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Gangland Wire

Joe Broadmeadow on Jerry Tillinghast

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6 • 623 Ratings

🗓️ 7 October 2019

⏱️ 25 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Wiretappers, don’t forget to hit me up on your Venmo app. In this week’s episode, I interview retired East Providence (RI) Police Captain Joe Broadmeadow. He is a skilled and prolific true crime author who has written several non-fiction books and articles on members of the New England Crime Family, headed by the infamous Raymond L.S. Patriarca.  In this episode, we discuss his book Choices: The Jerry Tillinghast Story.  Joe met Jerry Tillinghast after he served a very long murder sentence. He was a bit wary at first, but Jerry wanted his story told and was so sincere, that joe was won over and agreed to help a man who had once been on the wrong side of the law in a major way. Joe Broadmeadow weaves the good, the bad and the ugly of Tillinghast’s life into a remarkably personal and intimate account. Jerry grew up a hardscrabble life on the Jerry and Harold Tillinghast streets of Providence. We learn he escaped by enlisting in the United States Marine Corps and fighting in Vietnam. In a pivotal moment in his life, he becomes a victim of the politics of that war and his learned behavior of never talking to authorities. He returning to Providence an angry young man and made a choice to hang with the wiseguys. He was a tough young guy who rightfully earned the reputation of a “feared mob enforcer.” Raymond L.S. Patriarca and his chief crew leader, Gerard Ouimette would become his mentors and father figures. Joe tells the inside story of the famous Bonded Vault heist and how Jerry beat that case. But a much more serious case awaited Tillinghast and Joe tells how Jerry Tillinghast was caught up in a mob murder known as the George Basmajian Homicide. We learn how his brother, Harold Tillinghast was falsely accused in that murder and Jerry refused to cooperate with the authorities in a manner that could exonerate his brother but would then implicate another mobster. As a result, his brother, Harold, served a long sentence for a murder he did not commit. Joe Broadmeadow is a skilled writer who uses his insights as a cop who investigated Organized Crime to tell compelling stories about life in the New England mob. He has a new book being released on October 8, 2019, It’s Just the Way it Was; Inside the War on the New England Crime Family and other Stories. He writes this with Brendan Doherty, a retired Rhode Island State Police Officer who worked the mob for the majority of his long career.   To go to the store or make a donation click here To rent Gangland Wire, the documentary, click here To subscribe on iTunes click here, please give me a review and help others find the podcast.

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.

0:18.0

Well, welcome all you wiretappers out there. I'm here in the studio of the Gangland Wire.

0:24.1

I appreciate all your support out there.

0:26.0

Don't forget to hit me up on the Venmo app.

0:28.5

Buy me a cup of coffee or a shot in a beer at Gangland, is the code on that.

0:33.8

We have a caller today.

0:36.7

We have a telephone interview with a former copper like myself, Joe Broadmeadow from back east, who's done a lot of work on the New England mom.

0:46.5

He has a particularly interesting book about Jerry Tillinghast, who was closely connected with, I think it was a Gerard Wemett crew in New England and part of the Raymond Patriarcha, I think they call him the office.

1:00.6

Welcome, Joe.

1:01.8

Why don't you tell a little bit of, our listeners, a little bit about your background, how you came to be working with these guys in your career?

1:09.4

Well, thank you, Gary.

1:10.6

Well, I'm a hired captain from East Providence, Rhode Island.

1:14.6

I worked a number of different, when I was a young detective, growing up on the job, I worked

1:20.6

in a number of different task forces, organized crime and drug enforcement task force with the FBI

1:25.6

and various local and state police.

1:29.5

We did a lot of cases together.

1:31.9

Rhode Island being a small, in the smallest state in the country, and pretty much everybody

1:36.4

is working on the same cases.

1:40.0

You know, organized crime was pervasive back in the 60s, 70s before before my time, even up into the 80s, 90s.

1:47.8

So we had quite a bit of contact with those guys.

1:50.9

I make a long story show.

1:51.8

What happened was after I retired, I began my writing career.

...

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