MASSACHUSETTS
Two associates of the Genovese La Cosa Nostra crime family were sentenced Tuesday in federal court in Worcester, Massachusetts on extortion-related charges, officials announced.
U.S. District Court Judge Timothy S. Hillman sentenced Ralph Santaniello, 50, and Giovanni Calabrese, 54, both of Longmeadow, Massachusetts, to serve five years and three years in prison, respectively.
Following their prison sentences, they were both ordered to serve two years of supervised release.
In November 2017, Santaniello and Calabrese each pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to interfere with commerce by threats or violence; one count of interference with commerce by threats or violence – aiding and abetting; one count of conspiracy to use extortionate means to collect extensions of credit; and one count of using extortionate means to collect extensions of credit – aiding and abetting.
Santaniello and Calabrese were arrested and charged in August 2016 along with three other associates, Gerald Daniele, 52, of Longmeadow; Francesco Depergola, 62, of Springfield, Massachusetts; and Richard Valentini, 51, of East Longmeadow, Massachusetts.
According to plea documents and evidence presented in court, Santaniello, Calabrese, and their co-defendants, were associates of the New York-based Genovese LCN crime family and engaged in various criminal activities in Springfield, Massachusetts, including loansharking and extortion from legitimate and illegitimate businesses, such as illegal gambling businesses and the collection of unlawful debts.
The defendants used violence, exploited their relationship with Cosa Nostra, and implied threats of murder and physical violence to instill fear in their victims, according to authorities.
In 2013, Santaniello, Calabrese, Depergola and Valentini attempted to extort money from a Springfield businessman.
Santaniello assaulted the businessman, and Santaniello and Calabrese threatened to cut off the man’s head and bury his body if he did not comply, officials said.
Over a period of two months, the businessman paid $20,000 to Santaniello, Calabrese, Depergola, and Valentini to protect himself and his business.
In addition, during a six-month period in 2015, Daniele extended two extortionate and usurious loans to an individual, and then, along with Santaniello and Calabrese, threatened the individual if he did not make payments on the loans.
In March 2018, Daniele was sentenced to two years in prison.
In December 2017, Depergola plead guilty and Valentini was convicted by a federal jury; they are both scheduled to be sentenced on May 11.