U.S. arrests 119 in biggest Mafia bust

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – Authorities arrested 119  organized crime suspects yesterday in what the FBI called the  largest single-day operation against the Mafia in history.

The roundup, conducted with the help of former mobsters  turned informants, shows the Mafia remains a threat despite  decades of crackdowns that have sent its hierarchies to prison  but also that the famed “omerta” code of silence is largely a  myth, officials said.

More than 800 federal and local law-enforcement officials  detained suspects in at least four states plus one in Italy,  targeting New York’s five Mafia “families,” one in New Jersey  and one in New England.

Sixteen grand jury indictments charged 127 suspects with  murder, drug trafficking, extortion, gambling, loan-sharking  and other crimes going back 30 years, U.S. Attorney General  Eric Holder told a news conference in New York.

Five of those indicted were already in prison, putting the  total number detained at 124, and three others were not in  custody, the Justice Department said.

The Italian-American Mafia, also known as La Cosa Nostra  with its roots in Sicily, maintains a hold on American popular  culture thanks to decades of movies and television shows  including “The Godfather” in 1972.

Some of the suspects were known by colorful nicknames  typical of the Mafia such as “Tony Bagels,” “Vinny Carwash” and  “Junior Lollipops,” according to the indictments.

But Holder called them “among the most dangerous criminals  in our country.”

“Some allegations involve classic mob hits to eliminate  perceived rivals. Others involve senseless murders. In one  instance, a victim allegedly was shot and killed during a  botched robbery attempt. And two other murder victims allegedly  were shot dead in a public bar because of a dispute over a  spilled drink,” Holder said.

The FBI said it worked with the Italian National Police to  apprehend and charge one suspect in Italy.

Janice Fedarcyk, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s  New York Division, sought to dispel the notion that the Mafia  had been debilitated or was less violent than in the past.

“Arresting and convicting the hierarchies of the five  families several times over has not eradicated the problem,”  Fedarcyk said.

New York-based criminal defense attorney Bruce Barket  disputed that claim, saying much of the strength of La Cosa  Nostra was eliminated long ago and has been replaced by others  such as Albanian and Russian organizations.

“Privately, law enforcement officials will tell you there  isn’t anybody left,” Barket said. “Many of today’s arrests are  of older mobsters for crimes committed a long time ago.”