In 2005, Patrick Byrne, the CEO of Overstock.com and future Deep
Capture investigative reporter, began a public crusade against
illegal naked short selling (hedge funds and brokers creating
phantom stock to manipulate stock prices down). He said, over and
over, that the crime was destroying public companies and had the
potential to trigger a systemic meltdown of our financial
markets.
Soon after, I began to investigate a network of short sellers,
journalists, and miscreants. I concluded that many of the people in
this network were connected to two famous criminals –
“junk bond king” Michael Milken and his associate, Ivan
Boesky. I also began taking a close look at the Mafia’s
involvement in naked short selling.
In my last installment (click here to read ), I described some of the
strange occurrences that attended this investigation. Where the
story left off, I’d recently been threatened in a bookstore,
and then ambushed by three thugs who told me to stay away from this
story. My unwitting employer had been bribed by short sellers,
Patrick had been told by a U.S. Senator that his life was in
danger, and a Russian matryoshka doll had appeared on the desk of
an offshore businessman.
Inside this matryoshka doll was a slip of paper marked with the
letter “F”…
* * * * * * * *
Soon after receiving the matryoshka doll, the offshore
businessman invited Patrick Byrne to a greasy spoon diner in Long
Island. Over the previous year, the businessman had provided
Patrick with some information about the naked short selling scam,
and the hope was that he might have something more to say.
But that day at the diner, all he had was a message.
“I’ll make this quick,” the businessman said,
with two other witnesses present. “I have a message for you
from Russia. The message is, ‘We are about to kill you. We
are about to kill you.’ Patrick, they are going to kill you.
If you do not stop this crusade [against naked short selling], they
will kill you. Normally they’d have already hurt someone
close to you as a warning, but you’re so weird, they
don’t know how you’d react.”
In a later conversation with a colleague of Patrick’s the
businessman said [verbatim]: “These things don’t happen
to me anymore. I mean, I’ve been out of that world [the world
of Mafia stock manipulation] for a dozen years or more.
These…there are defined signals here that lead me to believe
that they [the Mafia] have been disturbed. The only way they coulda
been disturbed is if they own Rocker or if he is using them for
leverage.”
Rocker. That’s David Rocker.
At the time, David Rocker was a “prominent” hedge
fund manager specialized in short selling (betting that stock
prices will fall). It was also the case that Rocker had spent the
last couple decades insinuating to people on Wall Street that he
was somehow tied to the Mob.
But Rocker was probably full of it. He didn’t have ties to
the Mob. Perhaps he merely believed that his insinuations lent him
a certain cachet.
* * * * * * * *
From 1973 to 1981, Rocker was a general partner in a short
selling hedge fund managed by Michael Steinhardt, who is one of
Wall Street’s most “prominent” investors,
regularly hailed by The Wall Street Journal and CNBC as a genius
and a font of wisdom.
Some years ago, Steinhardt belatedly acknowledged that he is the
son of Sol “Red” Steinhardt, who was once a major
player in the Genovese Mafia organization. Steinhardt, Sr. spent
several years in Sing-Sing prison after a New York City prosecutor
described him as the “biggest Mafia fence in
America.”
Incidentally, experts concur that the Genovese Mafia family
brought the Russian Mob to America.
* * * * * * * *
The largest investors in Steinhardt Jr.’s first hedge fund
were associates of the Genovese Mafia (whose investments came in
large sacks of cash), Marty Peretz (future founder, with Jim
Cramer, of TheStreet.com), Marc Rich (future fugitive charged with
tax evasion and illegal trading with Iran and Libya), and Ivan
Boesky (later imprisoned on multiple counts, most of them involving
stock manipulation schemes orchestrated with “junk bond
king” Michael Milken).
By 1991, Steinhardt owned another hedge fund — JGM
Management – with a “prominent investor” named
James Marquez. The star employee at JGM was “prominent
investor” Samuel Israel III.
