Best American Crime Writing 2006 - Mark Bowden [107]
But, he explained, he had seen them once: when he retrieved Hydell in the parking lot. And the way things worked out, it was enough.
On the lam, looking for ways to fill the long days in his suburban hideout, Casso had picked up a book. The author’s photo came as a shock. He later said it was the same stolid tough guy who had stood guard while Jimmy Hydell lay in the trunk. He’d never have trouble identifying Lou Eppolito or his grim, wraithlike partner, Stephen Caracappa, to any jury.
Only, despite Casso’s willingness to get on the stand and point a condemning finger at the two detectives, he would never get his chance. He screwed up. Repeatedly. Housed in a prison section with other cooperating prisoners, he hatched a bug-eyed plot to kill a federal judge. He persuaded a prison employee to provide him with food, drugs, and fellatio. To avenge a jailhouse fight he had lost, Casso attacked Salvatore “Big Sal” Miciotta in the shower room after discovering that the three-hundred-pound wiseguy had been left handcuffed. And he offered the feds a loopy story about Sammy “the Bull” Gravano’s role in the 1991 stabbing of the Reverend Al Sharpton, a tale quickly proved false, since Gravano had been in prison at the time of the attack. In the end, the feds had to concede that Casso was pathologically savage, reckless, and ultimately unreliable. And, more significant, any defense attorney worth his six-figure retainer would shoot their star witness’s credibility full of holes.
In the summer of 1998, after determining that Casso had breached the terms of his agreement, the government sentenced him to life without parole. Without his testimony, police and federal authorities quickly decided, there was no hope of ever making a case against the two Mafia cops.
THAT, IN BRIEF STROKES, was the story that was told in the mountain of FBI criminal-investigation summaries, police reports, and crime-scene accounts that the U.S. Attorney’s Office delivered on four overloaded handcarts to the “war room” on the fourteenth floor of the Brooklyn district attorney’s building, on Jay Street. It was the fall of 2003, and in the weeks after Tommy Dades shared his new discovery, there was a flurry of activity.
Mark Feldman of the Brooklyn U.S. Attorney’s Office, a man whom Eppolito had admiringly described in his fateful book as “a tough Jew,” issued the marching orders. The D.A.’s investigative unit, a team of retired detectives whose long careers had been measured out in Mob cases, would lead the charge. They were assisted by William Oldham, an ex-cop and federal investigator in Feldman’s office. Their mandate was to dig up the past and scrutinize the present. To go back, and to go forward. To do whatever was necessary to make the cases against two cops who had allegedly betrayed the city’s trust. The men whose crimes they were investigating were of their generation, detectives who had been their colleagues. It was their own legacy they would be working to redeem.
To a man, they looked forward to the task with a special zeal. “I know what happened back then. I know all the names, all the players. This isn’t history to me,” says Robert Intartaglio. A fabled detective known throughout the department as Bobby I., he had retired after twenty-eight years on the job and had spent the last nine working in the D.A.’s office.
“All the years on the job,” he explains with a forlorn shake of his head, “you couldn’t help feeling that the wiseguys were onto us. You don’t talk on the phone. You don’t call some people. Leaks are the worst thing that can happen. And yet they kept happening. Now it was payback time.”
Retired detective Doug LeVien embraced the case as his unexpected summons to the front lines. Back in the seventies he had posed as a corrupt cop to infiltrate the Lucchese crime family. Now, after twenty-five years on the streets, he was strapped to a desk as a detective investigator in the D.A.