Burke Is Back: FBI Searches his Former Queens Home
Jimmy Burke, one year before his death in 1996. |
FBI Evidence Collection specialists and agents from the Organized Crime Division descended into the basement of Burke’s family home at 81-48 102 Rd. in South Ozone Park around 8 a.m. armed with jackhammers and sledge hammers.
Sources said the feds recently obtained information from a new cooperating informant linked to the Gambino and Bonanno crime families who told them he believed a hood who disappeared decades ago was buried in Burke’s basement or backyard.
The sources say the dig is not related the fabled 1978 Lufthansa Heist, where Burke, portrayed as Jimmy Conway by De Niro in "Goodfellas," and his fellow wiseguys pulled off an $8 million robbery at JFK, which at the time was the largest robbery in history and was featured in the film.
Many of the suspects eventually were murdered.
Only the body of Burke's closest friend, Thomas DeSimone, who was played by actor Joe Pesci, has never been found, but sources say they are not looking for his remains at Burke’s home.
Burke died in prison in 1996, after he was convicted of being involved in a Boston College basketball point
shaving scandal and for a mob murder in Brooklyn.
The house is still in Burke's family. His widow continued to live there after his death for an undetermined amount of time.
The house is in the name of one of Burke’s daughters, Cathy, who is married to Bruno Indelicato, the imprisoned son of slain Bonanno capo, Sonny “Sonny Red” Indelicato, sources say and records show.
A neighbor named Jim, 73, who declined to give his last name, said he has lived on the block for more than 40 years, but didn't know Burke, a powerful mob associate who was never able to be fully inducted into la cosa nostra because he was not 100 percent Italian.
Burke under arrest, finally, but not for
what they really wanted him for.
|
"I just came down the block and there's a circus going on," he said.
In the seminal 1990 movie directed by Martin Scorcese, Burke's home plays a key role in his crew's plans to steal a roomful of cash and jewels from nearby JFK airport.
The flick's mob characters was made famous by the stellar cast of Hollywood stars, which also included Ray Liotta, Lorraine Bracco and Samuel Jackson.
The movie was based on the 1990 book by author Nick Pileggi, who detailed the exploits of mob turncoat, Henry Hill, and a Gambino Crime Family crew run by Paul Vario, who was played by actor Paul Sorvino.
In the aftermath of the real heist, Burke executed many of the other conspirators in an effort to shield himself from the law. But he was eventually convicted by the feds in the college point-shaving scandal that allowed the Mob to win millions on the rigged games.
He then was sent to state prison where he eventually died in connection with the Brooklyn mob-related killing of, Richard Eaton. Eaton was not involved in the Lufthansa heist, but was tortured and murdered by Burke after skimming $250,000 from Burke's operation.
His body was discovered hogtied and hanging in a meat freezer truck.
Wasn't Jimmy Burke associated with Jimmy Hoffa? Hmmm....and to think I've driven down those Ozone Park streets so many times.
ReplyDeleteThere is an error in the article. Vario was a Lucchese Capo and not the Gambinos
ReplyDeleteYou are 100% correct -- in my defense though, I didn't write this one: Murray Weiss and Ben Fractenberg did, for Huffington Post, to which I linked... As noted at the top...
DeleteYep I did note that when I started reading. Huff Post made the error
DeleteThe picture says 'one year before his death in 1996', but you can clearly see the year '79 on the board.
ReplyDeleteYep you are correct - I have seen pics of him much older - bald, wearing eyeglasses ... not sure if that was orig caption that I pasted or if I incorrectly wrote it - thank you for catching that. I have no editor to support me: publishing unedited work is a fool's game!
ReplyDelete