Showing posts with label mob. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mob. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 July 2013

Alleged Gangster / Mob boss Radovan Krejcir assassination attempt - fail


Police are believed to be looking for a special effects film-maker who they suspect is responsible for weaponising the vehicle used to attack notorious Czech businessman Radovan Krejcir.

The Star has learnt that the attempted hit on Krejcir on Wednesday may be linked to the Cape Town movie industry.

The attempted assassination wouldn’t have been out of place in a James Bond movie, with Krejcir narrowly escaping death by a remote-controlled automatic weapon built into a parked car.

Krejcir, a director of Moneypoint – a gold and diamonds pawn shop on Bradford Road in Bedfordview – had been visiting the business at the time.

He drove his black Mercedes-Benz AMG into the parking lot of the business between 10.30am and 11am, parking perpendicular to a red VW Polo Cross.


Radovan Krejcir speaks to a friend after the attack in Bedfordview. Photo: Timothy Bernard

THE STAR

Business agents at Remax One, which shares the premises with Moneypoint, told The Star they had noticed the vehicle in the past three to four days, but each had assumed the car’s driver was visiting the other businesses.

Wednesday morning, its back was positioned opposite to where Krejcir was about to park, outside the Remax real estate building.

Krejcir told The Star he was taking a phone call after having just got out of his vehicle.

He said he had taken three steps when he heard a loud “popping” noise that he initially thought could be fireworks.

Unaware of the danger, he continued his phone call.

Then bullets flew from a dozen gun barrels built onto the inside of the VW Polo, just behind the licence plate.


Indents made by the projectiles on Krejcir s bullet-proof vehicle. Picture: Timothy Bernard

THE STAR

“It was like something from a movie,” said Krejcir, shaking his head in disbelief. “It’s definitely a professional job.”

Krejcir said he realised that he had just had an attempt hit on his life only when he saw a string of bullet dents lining the driver’s side and back passenger-side windows.

A remote control was used in the attack.

The Polo burst into flames. Its licence plate was blown off and part of the back of the car melted from the intense heat.

The projectiles were unable to pierce Krejcir’s R1.7 million bullet-proof car, but The Star counted at least 24 holes on windows and walls surrounding it. No one was hurt.


Meeting journalists from The Star in his office, flanked by two associates, Krejcir said: “I don’t know who did it, but if I did I wouldn’t tell you.”

Puffing on a cigarette, he was cheerful and joked that he would start going to church.

“It was a surprise for me, but I am not gonna get some bodyguards or anything like that.”

He added “we” should just let the police do their job.

Estate agents at Remax One said the VW Polo was not there in the morning and must have re-entered the premises between 9am and 10.30am.

“We ran out when we heard a bang and more popping sounds and saw the car on fire,” said Jarrid Rahme.

Police said the weapon itself was a battery-operated, remote-controlled device that ran on two batteries similar to those used in public phones.

At the time of publication, no arrests had been made.

A case of attempted murder has been opened.

A sourceclose to the investigation told the Star that the attack may be linked to Krejcir’s dealings with Cape Town gangsters over territory.

The source indicated that Krejcir had allegedly met with one of Cape Town’s most notorious members of the underworld at Emperors Palace last week – in an attempt to iron out their differences.

“It didn’t go well,” said the source. “It’s understood the alleged gang leader is currently out of the country.”

Security expert Paul O’Sullivan said: “It’s a disgraceful use of state resources, which would not be necessary if this gangster had been sent packing the day he arrived (in South Africa).

“While I’m not in agreement with anybody being murdered, it’s clear that this thug has developed many enemies as a result of his crime wave in South Africa and elsewhere.

“If the gangsters have to kill each other, I say please do not hurt innocent people in the process. And when there’s only one left, we should give him life for murder,” he said.

The attempted hit comes just a week after it was revealed that sleaze king Lolly Jackson’s suspected killer, George Louca, is scheduled to be extradited from Cyprus to South Africa.

He is expected to reveal in court details of the local criminal underworld.

