About: Raymond DeRosa   Sponge Permalink

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DeRosa is believed to have been made a member of the Los Angeles crime family in the 1960s under boss Nick Licata and also served under Dominic Brooklier, he dealt primarily in narcotics trafficking. In the 1970s the FBI was investigating a mob plan to control a Teamster health program. The FBI received a court order to wiretap an office thought to be a Mafia front. Agents linked Teamsters to possible criminal violations but the FBI ordered from Washington, DC to stop the investigation. The Justice Department said the wiretap was unproductive. While FBI agents said the tap led them to Raymond DeRosa and Peter Milano, Mafia figures of the L.A. crime family. They allegedly made a deal with Teamster President Frank Fitzsimmons in which doctors and medical personnel given Teamster jobs would k

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  • Raymond DeRosa
rdfs:comment
  • DeRosa is believed to have been made a member of the Los Angeles crime family in the 1960s under boss Nick Licata and also served under Dominic Brooklier, he dealt primarily in narcotics trafficking. In the 1970s the FBI was investigating a mob plan to control a Teamster health program. The FBI received a court order to wiretap an office thought to be a Mafia front. Agents linked Teamsters to possible criminal violations but the FBI ordered from Washington, DC to stop the investigation. The Justice Department said the wiretap was unproductive. While FBI agents said the tap led them to Raymond DeRosa and Peter Milano, Mafia figures of the L.A. crime family. They allegedly made a deal with Teamster President Frank Fitzsimmons in which doctors and medical personnel given Teamster jobs would k
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abstract
  • DeRosa is believed to have been made a member of the Los Angeles crime family in the 1960s under boss Nick Licata and also served under Dominic Brooklier, he dealt primarily in narcotics trafficking. In the 1970s the FBI was investigating a mob plan to control a Teamster health program. The FBI received a court order to wiretap an office thought to be a Mafia front. Agents linked Teamsters to possible criminal violations but the FBI ordered from Washington, DC to stop the investigation. The Justice Department said the wiretap was unproductive. While FBI agents said the tap led them to Raymond DeRosa and Peter Milano, Mafia figures of the L.A. crime family. They allegedly made a deal with Teamster President Frank Fitzsimmons in which doctors and medical personnel given Teamster jobs would kickback funds to mobsters and Teamsters. The FBI investigation allegedly ended after a Richard Nixon-Fitzsimmons meeting and Fitzsimmons refused to answer NBC questions with regard to the California investigation. A 1973 police memo said Fitzsimmons and his son, Richard, were immune to prosecution and no effort was made to continue the investigation.
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