After he entered witness protection, Teresa wrote three books: the 1973
My Life In The Mafia, co-written with
Newsday writer Thomas C. Renner, which documented his
Cosa Nostra career and the 1960s Boston
Irish Mob Wars; the 1975 ''Vinnie Teresa's Mafia
, also co-written with Renner, which documented his life during his time in the Federal Witness Protection Program and beyond; and the 1978 fictional novel Wiseguys'', solely written by Teresa.
My Life In The Mafia chronicles Teresa's path to a life in organized crime, his time as a lieutenant for Raymond Patriarca, his fall in the Patriarca crime family, and the circumstances that led to him to seek the protection of the Federal government and the Federal Witness Protection Program. Teresa's testimony put a large number of the Patriarca crime family in jail. ''Vinnie Teresa's Mafia'' chronicles Teresa's time as a government witness and subsequent life, with a number of anecdotes on his former life in the mob. Due to claimed government indifference, he does not succeed in making a life for himself and his family once out of witness protection. He was very bitter against the Federal government for his treatment in the Federal Witness Protection Program, feeling they used him with no regard to his safety, or an appreciation of his value. Thomas C. Renner implies this may have been more melodramatics than reality. Teresa's final book and fictional novel,
Wiseguys, was written solely by Teresa. The story is of Johnny Forza, a thinly disguised doppelganger of Teresa. It chronicles Forza's life as a betrayed government witness, his battles with a former friend mob member "Butch" (again, a thinly disguised doppelganger for New Jersey mob member Frank "Butch" Miceli), his life on the lam with his girlfriend and his final confrontations with everyone who has done him wrong. Normally, to become a
made member in an Italian mob, potential candidates have to first commit a murder at the direction of the mob. Teresa claimed that while he reached the position of lieutenant in the Patriarca crime family, this was mainly due to his prowess as a money maker for Raymond Patriarca, and that he never murdered anyone. The US government had no evidence to the contrary and as he was a very valuable witness, he was taken at his word. In the Witness Protection Program, Teresa and his family were briefly located in
El Paso, Texas and
San Diego, California before they settled in the
Seattle area, where he lived under his new identity. His son Wayne was convicted of first-degree murder in the drug-related, execution-style shooting of William Walkins III, whose body was found dumped on a bank of the
Green River in
Kent, Washington. Wayne was sentenced to life imprisonment at the
Washington State Penitentiary. In 1981, Teresa was investigated in an alleged plot to kill the prosecutors who had convicted his son. In 1982, he was charged with conspiracy to import
cocaine from Bolivia. Teresa was convicted of drug trafficking in
Tacoma, Washington and sentenced to ten years in prison. On November 27, 1984, Teresa, along with his daughter Cindy, sons Wayne and David, daughter-in-law Lynne, and an Indonesian man, Bobby Lhaksana, were indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring to smuggle $1 million worth of rare birds and animals into the United States from Australia, New Guinea and Indonesia between 1982 and 1984. ==Death==