Krejcir has been in the media spotlight for years, fleeing the Czech Republic after allegedly defrauding the government of more than R225m.

In December, he was convicted in his absence in Prague for money laundering and sentenced to 11 years behind bars.

Krejcir is at present fighting an attempt to have him extradited to the Czech Republic.

lerato.mbangeni@inl.co.za shain.germaner@inl.co.za angelique.serrao@inl.co.za

The Star

Thursday, 8 November 2012

The Ten Best Gangster Nicknames


The Ten Best Gangster Nicknames

“Joey Cupcakes” pled not guilty this month. That would be Joseph “Joey Cupcakes" Urgitano, charged with taking a metal baseball bat and doing a number on two men who were harassing a woman on West 14th Street in New York City in August. For our money, we believe “Joey Cupcakes.” For two reasons: (1) With a nickname like that, dollars to donuts he would stand up for a dame in distress and (2) His lawyer is the great Murray “Don’t Worry” Richman. For this kind of charge, that’s the best kind of legal money can buy. Anyway, if you’re going to go into the business of crime (and we’re not saying “Joey Cupcakes” is in that business) then you need yourself a nice nickname, one that people and, more importantly, the press, will remember. Here are 10 of our favorites:

1. Ciro “The Artichoke King” Terranova


Ciro was a turn of the century gangster who knew how to turn a profit: He would buy California artichokes for $6 a crate and then sell them in New York City at a 40% mark-up. Now this was a guy who knew how to make a business run! And there were no complaints from the paying customers. None.

2. Tony “The Ant” Spilotto


Tony was given his nickname by legendary FBI agent William F. Roemer, Jr who once referred to him as “that little pissant.” The Ant, who died in 1986, handled all of the Las Vegas casino profits for organized crime, known in their lingo as “the skim.”

3. Louie “Ha-Ha” Attanasio


The nickname came to him because he always cracked up whenever he heard another gangster had died. He had a brother with the same habit—Bobby “Ha Ha.” Louie is in federal lock-up in Ohio, eligible for parole in 2018. Who’s laughing now? Not us, Louie. Honestly.

4. Phil “The Chicken Man” Testa

Phil was also known as “the Julius Cesar of the Philadelphia Mob”, which is kind of more dignified. His sillier nickname came about because of a severe case of chicken pox he suffered as a child, that left his face scarred and marked. He died in 1981.

5. Gerlando “George From Canada” Sciascia

Care to take a guess? Yep, he was a Montreal capo rubbed out for unknown reasons.

6. Albert “The Mad Hatter” Anastasia

The Royal Highness of mob hits and the main triggerman for Murder, Inc., Anastasia met his end while sitting in a barber chair in New York City in 1957.

7. Abe “Kid Twist” Reles

Another Murder, Inc. member who got his nickname courtesy of his favorite candy. He was going to turn informant and was hidden away at the Half-Moon Hotel in Coney Island. Six detectives were guarding his room, but still, somehow, someone got in and threw him out a window to his death. The tabloids were kind to Kid Twist: They called him “the canary that couldn’t fly.”

8. Dominic “Sonny Black” Napolitano

Sonny had beach-blond hair by the time he turned 40, so he dyed it black—hence the nickname. He was the Capo who let FBI agent Joe Pistone into his crew posing as gangster Donnie Brasco. Let’s just say that decision did not sit well with his bosses.
9. Frank “The Prime Minister” Costello

Also known as the “Chairman of the Board.” He was such a powerful mob boss that when he testified in front of the televised Kefauver Hearings looking into organized crime in 1951, he refused to let the cameras show his face. They showed only his hands and viewers heard only his voice. Marlon Brando studied those hand gestures and mastered that voice for his role as Don Vito Corleone in The Godfather.
10. Sam “Golf Bag” Hunt

Sam was one of Al Capone’s most trusted hit men and carried all his weapons in a golf bag he lugged everywhere he went. He wasn’t much of a golfer, but he was pure magic when it came to a hole in one.