Rudy Guiliani
Phi Rho Pi fraternity member
The House of Savoy and the House of Windsor both knighted Rudy Giuliani the former Mayor of NYC. Giuliani's father was an enforcer for the mob. The Vallone family with Peter Vallone Sr, Peter Vallone Jr, and Paul Vallone of New York are all Fordham Jesuits and top members of the New York City Council with Peter Vallone Sr who was Majority Leader of the New York City Council until December of 2001.
Rudy Giuliani was mayor of New York City on 9/11 and was knighted 17
days after 9/11/2001 by the Italian government under their Order of
Merit. Giuliani's father was an enforcer for Cosa Nostra.
Giuliani was born in an
Italian-American enclave in East Flatbush in the New York City borough
of Brooklyn, the only child of working-class parents, Harold Angelo Giuliani (1908–1981)
and Helen Giuliani (née D'Avanzo; 1909–2002), both children of Italian
immigrants.[37] Giuliani is of Tuscan origins from his father side, as
his paternal grandparents (Rodolfo and Evangelina Giuliani) were born in
Montecatini Terme, Tuscany, Italy.[38] He was raised a Roman
Catholic.[39] Harold Giuliani, a plumber and a bartender,[40] had trouble holding a job, and was convicted of felony assault and robbery, serving time in Sing Sing.[41] After his release he worked as an enforcer for his brother-in-law Leo D'Avanzo, who ran an organized crime operation involved in loan sharking and gambling at a restaurant in Brooklyn.[42]
Giuliani Rudolph W.
Knight of the Grand Cross Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
History and regulations of the award
Mayor of New York City
Date of conferment: 28/09/2001
Knight of the Grand Cross Order of Merit of the Italian Republic
History and regulations of the award
Mayor of New York City
Date of conferment: 28/09/2001
https://www.nydailynews.com/archives/news/towers-fell-mob-schemes-began-organized-crime-civvied-ground-zero-work-article-1.654563
TOWERS FELL AND MOB SCHEMES BEGAN. How organized crime civvied up Ground Zero work
The News Investigative Team detailed how hundreds of millions of dollars were spent on projects that seemingly had nothing to do with 9/11 and lower Manhattan, how millions went to fat cats and firms that were barely hurt and how hundreds of small and less powerful business entities received barely enough to pay a month's rent. Today, The News reports on how organized crime moved in on the Ground Zero debris cleanup.
Allen Monchik, a Luchese crime family associate with two fraud convictions on his résumé, is working the phones. His first call is to a Port Authority engineer who, investigators will later say, regularly steers jobs at Kennedy Airport to mob-controlled subcontractors in return for bribes. During the next few hours, as Navy destroyers steam toward New York and fighter jets patrol the sky overhead, Monchik calls the engineer 12 more times. As the afternoon progresses, Monchik repeatedly phones a Bronx subcontractor connected to a Gambino family associate. He then calls a Jersey City construction company allegedly controlled by a Luchese family soldier. He completes his marathon day of phone conversations with a call to a major contracting executive who's a reputed Luchese associate. By the morning of the 12th, the mob is in a feeding frenzy to get in on the massive cleanup job that will inevitably ensue in lower Manhattan. In fact, organized crime and corrupt subcontractors turned the terrorist attack into a windfall, according to a four-month Daily News investigation of the federal government's $21.4 billion 9/11 disaster recovery program.
Down at Ground Zero, the Luchese family, the Colombos, the Gambinos and even the New Jersey-based DeCavalcantes all made out, according to court documents, government records and interviews. They divvied up Ground Zero the way the mob carved up Las Vegas in the old days. Unbeknown to Monchik and his business associates, all of the calls were being tracked by Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau's office. The DA had been looking into corruption in the asbestos removal industry and happened to run into the blizzard of phone calls in the hours following the terrorist attacks.
Coyne wrote. "Monchik followed organized crime protocol of informing the acting boss, Daidone, of Monchik's Ground Zero dealings in order to receive Daidone's approval or rejection.
