The Corporation

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The Corporation Page 69

by T. J. English


  Nene Marquez and, 324, 325

  murder of Palulu, 263, 265

  Peruvian casino deal, 384–386, 392–395, 496

  retirement from bolita business, 325–327

  RICO trial, 508–509, 512–513, 521–522

  suicide, 512

  Ernestico Torres and, 141

  Rydz, Susan, 324, 325, 457, 499, 500, 501, 511–513

  Salazar, Humberto, 399

  Salerno, Anthony “Fat Tony,” 71, 193–195, 231

  San Román, Pepe, 33, 45–46

  Santana, Armando, 214

  Scarafile, Frank, 90, 125–126, 127, 159, 161

  Sendero Luminoso, 420–422, 424, 427

  Sepe, Alfonso, 238, 239, 242–243, 310

  Sexy Cubana (informant), 436–437, 438, 494, 496

  Shadow Warrior (Felix Rodriguez), 316

  Shakur, Assata, 213–214

  Shanks, David

  attempted murder of, 487–489

  background, 156

  José Miguel Battle’s deportation, 440–441

  José Miguel Battle’s drug dealing, 354–355

  José Miguel Battle’s estate raid, 461–465

  José Miguel Battle’s trial for firearms possession, 475–477, 478–481

  bolita laundromat operation, 319–324

  Bordons’ money laundering trials, 486–487

  Casino Crillón investigation, 494–495

  cockfighting raids, 327–330

  as expert witness, 459–460

  first narcotics seizure, 157

  Gulf Liquors investigation, 416–417, 448–449, 451–452

  Hurricane Andrew, 381–382

  Kalafus and, 331–332, 365–366

  knowledge that Walled is José Miguel Battle, 436

  mole in department, 345–349

  Nicholas and, 334

  Operation Tabletop, 335–343

  Roberto Parsons and, 376–379

  Pearsall and, 234, 236–237

  Perez and, 355, 387–389

  Pons and, 367–368

  relationship with Boyd, 318, 323–324, 458, 459

  return to Battle/Corporation investigation, 410

  RICO trial deal for Miguelito Battle, 507

  RICO trial of José Miguel Battle, 483–486, 492, 509–510, 511

  Sexy Cubana and, 436–437, 438

  Vice Squad, 318

  YMR wiretap, 380

  Shultz, Dutch, 70

  Silber, Alan, 238–239

  Sirgo, Laura, 280–281

  Solano Loo, Juan, 409, 435, 441, 444

  Somoza Debayle, Anastasio, 311, 312

  Spanish Harlem (New York City), 139

  Stelzer, Lance, 222–223

  Sturgis, Frank, 57–58, 60–61, 101, 375

  Suarez, Frank, 335–340, 341–342

  Suarez, Rosa, 336–340, 341–342

  Tampa, Florida, 9, 67, 68

  Tati, 135, 151

  Tombs (Manhattan House of Detention for Men), 229–231

  Tony’s Barbershop, 74, 85

  Toribio, Jannin, 280–281, 284, 290, 324

  Torres, Bernardo de, 83

  Torres, Ernesto, Sr., 96–97, 133, 177–178

  Torres, Ernesto “Ernestico” “Rasputin”

  abduction of Battle organization bankers, 147–151

  attempted assassinations of, 154–156

  background, 96

  Pedro Battle and narcotics sales, 109

  as bolitero, 142

  Dávila and, 98, 141, 162

  deterioration of Acuna relationship, 146–147

  El Morro hit, 145–146

  entrapment of, 166–173, 177–183

  hunt for and shooting of Alvarez, 131–132, 134, 135

  hunt for Palulu, 119–120, 128–130

  jewelry heist from wives of Tati and Monchi, 151–152

  in Miami, 162–163

  murder of, 15, 16, 17, 163–164, 182–184, 199–204, 210, 216, 222–227, 228, 238–239, 286

  narcotics sales in Bronx (New York City), 110

  nickname, 140

  relationship with José Miguel Battle, 140, 152–153

  role in Battle’s organization, 140–141

  in Spain, 97–99

  sports betting, 142–143

  Torres, Roque, 335–342

  Torres, Ruby De Los Santos, 475, 476, 477

  Torriente, José Elías de la, 107–109

  Trafficante, Santo, Jr.

