Tuesday, February 26, 2019

In SDNY Racketeering Trial Witness Against Nice Hair Joe Admits Blinding Sushi Bar Owner


By Matthew Russell Lee

SDNY COURTHOUSE, February 26 – In the rackeeting trial of Joe Cammarano in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York on February 25, government witness Peter Lovaglio spent the morning fielding questions from prosecutor Jason Swergold -- and, for the second day, from SDNY Judge Alvin K. Hellerstein. When Lovaglio described his current eight year New York State jail sentence he recounted being insulted by the step son of the owner of a sushi restaurant owner on Staten Island. "I assaulted him with a glass," Lovaglio deadpanned. The man's eye no longer works, and he would not accept money to make the criminal complaint go away. Now Lovaglio is suing his NYPD handler for telling him not to take a lesser plea, for assuring him he wouldn't do a day in jail. He is in a "private detention facility." Judge Hellerstein wanted to know what they meant. It's a private prison. 
  Later in the morning, after several audio tapes Lovaglio recorded while wearing a wire for the government were played, he was asked to confirm that the Bonanno crime family used hand signals to refers to some people: an ear tug, the chin, and for the named defendant Joe Cammarano, a hand sweeping over the top of the head. Why, Judge Hellerstein asked. 

  "Because he has nice hair," Lovaglio shrugged. Cammarano and some sitting behind him laughed, seemingly with pride. Listening to Lovaglio try to get associates to talk for his audio recorder, one wondered if the jury will wonder if he isn't playing them, too. But if he lies he loses the prospect of the Fed's helping him on the racketeering he's pled to, with e 5K letter.  Watch this site.