Former FBI agent calls informant who helped convict mafia leaders a friend
A former FBI agent says he considered his star Mafia informant a friend and did not investigate when this informant let him know he had killed a rival mobster. Lin DeVecchio, who once headed the FBI's Bonanno and Colombo anti-crime squads in New York, makes these revelations in an interview with CNN'sAnderson Cooper.
The story offers a rare look into the relationship between law enforcement and informants and will be broadcast on "60 Minutes" this Sunday, May 22 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
DeVecchio says that his top echelon informant, Greg Scarpa, a made member of the Colombo crime family, provided valuable information that helped investigators in the famous Commission case that took down some of the Mafia's top leaders. But DeVecchio's handling of Scarpa - who was so deadly he was known on the street as "The Grim Reaper" - became the center of a major scandal. DeVecchio was charged with murder by the Brooklyn district attorney in 2006, but a key witness in the case was discredited and the charges against DeVecchio were dismissed.
DeVecchio has just published a book called "We're Going to Win This Thing," in which he argues he was wrongly accused and unfairly maligned.
In his interview with Cooper, DeVecchio says that he and Scarpa were friends. "His career and his life and his milieu that he worked in was so different than mine, that it was fascinating to me to learn about that,'' he says. "I liked the guy...I'm not ashamed of that. [It] doesn't mean I condone what he did," DeVecchio tells Cooper. "It was a friendship, absolutely."
The story offers a rare look into the relationship between law enforcement and informants and will be broadcast on "60 Minutes" this Sunday, May 22 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
DeVecchio says that his top echelon informant, Greg Scarpa, a made member of the Colombo crime family, provided valuable information that helped investigators in the famous Commission case that took down some of the Mafia's top leaders. But DeVecchio's handling of Scarpa - who was so deadly he was known on the street as "The Grim Reaper" - became the center of a major scandal. DeVecchio was charged with murder by the Brooklyn district attorney in 2006, but a key witness in the case was discredited and the charges against DeVecchio were dismissed.
DeVecchio has just published a book called "We're Going to Win This Thing," in which he argues he was wrongly accused and unfairly maligned.
In his interview with Cooper, DeVecchio says that he and Scarpa were friends. "His career and his life and his milieu that he worked in was so different than mine, that it was fascinating to me to learn about that,'' he says. "I liked the guy...I'm not ashamed of that. [It] doesn't mean I condone what he did," DeVecchio tells Cooper. "It was a friendship, absolutely."
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