The Canadian Press (CP) April 10, 1990 Tuesday
Copyright 1990 Press News Limited, All Rights Reserved
The Canadian Press (CP)
April 10, 1990 Tuesday
SECTION: FOREIGN GENERAL
NEWS
LENGTH: 682 words
HEADLINE: Mob-Lawyer
BODY:
--- Mob-Lawyer --- By Karen Schwartz= PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) _ The gold
lettering on the plate-glass window reads simply: Law Office. Inside
works Rhode Island's busiest criminal lawyer _ a man who has built a
career by representing reputed organized crime figures. "I've never
discouraged people from referring to me as a mob lawyer,'' John (Jack)
Cicilline said between drags on his cigarette. "I suppose to some people
it's a sinister connotation, but it's done me well. Someone has to
represent these people.'' But the balding 51-year-old does more than
defend people such as reputed mob boss Raymond (Junior) Patriarca _ he
befriends them. Pictures of Patriarca and his late father, legendary
organized crime leader Raymond L. S. Patriarca, hang in Cicilline's
Providence office. On the opposite wall is a framed copy of a 1983
indictment against Cicilline _ charges he eventually beat. Cicilline
rents his office from Raymond (Junior) Patriarca in the city's Italian
section _ not far from where he grew up. Cicilline's father wanted him
to become a lawyer. Although he originally planned on entering the
foreign service, he's glad he followed his father's advice. "I love
doing this work,'' he said. Cicilline put himself through law school,
commuting 100 kilometres to Boston's Suffolk University while working
days to support the wife with whom he eloped as a teenager. Cicilline
sees himself as on the front line defending civil rights. He said his
small firm, which includes two of his five children, takes "more than
our fair share'' of cases from poor people. "I see myself as one of the
last survivors of the battle against the system taking over,'' he said.
Two of Cicilline's clients were arrested last month in an FBI sweep.
Patriarca and
Matthew Guglielmetti are charged
with racketeering. Partriarca, 45, has been identified in testimony
before the U.S. Senate as head of the New England Cosa Nostra.
Guglielmetti, Cicilline's golf partner, is named in last month's
indictment as a lieutenant in charge of the Patriarca family's
Connecticut operation. That doesn't faze Cicilline, who said his
"commonality'' with some of his clients has forged friendships that have
survived even though "a lot of them are in jail.'' "I've never heard
anyone say his reputation has been impaired or sullied in any way
because of the company he keeps,'' said Presiding Superior Court Judge
Anthony Giannini. "Jack is a very sensitive, warm guy,'' said Dick
Casparian, chief public defender. But when asked about Cicilline's
personal relationship with some clients, Casparian said he had never
developed such a friendship in 16 years as a criminal lawyer. Cicilline
said he knows nothing about organized crime. As to the guilt or
innocence of his clients and friends, Cicilline said: "I've heard what's
said about a lot of my clients. I don't know if it's true and it doesn't
bother me even if it is true.'' Cicilline said he got involved in
representing reputed mobsters as a young lawyer trying to build a
practice. "You've got to take little risks,'' said Cicilline. "Risking
my reputation is a risk I was willing to take. "I can't say I didn't
enjoy seeing my name in the paper with people who were expected to be
seen with the best lawyer money could buy.'' That strategy, with a
healthy dose of talent, made Cicilline into the state's busiest criminal
lawyer. He takes on about 25 per cent of the criminal cases that don't
go to the public defender's office, Giannini said. That doesn't include
the many cases he handles in federal court. Although Cicilline has the
respect of his colleagues, many refuse to talk about his private life. A
half-dozen law enforcement officials also refused to comment on
Cicilline. In 1980, the FBI bugged Cicilline's office. In 1983, an
informant wore a wire during a meeting with the lawyer and mobster Frank
(Bobo) Marrapese. After a mistrial and a hung jury, Cicilline cleared
himself of charges he conspired to persuade a witness to lie. "He's
aware of the tightrope that he chooses to walk,'' one police officer
said, demanding anonymity.