Podcasts about ruggerio

  • 42PODCASTS
  • 66EPISODES
  • 37mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Apr 21, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about ruggerio

Latest podcast episodes about ruggerio

The Bartholomewtown Podcast (RIpodcast.com)
RI Senate President Dominick Ruggerio Has Died. Boston Globe's Ed Fitzpatrick Reports

The Bartholomewtown Podcast (RIpodcast.com)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 16:19


Send us a textBreaking news: following a lengthy illness, Rhode Island Senate President Dominick Ruggerio has died.  The Boston Globe's Ed Fitzpatrick join Bill Bartholomew to discuss Ruggerio's legacy and what comes next on the governmental side. Support the show

The Tara Granahan Show
WPRI's Ted Nesi: on the passing Senate President Dominick Ruggerio

The Tara Granahan Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 13:08


Channel 12's Ted Nesi joins Tara to talk about the life and legacy of Senate President Dominick Ruggerio See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The News with Gene Valicenti
RI Speaker of the House Joe Shekarchi Reacts to the Passing of Senate President Dominick Ruggerio

The News with Gene Valicenti

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 4:55


RI Speaker of the House Joe Shekarchi joins Gene to discuss the passing of Senate President Dominick RuggerioSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The News with Gene Valicenti
RI Governor Dan McKee Reacts to the Passing of Senate President Dominick Ruggerio

The News with Gene Valicenti

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 4:38


Governor Dan McKee joins Gene to discuss the passing of Senate President Dominick Ruggerio.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The 'X' Zone Radio Show
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2025 60:01


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-x-zone-radio-tv-show--1078348/support.

Political Roundtable
Sen. Ryan Pearson on what's next for the RI Senate after a split in calls for new leadership

Political Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2025 3:47


Ryan Pearson's term as the second-ranking member of the Rhode Island Senate will formally end Tuesday. During a Democratic Senate caucus in November, Pearson lost a challenge to Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, and Senate Whip Val Lawson won the support to take over Pearson's role in the legislative session starting next week. More fallout is expected. All this comes as legislators will wrestle with a big budget deficit and thorny issues including housing, healthcare and the economy. Pearson and his supporters say they were motivated by how Ruggerio, now 76, missed large parts of the last session due to various health issues. But was it a smart play to pursue the challenge against Rhode Island's longest-serving lawmaker, and will that hurt the Senate's ability to get things done in the new session?

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News
10/31/2024: Senator Ruggerio; political roundtable

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2024 23:13


This week on Newsmakers: Senate President Dominick Ruggerio sits down with 12 News politics editor Ted Nesi to discuss his health, his political future and shaking up his leadership team; then, 12 News political analyst Joe Fleming and Boston Globe reporter Steph Machado join Tim White to break down the news of the week and look ahead to Election Day.

High Vibe Mindset
60. Anger Unpacked: Strategies for Anger Mangagement with Faust Ruggerio

High Vibe Mindset

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 43:43


In this episode...Faust Ruggerio, pyschologist, offers practical strategies for recognizing and managing anger effectively, with insights on healthy communication and self-awareness. By tuning in, you'll gain a deeper understanding of your anger, stress reduction, and how to cultivate an inner strength that allows you to face life's challenges with confidence. Listen and learn more about:Distinguishing healthy discussions from unhealthy arguments.Transforming anger from a destructive force into a tool for personal growthWhat is internal strength and how do you become internally strong? How to set achievable goals to develop emotional resilienceGuest bio:Faust Ruggiero is a psychologist who has been in private practice for over thirty-five years. Before entering private practice, he worked in clinics for deaf children, prisons, nursing homes, substance abuse centers, inpatient facilities, and is a consultant for major national and international corporations. He is a published research author and a professional clinical trainer.Mentioned in Show:You can learn more through his website https://www.faustruggiero.com/Faust's Books on Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/dp/1734383062?ref_=pe_93986420_774957520High Vibe links:Visit Melissa's Etsy Shop:https://www.etsy.com/shop/SouleaAffirmations?ref=shop-header-name&listing_id=1391629267&from_page=listingFull Podcast Episode Transcripts here: https://www.soulea.co/podcastSupport the show I've launched a new affirmation card deck designed with YOU, the listeners in mind! The Body Deck offers 77 beautiful cards that address the three high-vibe killers of disconnection, negative-self talk & lack of self-care/coping practices. Best of all, it's portable & affordable at $33. Benefit from the transformative practice of affirmations anywhere you go. Stop self-sabotage & start being the highest version of YOU: Visit soulea.coSupport the show

Political Roundtable
RI Senate Democratic Whip Val Lawson on Washington Bridge, East Providence and the future of the Senate

Political Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 13:54


Valarie Lawson has enjoyed a rapid rise in the Rhode Island Senate. Lawson was first elected in 2018 and she is now the third-ranking member in the chamber. The East Providence Democrat may climb even higher. Senate president Dominick Ruggerio is 75. If he wins re-election this year, Ruggerio is expected to pass the Senate […]

Holy City Sinner Radio
Episode 259 - Interview with We Are Family's Executive Director Domenico Ruggerio - (6/3/24)

Holy City Sinner Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 33:29


1. We Are Family's website - https://wearefamilycharleston.org/ 2. Closet Case Thrift Store - https://wearefamilycharleston.org/closetcasethrift 3. Park Circle Pride - https://www.parkcirclepride.com/ 4. WAF's Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/WeAreFamilyCharleston 5. WAF's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/wearefamilycharleston/ 6. WAF's YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/user/wearefamilychs 7. WAF's Twitter - https://twitter.com/wearefamilychs 8. WAF's LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/we-are-familychs/ This episode's music is by Tyler Boone (tylerboonemusic.com). The episode was produced by LMC Soundsystem.

