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Former Top Russian Intelligence Official Gunned Down in Moscow
AP ^ | Apr 10, 2005

Posted on 04/10/2005 10:55:52 AM PDT by nuconvert

Former Top Russian Intelligence Official Gunned Down in Moscow

The Associated Press

Apr 10, 2005

MOSCOW (AP) - Assailants wielding automatic weapons from a passing car gunned down a former top Russian intelligence official while he drove on a Moscow street Sunday, Russian news agencies reported. Col. Gen. Anatoly Trofimov, former deputy chief of the Federal Security Service under President Boris Yeltsin, was shot in his sport utility vehicle around 7:30 p.m. on a northern street, the Interfax news agency reported. He died on the scene.

The assailants fired from a small car, the ITAR-Tass news agency said. A woman believed to be Trofimov's wife was in the car and was seriously wounded and hospitalized, news agencies said.

Ekho Moskvyi radio said the attack may have been a contract killing related to unidentified business deals.

A duty officer at the Federal Security Service headquarters could not confirm the report, and phone calls to the police went unanswered Sunday evening.

Trofimov, who also served as head of the Moscow branch of the Federal Security Service, or FSB, was fired by Yeltsin in 1997 following an examination by federal accountants for "gross violations and flaws in his work."

The Federal Security Service is the main successor agency to the KGB.

Top Russian business and political leaders routinely are attacked, often as a part of shady business deals. Last month, Anatoly Chubais, the head of the state-controlled Unified Energy Systems power grid, was ambushed by assailants, who detonated a bomb and raked his armored car with automatic weapons fire as he was being driven to work just outside Moscow.

Last summer, the editor of Forbes Magazine's Russian edition, Paul Klebnikov, was gunned down outside the magazine's offices


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: assassination; moscow; murder; putinsbuttboys; russia; trofimov; vladtheimploder
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To: sergey1973

How would you like to be Bill Clinton's friend? The following is a list of dead people connected with Bill Clinton:

James McDougal - Clinton's convicted Whitewater partner died of an apparent heart attack, while in solitary confinement. He was a key witness in Ken Starr's investigation.

Mary Mahoney - A former White House intern was murdered July 1997 at a Starbucks Coffee Shop in Georgetown. The murder happened just after she was to go public with her story of sexual harassment in the White House.

Vince Foster - Former White House counselor, and colleague of Hillary Clinton at Little Rock's Rose Law Firm. Died of a gunshot wound to the head, ruled suicide. He also had another 22 gunshot wound in the neck. The gunshot wound to the head was of larger caliber and found still in his hand!!

Ron Brown - Secretary of Commerce and former DNC Chairman. Reported to have died by impact in a plane crash. A pathologist close to the investigation reported that there was a hole in the top of Brown's skull resembling a gunshot wound. At the time of his death, Brown was being investigated, and spoke publicly of his willingness to cut a deal with prosecutors.

C. Victor Raiser II & Montgomery Raiser - Major players in the Clinton fund-raising organization. Died in a private plane crash in July 1992.

Paul Tulley - Democratic National Committee Political Director found dead in a hotel room in Little Rock, September 1992. Described by Clinton's a "Dear friend and trusted advisor".

Ed Willey - Clinton fund raiser, found dead November 1993 deep in the woods in Virginia of a gunshot wound to the head. Ruled a suicide. Ed Willey died on the same day his wife Kathleen Willey claimed Bill Clinton groped her in the oval office in the White House. Ed Willey was involved in several Clinton fund raising events.

Jerry Parks - Head of Clinton's gubernatorial security team in Little Rock. Gunned down in his car at a deserted intersection outside Little Rock. Park's son said his father was building a dossier on Clinton. He allegedly threatened to reveal this information. After he died the files were mysteriously removed from his house.

James Bunch - Died from a gunshot suicide. It was reported that he had a "Black Book" of people containing names of influential people who visited prostitutes in Texas and Arkansas.

James Wilson - Was found dead in May 1993 from an apparent hanging suicide. He was reported to have ties to Whitewater.