The News investigation found that at least $63.2 million of the $458 million FEMA-funded Ground Zero cleanup went to companies accused of mob ties
Tommy Cappa, a Colombo crime family associate, was put on the payroll of an asbestos removal company doing Sept. 11 cleanup while still on probation for his role in a 1991 mob war murder conspiracy. Documents show he was paid $200 a week on the books, but he proclaimed on tape that he pocketed 20% of every job the company won. At one point, investigators watched Cappa meet with Monchik at Ground Zero, then drive off in a white 2002 Jaguar registered to Cappa's wife.
http://www.911conspiracy.tv/cache/nydailynews-com_2005-12-05_exposed__map_of_ground_zero_.html
EXPOSED: MAP OF GROUND ZERO SPOILS. WHERE THE MONEY WENT TO CLEAR TRADE CENTER DEBRIS.
Of the $458 million in federal 9/11 aid spent on debris removal, AMEC got $65.8 million, Bovis $277.2 million, Tully $76 million and Turner $39 million.
When London-based AMEC Construction showed up at Ground Zero as one of the Big Four hired to run the cleanup job, the firm's U.S. subsidiary already was ensnared in government corruption probes in Missouri and California. AMEC still got the 9/11 job.
AMEC's No. 1 guy on the ground was Vice President Leo DiRubbo, a reputed associate of the Luchese crime
family. At Ground Zero, it was DiRubbo's responsibility on behalf of
the Luchese crime family "to ensure labor peace between organized crime
and contractors," according to investigators' reports obtained by The
News.
AMEC hired Big Apple Wrecking, owned by Harold Greenberg, a reputed mob associate whose firm was barred from government work because of his convictions in bid-rigging and bribery conspiracies.
Weeks into the cleanup, Thacher Associates realized Greenberg was
on-site and kicked Big Apple off the job, though the firm still collected $203,000.
It didn't end
there. Safeway Environmental, a firm that investigators allege was
controlled by Greenberg, was still at Ground Zero.
AMEC also hired Mazzocchi Wrecking. A few months after 9/11, the N.J. Division of Gaming Enforcement charged that three members of the DeCavalcante crime family worked for Mazzocchi.
The city Department of Investigation determined Mazzocchi "had potentially overbilled the city" for Ground Zero work.
The DOI forwarded the information to the city Department of Design and Construction but the probe was closed without prosecution. Mazzocchi, which denies mob ties, earned a total of $16 million from two of the major contractors.
Civetta won a $1.2 million contract at Ground Zero, and Yonkers won three deals worth $14.5 million.
Not long afterward, prosecutors alleged both firms had for years been
making regular payments to corrupt officials of Local 15 of the
Operating Engineers - a local that prosecutors say long has been
infiltrated by the Colombo crime family.
Both firms deny mob involvement and have not been charged with wrongdoing.
In the middle of the 9/11 job, owners of the AMEC-hired subcontractor Peter Scalamandre & Sons, of Freeport, pleaded guilty to laundering $1 million through subcontractors. Prosecutors charged that some cash wound up in the hands of the Luchese crime family.
Scalamandre was kicked off the job and was paid $2.8 million.
AMEC hired Breeze National, a Brooklyn demolition firm owned by Toby Romano, a reputed Luchese family
associate convicted in 1988 of bribing inspectors to overlook health
violations on asbestos-removal jobs. Breeze earned $3.9 million.
Turner Construction hired Seasons Contracting, owned by Salvatore Carucci, a reputed Luchese associate who was indicted in 1995 on
charges of using a bogus minority-owned business to illegally win
government work. Charges were later dismissed because of a flawed
indictment. Seasons was paid $26.7 million.
Luchese associate Allen Monchik was a consultant to this firm,
which won a small, $95,250 city contract to clean up asbestos on the
streets and sidewalks around Ground Zero. A principal of the company has
been indicted in a 9/11 ghost-employee scheme.
Gambino associate Noel Modica negotiated a "loan" for Termon from Monchik, according to investigators' documents. Termon was paid $2.2 million to clean asbestos from Battery Park City. Termon has not been charged with wrongdoing.
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