A few years later, Israel and Marquez founded the Bayou Group,
one of the biggest hedge fund frauds in history. A significant part
of the Bayou fraud involved Israel “feeding” his
investors’ money into a Ponzi scheme run by Robert Booth
Nichols, who has been targeted by authorities as a business
associate of the Genovese Mafia family.
When Israel was sentenced to prison last year, he briefly
disappeared. His car was found on a bridge. Scrawled in the dust on
the hood was a note: “Suicide is Painless.”
Authorities arrested Israel’s girlfriend, whom they
suspected of harboring a fugitive. Shortly after, Israel rode a red
motor scooter to a Boston police station and turned himself in.
Apparently, he was not dead. He had tried to fool us.
Meanwhile, Israel had filed a lawsuit against Nichols, alleging
that Nichols had ripped him off. Apparently, Israel (who could not
be reached for this article) would like us to believe that he is
not tied to Nichols or the Genovese Mafia.
Nonetheless, Israel has a certain cachet. So do Steinhardt and
James Marquez.
* * * * * * * *
In the 1990s, Steinhardt founded another hedge fund, Steinhardt
Partners. The co-founder and head trader of Steinhardt Partners was
a “prominent investor” named John Lattanzio.
The limited public information about Lattanzio concerns a
Russian prostitute.
Apparently, Lattanzio proposed marriage to the prostitute and
gave her a diamond ring. Alas, the couple separated, and Lattanzio
asked for his ring back. After all, it had cost him
$289,275.00.
But the prostitute seemed to believe that the ring was payment
for services rendered. The dispute ended up in court, where the
prostitute testified that Lattanzio had told her that he had ties
to the Mafia.
Yes, said the prostitute, Lattanzio (Steinhardt Partners’
co-founder and head trader) had big-time Mafia connections, and he
“would not hesitate to use them to harm me.”
From what I know of Russian strumpets, there is at least one
area where they cannot be trusted – and that is where it
concerns their love life. So perhaps Lattanzio had his heart
broken. Perhaps, in the heat of passion, he said some crazy stuff
about the Mafia to make himself seem dangerous. If that is the
case, I send Mr. Lattanzio my condolences.
Indeed, I would enjoy meeting him. He has a certain cachet.
* * * * * * * *
Rocker left Steinhardt’s hedge fund in 1981 and went to
work for an investment management firm called Century Capital
Associates.
Information on this firm is limited, but it seems to have been
largely owned in the 1980s by the Belzberg brothers —
William, Sam and Hymie.
The Belzbergs were among Michael Milken’s closest cronies
(family member Mark Belzberg was in fact implicated by the SEC in
Milken’s stock manipulation schemes). They were at the inner
core of the Milken machine – buying and selling the junk
bonds of other Milken cronies. Often, the Belzbergs collaborated
with Milken to blackmail, seize, or destroy public companies. .
In the late 1980s, the Belzbergs announced that they were going
to take over Crazy Eddie, which was then a famous home electronics
retail chain. The Belzbergs joined forces with Crazy Eddie’s
founder, Eddie Antar, and the company’s chief financial
officer, Sam Antar, in a supposed effort to take the company
private.
This is a story for another time, but for now it suffices to say
that Crazy Eddie was a massive fraud, the Belzbergs (and Milken)
likely knew this already, and when the company was raided by the
FBI a few months later, it emerged that Sam Antar had been feeding
information to both the FBI and a lawyer, Howard Sirota, who was
preparing to sue the company.
The Belzberg’s did not buy Crazy Eddie. Instead, just
before the FBI arrived, the company was sold to another investor,
Victor Palmieri. Robert A. Marmon, who was hired by Palmieri to run
Crazy Eddie, told me that he arrived to find that the
company’s top employees – the only people who had had
direct access to the Antars – were all burly, armed thugs who
claimed to be former employees of the Mossad, Israel’s secret
intelligence agency.
It was Marmon’s job to fire the Antars’ corporate
goons. “I’ve never been so scared in my life,” he
said. “There weren’t any explicit death threats. They
just stared you down, so you got the message.”