Kathy Ferguson - Ex-wife of Arkansas Trooper Danny Ferguson. Died in May 1994. She was found dead in her living room with a gunshot to her head. It was ruled a suicide although there were several packed suitcases, as if she was going somewhere. Danny Ferguson was a co- defendant along with Bill Clinton in the Paula Jones lawsuit. Kathy Ferguson was a possible corroborating witness for Paula Jones.

Bill Shelton - Arkansas State Trooper and fiancee of Kathy Ferguson. Critical of the suicide ruling of his fiancee, he was found dead in June, 1994 of a gunshot wound also ruled a suicide at the gravesite of his fiancee.

Gandy Baugh - Attorney for Clinton friend Dan Lassater. Died by jumping out a window of a tall building January, 1994. His client was a convicted drug distributor. One of Clinton's last duties as Governor of Arkansas was to pardon Dan Lassater convicted on over a hundred drug charges.

Florence Martin - Accountant sub-contractor for the CIA related to the Barry Seal Mena Airport drug smuggling case. Died of three gunshot wounds.

Suzanne Coleman - Reportedly had an affair with Clinton when he was Arkansas Attorney General. Died of a gunshot wound to the back of the head, ruled a suicide. Was pregnant at the time of her death.

Paula Grober - Clinton's speech interpreter for the deaf from 1978 until her death December 9, 1992. She died in a one-car accident.

Danny Casolaro - Investigative reporter. Investigating Mena Airport and Arkansas Development Finance Authority. He slit his wrists, apparent suicide in the middle of his investigation.

Paul Wilcher - Attorney investigating corruption at Mena Airport with Casolaro and the 1980 "October Surprise" was found dead on a toilet June 22, 1993 in his Washington D.C. apartment. Had delivered a report to Janet Reno 3 weeks before his death.

Jon Parnell Walker - Whitewater investigator for Resolution Trust Corp. Jumped to his death from his Arlington, Virginia apartment balcony August 15, 1993. Was investigating Morgan Guarantee scandal.

Barbara Wise - Commerce Department staffer. Worked closely with Ron Brown and John Huang. Cause of death unknown. Died November 29, 1996. Her bruised nude body was found locked in her office at the Department of Commerce.

Charles Meissner - Assistant Secretary of Commerce who gave John Huang special security clearance, died shortly thereafter in a small plane crash. Dr.

Stanley Heard - Chairman of the National Chiropractic Health Care Advisory Committee. Died with his attorney Steve Dickson in a small plane crash. Dr. Heard, in addition to serving on Clinton's advisory council, personally treated Clinton's mother, stepfather and brother.

Barry Seal - Drug running pilot out of Mena Arkansas, death was no accident.

Johnny Lawhorn Jr. - Mechanic, found a check made out to Clinton in the trunk of a car left in his repair shop. Died when his car hit a utility pole.

Stanley Huggins - Suicide. Investigated Madison Guarantee. His report was never released.

Hershell Friday - Attorney and Clinton fundraiser. Died March 1, 1994 when his plane exploded.

Kevin Ives & Don Henry - Known as "The boys on the track" case. Reports say the boys may have stumbled upon the Mena Arkansas airport drug operation. Controversial case where initial report of death was due to falling asleep on railroad track. Later reports claim the 2 boys had been slain before being placed on the tracks. Many linked to the case died before their testimony could come before a Grand Jury.

THE FOLLOWING SIX PERSONS HAD INFORMATION ON THE IVES / HENRY CASE:

Keith Coney - Died when his motorcycle slammed into the back of a truck July, 1988.

Keith McMaskle - Died of 113 stabbed wounds, November 1988.

Gregory Collins - Died from a gunshot wound January 1989.

Jeff Rhodes - He was shot, mutilated and found burned in a trash dump in April 1989.

James Milan - Found decapitated. Coroner ruled death due to natural causes.

Jordan Kettleson - Was found shot to death in the front seat of his pickup truck in June 1990.

Richard Winters - Was a suspect in the Ives / Henry deaths. Was killed in a set-up robbery July 1989.