Do You Know The Mob?
Angelo "Quack Quack" Ruggerio

Do You Know The Mob?

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 21:08


His house was bugged by the FBI and it almost cost his life. Meet one of the infamous mobsters from New York.

PRN - At the Track
EP 2420 Southeast Edition: Kevin Thomas Jr, Gio Ruggerio, Mark Garrow

PRN - At the Track

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024


Mark Garrow, co-anchor for the Performance Racing Network and host of PRN's Garage Pass; Kevin Thomas Jr., USAC Sprint Car winner at Tri-State Speedway; and Gio Ruggerio, ASA Star National Tour defending winner of the Tarheel 250 at Hickory Motor Speedway are this week's guests.

PRN - At the Track
EP 2420 Mid-America Edition: Mark Garrow, Kevin Thomas Jr., Gio Ruggerio

PRN - At the Track

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024


Mark Garrow, co-anchor for the Performance Racing Network and host of PRN's Garage Pass; Kevin Thomas Jr., USAC Sprint Car winner at Tri-State Speedway; and Gio Ruggerio, ASA Star National Tour defending winner of the Tarheel 250 at Hickory Motor Speedway are this week's guests.

The News with Gene Valicenti
4-22-24 Senate President Dominick Ruggerio

The News with Gene Valicenti

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 10:13


Senate President Dominick Ruggerio joins Gene to talk about the Washington Bridge latest, RIPTA Relocation, Border tolls, and moreSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

In the Line of Fire with Gary Dillon
2024-06 - Friend of the Family - Edgar Robb (FBI, Ret.) - Part 2

In the Line of Fire with Gary Dillon

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2024 61:07


I'm excited to interview my friend Ed Robb for part 2 of the Friend of the Family series. Ed served the FBI for twenty years and was regarded as one of the best undercover agents in the bureau's history. In this episode, we'll learn more about the Coldwater case and some of it's mafia players – Jimmy Aquafredda, Santo Trafficante, JoJo Fitapelli, Sonny Black, Left “Two guns” Ruggerio, and more. 

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News
3/8/2024: Sens. Ruggerio and Pearson

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2024 23:04


This week on Newsmakers: Senate President Dominick Ruggerio and Senate Majority Leader Ryan Pearson. The Senate's two top Democrats discuss the Washington Bridge crisis, the new package of health bills, their political futures and more.

Roughing Fenders Podcast
Season 2 Episode 28 Front Stretch Family Get Togethers

Roughing Fenders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 98:54


This past weekend we were couch racing, We watched Claremont Fall Challenge and also little bit of Oxford 300 James headed off to SOBO for the Boone Tractor 199 for the Smart TourAndy J Picked up wins and pissed off tech, Jason and Burt ran great races but some controversy happened Amber Lynn took a hard lick down the back stretch and much more happened Claremont had 3 days of racing action with 10 to 12 different divisons running that weekend we cover finishes and some controversy thereASA had a whole family reunion for the Nasse family after heated battle between him and Ruggerio happened at the Winchester 400 and much more !We covered alot and we got put on parole for next year with 3 of the 4 tracks that we squashed our beef with which we look forward to working with next year !

Ecommerce Conversations by Practical Ecommerce
For Manly Bands, Manufacturing Is Storytelling Gold

Ecommerce Conversations by Practical Ecommerce

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 31:05


John Ruggiero is co-founder with his wife, Michelle, of Manly Bands, a Utah-based direct-to-consumer seller of men's rings. The company launched in 2016 after John couldn't find a suitable wedding band.This is Ruggiero's second appearance on the podcast. In April 2021, we discussed the company's founding, unique ring materials, and more. Since then, Manly Bands has acquired its manufacturer. Filming the making of rings from, say, Jack Daniel's whiskey barrels or Fender guitar strings creates compelling video, says Ruggerio, perfect for storytelling on social media and elsewhere.For an edited and condensed transcript with embedded audio, see: https://pec-ly.com/?6ps5For all condensed transcripts with audio, see: https://www.practicalecommerce.com/tag/podcasts******The mission of Practical Ecommerce is to help online merchants improve their businesses. We do this with expert articles, podcasts, and webinars. We are an independent publishing company founded in 2005 and unaffiliated with any ecommerce platform or provider. http://www.practicalecommerce.com 

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: The Story Of Mafia Chef David Ruggiero

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2023 17:59


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't.(commercial at 10:54)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.htmlThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5080327/advertisement

