Bad News, Good Lawyers - Flipping the Real-Life Sopranos: How the FBI Dismantled a Notorious Crime Family [Podcast]
From the article
In this episode of Bad News, Good Lawyers , host Tom Firestone , head of our Government Investigations & White Collar Practice, speaks with Séamus McElearney, a retired FBI Special Agent and author of Flipping Capo: How the FBI Dismantled the Real Sopranos , about the investigation that helped dismantle the DeCavalcante organized crime family (the model for the Sopranos). McElearney explains how he and his colleagues secured the cooperation of Anthony Capo, a member of the DeCavalcante organized crime family, paving the way for additional members and associates to come forward and helping investigators solve 11 murders and secure convictions against 71 defendants. The conversation explores the challenges of developing cooperating witnesses within organized crime organizations and the broader impact the investigation had on the FBI’s efforts against La Cosa Nostra. McElearney also discusses the connection between the DeCavalcante family and HBO’s The Sopranos , sharing how real-life figures reacted to the series and which storylines were inspired by actual events. This episode offers a rare insider’s perspective on organized crime investigations, witness cooperation and the real-world history behind one of television’s most iconic crime dramas.
Continue reading on The National Law ReviewYou might also wanna read
Murdaugh Case Overturned: How a True Crime Media Frenzy Consumed a Rural Tragedy
The article examines the Alex Murdaugh case within the context of true crime media frenzy. Murdaugh, a former prominent South Carolina attor
The Erosion of Legal Ethics: How Meta's Lawyers Abandoned Professional Responsibilities
The article examines the erosion of legal ethics in corporate law, using Meta's legal team as a case study. It contrasts John Adams' princip

New DOJ cover-up of Todd Blanche secrets could hide 'unspeakably bad' conduct: experts
Raw Story·15h ago

Dianna Russini's Texting-and-Driving Anecdote Called Into Question by New York Times Profile
A New York Times profile of former NFL insider Dianna Russini resurfaced a story she told on a podcast about being pulled over for texting a
Radley Balko's podcast examines overbroad criminal laws and prosecutorial misconduct in the US justice system
A brief overview of journalist Radley Balko's podcast "The criminalization of nearly everything," which discusses how overbroad and vague st
U.S. Details Gambling Cases Involving Pro Athletes and Mafia Families
nytimes.com·8mo ago

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.