 

THE FOLLOWING CLINTON BODYGUARDS ARE DEAD:

Major William S. Barkley Jr.
Captain Scott J. Reynolds
Sgt. Brian Hanley
Sgt. Tim Sabel
Major General William Robertson
Col. William Densberger
Col. Robert Kelly
Spec. Gary Rhodes
Steve Willis
Robert Williams
Conway LeBleu
Todd McKeehan

 


21 posted on 04/11/2005 9:36:18 AM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: AdrianR

How much force did this guy have in public opinion swaying, against the war? These guys make large claims but most of these guys ar minor players at best. More then likely a deal gone bad or he pissed some don off.


22 posted on 04/11/2005 9:38:08 AM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: sergey1973

The man had been out of the intelligence business since 1997. That's a very long time, and therefore it's highly unlikely it had anything to do with his prior work. Additionaly, it's long before Putin took over as president.


23 posted on 04/11/2005 9:39:57 AM PDT by GarySpFc (Sneakypete, De Oppresso Liber)
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To: nuconvert
"Former Top Russian Intelligence Official"

Translation: "Mafia Thug"

24 posted on 04/11/2005 9:43:58 AM PDT by FormerACLUmember (Honoring Saint Jude's assistance every day.)
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To: jb6

Funny list, I understand that are you trying to proof that Clinton is worse bandit than Putin IS.
To be honest if you take the same criteria Putin’s list would be a lot longer. You know KGB and all that stuff now.


25 posted on 04/11/2005 9:52:08 AM PDT by Lukasz
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To: sergey1973

Sergei Yushenkov, Member of Parlament ==

Yshenkov got killed by his collegue of his party. They got into despute about donated money.

Artyom Borovik, Investigative Journalist, Reporter, Writer, Publisher (Technically it was air crash, but many suspect a foul play). ===

Borovik case wasn't foul play. His plane got into strong wind gust on takeoff and plane wings got ice covered before takeoff. It was fault of pilots.

Galina Starovoitova, Activist, former MP==

Staravoitova carried about 1 mln dollars of cash which she got for her reelection on her when got killed. Her killers hunted that money, they alredy got caught and now there are court hearing goes.

You read papers and internet:).

Trofimov was never the head of russian intellegence. He was once the head of Moscow regional office of FSB (the analog of FBI). It is like regional representative of counter intellegence.
Since that he wasn't collegue of Putin. Putin was integellence(like CIA). Trofimov was like of FBI.

But Trofimov got fired in 1997. Since he worked as commersant in building business in Moscow. It is according papers again.

I think it is big money means Mafia who had killed Trofimov.


26 posted on 04/11/2005 9:53:39 AM PDT by RusIvan
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To: GarySpFc
Don't you know, the name of the game is blame it on Bush...er Putin.
27 posted on 04/11/2005 10:05:17 AM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: jb6

Clinton (Hillary+Bill) = Yeltsin = Putin = " # of unrensolved Deaths" & "unresolved Murders" & " High Profile Gross Corruption Scandals".

Obvisouly the list I gave is very short--there are far more people murdered or died under suspicious circumstances during both Putin and Yeltsin. I'm very frightened at even a possibility of Hillary ever winning the White House. Maybe I'm too anxious, but I'd rather error on the side of caution.

It shows what happens when amoral people reign in office, even in such a great Democracy as the United States. That's why I'm going to say--it's safer to live under Moral Conservatives, even for liberals.


28 posted on 04/11/2005 10:06:09 AM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: sergey1973

I think Rusivan put some light on your list.


29 posted on 04/11/2005 10:07:23 AM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: nuconvert
Russia is now experiencing our 1920's with Mafia style control in say ways.
30 posted on 04/11/2005 10:09:35 AM PDT by TheForceOfOne
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To: RusIvan

Sorry--not everything you find on the Internet is neccessarily trustworthy. The "pilot fault" in Borovik Plane crash is the official Russian government version, and I have every reason to view the official Russian government version with suspicion.