  assassination of John Kennedy and, 59–60, 66

  José Miguel Battle and bolita business, 8–9, 10, 68, 70–71

  control of Tampa bolita business, 67–68

  Dávila and, 138

  Fox and, 8–9

  Lanksy and, 9

  Miami cocaine business, 76

  murder of Roselli and, 206–207

  plots to assassinate Castro and, 50, 51–52, 53, 205

  Trafficante, Santo, Sr., 9, 67

  2506 Brigade

  José Miguel Battle as platoon leader, 21–22, 34–36

  citizenship and, 49

  Duran and, 214

  imprisonment in Castillo del Príncipe, 38–39, 54

  imprisonment in Havana, 38

  imprisonment in Isle of Pines, 39–43

  John F. Kennedy at Orange Bowl and, 45–48

  men in, 21, 22, 23–24, 25, 415

  organization of, 25–26

  paratroop unit, Company C, 27–28, 27–33, 30

  release and flown to U.S., 43–44

  retreat and capture of, 34–38

  San Blas as mission, 27–28

  Veterans Association, 313–314

  Watergate break-in and, 101

  Union City, New Jersey

  as base of New York City bolita business, 69

  José Miguel Battle residence in, 11, 64

  police and bolita business, 84–85

  Vaccarino, Anthony, 93

  Valachi, Joe, 217

  Valdivia, Celin, 90, 127

  Van Der Linden, Jacobo, 399–400

  Varona, Manuel Antonio de “Tony,” 53

  Venezuela, 105

  Vidan, Orestas “El Cocinero,” 269, 419, 496, 501

  Vigoa, Oscar, 308–310, 314

  Vigoa, Willie, 329

  Wack, Lawrence, 108, 241

  Walled, Alfredo, 389. See also Battle y Vargas, José Miguel, Sr. “El Gordo”

  Ward, Benjamin, 305

  Watergate burglary, 100–103

  Whitehurst, George, 78

  Wright, Ronald, 223

  YMR Fashions Corp., 267, 380, 496

  Zambrano, Manuel, 399

  Zatrapalek, Charles, 218

  Zayaz, Gerardo, 332–333, 334

  “Zero Group,” 107

  The Bay of Pigs invasion, April 17, 1961, was a hellish ordeal for the men of Brigade 2506. The battle raged for three days until the invading soldiers were either killed or forced to surrender.

  (© GETTY IMAGES)

  Many members of the brigade were held as prisoners by the government of Fidel Castro. It was a bitter defeat that would shape the lives of everyone involved.

  (© GETTY IMAGES)

  After members of the brigade were captured, they were brought before Fidel Castro (far right), who smoked a cigar and reveled in the humiliation of his captives.

  (© AP PHOTOS)

  After the release of prisoners, President John F. Kennedy met surviving members of the brigade at the Orange Bowl in Miami. He was presented with the brigade’s official fag. Eleven months later Kennedy was assassinated.

  (© GETTY IMAGES)

  José Miguel Battle and Angel Mujica knew each other since Havana. They were both members of Brigade 2506, served time in the infamous Cuban prison on the Isle of Pines, and, on the same day, they both joined the U.S. Army.

  (© U.S. ARMY PHOTOS)

  Santo Trafficante Jr. (wearing glasses) proved to be an important contact for Battle as he forged a relationship with the Mafia in the United States. Here Trafficante is detained in Havana, where
he was incarcerated for a time in 1959 before being released and deported back to the States.

  (© AP PHOTOS)

  Anthony “Fat Tony” Salerno, titular boss of the Genovese crime family, controlled the numbers racket for all Five Families in NYC. Salerno created a power sharing arrangement with Battle and the Cuban boliteros that lasted for more than a decade.

  (© GETTY IMAGES)

  Union City Mayor William Musto and Deputy Police Chief Frank Scarafle at their arraignment on gambling charges.

  (© JERSEY JOURNAL)

  Humberto “Isleño” Dávila, the most successful of the bolita bankers, seen here at a social function in mid-1975 with his wife, his mother, his brother Tony and Tony’s wife.

  (© DÁVILA FAMILY)

  Ernesto Torres, who José Miguel Battle sometimes referred to as El Hijo Pródigo, the Prodigal Son.

  (© ERNESTO TORRES IZQUIERDO)

  Pedro Battle (left), stands with Ernesto Torres at the baptism of Ernesto’s son. Pedro Battle served as godfather, with the woman holding the child serving as godmother.

  (© ERNESTO TORRES IZQUIERDO)

  Carlos “Charley” Hernandez, seen here with his mother.

  (© KELLY NOGUEROL/CAROL DALEY)

  Ernesto Torres, shot dead in the closet of an apartment in Opa-Locka, Florida.

  (© U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  The coup de grâce, a bullet between the eyes, was administered by El Padrino.

  (© U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  Idalia Fernandez in a 1973 police mug shot photo.

  (© NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT)

  The murder of Ernesto Torres and assault on Idalia Fernandez: this schematic of the crime scene was created by prosecutors for the trial of Battle on the charge of Conspiracy to Commit Murder. At the time, prosecutors did not know that Battle was actually one of the assailants.

