CNN logo US navbar Infoseek/Big Yellow Pathfinder/Warner Bros Main banner Start your retirement planning using Portrait Planning. Click Here. rule REPUTED MOBSTER'S ADMISSION MAY CAUSE CASE TO CRUMBLE Mercurio June 18, 1997 Web posted at: 9:47 p.m. EDT (0147 GMT) BOSTON (CNN) -- The trial of reputed mob boss Frank "Cadillac" Salemme was thrown into disarray Wednesday when mob journeyman Angelo "Sonny" Mercurio told a U.S. District Court he had been an informant for the FBI. The dramatic admission came after federal Judge Mark Wolf asked Mercurio if he had been an informant for the FBI in 1989 -- the same year his pals were being wiretapped by the agency. Mercurio, who is serving time in Georgia for marijuana possession, faced a jail sentence for contempt if he did not answer the question. _______________________________________________________________ PEG TYRE's report as seen on CNN VXtreme logo VXtreme Streaming Video _______________________________________________________________ "Yes," he replied in a loud and clear voice. His disclosure could threaten the government's case against Salemme, the reputed head of the New England Mafia, and four other reputed mobsters. Mercurio's answer raises questions about whether the Justice Department misled a federal judge to get a wiretap that helped lead to the conviction of other organized crime figures. Judges will not grant wiretaps if they know authorities haveinvestigative alternatives, such as informers. "It is an important part of a mosaic that we're going to build to argue that there has been outrageous government misconduct in this case and ask for a retrial," defense attorney John Mitchell said. Salemme's lawyers say they'll ask that the wiretaps be thrown out. If the judge agrees, the case against Salemme, as well as mobsters already convicted on wiretap evidence, could be in jeopardy. Judge says government's credibility is at stake The government's case against Salemme hinges on a wiretap recording of a ceremonial induction into the Patriarca crime family in Medford, Massachusetts, in 1989. The wiretap information led to convictions against Salemme's alleged predecessor, Raymond "Junior" Patriarca, and several others. Mercurio's admission proved the FBI lied in sworn statements they used to get permission for the tap. Agents claimed they needed the electronic surveillance of the induction, when instead they had Mercurio on the inside to help them. Scarpa "The entire premise and entire foundation of the tap may well be rotten, and the tape will be suppressed," defense attorney Anthony Cardinale said. It also potentially undermines 20 major mob convictions in New England. "I think FBI agents have gotten the message from the courts and from Congress that in organized crime cases, anything goes," criminal defense attorney Gerald Shargel said. Wolf said he will continue to press to see if the FBI obtained other wire taps by providing false information. At issue he says is the credibility of the government in the eyes of its federal judges. Correspondent Peg Tyre contributed to this report rule Read the next US story: * Negotiators optimistic about tobacco talks - June 18, 1997 Related stories: * CNN - Federal jury convicts 12 suspected Mexican Mafia members - May 30, 1997 * CNN - Mob bosses took a beating last year - Jan. 3, 1997 Related sites: * US Mafia, Short History & Key Players + Patriarca, Raymond L.S. * CSS Organized Crime Menu * Gangsters! * The New Mafia Order A history of the mafia from Mother Jones Magazine * GANG LAND: The Jerry Capeci Web Page Search for related CNN stories: ________________________________________ ______ [Help] Tip: You can restrict your search to the title of a document. Infoseek grfk Example: title:New Year's Resolutions rule Message Boards Sound off on our message boards Tell us what you think! You said it... [INLINE] Start your retirement planning using Portrait Planning. Click Here. rule To the top © 1997 Cable News Network, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you.