- Casey Rosado
Caecus Rosado (1934-1972) was an
Cuban Lucchese crime family associate. Rosado served as the powerful president of theHotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union local atJohn F. Kennedy Airport inBrooklyn from 1957 until his death in 1972.Biography
Born in
Havana , Rosado became a powerful mafioso during the rule of dictatorFulgencio Batista inCuba . During this period, Rosado allegedly became a close associate ofFlorida mob bossSanto Trafficante Jr. . Rosado had one brother, Rosario "Rosey" Rosado, aColombo crime family mob associate and gourmet chef in New York who became a crew member that served underDominick Cataldo . He spoke the the language known in the old mafia days as "Tampan" which was created bySanto Trafficante Jr. "Tampan" was a language of an Italian/Spanish dialect. It was spoken by the Mob mainly because the police could not understand the language. In 1949, Rosado immigrated to the United States and settled in New York. He soon became a mob associate with the Lucchese crime family. Rosado was involved inloan shark ing,extortion , hijacking, and laborracketeering .Eventually, Rosado was put in charge of theHotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union atJFK Airport , controlling the local for the Lucchese family. Although a powerful associate with the Lucchese family, Rosado could never become a full member because he was not Italian. Rosado was reportedly a close friend of mob bossTommy Lucchese and longtime Lucchesecaporegime Paul Vario . Through the control of the airport by Rosado and Lucchese mobsterFrancesco Manzo , and later another corrupt Teamster local, they offered labor peace in return for aLa Cosa Nostra surtax on air freight companies and air freight brokers.Extorting Gaspar Ciacco
In 1972, Rosado asked Lucchese mob associates Jimmy Burke and
Tommy DeSimone to come down to Miami to help two local brothers, Luis and Raul Charbonier, collect a debt. The debtor was Gaspar Ciacco, owner of The Temple Terrace Lounge (now called Gaspar's),Temple Terrace , Florida who owed the Charboniers $13,000. Ciacco had spent the money on racinggreyhound s andbolita and was avoiding payment. DeSimone was arrested in New York around this time and could not go to Florida. Vario suggested that mob associate and future government witnessHenry Hill take DeSimone's place.After arriving in Florida, Hill and Burke found Ciacco one evening at his bar and forced him into their car. Hill
pistol whip ped Ciacco as they drove to a lounge owned by the Charboniers. Once there, the two mobsters beat Cicacco, then chained him to the back of a car and dragged him down a street. At this point, Ciaccio agreed to pay thedebt .However, the two New York mobsters did not know that Ciacco's sister worked for the FBI in Miami. When she heard about what happened to her brother, she went to law enforcement. The Charboniers, Hill, and Burke were eventually convicted of extortion.Casey's untimely death
During the extortion trial in 1972, Rosado was due to testify for Hill and Burke. However, on the day of his testimony, Rosado suffered a
coronary artery aneurysm , allegedly from snortingcocaine . Rosado died at home at the foot of his bed. His death supposedly ruined Hill and Burke's defense; both men received ten years for extortion later that same year. In 1983, Rosado's mob colleague Manzo would be convicted and incarcerated for his racketeering activities at JFK Airport.References
* "Wiseguy: Life In A Mafia Family" by
Nicholas Pileggi
* "Gangsters and Goodfellas: Wiseguys . . . and Life on the Run" By Henry Hill & Gus Russo (2005)
* "The Mob: A Drive-By Historical Tour of Tampa's Notorious Wise Guys" by Scott Dietche
* "HOW THE MAFIA LOOTS JFK AIRPORT MORE THAN $59 BILLION OF FREIGHT " June 22nd 1987 Fortune Magazine by Roy Rowan and Christopher Knowlton*http://www.geocities.com/scottyyz/chart.html
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