31 posted on 04/11/2005 10:11:27 AM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: GarySpFc; jb6; RusIvan; Lukasz

I have serious doubts that some Mafia Don would order assassination of the retired FSB/KGB General who was also not a small figure in the Russian Business Security world. With former FSB/KGB Colonel being the Russian president and ex-FSB/KGB people widely employed at every level of the government, it would be equivalent on declaring the open war on Putin.

Gangsters, criminals and Mafia Dons in either authocratic or democratic countries with powerful power and law enforcement structures are very cautious about attacking even ordinary Police Officers, knowing what reprecussions they may face from Police and the State. So while I'm not throwing out the average Mafia Don possibility completely (just in case), I think the chances are that some "pissed off Mafia Don" would dare to attack the retired FSB general (aka "Chekist") are very slim. Putin once said famously: "There are no former Checkists". It means that even after KGB/FSB officer retires, he/she still usually retains most of the connections to colleagues and knows far far more about the situation in the corridors of power then the average Russian Citizen.

In other words, you can't rule out the possibility of Kremlin involvement in this case. Considering how many unsolved high-profile assassinations happened during Putin and Yeltsin era, you cannot rule out anything. Official versions stating for instance that Yushenkov was murdered by his party companion over money, or that the Borovik plane had simply malfunctioned, or that Starovoitova was found with bag of cash are as credible as the old joke that prisoner was not murdered but "run accidentally into the knife 16 times". The number of unsolved high-profile murders or suspicious deaths of investigative journalists, Yeltsin/Putin political opponents or somebody formerly connected to Kremlin are legitimate causes for concern. I am not automatically blaming Putin and his circle in this, but I simply not ruling him out as a suspect or an accomplice either. I wonder if we ever know all the circumstances surrounding this or other high-profile murders of the last 15 years.


32 posted on 04/11/2005 12:10:34 PM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: RusIvan

"But Trofimov got fired in 1997".

Yes he was fired in 1997 when he was involved in the investigation of this famous Summer 1996 accident during Yeltsin re-election campaign when two Yeltsin campaign election workers were found with a xerox box full of cash (something like $500,000).

Here is the link in gazeta.ru (In Russian only).

http://www.gazeta.ru/2005/04/11/oa_154255.shtml


33 posted on 04/11/2005 12:19:58 PM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: sergey1973

The "pilot fault" in Borovik Plane crash is the official Russian government version, and I have every reason to view the official Russian government version with suspicion.==

What is this your reason? DO you jave some trustworsy information which no one knows? OR you just suspicious as it is?:))))


34 posted on 04/11/2005 12:41:19 PM PDT by RusIvan
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To: sergey1973
I have serious doubts that some Mafia Don would order assassination of the retired FSB/KGB General who was also not a small figure in the Russian Business Security world.

Why? First he wasn't retired, he was fired and fired 8 years ago. I know, if he was knocked off by a business associate it doesn't fit well with blame Putin for everything, but still. What was it about him and the discredited Yeltsin years that makes him bullet proof from the mob?

Gangsters, criminals and Mafia Dons in either authocratic or democratic countries with powerful power and law enforcement structures are very cautious about attacking even ordinary Police Officers, knowing what reprecussions they may face from Police and the State. So while I'm not throwing out the average Mafia Don possibility completely (just in case), I think the chances are that some "pissed off Mafia Don" would dare to attack the retired FSB general (aka "Chekist") are very slim. Putin once said famously: "There are no former Checkists".

You need to do some studing on how many people have died from mob bullets here in America, and I'm talking important people. To include Jimmy Hoffa, who ran a major union. Marylin Monroe may also have been knocked off, as opposed to the official report. Even the Pope who came before John Paul II is believed by many to have died because he planned on cleaning up the Vatican-Costra Nostra mess in the Vatican Bank.

Official versions stating for instance that Yushenkov was murdered by his party companion over money, or that the Borovik plane had simply malfunctioned, or that Starovoitova was found with bag of cash are as credible as the old joke that prisoner was not murdered but "run accidentally into the knife 16 times".

There are three ways to go through life: believe nothing, believe everything, study-research and choose what to believe. You seem to show the believe nothing attitude.

