Wiretapping Between 1961 and 1963, federal agents began
wire tapping conversations between DeCarlo and his mob associates. These wire taps revealed corruption among law enforcement, prominent businessmen and state officials including
Newark Mayor
Hugh Addonizio and influential
Hudson County politician
John J. Kenny. Both Addonizio's and Kenny's political careers ended after the wire transcripts were published. The transcripts also mentioned Sinatra. On one tape, DeCarlo discussed methods for committing murder; he described a so-called "humane" hit in which he shot a victim through the heart. According to DeCarlo, it was a painless way to die.
Saperstein death In September 1968, DeCarlo and his men brutalized Louis Saperstein, who owed DeCarlo $400,000. Government witness and former mob associate
Gerald Zelmanowitz described an intense beating of Saperstein in DeCarlo's office due to a $5,000 monthly interest payment. Zelmanowitz said Saperstein was lying on the floor, looking purple, his tongue hanging out, and he was covered in blood and spit. On November 26, 1968, Saperstein died of
arsenic poisoning. That same day, the FBI received a letter from Saperstein that detailed his problems with DeCarlo. In March 1970, DeCarlo was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment.
Presidential pardon After DeCarlo served 18 months in prison, President
Richard Nixon commuted his sentence to time served (two years of a 12-year sentence), ostensibly due to his poor health. DeCarlo himself claimed to be dying of cancer (which turned out 10 months later to be true). Disregarding the usual protocol,
U.S. Attorney General Richard Kleindienst approved the pardon request and sent it to
White House Counsel
John Dean. Dean then delivered the request directly to Nixon. It was rumored that Vice President
Spiro Agnew, a personal friend of Frank Sinatra, persuaded Nixon to approve the request. In December 1972, DeCarlo was released from prison. He died, from cancer, in
Mountainside, New Jersey, on October 20, 1973. This was five days before a deadline to pay a $20,000 fine from his 1970 conviction. He was buried in
Gate of Heaven Cemetery in
Hawthorne, New York. The funeral was scheduled for the afternoon but was held in the morning because "the family just didn't want any more publicity." ==In popular culture==