friday on the recommendation of federal prosecutors.

"Skinny Joey always looked at himself as the John Gotti of Philadelphia," Cicini said. "He gave away a lot of stuff — he'd call it charity — to make himself popular."

- Jagajeet Chiba, Gambling911.com

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