Lebed was murdered, for example. Yes I know that one and have it from some very good sources. Borovik died in a plane crash, plain and simple.

Furthermore, to blaim Putin for everything everywhere assigns to the man God-like powers. It's also shows a break down in critical thinking, looking for one over arching man or group to blame every problem on.

35 posted on 04/11/2005 12:44:33 PM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: RusIvan

It's just a suspicion. Considering Borovik's high profile investigative reporting, it's a natural to be suspicious that foul play may be involved. The very fact that foul-play version was not seriously pursued in Borovik or any other high profile murder or unexplained death, gives a plenty of reason for suspicion.

Also, how about of murder of General Rokhlin, first Chechen war veteran turned vocal Yeltsin Opponent ? Official version says it was his wife who shot him, but his wife vehemently denied it and she recently won the case in the European Court of Human rights of irregularities and abuses during investigation. In other words, whenever unsolved high profile murder or death happens in Putin or Yeltsin Russia, it's a normal to become suspicious.


36 posted on 04/11/2005 12:49:21 PM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: jb6

"Furthermore, to blaim Putin for everything everywhere assigns to the man God-like powers. "

I'm not blaming Putin (or Yeltsin) for every high profie murder that happened in the last decade and a half. I simply not ruling them out as suspects in certain high-profile deaths, be it Borovik, Rokhlin, Yushenkov, Trofimov, etc. That's a difference. Until we know for sure all the circumstances surrounding these deaths, we should not rule out anything as good investigators would not. Obviously, we are not investigators, but we are trying to play ones.


37 posted on 04/11/2005 12:55:21 PM PDT by sergey1973 (Russian American Political Blogger, Arm Chair Strategist)
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To: sergey1973
AmericanMafia.com

Feature Articles


August 2004
The Irishman
and the Quite Don

By Mike La Sorte, Professor Emeritus


Mike La Sorte is a professor emeritus (SUNY) and writes extensively on a variety of subjects.

Frank Sheeran
     Frank Sheeran

     “ I wasn’t born into the mafia life like the young Italians were, who came out of places like Brooklyn, Chicago, and Detroit. I was Irish Catholic from Philadelphia, and before I came home from the war I never did anything really wrong. I was born into some rough times. They say the Depression started when I was nine years old in 1929, but as far as I was concerned our family never had money. …I learned a lot of Italian words as a kid and in the Sicilian and Italian campaigns during the war. The people I got involved with after the war were very impressed with how I spoke Italian. They took it as a sign of respect toward them. It made it a lot easier for them to confide in me and trust and respect me.” (Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran, in C. Brandt. “I Heard You Paint Houses,” 2004)

     In 1955, Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran was pushing a rig loaded with a cargo of meat north from Philly to Syracuse, NY. When passing through Endicott, NY, his truck had engine trouble.

Russell Bufalino
     Russell Bufalino
While looking at the engine wondering what to do, a short, older Italian guy strolled over and offered his assistance. With his box of tools, the engine was soon running smoothly. That was the Irishman’s first encounter with Russell Bufalino, the Quiet Don, so called, whose bite was worse than his bark. Russ and Frank hit it off from the start. Russ became Frank’s “ padre/padrone,” shaping him from a six-four, hard- muscled roughneck and small-time thief to a feared mob assassin, and introducing him to the tough mug Jimmy Hoffa, a Teamsters official and union organizer, who guided Sheeran’s rise in the Teamsters organization.

     Bufalino’s presence in Endicott that day was no accident. He had a residence in Endicott because he did business with Joe B. Barbara, an associate and legitimate businessman, who had had longtime connections with Magaddino, the Buffalo capo, and had been involved, since the 1920s, with the Pennsylvania-Western New York combine, of which Bufalino was a major player.