* * * * * * * *
Sam Antar is a convicted felon, but he never went to prison
because he testified against his cousin, Eddie Antar, in return for
house arrest. Now he is paid by short sellers with ties to David
Rocker and associates of Michael Milken. The assignment to which he
devotes the majority of his time is to use the Internet to harass
and smear the reputations of Deep Capture founder Patrick Byrne and
his colleagues.
At one point, Antar threatened the young children of Deep
Capture reporter Judd Bagley, posting their names, ages, and
address on the Internet. As I described in my last installment , Antar has made what I can
only interpret to be veiled references to two seminal events
in my life – the time I was ambushed and
punched in the eye by three thugs, and the day that a goon in a
bookstore threatened my close relative.
When he is not harassing us, Antar helps Howard Sirota (the
attorney who sued Crazy Eddie) file bogus class action lawsuits
against companies targeted by short sellers. A recent court case
also describes Antar delivering $250,000 in cash to a man named
Barry Minkow.
In the 1980s, Minkow built a carpet cleaning and insurance
restoration company called ZZZZ Best, with the bulk of his finance
coming from Michael Milken, and other funds coming from associates
of the Genovese organized crime family.
ZZZZ Best was a massive fraud that manufactured false
restoration claims – some of them on Las Vegas casinos that
had been financed by Michael Milken and investors tied to the
Genovese organized crime family.
Minkow spent some time in prison. Now he runs an outfit called
the Fraud Discovery Institute out of the Community Bible Church in
San Diego, where he is a preacher. The Fraud Discovery Unit is in
the business of publishing negative information about public
companies targeted by Howard Sirota and short sellers tied to David
Rocker, Michael Steinhardt, and associates of Michael Milken.
In one of Sam Antar’s famous Internet messages (he signs
them, “Sam Antar, Convicted Felon”), he warned that we
at Deep Capture were taking chances by writing about the Mafia
connections of Barry Minkow, whom Antar described as his
“friend.”
“You have awakened a sleeping giant,” Antar
wrote.
* * * * * * * *
In addition to their involvement with Crazy Eddie and David
Rocker’s operation, the Belzberg brothers – William,
Sam, and Hymie – also tried in the 1980s to take over a
investment services concern called the Bache Group. But executives
of the Bache Group did not want the Belzbergs to seize their
company.
According to the executives, the Belzbergs had ties to the
Mafia. The executives went public with their allegations, citing,
among other things, a U.S. Customs report that described the
Belzbergs cavorting with some Genovese mafiosi in Acapulco.
Fortune magazine reported that these allegations were
“unsubstantiated.”
But the Belzbergs have a certain cachet
* * * * * * * *
The Belzbergs were also the largest providers of capital to John
Mulheren, a “prominent investor” who was famous in the
1980s for the arbitrage operation that he ran out of Spear Leeds
& Kellogg, a broker-dealer and notorious naked short seller
that was later merged into Goldman Sachs Execution and Clearing
(which currently employs Elliot Faivinov, a Russian man who in 2006
was, for reasons of his own, receiving copies of the phone records of a
woman who was then Deep Capture reporter Patrick Byrne’s
girlfriend).
The Department of Justice alleged that Mulheren routinely
engaged in stock manipulation schemes with Ivan Boesky, targeting
companies financed by Milken. In 1987, when Boesky was indicted,
and the government began to investigate Milken, Mulheren announced
that he was going to murder Boesky.
Depending on the story, Mulheren either forgot to take his
psychiatric medication, or he was worried that Boesky was going to
squeal. Either way, he was arrested on the way to Boesky’s
house. In Mulheren’s car, police found a 9-millimeter pistol,
a .357 Magnum, a 12-gauge pistol-grip shotgun, a .233-caliber
Israeli Galil assault rifle, and 300 rounds of ammunition.
