Mob figure arrested, union
office searched
Hours after
the arrest of Matthew L. Guglielmetti Jr., 56, on a charge
of conspiracy to distribute cocaine, the FBI and state
police raid a New England Laborers office and a Cranston
concrete company.
01:00 AM
EST on Friday, January 21, 2005
BY W.
ZACHARY MALINOWSKI and MIKE STANTON
Journal Staff Writers
State and federal agents arrested a capo regime in the
Patriarca crime family yesterday and also searched offices
of the Laborers' International Union in Providence and a
Cranston concrete company that has employed the mobster as
well as the son of a top state judge.
Matthew L. Guglielmetti Jr., 56, was charged with
conspiracy to distribute cocaine. The government accused
Guglielmetti of agreeing to protect a major shipment of
cocaine that was passing through Rhode Island en route to
Canada.
According to an FBI affidavit, the drug case grew out of
a larger undercover investigation in which an agent posing
as a businessman operated a business with Guglielmetti, who
was a silent partner.
Authorities declined comment on the ongoing
investigation. But hours after Guglielmetti's arrest, FBI
agents and Rhode Island State Police detectives armed with
empty boxes and search warrants descended upon the offices
of the New England Laborers in Providence and Capital City
Concrete in Cranston.
The agents arrived shortly before noon at the Arthur E.
Coia Building at 226 S. Main St., Providence, a red-brick
building that holds office space for various operations of
the New England regional operations of the Laborers.
A uniformed state trooper and Providence police officer
barred reporters from entering. But inside, agents could be
seen on the first floor, which includes the union's
organizing department, and also going upstairs, which
includes offices of the New England Laborers'
Labor-Management Cooperation Trust.
Simultaneously, other law-enforcement officials arrived
at Capital City Concrete at 108 Phenix Ave. in Cranston, a
two-story white house converted into offices.
Guglielmetti worked for
Capital City Concrete, which
employs union construction workers, when the company helped
build the parking garage for the planned new Kent County
Courthouse over the past few years.
One of Guglielmetti's coworkers at Capital City Concrete
was Albert E. DeRobbio II, the son of Chief District Court
Judge Albert E. DeRobbio.
Until last year, the younger DeRobbio was a vice
president of Capital City Concrete, which is owned by his
wife, Lori Mason DeRobbio. He no longer works for the
company and faces charges of assaulting his wife last
summer; the couple is in the midst of a divorce marked by
squabbling over assets, including the concrete company.
GUGLIELMETTI'S ARREST follows a scheme that the FBI says
was hatched because the mobster needed some cash for
Christmas.
According to an affidavit filed in federal court
yesterday by FBI Special Agent Joseph Degnan, several FBI
agents had been working undercover in Rhode Island and
elsewhere, for an undisclosed period of time.
"During this undercover activity, an FBI undercover agent
. . . was introduced to Guglielmetti," the affidavit said.
"In his undercover role, [the agent] and Guglielmetti
operated a business, with Guglielmetti as a silent partner.
During the operation of this business, Guglielmetti received
money from the business, including a share of the profits
from laundering what Guglielmetti believed were drug
proceeds through the undercover business."
Then, last November, the affidavit said, Guglielmetti met
the undercover agent in Johnston and "indicated a need to
make some money prior to Christmas."
The mobster and the agent discussed having Guglielmetti
arrange protection for a large shipment of cocaine that
would be passing through Rhode Island from the South, bound
for Canada. They also discussed the possibility of
laundering the proceeds once the cocaine was distributed.
On Dec. 6, according to the affidavit, Guglielmetti met
with the agent again and agreed to a payment of $1,000 per
kilo for "babysitting" 67 kilos of cocaine; they also
discussed laundering at least half the proceeds once the
cocaine was sold in Canada.
The affidavit said that the conversations were recorded
on audiotape, and that some were also secretly videotaped.
At a subsequent meeting, on Dec. 13, Guglielmetti told
the undercover agent that his "people" would guard the
cocaine, and agreed that someone could come and pick up some
of the cocaine for local distribution. However, the
affidavit quotes Guglielmetti as saying, "I don't want
people in and out of there . . . I don't want a guy walking
in, taking three, running out, coming back, taking four . .
. coming back, taking five, you might as well just hang a
sign out and say we're doing drugs."
The cocaine shipment was due in Rhode Island this week,
the affidavit said, and would be kept at a hotel. On Tuesday
of this week, Guglielmetti arranged for two associates he
had enlisted to guard the cocaine to meet two other
undercover agents, posing as employees of the cocaine
supplier, in Johnston.
Authorities did not say where in Johnston the meetings
took place.
Later, between 4 and 5 p.m. on Tuesday, the affidavit
said, the original undercover agent met Guglielmetti in
Cranston and gave him a key to the hotel room where the
cocaine was, and told the mobster to have his two men there
by 6 p.m.
Shortly after 6 p.m., Guglielmetti's two associates --
who were not named, or arrested yesterday -- arrived at the
designated room to find two undercover policemen and 67
kilos of cocaine in suitcases. The four men remained
together for about five hours, during which time two more
undercover agents came and took 18 kilos, purportedly for
distribution in Central Falls.
During this time, the affidavit said, Guglielmetti was
with the original undercover agent at another hotel. At 11
p.m., the agent called the hotel room with the cocaine and
told one of the undercover agents that Guglielmetti's
associates were done; Guglielmetti then talked to one of his
associates by phone, and he and the other associate left.