     At that time Sheeran knew nothing of the mafia or its reach. He considered his Italian acquaintances in downtown Philly as freelancing punk crooks that eked out a livelihood on opportunistic criminal scams. It was only with the failed Apalachin mob meeting of November 1957 at the farm estate of Joe Barbara (six miles from Endicott) that he realized the dimensions and possibilities for him of “Our Thing.” In his heart, the drifter and stand-up Irishman was delighted. He had found a home, at long last, and Bufalino had a protégé who would willingly do his bidding. They were a particularly odd couple—why they became fast friends, Frank the product of an abusive ex-pugilist Irish father and a Swedish mother, and a Sicilian of the Old School, is a fascinating story in itself. Perhaps Frank had finally found a mentor, worthy of the name, and Russell an avid pupil. Bufalino the father figure, long sought, and Sheeran the obedient son, long yearning. The entrenched mafia heroic code that Bufalino represented nourished the emotionally blocked Irishman, who had found his compass in the company of a tightly knit Sicilian-American family. No wonder that Frank considered Russ as “one of the two greatest men I ever met.” Russ “respected a man who was hard but fair, like himself. Once he told you something, you could count on it. Whether it was good or bad for you, you could count on it.”

     Russell A. Bufalino was born Rosario Bufalino in 1903 in Catania, Sicily. He was an infant when his family disembarked at Ellis Island for immigrant processing.

     Bufalino began his criminal career while in his teens. His arrest record dates back to the mid-1920s with such charges as petty larceny, receiving stolen goods and conspiracy to obstruct justice. The first serious conviction was in 1977 when he served four years for extortion after threatening a witness, Jack Napoli, a con man, who owed $25,000 to a diamond fence with the Bufalino family. At the sit-down over the money, Napoli wore a wire to get the goods on Bufalino, and Bufalino complied by threatening to strangle Napoli if he did not come up with the cash. Jimmy “The Weasel” Fratianno was given the contract to whack Napoli, but he had disappeared into the Witness Protection Program and the hit failed. Russell was convicted. Furious over Napoli’s lack of honor in the diamond deal, the Quiet Don summed up his feelings in court: “If you had to deal with an animal like that, Judge, you would have done the same thing.”

     Bufalino had a hand in many pies. His operational base was in Pittston, PA. In New York he had garment and trucking interests and made union deals. He extended the boundaries of his domain into upstate New York and New Jersey, and also was considered a behind-the-scenes major operator in the corrupt Teamsters union affairs, which made him an obvious suspect with the disappearance of Jimmy Hoffa in 1975.

     “He was old-school,” recalled a former police chief from the Pittston area, “a perfect gentleman. You wouldn’t know he had two dimes to rub together from looking at his house or the car he drove.” Even though the Quiet Don was a “shadowy” figure or probably because of that, the McClelland Committee on Organized Crime called him “one of the most ruthless and powerful mafia leaders in the United States.” And also deceptive and shrewd, because he escaped the fate of many mafiosi, living a long life and dying in bed.

     Initially an MP in the army, Frank Sheeran volunteered for the infantry and fought in the bloody, slogging Italian campaign against fierce German resistance. A close witness to the horrors of war, he did not hesitate to shoot prisoners taken in combat. Orders were orders, was his rationalization. This conditioned him, by his own account, to view life as expendable, a cheap commodity. In war killing was the solution. This mindset apparently extended to the mob rubout: violence as a form of justice and retribution.

     “Murdering our own was a fact of life. Nobody like doing it, but it was the only way to maintain control.” (Joseph Iannuzzi. Joe Dogs, 1993)

     “You gotta do what you gotta do.” (Angelo Bruno, Philly capo, to Frank Sheeran before his first hit.)

     “Somewhere overseas I had tightened up inside, and I never loosened up again. The war taught me how to control my feelings when called for. If you want to know how I felt…I felt nothing. You get used to death. You get used to killing. You lost the moral skill you had developed in civilian life. You developed a hard covering, like being encased in lead.” (Frank Sheeran)

     “Remorse is something you could feel with Sheeran, but it’s something he had no vocabulary for.” (Charles Brandt recalling Sheeran as an old man.)

     Bufalino called upon the Irishman many times to take care of business. There was the shooting of Crazy Joe Gallo at Umberto’s Clam House in Little Italy, New York City.