It is a common misperception that Boesky’s testimony led
to the 98-count indictment of Michael Milken. Considering the scope
of business the two criminals did together, Boesky actually
provided very little information to the government. He told
prosecutors that he was afraid that he might be killed. On several
occasions he told prosecutors that he might be killed by
Milken’s “friends in Vegas.”
* * * * * * * *
Far more important to the government’s case against Milken
was evidence that it obtained when 50 armed troopers stormed the
offices of a hedge fund called Princeton-Newport. The founder of
this hedge fund, Edward Thorp, once partnered with the Genovese
organized crime family to develop a system for cheating Las Vegas
casinos. He wrote a seminal book on counting cards in black jack,
and soon after, he was a critical – perhaps the most critical
– figure in the Milken operation.
The base of Milken’s operation was the high-yield debt
department of Drexel Burnham Lambert in Beverly Hills. From there,
he underwrote and sold billions upon billions of dollars worth of
junk bonds. Hence the moniker, “the junk bond
king.”
But most observers believe that Milken derived a greater part of
his fortune from a web of private partnerships and personal
brokerages that traded, and often manipulated, not just the debt,
but also the stock of public companies. Most profitable of all
Milken’s businesses were two Chicago-based brokerages –
Belvedere Securities and EGM partners – that he co-owned with
the Genovese Mafia card-counter Edward Thorp.
In 2006, Thorp’s son, Jeffrey, was charged by the SEC with
destroying more than 20 companies in a scheme that involved
unbridled naked short selling (millions upon millions of phantom
shares sold into the market). Jeffrey Thorp also collaborated
closely in short selling schemes with Anthony Elgindy, a notorious
phantom stock peddler who is now serving an 11 year prison sentence
for stock manipulation, extortion, and bribing FBI agents.
Elgindy, like Thorp’s father, is tied to the Genovese
organized crime family.
When Elgindy appeared in court for sentencing, the judge noticed
that Elgindy was missing the tip of one finger. Elgindy could not
provide a straight answer as to what had happened, but a source
close to the Elgindy investigation claims that Elgindy was forced
by Russian mobsters to saw off his own finger as a warning not to
squeal on his partners in crime.
* * * * * * * *
When delivering the death threat to Patrick Byrne, the offshore
businessman mentioned David Rocker, and as we now know, Rocker was
a general partner in Michael Steinhardt’s first hedge fund
— largely capitalized by the Genovese Mafia and Ivan Boesky.
We also know that Rocker later worked for Century Capital, largely
owned by the Belzbergs – William, Sam, and Hymie – who
might or might not have been cavorting with Genovese mafiosi in
Acapulco, but were certainly the largest funders of John
Mulheren.
After getting caught on his way to murder Ivan Boesky, Mulheren
went to jail, where he spent most of his time in consultation with
Anthony “Fat Tony” Salerno, a Genovese Mafia capo who
had recently begun a 100 year prison sentence.
Upon his release, Mulheren (whose convictions were later
reversed on appeal) went into business with a “prominent
investor” named Israel Englander. Soon after that, Mulheren
died (apparently of a heart attack), but Englander continued to
manage Millennium Partners, a “prominent” short selling
hedge fund whose major investors are the Belzbergs – William,
Sam, and Hymie.
By this time, David Rocker had left the Belzberg’s Century
Capital to start his own hedge fund – Rocker Partners.
* * * * * * * *
Here I must skip ahead more than a decade: In 2004, Deep Capture
reporter Patrick Byrne (pursuant to his day job of being CEO of
Overstock.com) was on a Lehman Brothers-sponsored road show seeing
dozens of hedge funds, attempting to sell a $120 million
convertible bond in Overstock. When he sat down in
Millennium’s offices, a man entered. His opening words were,
“Millennium wants to take the entire $120 million of this
offering. Of course, we’ll need a board seat to go with
that.”
This would have given the hedge fund access to inside
information about Overstock. And it would have given Millennium the
ability to sell the company short without borrowing shares in the
open market.
This is a common strategy employed by short sellers tied to
Michael Milken or his associates. As I will show in future stories,
many companies that agree to this arrangement are eventually
destroyed or seriously wounded by naked short selling – hedge
funds offloading phantom stock.