Yesterday morning, Guglielmetti met with the agent in
Johnston to receive payment. Instead, he was arrested.
At 2:45 p.m. yesterday, a handcuffed Guglielmetti was led
into a federal courtroom for an initial appearance before
U.S. Magistrate Judge David Martin. Clad in a dark sweater,
blue jeans and new white running shoes, Guglielmetti stood
calmly beside his lawyer, John M. Cicilline, as the judge
summarized the charge against him and asked him if he
understood.
"Yes, sir," he said softly.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Kenneth P. Madden argued that
Guglielmetti is a flight risk and danger to the community,
and should be denied bail. He faces a prison term of 10
years to life, if convicted.
"The strength of the evidence against the defendant is
great," Madden argued. "He dealt with an undercover agent --
in fact, several undercover agents were involved -- and all
of their conversations were audiotaped, and some were
videotaped.
Martin ordered Guglielmetti held without bail at the
Wyatt Detention Center in Central Falls. He scheduled a
preliminary hearing for next Friday.
GUGLIELMETTI HAS been a prominent figure in the Rhode
Island underworld for decades. In 1991, he pleaded guilty to
federal racketeering conspiracy charges in Hartford, Conn.,
and was sentenced to nearly five years in prison.
While Guglielmetti pleaded guilty, seven others,
including mob underboss Nicholas L.
Bianco, went to trial.
During the trial, evidence surfaced that Bianco had sent
Guglielmetti to a Ramada Inn in Mystic, Conn., to meet with
mobsters from the Hartford-Springfield area.
As part of the plea, Guglielmetti admitted that, on Oct.
29, 1989, he crossed state lines -- traveling from Rhode
Island to Massachusetts -- to attend a Mafia induction
ceremony in Medford, Mass.
The ceremony was a watershed moment. The FBI was able to
record several prominent New England mobsters, including
Vincent Federico, Bobby DeLuca and Gaetano Milano, having
their fingers pricked and swearing blood oaths to the
Providence-based Patriarca crime family.
DeLuca, of Lincoln, later rose to become a ranking member
of the crime family.
Also among those attending the ceremony were former crime
boss Raymond J. "Junior" Patriarca. Charges stemming from
the undercover operation sent Patriarca to prison for almost
nine years.
One of the mobsters,
Biagio DiGiacomo, was recorded
saying, "We get in alive in this organization, and the only
way we are gonna get out is dead. No matter what. It's no
hope. No Jesus. No Madonna. Nobody can help us if we ever
give up this secret to anybody, this thing cannot be
exposed."
In the mid-'90s, Guglielmetti was released from a federal
prison in Sandstone, Minn., and returned to Rhode Island. He
remained under the watchful eye of law enforcement as he
worked jobs as a construction laborer.
On July 3, 1997, Guglielmetti was treated for two stab
wounds at Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island in Pawtucket. He
was "very courteous" to the police, but he refused to
provide them with any information other than his address and
telephone number.
Guglielmetti also surfaced on law-enforcement tape
recordings in a 2003 federal racketeering and extortion case
in Boston. A Massachusetts State Police affidavit identified
Guglielmetti as a Rhode Island capo in the Patriarca crime
family and
Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio, of Providence, as
the boss.
The affidavit went on to describe Guglielmetti's alleged
role in helping to collect a mob gambling debt in New
Hampshire and in trying to mediate a dispute among mob
soldiers in Massachusetts. In one recorded conversation
quoted in the affidavit, Guglielmetti commiserates with two
of the Massachusetts wise guys about how their rivals are
"throwing fish around" in an apparent death threat
reminiscent of the Godfather movies.
"I went with a broad I had a fish in my door step inside
the entry way," says one Massachusetts mobster.
"That's HBO," responds Guglielmetti.
"That's the Sopranos," echoes another wise guy.
In another recorded conversation, the affidavit said,
Guglielmetti lamented that some Mafia members were being
promoted simply for their long years of service.
"So now, I mean it's like, ah, a whore in the
neighborhood, you know you stand here long enough we'll use
her," said Guglielmetti.
Guglielmetti was not charged in that case. But prior to
the indictment, Massachusetts and Rhode Island state police
did stop by the construction site of the new Kent County
Courthouse parking garage, where Guglielmetti was working
for Capital City Concrete, to notify him that he had been
picked up on the court-authorized recordings.
DURING GUGLIELMETTI'S brief court appearance yesterday
afternoon, FBI agents and state police detectives continued
their searches of the Laborers and Capital Concrete offices
for records pertaining to the larger investigation.
A secretary for Armand E. Sabitoni, the Laborers' general
secretary-treasurer and the Laborers' New England regional
manager, said that Sabitoni was traveling and not available.
Dominick Ruggerio, administrator of the New England
Laborers' Labor-Management Cooperation Trust and a state
senator from Providence, could not be reached for comment.
According to a union Web site, the trust's mission includes
"creating long-term working relationships between
contractors and the New England Laborers."
The law firm of Coia & Lepore, which is also in the
Arthur E. Coia Building and has close ties to the Laborers,
issued a statement saying that its offices had not been
searched.
Meanwhile, nobody was available at Capital City Concrete
in Cranston. Late in the afternoon, when a reporter called
the company's office, a state police officer answered the
phone. He said that Lori DeRobbio was not there.
With staff reports from John Freidah.
Bill Malinowski can be reached at (401) 277-7019, or
bmalinow [at] projo.com.
Mike Stanton can be reached at (401) 277-7724, or
mstanton [at] projo.com