     “I didn’t know who Russ had in mind, but he needed a favor and that was that. They didn’t give you much advance notice. I don’t look like a mafia shooter. I have very fair skin. None of these Little Italy people or Crazy Joe and his people had ever seen me before. I walked in the Mulberry street door where Gallo was. …A split second after I turned to face the table, Gallo’s driver got shot from behind. Crazy Joey swung around out of his chair headed toward the corner door. He made it through to the outside. He got shot three times. He had no chance of making it. Crazy Joey went to ‘Australia’ [Down Under] on his birthday on a bloody city sidewalk. They say that there were three shooters, but I’m not saying that. I’m not putting anybody else in the thing but me. If you do it yourself, you can only rat on yourself. An old-time Irish guy with a lot of combat experience was a benefit. Bufalino was able to provide for important matters like Gallo. The Commission always gave Russell anything really big.”

     And then there was the still mysterious case of the Jimmy Hoffa assassination for which Frank takes credit. He became a close associate of Hoffa and prospered over the years with Hoffa’s blessing. Frank owed Jimmy a great deal. He was Hoffa’s aide and confidant, his right-hand man and enforcer. Frank watched Jimmy’s back, at least until that fateful day in Detroit. Despite the close relationship, Frank faithfully reported back to Bufalino what Hoffa said and did. Hoffa was a hothead with an uncontrollable big mouth who confused foolhardiness with courage. When Jimmy became in the mob’s judgment a loose cannon who could compromise the Teamsters ties with the “boys,” thereby bringing heat and unwanted publicity on the mob, Bufalino signaled for the Irishman.

     Sheeran claimed he was not conflicted when he was informed of the target. “Not even a little bit. They only had two choices. Kill me or put me into the thing.” Frank was loyal to both Hoffa and Bufalino, but it was to Bufalino to whom he owed the most and loved the most. “I had seven contracts out on me over the years and Russell was able to square every one of the beefs. Even though he was a boss, Russ had to do what he had to do. They [the mafia] took care of bosses, too. If they decided not to use me in the thing Jimmy would have been just as dead. I would have been dead along with him. They even told me later on.” Frank did it with surgical precision: “My friend did not suffer.”

     Over the years the authorities made sure that the men involved in the Hoffa slaying were prosecuted to the full extent of the law on other charges. The RICO legislation facilitated that process. At age 79, Bufalino got fifteen years and died at age ninety in a nursing home. Sheeran received thirty-two years, in 1982, when he was 62 years of age. He was released in 1995, sickly and infirm, and died December 14, 2003, at age 83, but not before he made his peace with the Church and confessed all to his former attorney, Charles Brandt, breaking the code of honor he swore to uphold after it was too late for the Feds to bring him to justice.


Past Issues


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38 posted on 04/11/2005 1:03:33 PM PDT by jb6 (Truth == Christ)
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To: sergey1973; jb6
http://www.sptimes.ru/archive/times/1060/news/n_15401.htm

State-run Rossiya television, citing unnamed regional law enforcement officials, said the attack was a contract killing related to Trofimov's business dealings. However, Alexander Litvinenko, a former top official in the Federal Security Service, or FSB, said on Ekho Moskvy radio that the killing was political.

"I don't believe that ... Trofimov was killed for commercial activities," Litvinenko said according to a transcript posted on Ekho Moskvyi's web site. "In today's Russia not one businessman under any circumstances would raise their hand against a general of the FSB."

Trofimov "was against the war in Chechnya, although he never, of course, spoke openly on this question. He was also against naming Putin to the post of FSB head," Litvinenko said.

39 posted on 04/11/2005 1:09:20 PM PDT by Lukasz
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To: sergey1973
In other words, you can't rule out the possibility of Kremlin involvement in this case. Considering how many unsolved high-profile assassinations happened during Putin and Yeltsin era, you cannot rule out anything.

On nonsense! You have been reading too many spy novels. The man has been out of the intel business for 8 years, and he obvously had business interests which wanted him rubbed out.
40 posted on 04/11/2005 1:14:39 PM PDT by GarySpFc (Sneakypete, De Oppresso Liber)
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