Overstock board member Gordon Macklin, the former chairman of
Hambrecht & Quist, a straight-shooting investment bank, warned
Patrick not to do the deal with Millennium.
Millennium, after all, had a certain cachet.
Patrick declined Millennium’s offer, and went ahead with
the offering to a number of hedge funds.
A few months after Millennium’s offer to acquire the
bonds, affiliated hedge fund managers, including David Rocker,
began a short selling attack on Overstock.
* * * * * * * *
One hedge fund closely affiliated with David Rocker is SAC
Capital, which is managed by Steven Cohen, and is said to account
for more than 3 percent of all the trading on the New York Stock
Exchange. BusinessWeek magazine has described Cohen as “The
Most Powerful Trader on Wall Street.”
Some years ago, there was an article by Fortune magazine called
“The Shabby Side of the Street.” This article did not
mention Steve Cohen. It did not mention him because, by this time,
Cohen was a “prominent investor.”
But while “The Shabby Side of the Street” does not
mention Cohen, it is all about Gruntal & Co., which is where
Cohen spent his formative years. Cohen was a proprietary trader for
Gruntal in the 1980s and early 1990s – up until the day when
he founded SAC Capital.
Gruntal, we can assume, is where Cohen developed his network and
learned the tricks that made him the “most powerful trader on
Wall Street.”
Fortune magazine interviewed a former Gruntal employee, who
described the ambience there: “Gruntal was the Island of the
Misfit Toys. But they didn’t care what was going on in our
sick, dysfunctional office as long as we were making money. We had
no manager, and it’s illegal not to supervise brokers. I
remember doing cartwheels down the hall, drinking beer at my desk,
smoking pot, having sex in the stairwell. Whatever!”
* * * * * * * *
The Fortune magazine article about Gruntal also failed to
mention Michael Milken. It did not mention Milken because Milken
was, by then, a “prominent philanthropist.” But Milken
had been intimately involved with Gruntal, whose parent company, a
financial services and insurance conglomerate called the Home
Group, had been central to the Michael Milken empire.
As nearly every account of Michael Milken’s schemes will
tell you, Milken worked with a select group of cronies (many of
whom controlled large insurance and financial services
conglomerates) to operate what amounted to a Ponzi scheme.
The cronies would sell junk bonds through Milken to raise
finance. Then the cronies would use much of this finance to buy
(from Milken) the junk bonds of other cronies in the group. The
cronies and Milken would then trade the junk bonds among
themselves, raising their prices incrementally as they passed them
on to the next crony (a process known as
“daisy-chaining”), before fobbing them off to little
old ladies and dimwitted pension fund managers.
Until the scheme collapsed, Milken’s junk-bond
merry-go-round generated enormous profits and seemingly unlimited
finance for his select cronies. So the cronies could not only buy
more junk bonds from Milken, but they could also use their billions
to harass, destroy, or initiate hostile takeovers of public
companies.
Meanwhile, Milken presided over a nationwide network of private
partnerships (such as those he had with the Mafia card-counter
Edward Thorp), arbitrage and short selling partnerships (such as
Ivan Boesky’s criminal operation), short selling hedge funds
(such as Michael Steinhardt’s Mafia-funded outfit), and
brokerages that could help put public companies on the
defensive.
Home Insurance was a key buyer and issuer of Milken junk bonds.
It was the second largest unsecured creditor to Milken’s
operation at Drexel. It also owned about $15 million worth of Ivan
Boesky’s short selling and arbitrage outfit. Meanwhile,
Home’s subsidiary, Gruntal & Co., employed traders who
were on quite friendly terms with Milken and others in his
network.
* * * * * * * *
Gruntal’s options department was founded by a man named
Carl Icahn. After leaving Gruntal, Icahn formed Icahn & Co.,
receiving most of his finance from Michael Milken, but also a
significant chunk of capital from a “prominent
investor” named Zen Wolfson.