The Worn & Wound Podcast
Time On Screen: Mr. Ruggerio's Neighborhood

The Worn & Wound Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 74:31


On this episode of Time on Screen, Zach is joined by Asher Rapkin, co-founder of Collective Horology. We return to the small screen this week to focus on what might just be as close as we'll ever come to a consensus pick for the greatest television show of them all, The Sopranos. Zach and Asher reminisce about catching the series as it aired (they're both kind of old) and acquiring those iconic DVD box sets, another collecting rabbit hole altogether. Then they dive into “Mr. Ruggerio's Neighborhood,” the season 3 premiere that originally aired in the spring of 2001, setting the table for what some fans argue is the best single season of the show. This episode, which tracks an FBI team as they attempt to plant a listening device in the Soprano home (the “sausage factory”), is uniquely obsessed with time, and has what is easily one of the show's great watch spots on Agent Harris. His Timex (with an Indiglo dial) is sneakily great character work, drawing a clear line between Tony and life of ill gotten gains, and the more humble means of the government employee just doing his job in trying to take him down.To stay on top of all new episodes, you can subscribe to The Worn & Wound Podcast — now available on all major platforms including iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Soundcloud, Spotify, and more. You can also find our RSS feed here.And if you like what you hear, then don't forget to leave us a review on iTunes.If there's a question you want us to answer you can hit us up at info@wornandwound.com, and we'll put your question in the queue.Show NotesAsher's wrist check: Armin Strom Gravity Equal Force P.03 for CollectiveZach's wrist check: IWC Pilot Chronograph 41 CerataniumThe Ringer's Sopranos Episode RankingNot Fade AwayThe Many Saints of NewarkBreakdown of the Sopranos finale

The 'X' Zone Radio Show
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2023 60:01


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases.******************************************************************To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv*** AND NOW ***The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.comThe ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

Rhode Island Report
BONUS: Live taping with House Speaker Shekarchi and Senate President Ruggerio

Rhode Island Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2023 61:57


Listen to a live event taped at the Rhode Island PBS studios celebrating the podcast's 100th episode. Our host, Ed Fitzpatrick, and Jim Ludes from Salve Regina and Rhode Island PBS interview House Speaker Joe Shekarchi and Senate President Dominick Ruggerio. Brown political science professor Wendy Schiller concludes the show with some analysis. Tips and ideas? Email us at rinews@globe.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Dan Yorke Show
Senate President Ruggerio Talks Proposed iGaming Legislation and Beyond

The Dan Yorke Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2023 24:47


Senate President Dominck Ruggerio joins the show to discuss proposed iGaming legislation and his thoughts on moving RIPTA under the DOT umbrella. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sweat & Grime
REBROADCAST: The Disaster with Andrew Ruggerio

Sweat & Grime

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 70:44


This week while Bryan and Rick are at conexpo we're rebroadcasting our episode with Andrew!Donate and support the show!Sweat & Grime is a podcast created for the skilled trades, hosted by the skilled trades. Bryan is a freelance heavy equipment operator and content creator, Rick is an owner/operator of an excavation business, Matt is a general contractor, and Greg Johnson is a plumber.

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: Chef By Day, Mafioso By Night

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 17:57


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't.(commercial at 10:54)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.html

A Lively Experiment - Presented by Rhode Island PBS
Should CCRI and RIC have armed police officers on campus?

A Lively Experiment - Presented by Rhode Island PBS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2023 28:59


Watchdog RI Chairman Ken Block, RI Black Business Association CEO Lisa Ranglin, and Former RI Democratic Party Chairman Bill Lynch join Moderator Jim Hummel to discuss a bill that would arm officers at CCRI and RIC, Ruggerio wants to legalize online gaming, firefighters lobby for benefits for hypertension and PTSD, plus a special message for our longtime Lively director.

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News
2/17/2023: Sens. Ruggerio and Pearson

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2023 28:19


This week on Newsmakers: Senate President Dominick Ruggerio and Senate Majority Leader Ryan Pearson. The Senate's two top Democrats discuss their priorities for 2023, lowering the state sales tax, their political futures and more.

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: The Man Who Was A Chef By Day And A Mafioso By Night

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 17:57


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't.(commercial at 11:54)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.html

Deep Cover: The Real Donnie Brasco
S3 Ep2: Life and Death Phone Call with Lefty Ruggerio and Donnie, Part 1

Deep Cover: The Real Donnie Brasco

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2022 40:44 Transcription Available


In this episode, you will hear the real life conversation between Lefty and Joe as Donnie faced a life-and-death situation as he dealt with accusations of theft from fellow mobster Tony Mirra.  Join co-hosts Leo Rossi and Joe Pistone as they dive into the first tape from Joe's collection of undercover conversations. Hear from Lefty Ruggiero's wife, as she urgently tries to contact Joe for Lefty, and then from Lefty himself as he questions Joe to find out the truth behind the accusations.  It's high drama on this episode of Deep Cover: The Real Donnie Brasco! If you have questions about this episode or past episodes, you can ask them here by joining the Motion Lounge, where you can also listen to the full tape used in this episode. About the MOTION LOUNGE ! For the first time, we are offering a subscription plan. For just $5.99 a month you will join the Motion Lounge and get: Season Exclusives, such as the complete collection of tapes Joseph D. Pistone recorded while in deep cover with New York's most notorious crime families. AD Free Podcast Episodes (Two Days Early) Unedited Video Episodes & Behind the Scenes Content Member-only Bonus Episodes Member-only AMA's (ask me anything) Family-first access and discounts to live events.    Join now by clicking THIS LINK! Not ready to become a friend of ours? Stay connected via social using the links below: Instagram: @deepcoverpod Facebook: @deepcoverpodcast Twitter: @deepcoverpodcast  Episode notes: [00:01:30] -  Introduction to Joe's defense for his life [00:02:18] - Louise Ruggiero's (Lefty's wife) concerned call to Joe about Lefty's meeting; quick brief on Tony Mirra [00:04:34] - Lefty's call to Joe about Lefty's meeting with Tony Mirra [00:05:37] - Who is Rocky? [00:06:52] - $250,000 accusation [00:07:46] - Lefty probing for information [00:09:36] - Joe explains the story he's trying to sell [00:11:45] - Junk money, Zips [00:19:37] - Lefty continues to probe/explain, compares Tony Mirra's and Donnie's situation [00:24:59] - Sally - head of the Bonanno family [00:29:27] - Federal “Stool Pigeon” [00:35:29] - Lefty and Tony Mirra's bad blood [00:39:00] - Lefty and Joe (Donnie) are in pinch, how will this play out in the next episode?

