 Welcome to the original gangsters podcast. I'm your host Scott Bernstein. We're going to do a little kind of like pronostication, analysis, predictions, based on the fact that it looks like Marty Tosheta, the former coppo in the Jersey crew of the Lucchese crime family is getting some traction right now on his appeal effort to try to get a racketeering murder case. Toss based on tampering, prosecutorial misconduct and tampering of evidence that him and his attorney say, you know, prove his alibi tied to the summer 1984 murder of Jimmy Sinatra, who was a Lucchese soldier. His real name was Vincent Craparata, but went by the nickname Jimmy Sinatra, who got beaten to death with golf clubs in his auto, his auto dealership, used auto cars out of Tom's River, was beaten to death by the Jersey crew on orders of the Lucchese bosses in New York. Ton of legal drama was involved in all of this over a over a decade, both state at the state level and the federal level, longest trial in American history. That was chronicled in the movie, find me guilty with Vin Diesel talks about this. And there were quiddles and then there were you know, another cases that were brought at at different levels. Marietje Seta was was in prison, got the case thrown out initially was out for three or four years and the 2000s has been back in I think since 2011 or 12. And the case got reinstated. So the question that I'm asking right now is, are we going to see crazy filly and netty on the stand when it comes to this evidentiary hearing that Deschetto was granted earlier this month, and a possible new trial, because the the tampering on the prosecution side is connected to partially connected to crazy fills testimony at some of the trials and how it compares to some of his debriefing documents when he flipped in 1989, compared to some of his testimony in the 90s. It doesn't match up. And then there is some documents from a dentist. Marietje Seta's dentist, that shows that he was at the dentist's office when Jimmy Sinatra was murdered, couldn't have been at the murder scene, and that that that dentist appointment document was a tampered with and hidden. So there's a lot of people now asking, you know, in order for Marietje Seta to see freedom sooner rather than later, does that mean that filly and netty has to get back on the stand. And this is, you know, a guy that is, you know, close to my heart. I love Phil. I owe him a lot of my career for people that know me, know I wrote his co wrote his autobiography Mafia Prince. And, you know, he is a historical figure that was a really big deal in the 70s and 80s became a huge mafia term coat, one of the highest ranking guys to ever flip when he cut his deal in 89. And but hasn't been a guy that, you know, has hit the circuit, per se, as you've seen a lot of these other former mob guys that that joined team team USA, the Michael Francises, the Samuel Bulls, and other a multitude of others that you can find on mob two. So and I know that George and Dave over at mob talk sit down, we're also asking these questions kind of pondering, thinking aloud on how this could bring filly and netty back into the spotlight. You know, he was the underboss under his uncle, the murderous volatile maniacal little Nikki Scarfo in the 80s, caught to you know, more than 10 murders, only did about five, six years has been a witness protection for the last 30 plus, and is really living a living his best life. And you know, I tip my captain whenever I talk about it. He's the only I've met a lot of former high ranking mob guys, high ranking drug king pins, high ranking crime lords from, you know, various other criminal factions and to almost every single one of them longs for the past and want to be back in their old life, failed to his credit, just wants to be a regular Joe and has no affinity for the for the life. But he might be dragged back up into this back out into the soap opera. I would guess based on what we're seeing in these court filings and this ruling that came down in New Jersey. This month will be an evidentiary hearing next month in February. And if that goes well, there could be a new trial. And we're filly and Eddie's going to have to get up on the stand potentially. And he's got to reconcile what was in his his 302 debriefing in 89 where he claimed that I that he had no knowledge of who were the hitters in this. And then when he got on the stand saying that both Tommy Richardi and Martin Trissetta admitted to him, you know, in in conversations when they were all on the street that they had killed Jimmy Sinatra, Tommy Richardi, who allegedly was the kind of lead hitman flipped and testified, they were all working under two Mac Acetoro, who was the copper at that time. And Jimmy Sinatra was a guy that kind of wanted to he had wanted to try to kind of play both sides of the fence. He was claiming that he was retiring from the life after he had done a prison sentence. But at the same time, he had his hands in some Joker poker rackets, and I had his nephews running a pretty big Joker poker operation. And the cages want a piece of it. And Sinatra wouldn't give him that piece of it. And it ended up with him being murdered. The situation after that murder is almost equally compelling, because there was like five or six months of back and forth and sit downs between the Philadelphia mafia and the Luccheses about who would control these these nephews of Jimmy Sinatra's two Mac Acetoro and the Jersey guys eventually won those sit downs. And, you know, according to Leonetti, the nephews, you know, they turned like purple, you know, turn blue when the decision came down. And that's how in fear they were for their for their lives. But two Mac also flipped. So, you know, the chattas were left kind of hole in the bag. And they're related to the pernas, you know, New Jersey, Lucchese mob royalty. So we'll see. But I find it inevitable if this thing goes to very least at the trial, a stage, you'll see Phil back on the stand. And possibly at an evidentiary hearing, you know, in the coming months. So that's my analysis. And I wanted to keep everybody in the loop about what's going down with that Jimmy Sinatra murder case. And if Marty Trishetta can ever taste freedom again, he's a guy in the 70s was a couple at one time for the Jersey. Casey Crew, his brother Michael Maddog is out and his cousins, the pernas are, you know, they've been holding holding the fort down for most of the last 20 years of these. So for OG pod, I'm Scott Bernstein. I am out.