Since then, Wolfson has been involved with a number of Wall
Street brokerages that are tied to the Genovese Mafia. One such
brokerage is Pond Securities, which, in 2001, was implicated by the
SEC in a massive naked short selling (phantom stock) fraud. Among
the victims of Pond Securities were companies that had employed the
services of Ladenburg Thalmann, an investment bank largely
controlled by Carl Icahn.
In an upcoming story, I will tell you more about Ladenburg
Thalmann’s role in the naked short selling scandal. I will
tell you more about Pond Securities and its relationship with a man
who remains a fugitive in Austria. And I will tell you more about
Carl Icahn, who is not only one of the most “prominent
investors” in America, but also a man with a certain
cachet.
* * * * * * * *
Another employee of Gruntal – a fellow who sat next to
Steve Cohen (later known as “the most powerful trader on the
Street”) – was Stephen Feinberg, who had moved to
Gruntal from Michael Milken’s operation at Drexel Burnham
Lambert. Feinberg had been one of Milken’s most favored
employees. Most likely, he moved to Gruntal (“the
“shabby side of the Street,” as Fortune magazine
described it) to reinforce the relationship between Gruntal and
Milken’s nation-wide stock manipulation network.
Nowadays, Feinberg runs Cerebus Capital, one of the most
powerful private equity firms in America. In an upcoming story, I
will tell you how Cerebus loots the companies it seizes.
Its techniques have a certain cachet.
* * * * * * * *
Yet another “prominent investor” who sat on Steve
Cohen’s trading floor at Gruntal was Samuel Israel III.
Israel left Gruntal to work for a hedge fund owned by Steinhardt
(the son of the “biggest Mafia fence in America”). As
you will recall, Israel later wrote “Suicide is
Painless” on his car and briefly disappeared after being
sentenced for masterminding one of the largest hedge fund frauds in
history – a fraud that Israel ran with help from a co-founder
of Steinhardt’s hedge fund and another fellow connected to
the Genovese Mafia.
Also on Steve Cohen’s trading floor at Gruntal was Maurice
A. Gross, whose biggest client was Thomas Gambino, a prominent
member of the Gambino Mafia family. This was in the days when the
Gambinos and the Genovese still collaborated on Wall Street.
Gross later left Gruntal, and in 1997, he and a Pakistani fellow
named Mohammad Ali Khan tried to steal the Gambinos’
money.
Fortunately, Elliot Spitzer intervened. At the time, Spitzer was
New York’s attorney general. Throughout his political career,
Spitzer received by far the greatest percentage of his campaign
funding from short sellers (such as Jim Chanos, who provided a
rent-free beach house to the hooker who later forced Spitzer to
resign as governor) who are closely tied to Steve Cohen and SAC
Capital.
Spitzer forced the former Gruntal broker to give the Gambinos
their money back. There is no evidence, however, that Spitzer was
concerned that New York’s second largest organized crime
family was running money through a brokerage owned by cronies of
Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky.
In 1996, Gruntal was charged with embezzling millions of
dollars. By then, Steve Cohen had left to begin his career as the
“most powerful trader on the Street.”
* * * * * * * *
So in 2006, I was investigating Steve Cohen’s SAC Capital,
David Rocker, Michael Steinhardt and their network of miscreants. I
was also investigating “prominent”
journalists (at The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times,
CNBC and other major news organizations) who had unusual
relationships with this network and who were going to extraordinary
lengths to cover up the naked short selling (phantom stock)
scandal.
That’s when three guys in Armani suits saddled up to me in
a quiet bar. As you will recall from my last installment , one of the Armanis
introduced himself to me as a former Boesky employee, and told me a
story about a fellow who got his brains blown out after
“peaking” into the ladies underwear department at Saks
Fifth Avenue.
Steve Cohen’s SAC Capital is known colloquially as
“Sak.” I do not know for certain that Armani was
telling me I shouldn’t be “peaking” at
Cohen’s dirty underwear. It was a strange encounter, to say
the least.