Our Thing with Sammy The Bull
Fireside With The Underboss - "If We Pay This Money, Our Children Will Become Victims"

Our Thing with Sammy The Bull

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 9:32


After Carlo Gambino's nephew is kidnapped, he uses John Gotti and Angelo Ruggerio to get revenge. Sammy tells the story of the hit that laid the groundwork for John and Angelo to become made into the Gambino family.

The Wolf’s Den
The Ins and Outs of Plants (w/ John Ruggerio)

The Wolf’s Den

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2022 34:37


Marcus Celiano and Plant Detectives' John Ruggerio discuss working in the off-season, the future of hardscaping, and more. Plant Detectives: https://plantdetectives.com https://www.instagram.com/plantdetectives Golden Wolf Landscape & Design: https://goldenwolflandscapeanddesign.com https://www.instagram.com/goldenwolflandscapellc https://www.facebook.com/goldenwolflandscapeanddesignLLC

Gangland Wire
Lefty Ruggerio and Joe Pistone

Gangland Wire

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 28:00


Retired Kansas City Police Intelligence detective Gary Jenkins interviews Joe Pistone, Retired FBI agent Doug Fencl and a former cellmate of Lefty Ruggerio and friend of Gary's Steve St. John. We learn that Lefty Ruggerio... The post Lefty Ruggerio and Joe Pistone appeared first on Gangland Wire.

