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Gangland Wire

Chris Paciello – South Beach Celebrity

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6623 Ratings

🗓️ 11 January 2021

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Chris Paciello – The early days Chris Paciello was born Christian Ludwigsen in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn to an Italian mother and non-Italian father who was an addict and a petty thief. Chris’s father was a street guy who rarely took care of his family. His mother moved Chris to an Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn and they began using her maiden name, Paciello. Chris started as a petty thief, boosting car stereos at age 15, and graduated to stealing cars. He became close with the New Springfield Boys, a young crew often used by both the Colombo and Bonanno families for small jobs, arson, robbery, intimidation.  Like most young men of the 1980s-90s, they dabbled in street-level drug dealing. Paciello maintained his mafia connections for use later in his criminal career. Chris Paciello – First big score Paciello got his first big break in the early 90s when he noticed some young guys loading bales of marijuana into a panel truck. Chris was always quick to see an opportunity and he followed the panel truck until the men dropped it on the street and left it unguarded. Chris knew how to hotwire an automobile so he called in his crew and they took the marijuana. Since Paciello was in a group with mafia connections, a Bonanno Capo named Anthony Graziano demanded a piece of this theft. Graziano demanded $50,000 in cash. Paciello gladly paid this tribute because they actually made over three times that amount. Chris Paciello – Armed Robbery Chris Paciello and the New Springfield Boys decide to go for the big money and robbed six banks over the next few months after the marijuana caper. Modeling themselves after the Point Break robbery crew, they meticulously planned each robbery. They cased the locations, used crash cars, knew the schedules of the armored car arrivals and the personal schedules of every bank employee. Paciello was building for the future with each bank robbery and one even netted them over $300,000. Chris Paciello – A job goes wrong Paciello was always on the prowl for a bigger job and more money. He was a thinking robber and looked into the porn industry because they usually dealt in cash. He learned about a porn magnate named Sami Shemtov who owned many porn shops in New York City.   Even while many of these porn stores were co-owned by mob members, Paciello started running surveillance on Shemtov. he learned where he lived and believed he must keep a cash hoard inside his home  Chris recruited outside his normal crew and convinced mob associates and members of a Bonanno crew called the Bath Avenue crew to help him. Bonnano associates Jimmy Calendra and Tommy Reynolds went to Shemtov’s home. Reynolds was a crack addit and unreliable to the poin that he spent the whole day smoking in preparation for the home invasion. Paciello and his crew arrived at Shemtov’s. Calendra and Reynolds went to the door, while Paciello waited in the car. Shemtov’s wife answered the door. Reynolds was jittery and afraid and for some reason he pulled his trigger killing Ms. Chemtov in front of her 9-year old daughter. The two men fled back to Pacielloo and the getaway car with no money. Newspapers later reported that Shemtov diod not have a safe and did to keep his store rfeceiuopts at home. Chris Paciello – Still out there Paciello left New York after this crime and invested much of his money into a Miami South Beach club called Risk. During this time, he hedged his bets and started proving the FBI information.  He was very successful in the Miami club scene and sooner partnered with a local celebrity named Ingrid Casares and opened Club Liquid. He became friends with many movie stars and music legends like Madonna during these days. On December 1, 1999, New York charged Paciello in the 1993 murder of Judith Shemtov.  Sofia Vergara and other wealthy customers of his South Beach club posted his three million dollar bail. After a year of negotiation, Paciello pleaded guilty to s single racketeering charge.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You are listening to Gangland Wire, hosted by former Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit Detective, Gary Jenkins.

0:16.0

Welcome all you wiretappers out there, back here in the studio of Gangland Wire.

0:20.5

Got my friend Camulus Cam Robinson on the Skype.

0:25.6

Well, wait a minute, I forget.

0:26.9

I use Skype so long that you Zoom all the time now.

0:30.9

And those guys...

0:31.5

You guys that have donated money, you know that we do a Zoom call once a month.

0:36.9

So, you know, if you haven't been donating any money, you better that we do a Zoom call once a month. So, you know, if you haven't been

0:38.2

donating any money, you better start donating some money and I'll put you on a live Zoom call

0:43.5

with myself and Cam's usually there and a few others. We had a special guest last time. I know his

0:49.9

name as well, so I know my own, Denny Griffin, who wrote the books with Frank Kulata and kind of a tribute to

0:55.8

Frank Kulata this next week or so. I think it's the 25th here. We're going to do one, and we're

1:02.6

just going to talk about your favorite my book. And I think I'm after that, I think I'll get a guest.

1:07.1

So, Cam, welcome. It's good to have you here. As always, I'm glad to be here, Gary.

1:12.1

So, Cam, let's go back over some of those other sites that you're involved with now.

1:17.0

Yeah, we've got a lot trying to put together a lot of things. I'm with a couple of the guys,

1:21.1

and we've got a Facebook site right now on the Chicago outfit of the underworld killers,

1:27.0

Kings, Killers, and Clowns. We've got a New York

1:29.8

site, the underworld of five families. And we've got sites, from those Facebook sites, you can get

1:35.6

links to other places. We're working on a series of publications that will be coming out in 2021,

1:41.5

several issues of magazines for different mob history, starting with Prohibition

1:46.4

and working on up to a pretty contemporary.

...

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