But if you doubt that journalists sometimes receive such
threats, consider the case of Los Angeles Times reporter Anita
Busch. One day after work, Busch found, in the front seat of her
car, a dead fish and a rose. In the windshield of her car, there
was bullet hole and a note that said, simply,
“Stop!”
Later, the LA Times reporter was nearly killed when two men in a
black Mercedes tried to run her over.
All of this was the handiwork of Anthony Pellicano, a former
soldier in the Genovese Mafia organization who had found employment
as a hired-thug and private investigator. Most of Pellicano’s
clients had been Hollywood actors like Steven Seagal (who has been
reported by some news organizations to have ties to the Mob, though
I have not confirmed those reports) and various billionaires, a
significant number of whom had ties to Michael Milken.
When Pellicano put the dead fish and the bullet hole in the
reporter’s car, he was working for Michael Ovitz, the
Hollywood mogul. Busch and the LA Times were investigating the
business dealings of Ovitz, and Ovitz apparently hired the former
Genovese Mafia soldier to stop the story in its tracks.
Ovitz, as you may know, is one of Michael Milken’s closest
friends. They were high school classmates. In later years, Milken
and Ovitz did a lot of business together.
While Pellicano was threatening an L.A. Times reporter, he was
also employed by Adam Sender, who runs a hedge fund called Exis
Capital. Sender is a former employee of Steve Cohen at SAC Capital.
Steve Cohen — the “most powerful trader on the
Street” — provided Sender with most of his start-up
capital. Exis and Sender are considered by most everyone on Wall
Street to be essentially subsidiaries of SAC (a.k.a.
“Sak”).
Apparently, Sender had some kind of dispute with a business
partner, so he called Pellicano, the former Genovese Mafia soldier.
In a conversation that was recorded by the FBI, Sender said to
Pellicano: “You have 100% free reign to do whatever you feel
will make this cocksucker as unhappy as possible…I’d
like to make the fucking asshole as uncomfortable as
possible…I’m going to continue the lawsuit until
doomsday… when the time is right I’m going to fix
him.”
You can listen to the full conversation here .
In a later conversation, Pellicano allegedly offered to have
Sender’s business partner disappear. The former Genovese
soldier said he’d make his move while the business partner
was driving to Los Angeles from Las Vegas. He’d force the
business partner off the road. Then Pellicano would kill the
business partner and bury him in the Nevada desert. Nobody would
know a thing.
In court, Sender testified that he turned down Pellicano’s
murder-for-hire offer. But Pellicano was convicted for multiple
crimes – such as offering to have a man buried in the Nevada
desert and putting a dead fish, a rose, and bullet hole in the car
of a journalist investigating Michael Milken’s best friend
from high school.
* * * * * * * *
I do not know whether any merit can be given to the offshore
businessman’s speculation that Rocker might be
“owned” by the Mafia. I do not know whether Rocker had
anything to do with the message that the Russian Mafia was going to
kill Patrick Byrne.
I do know, however, that in a later phone conversation, the
offshore businessman explained how the death threat had been
conveyed to him. He said he returned home one night and his wife
told him there was a package on his desk. “And there was a
beautiful little box, and inside was a matryoshka.”
“And I opened up the…matryoshka, and inside is an
`F’ with a cross on it — which is from
Felix.”
The businessman said he contacted Felix. And Felix said,
“tell [Patrick]….we’re going to fucking take it
private.”
* * * * * * * *
In 1998, Felix – that’s Felix Sater – forgot
to pay the rent on a locker at the Manhattan Mini Storage in Soho.
As a result, police found inside this locker two pistols, a
shotgun, and a gym bag stuffed with documents outlining various
money laundering and stock manipulation schemes orchestrated by
Felix Sater and his partners.
Felix is a Russian immigrant said by authorities to have ties to
both the Russian Mafia and the Genovese organized crime family.
In 1991, Felix stabbed a stock broker in the face with a broken
stem of a wine glass.