Midnight Train Podcast
Crazy Sting Operations

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022 140:13


www.patreon.com/accidentaldads for bonus content and to support the show AND The Save The Music Foundation!   Top police stings   A sting operation is a deceitful operation used by law enforcement to apprehend criminals in the act of trying to commit a crime. In order to obtain proof of a suspect's misconduct, a typical sting involves an undercover law enforcement officer, investigator, or cooperative member of the public acting as a criminal partner or prospective victim and cooperating with a suspect's activities. Journalists for the mass media occasionally use sting operations to film and disseminate footage of illegal conduct.   Sting procedures are prevalent in many nations, including the United States, but are prohibited in others, like Sweden and France. Certain sting operations are prohibited, such as those carried out in the Philippines where it is against the law for police enforcement to act as drug traffickers in order to catch purchasers of illegal substances.   Examples   Offering free sports or airline tickets to lure fugitives out of hiding. Deploying a bait car (also called a honey trap) to catch a car thief Setting up a seemingly vulnerable honeypot computer to lure and gain information about hackers Arranging for someone under the legal drinking age to ask an adult to buy an alcoholic beverage or tobacco products for them Passing off weapons or explosives (whether fake or real), to a would-be terrorist Posing as: someone who is seeking illegal drugs, contraband, or child pornography, to catch a supplier (or as a supplier to catch a customer) a child in a chat room to identify a potential online child predator a potential customer of illegal prostitution, or as a prostitute to catch a would-be customer a hitman to catch customers and solicitors of murder-for-hire; or as a customer to catch a hitman a spectator of an illegal dogfighting ring a documentary film crew to lure a pirate to the country where a crime was committed.   Whether sting operations constitute entrapment raises ethical questions. Law enforcement might have to be careful not to incite someone who wouldn't have otherwise committed a crime to do so. Additionally, while conducting such operations, the police frequently commit the same crimes, like purchasing or selling narcotics, enticing prostitutes, etc. The defendant may raise the entrapment defense in common law jurisdictions.   Contrary to common belief, however, laws against entrapment do not forbid undercover police personnel from pretending to be criminals or deny that they are police officers. Entrapment is normally only a defense when suspects are coerced into confessing to a crime they probably would not have otherwise committed. However, the legal meaning of this coercion differs widely from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Entrapment might be used as a defense, for instance, if undercover agents forced a possible suspect to manufacture illicit narcotics in order to sell them. Entrapment has often not taken place if a suspect is already producing narcotics and authorities pretend as purchasers to apprehend them.   Operation Entebbe The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) commandos successfully carried out Operation Entebbe or Operation Thunderbolt, a counterterrorism hostage-rescue mission, at Entebbe Airport in Uganda on July 4, 1976. A week earlier, on June 27, two members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine - External Operations (PFLP-EO) (who had previously split from the PFLP of George Habash) and two members of the German Revolutionary Cells hijacked an Air France Airbus A300 jet airliner carrying 248 passengers. The declared goal of the hijackers was to trade the hostages for the release of 13 detainees in four other countries and the release of 40 Palestinian terrorists and related prisoners who were detained in Israel. The flight, which had left Tel Aviv for Paris, was rerouted after a stopover in Athens through Benghazi to Entebbe, the country of Uganda's principal airport. The ruler Idi Amin, who had been made aware of the hijacking from the start[10], encouraged the hijackers and personally greeted them. The hijackers confined all Israelis and a few non-Israeli Jews into a separate room after transferring all captives from the plane to a deserted airport facility.  148 captives who were not Israelis were freed and taken to Paris over the course of the next two days. Ninety-four passengers—mostly Israelis—and the 12-person Air France crew were held captive and threatened with execution.  Based on information from the Israeli intelligence service Mossad, the IDF took action. If the demands for the release of the prisoners were not granted, the hijackers threatened to murder the hostages. The preparation of the rescue effort was prompted by this threat. These strategies included getting ready for armed opposition from the Uganda Army. It was a nighttime operation. For the rescue mission, Israeli transport planes flew 100 commandos to Uganda over a distance of 4,000 kilometers (2,500 miles). The operation took 90 minutes to complete after a week of planning. Out of the 106 captives still held, 102 were freed, and three were murdered. In a hospital, the second captive was later slain. Lt. Col. Yonatan Netanyahu, the unit leader, was one of the five injured Israeli commandos. Netanyahu was Benjamin Netanyahu's elder sibling and the future Israeli prime minister. Eleven Soviet-built MiG-17s and MiG-21s of the Ugandan air force were destroyed, and all five hijackers and forty-five Ugandan troops were killed. Idi Amin gave the command to attack and kill Kenyans living in Uganda after the operation because Kenyan sources supported Israel. 245 Kenyans in Uganda were killed as a consequence, and 3,000 left the nation. In honor of Yonatan Netanyahu, the commander of the force, Operation Entebbe, which had the military codename Operation Thunderbolt, is occasionally referred to retroactively as Operation Jonathan.   Operation Valkyrie Senior Nazi military officers and Adolf Hitler convened in the Wolf's Lair in Rastenburg, Eastern Prussia, on July 20, 1944. Hitler's body was discovered scattered across the table as the Nazi military chiefs sat down to plan troop deployments on the Eastern Front when an explosion burst through the steamy meeting room. With the Führer's death, the Nazi threat to Europe could have been lifted. or so it seems at first.   