  (© U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  José “Palulu” Enriquez

  Julio “Chino” Acuna

  Conrado “Lalo” Pons

  Gustavo Battle

  Robert Hopkins

  Effugenia Reyes

  There were nearly a dozen attempts on the life of Palulu Enriquez, in prison and out, over the course of a decade, before the deed was finally done. Palulu was shot while convalescing in a hospital by a gunman disguised as a male nurse.

  (© NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT)

  Roberto Parsons, former CIA covert operator turned hit man for the Corporation.

  (© U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  Miami police officer Dave Shanks (far right) with fellow detectives, including Sgt. Jimmy Boyd in white shirt.

  BELOW: Shanks receives a special citation from Miami-Dade Police Director Fred Taylor

  (© DAVID SHANKS)

  Shanks making a street arrest. In 1984, he was temporarily demoted from the Organized Crime Squad to uniform street patrol.

  (© DAVID SHANKS)

  The bolita arson wars of the mid-1980s resulted in many gruesome homicides, including these victims, above and below, who were incinerated to death in a fire on Evergreen Avenue in Brooklyn that was undertaken by Willie Diaz (inset).

  (© NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT)

  José Miguel Battle being arrested in Miami for attending and betting on cockfights, surrounded by Miami-Dade police officers.

  (© U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  Battle was a financial and political supporter of the Contras, a rebel insurgency attempting to overthrow the leftist Sandinista government in Nicaragua. The Contras trained at camps in South Florida and were supported by anti-Castro Cuban exiles.

  (© GETTY IMAGES)

  By the early-1990s, Battle had achieved considerable notoriety in the media, partly as a result of the Presidential Commission hearings on organized crime and gambling held in New York City. As a result, law enforcement and the press came after Battle, which partly motivated his move to Lima, Peru.

  (© NEW YORK DAILY NEWS)

  El Zapotal, Battle’s estate in South Miami, as seen from the air, with the house, pool, and field hands’ quarters surrounded by mamey groves.

  (© U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  Miguelito Battle (left, with mustache), and Abraham “Polaco” Rydz (with glasses), seen here with their wives and the daughter of a business associate celebrating her bat mitzvah.

  (COURTESY OF U.S. ATTORNEY, SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA)

  The Casino Crillón opened on the bottom two floors of the Hotel Crillón, one of the most venerable hotels in the city of Lima. At left is a luggage tag from the hotel circa the early-1990s.

  (© T. J. ENGLISH)

  Abraham Rydz with his daughter Susan.

  (COURTESY OF SUSAN RYDZ)

  The suicide note that Rydz left for his daughter.

  (COURTESY OF SUSAN RYDZ)

  In later years, Battle suffered from poor health until his death in 2007. Here he is in better times, circa 1985, with his pet monkey.

  (© HISTORYMIAMI MUSEUM)

  The monument in honor of those who died at the Bay of Pigs invasion, located on Calle Ocho in Miami’s Little Havana.

  (© EVAN MICHAEL RODRIGUEZ)

  T. J. English IS A NOTED JOURNALIST, A SCREENWRITER, AND THE AUTHOR OF THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLERS HAVANA NOCTURNE, PADDY WHACKED, AND THE SAVAGE CITY, AS WELL AS OF THE WESTIES, A NATIONAL BESTSELLER, AND BORN TO KILL, WHICH WAS NOMINATED FOR AN EDGAR AWARD. HE HAS WRITTEN FOR VANITY FAIR, PLAYBOY, AND ESQUIRE, AMONG OTHER PUBLICATIONS. HIS SCREENWRITING CREDITS INCLUDE EPISODES OF THE TELEVISION CRIME DRAMAS NYPD BLUE AND HOMICIDE, FOR WHICH HE WAS AWARDED THE HUMANITAS PRIZE. T. J. LIVES IN NEW YORK CITY.

  Also by T. J. English

  WHERE THE BODIES WERE BURIED

  WHITEY’S PAYBACK

  THE SAVAGE CITY

  HAVANA NOCTURNE

  PADDY WHACKED

  BORN TO KILL

  HTE WESTIES

  First published in the United States of America 2018 by HarperCollins Publishers

  First published 2018 in Pan by Pan Macmillan Australia Pty Ltd

  1 Market Street, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, 2000

  Copyright © T. J. English 2018

  The moral right of the author to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted by any person or entity (including Google, Amazon or similar organisations), in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, scanning or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.

  Cataloguing-in-Publication entry is available from the National Library of Australia

  http://catalogue.nla.gov.au

  EPUB format: 9781760559335

  Designed by William Ruoto

  Appendix chart © U.S. Attorney, Southern District of Florida

  Cover design by Ervin Serrano

  Cover photographs © Leontura/Getty Images (gun); © NataLT/Shutterstock (texture); © millicookbook/Shutterstock (palm trees)

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