Paulie Walnuts' Colombo Crime Family Ties

Tony Sirico, who played Paulie "Walnuts" Gaultieri on HBO's The Sopranos, was dragged into the media spotlight, his mob past highlighted thanks to a crime docudrama that pops up every few months.

His inclusion in the show centers on his involvement as a “witness” in the murder of a 1970s B-movie actress. (Not suspect. See the difference?)

Who doesn't know about Sirico's mob-related past by now?

Tony Sirico -- aka Paulie Walnuts....

Sirico was born Genaro Anthony Sirico Jr. in 1942 in Brooklyn, New York. He has played gangsters in numerous films, some poorly made, some pretty decent, including Fingers (probably his earliest mob film worth watching), Goodfellas, Innocent Blood, Bullets Over Broadway, Mighty Aphrodite, Gotti, Cop Land, and Mickey Blue Eyes.

Before turning to acting, Sirico was reportedly an associate of the Colombo crime family serving under Carmine "Junior" Persico -- and was arrested an amazing 28 times, according to court documents.




There is even a Sopranos reference to Tony’s real past, when in one of the last episodes in the series, Paulie casually notes:

"I lived through the '70s by the skin of my nuts when the Colombos were goin' at it."

Indeed they were: The Colombos shot one another up during three family wars, the first two in the 1960s and 1970s courtesy of the Gallo brothers taking on boss Joseph Profaci, when the family had his name, and then Joseph Colombo, after whom the family was renamed once the Commission realized the extent of the mess Profaci left behind when he died.

See Tony Soprano Died in Finale, Here's Why.

Profaci successor Joseph Magliocco, who had been underboss, and Joseph Bonanno had plotted to wipe out the Commission and take over all the New York families.

Paulie Walnuts, aka Tony Sirico?

In 1967, Sirico was sent to prison for robbing a Brooklyn after-hours club but was released after serving 13 months. In 1971, he pled guilty to felony weapons possession and was sentenced to an "indeterminate" prison term of up to four years, of which Sirico ended up serving 20 months. In was during that stint in the can that Sirico got interested in acting – and gave up a life of crime for a life of playing criminals -- a wise move, safer and probably better paying.

His past was dredged up when 48 Hours Mystery: The Last Take (see episode below) did a special on the 1977 murder of Christa Helm, who was murdered late one night in a posh area of LA. It happened in front of her agent's house.

Sirico was involved somehow – but only as a witness wanted for questioning, police said.



At the time of her murder, Helm was a gorgeous "B" movie starlet who hung around with the likes of Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson and Frankie Crocker. When she died, she left behind a sordid past filled with suspects and "persons of interests."

Sirico knew Helm and was apparently dispatched by someone the day after her murder to "look after" her roommate. According to the show, he may also have taken away some of Christa's belongings, including incriminating sex tapes, diaries (which are still missing), furs and other personal belongings.

When recently questioned in tandem with the 48 Hours segment, Sirico reportedly told detectives that he "didn't know she was killed" and that he "hardly knew her." This was about 40 years ago.

Sirico was never a suspect, and his involvement appears to be limited to the missing tapes and diaries, which may have been weapons in Helm’s blackmail arsenal. She had the goods to nail the Shah of Iran and several of the hottest celebs of the day.

The tapes could have been taken to protect them – or to protect her reputation.

Sirico, a proud member of the USO (who spent a few years in the US Army himself), is an Italian-American of Sicilian descent. Interestingly, in a minor—very minor, blink and you’ll miss him—role in Goodfellas (1990), he played a mobster named Tony who reported to a boss named Paulie. In The Sopranos (1999), he plays a mobster named Paulie who reports to a boss named Tony.


See Tony Soprano Was Whacked in Final Scene.


Anthony Borgese plays another Sopranos alumnus named Larry Boy Barisi.

Borgese really had his pair in the ringer when he pleaded guilty to extorting a debtor who was beaten by mob goons.

"I used extortionate means to collect a debt from a person who lived near Monticello," Borgese, 72, said in Brooklyn Federal Court.

The unidentified victim owed money to an upstate car dealership whose owner had sought Borgese's help in collecting the debt. The victim ended up with a broken jaw and broken rib.

What were the car dealer and Mr. Borgese thinking? Or were they thinking? Who'd find a 72-year-old man who played a mobster on TV as intimidating as a real-life mobster?

In Borgese's case, it seems the line between fiction and reality was more than blurred.

Borgese was allegedly involved with the Gambinos, who supplied the enforcers who broke the victim's ribs and jaw.

In Goodfellas, Borgese played the luckless owner of the Bamboo Lounge, a successful restaurant/nightspot that the mob got their hands on and sucked every dime out of before setting it ablaze.

Page one of Sirico's sentencing transcript....



Borgese faces up to 41 months in prison when he's sentenced sometime in late summer so as to not interfere with a charity golf tournament he hosts every summer to raise money for United Cerebral Palsy.

He should leave the gangster stuff for the movies like Tony Sirico is doing.