Claus von Stauffenberg and his accomplices believed they had turned the course of World War II and maybe saved thousands of extra lives for a brief period of time in history. The July Plot, also known as Operation Valkyrie, was the most famous attempt to have Hitler killed, although it was ultimately unsuccessful for a variety of reasons, some of which are still unknown to this day. The July Plot Is Hatched Many Germans, including some of the country's top military figures, had begun to lose faith in Germany's ability to win the war by the summer of 1944. Hitler was widely held responsible for ruining Germany. The Wolfsschanze was one of Hitler's military headquarters. A number of prominent politicians and senior military figures devised a plan to murder the Führer by detonating a bomb at a conference there in order to spark political unification and a coup. Operation Valkyrie was the name of the strategy. The plan was that after Hitler's death, the military would assert that the murder was the result of a Nazi Party coup attempt, and the Reserve Army would take significant buildings in Berlin and detain senior Nazi figures. Carl Friedrich Goerdeler would become Germany's new chancellor, and Ludwig Beck would become its first president. The new administration wanted to negotiate a peaceful conclusion to the war, ideally with benefits for Germany. The main conspirators' motives varied, according to Philipp Freiherr Von Boeselager, one of the last remaining participants in the July Plot. Many of them only saw it as a means of avoiding military defeat, while others hoped to at least partially restore some of the nation's morals. They chose Claus von Stauffenberg, a young colonel in the German army, to carry out the assassination. Despite not being a member of the Nazi party in the traditional sense, Stauffenberg was a devoted German patriot. In the end, he came to think that if Germany was to be saved, it was his patriotic duty to expel Adolf Hitler. Hitler, though, had experienced assassination attempts before. Assassination attempts against Hitler had been more frequent since his spectacular ascent to the top of Germany's political scene in the late 1930s. Hitler, who was becoming more and more paranoid, frequently altered his plans without warning and at the last minute. What Went Wrong Stauffenberg entered the bunker at Wolfsschanze on July 20, 1944. The conference was planned to take place in a concrete, windowless subterranean bunker that was closed off by a large steel door. By making sure it happened within one of these facilities, the detonation would be confined and anyone nearby the explosive device would die quickly from the shrapnel. The conference was moved to an above-ground wooden bunker with better air circulation on July 20 due to the oppressively hot weather, according to Pierre Galante's Operation Valkyrie: The German Generals' Plot Against Hitler. Numerous windows, a wooden table, and other beautiful furniture were all present in the area, which meant that the potential explosion would be much diminished since the energy of the blast would be absorbed and diffused. Stauffenberg was aware that this was the case, but he nonetheless proceeded, assuming that two explosives would be sufficient to destroy the room and kill everyone within. Stauffenberg excused himself when he arrived, saying that he needed to change his clothing, and went to a private room. The two explosives needed to be armed and primed. However, he only had time to arm one of the two devices due to an unexpected phone call and a quick knock at his door. Thus, the possibility of a greater blast was cut in half. Stauffenberg realized that in order to cause any kind of harm, the explosive device needed to be placed as near to Hitler as possible. He was able to get a seat as near to Hitler as possible with only one other person between them by claiming that his hearing was impaired due to his wounds. Placing the bag as near to Hitler as possible, Stauffenberg then left the room pretending to take a personal call. The briefcase was accidentally shifted to the opposite side of a large wooden leg that was supporting the meeting room table as another official was taking a seat. The Aftermath Panic broke out after the device exploded at precisely 12:42 pm. Twenty individuals were hurt, including three cops who subsequently died from their injuries, and a stenographer was instantaneously murdered. Stauffenberg and his assistant Werner von Haeften leapt into a staff car and bluffed their way past three different military checkpoints to flee the mayhem at the Wolfsschanze complex because they believed that Hitler was indeed dead. Hitler, however, along with everyone else who was protected by the large wooden table leg, only suffered a few minor cuts and an eardrum perforation. He had fully torn-up pants, and the Nazi leadership would subsequently utilize pictures of them in a propaganda effort. Ian Kershaw, a historian, claims that during the explosion, contradictory news concerning Hitler's fate came. In spite of the disarray, the Reserve Army started detaining senior Nazi officials in Berlin. The entire scheme, however, was eventually thwarted by delays, unclear communication, and the announcement that Hitler was still alive. The conspirators were all given the death penalty in a hastily called court martial the same evening by General Friedrich Fromm. In the courtyard of the Bendlerblock, a makeshift firing squad murdered Stauffenberg, von Haeften, Olbricht, and another officer, Albrecht Mertz von Quirnheim, while Ludwig Beck committed himself. At Berlin's Plötzensee jail, Berthold Stauffenberg was gently strangled while the incident was being recorded for Hitler to see. Hitler's life was ultimately saved that day by a number of interrelated reasons, but the conspirators were right that Germany was headed for disaster. Less than a year later, the Nazi leader and his closest advisers committed suicide. Operation Iceman Ever wonder what its like working undercover with an alleged murderer? Well, let's just say it's not hard to get a stuffy nose around this case… In fact, serial killer Richard Kuklinski's preferred method of murder involved using a nasal spray bottle to spritz cyanide into the faces of his victims. As a result, undercover agent Dominick Polifrone was never more on guard than during the 18 months he spent building a case against the so-called Iceman. “No matter where I went with him, I wore this leather jacket with a pocket sewn inside containing a small-caliber weapon,” recalls Polifrone, who gained his target's confidence and taped dozens of their conversations. “I knew that I was somewhere on his hit list. If he'd pulled out that nasal spray, I'd have to protect myself.” The streetwise New Jersey officer acquired enough proof before Kuklinski had suspicions, preventing that situation from occurring. Finally, the enormous 6-foot-4 gangland killer was apprehended thanks to his evidence. “I've met hundreds of bad guys, but Kuklinski was a totally different type of individual,” he tells The Post. “He was coldhearted — ice-cold like the devil. He had no remorse about anything.”  Kuklinski was captured by Polifrone in a combined operation between the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms and the office of the New Jersey attorney general. The criminal, who was a leading suspect in the murder of a mobster whose body was found two years after his disappearance, was posing as a respectable businessman residing in suburban Dumont, New Jersey. The reason the medical examiners discovered ice in the muscle tissue was because Kuklinski, who earned his notoriety for frequently freezing the bodies of his victims and then defrosting them, erred that time. Police made an indirect connection between the deceased man and Kuklinski, who was charged with a number of previous homicides.  “We had to get something nobody knew,” recalls Polifrone. The sting only appears briefly on screen in the film. In order to gain Kuklinski's trust, Polifrone, a resident of Hackensack, New Jersey, pretended to be a "bad person" for a whole year and a half. They met in parks and rest areas along highways and discussed the horrific killings Kuklinski had carried out, including a Mafia hit in Detroit for which he was paid $65,000. Additionally, there were "statement killings." To put a dead canary in the mouth of a victim as a warning to other victims, one mafia leader paid him extra. Another occasion, Kuklinski made light of the fact that he saw a gang member consume an entire cheeseburger laced with cyanide before passing away while joking with Polifrone. Recalls the cop: “He told me that cyanide normally works real quick and easy, but that ‘this guy has the constitution of a God damn ox, and is just eating and eating.  “He said he almost ate the whole burger and then, bam, he's down!” Polifrone knew exactly how to play his role. “I laughed, of course,” he shrugs. “That's what bad guys do.”  Paradoxically, Kuklinski was a committed family man. He led a Jekyll-and-Hyde existence.  “He never socialized, gambled or messed around with other women,” adds Polifrone. “He lived for his wife and kids.” One minute he'd be repairing his daughters' toys, the next, dismembering a body with a chain saw and stuffing it into an oil drum. “He would come home and completely shut off this murderous component and seek security and love from his family,” says “Iceman” director Vromen. “He fulfilled the need to provide for them by killing.” Polifrone finally nailed Kuklinski after tricking him into buying what he thought was pure cyanide. A team of feds and ATF officers arrested him in December 1986. Twenty-eight years later, he reflects on the man who died, apparently of natural causes, in Trenton Prison in 2006 at age 70. Eyebrows were raised because he was due to appear as a witness at the trial of a Gambino family underboss. “I hope he died a slow death because of what he did to families and individuals,” concludes Polifrone. “He had no mercy. And if it was foul play, that's OK with me.” So let's talk about some controversial sting operations you may or may not have heard of.   ACORN Sting   Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now is known as ACORN. ACORN was a group of neighborhood-based organizations in the US that supported low- and middle-income families. They also offered details on affordable housing and voter registration. James O'Keefe and Hannah Giles, two young conservative activists, published recordings that had been edited with care in 2009. The two pretended to be a pimp and a prostitute before using a hidden camera to get unflattering answers from ACORN workers that seemed to give them advice on how to hide their prostitution business and avoid paying taxes.The plea for assistance in obtaining funding for a brothel didn't appear to deter the ACORN employees either. This sparked a national debate and led to a reduction in financing from public and private sources. ACORN declared on March 22, 2010, that it was disbanding and shutting all of its connected state chapters as a result of declining funding. Interesting fact: On January 25, 2010, James O'Keefe and three other people were detained on felony charges for allegedly tampering with the phones at Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu's office in New Orleans. O'Keefe stated that he was looking into claims that Landrieu's staff had dismissed constituent phone calls over the health care issue. O'Keefe recorded the action as they pretended to be telephone repairmen.In the end, they were accused with breaking into a government building under false pretenses, a misdemeanor. Following his admission of guilt, O'Keefe received a three-year probationary period, 100 hours of community service, and a $1,500 fine.   Operation West End The largest undercover news story in Indian journalism has been described like this. In order to expose the alleged culture of bribery inside the Indian Ministry of Defense, a well-known newspaper from India by the name of Tehelka—which translates as "sensation" in Hindi—started its first significant undercover operation, "Operation West End" in 2001. Two reporters from the publication pretended to be London-based armaments dealers from a fake firm. In the undercover film, numerous politicians and defense officials are shown discussing and accepting bribes in exchange for assisting them in obtaining government contracts, including Bangaru Laxman, secretary of the ruling BJP party. Laxman and Military Minister George Fernandes (shown above) resigned following the release of the tapes, and a number of other defense ministry employees were placed on administrative leave.   Interesting Fact: Instead of initially acting on the evidence from the sting operation, the Indian government accused the newspaper of fabricating the allegations. The main financial backers of Tehelka were made targets of investigations, and the newspaper company was almost ruined. In 2003, Tehelka was re-launched as a weekly newspaper, and was funded by faithful subscribers and other well-wishers. In 2007, Tehelka shifted to a regular magazine format.   Senator Larry Craig On June 11, 2007, an undercover police officer conducting a sting operation targeting males cruising for sex at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport detained Idaho Senator Larry Craig. Sgt. Dave Karsnia, the arresting officer, claimed that just after noon, the suspect entered a restroom and shut the door. Craig then moved into the stall next to him and propped his suitcase up against the stall door's front. By obscuring the front view, this is frequently done in an effort to hide sexual activity. Several minutes later, the officer claimed to have noticed Craig looking into his stall through a gap, tapping his right foot repeatedly, then moving it till it brushed Karsnia's. Craig then passed his hand under the stall divider into Karsnia's stall with his palm up and guided it along the divider toward the front of the stall three times. Karsnia then waved his badge back, to which the senator responded, “No!” The senator pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct and paid a fine, but changed his mind after word of his arrest later became public. Craig claimed he just had a “wide stance”, and he only pleaded guilty to avoid a spectacle.An appeals court rejected his request to change his mind about entering a guilty plea. Craig completed his time in the Senate but was unable to have his case dismissed by the Senate Ethics Committee. Craig departed office on January 3, 2009, having not to run for reelection in 2008. Fascinating Fact: Soon after Craig was arrested, the men's room started to resemble a tourist destination, with people coming to seek directions and take photographs. Even restroom tissue may be purchased on eBay. Listen to the conversation between Senator Craig and Sgt. Karsnia immediately following the arrest here.   7 Sarah Ferguson was victimized by Mazher Mahmood, a reporter for the tabloid daily "News of the World," in May 2010. In order to set up a meeting with Ferguson, Mahmood pretended to be a wealthy international businessman. The Duchess, who was discreetly recorded throughout the encounter, offered to connect the "tycoon" with Prince Andrew's influential inner circle. "500,000 pounds when you can, to me, open doors," Sarah Ferguson is heard saying on the video. She may also be seen removing a briefcase that is holding $40,000 in cash. After the event was reported, Ferguson's spokesman claimed she was both "devastated" and "regretful." She said that she had been drinking before asking for the money and was "in the gutter at that point" in an interview with Oprah Winfrey. Mazher Mahmood, the guy who pretended to be the tycoon, is referred to as the "Fake Sheikh" and has conned several famous people. No one is certain if that is his true name or what his real history is since he likes to make things as mysterious as possible. The journalist denies ever allowing his face to appear in any of his pieces and claims to have received several death threats. He also avoids public appearances.   Bait Cars The Minneapolis Police Department employed the first bait cars in the 1990s. The largest bait car fleet in North America is now situated in Surrey, British Columbia, which is widely regarded as the continent's "auto theft capital." The cars are carefully modified, equipped with GPS tracking equipment, audio/video surveillance, and an engine-disabling remote control. It has helped to lower car theft by 47% when it was introduced in Surrey, British Columbia, in 2004. In one of the more contentious bait vehicle stings, a lady was murdered nearly instantaneously after a robber driving a bait car drove into her in Dallas, Texas, in 2008. To resolve the litigation, $245,000 was given to the victim's family. Fact: The key to determining whether police are utilizing a bait car improperly and would result in entrapment is if they left it in a way that would tempt someone who would not ordinarily commit a crime. Here, you can view one of the more eye-catching (to put it mildly) bait vehicle stings. Many others will undoubtedly have the same thoughts as I had. “Where the heck was the kill switch?”   Marion Barry A well-known politician and former mayor of Washington, D.C., Marion Barry. Police were going to conduct an undercover narcotics transaction with former Virgin Islands official Charles Lewis on December 22, 1988, but they were turned back when they discovered Mayor Marion Barry was in Lewis's hotel room. This prompted a grand jury inquiry into potential mayor meddling in the narcotics probe. Barry testified for three hours in front of the grand jury before telling reporters he had done nothing wrong. Then, on January 18, 1990, Barry was arrested in a Washington, D.C. hotel after using crack cocaine in a room with his former girlfriend, who had turned informant for the FBI. This was the result of a sting operation put up by the FBI and D.C. Police. Barry said the now-famous phrase, "Bitch set me up," which has come to be linked with him. Following his arrest and subsequent trial, Barry made the decision not to run for mayor again. He was charged with 14 charges by a grand jury, including suspected grand jury perjury. The mayor could have spent 26 years in prison if found guilty on all 14 counts. Barry was only given a six-month prison term after the jury found him guilty of using cocaine. Barry campaigned for municipal council after being let out of prison. He garnered 70% of the vote due to his widespread popularity and the perception held by many that Marion Barry was the target of a political witch hunt by the government. Then, in 1995, Barry won a fourth term as mayor of Washington, D.C. Barry is currently back in his position on the D.C. city council. Regardless of your opinion on Marion Barry, you have to respect his perseverance and drive to help the people of Washington, D.C. The aforementioned occurrence is only a small portion of his remarkable life. A documentary titled "The Nine Lives of Marion Barry" was produced by HBO.    Joran Van der Sloot Dutch national Joran Van der Sloot is a key suspect in the case of Natalee Holloway, who vanished on May 30, 2005, while traveling to Aruba to celebrate her high school graduation. On March 29, 2010, Van der Sloot got in touch with Beth Twitty Holloway's mother's attorney John Q. Kelly, reviving the case. Van der Sloot promised to provide details about Holloway's demise and the whereabouts of her remains in exchange for a total of $250,000 with a $25,000 down payment. After Kelly and Twitty made contact with Alabama law enforcement, the FBI launched a sting operation. On May 10, Van der Sloot accepted a wire transfer of $15,000 to his Dutch bank account along with an additional cash payment of $10,000. He drove Kelly to the location of Holloway's remains in exchange for the cash. He indicated a home, saying that his father had assisted in burying the body in the foundation. The home had not yet been constructed when Holloway vanished, therefore this turned out to be untrue. Later, Van der Sloot informed Kelly through email that the entire incident was a fraud. At this point, police might have detained Van der Sloot for wire fraud and extortion, but they chose to wait while they worked to establish a case of murder against him. Van der Sloot was not only let free, he was also given permission to depart Aruba and travel to Bogotá, Colombia, and then Lima, Peru, with the money he had made from the operation. He met Stephany Flores Ramirez, a 21-year-old University of Lima business student, in a casino hotel in the city. Ramirez and Van der Sloot are seen entering a hotel room together on security footage, but only Van der Sloot is seen exiting. On June 2, Ramirez was discovered dead in the hotel room that Van der Sloot had booked, her neck broken and she had been battered to death. On May 30, 2010, precisely five years after Natalee Holloway vanished, Ramirez passed away. A person arrested Van der Sloot He admitted to the murder on June 3 and June 7. Fascinating fact: Van der Sloot is presently detained at Peru's Miguel Castro jail, where murder charges have been brought. He apparently now claims that if he is permitted to move to a jail in Aruba, he would tell the whereabouts of Natalee Holloway's remains.   Perverted Justice Stings Perverted-Justice is a group that uses volunteers to masquerade as juveniles online, often between the ages of 10-15, and wait for an adult to message or email the decoy back. If the topic becomes sexual, they won't actively reject it or support it. Then, in order to set up a meeting, they will attempt to identify the males by acquiring their phone numbers and other information. The group then provides law enforcement with the information. Additionally, Perverted-Justice has worked with the American reality show "To Catch a Predator." In Murphy, Texas, one of the more contentious instances took place in 2006. Louis Conradt (seen above), a district attorney in Texas, pretended to be a 19-year-old college student and had sexually explicit internet conversations with a person he thought was a 13-year-old kid. They hired an actress to portray the youngster on the phone when Conradt demanded images of the boy's genitalia. Conradt stopped returning phone calls and instant messages, so police and the reality program decided to conduct a search warrant operation at his residence. A gunshot was heard as the police entered the scene to make an arrest. Conradt was inside with a self-inflicted wound when they arrived, and he eventually passed away at a hospital. 23 people were taken into custody for online solicitation of minors as a consequence of the sting operation in Murphy, Texas. Due to inadequate evidence, none of the 23 instances were prosecuted as of June 2007. Conradt's family launched a $105 million lawsuit against Dateline's To Catch a Predator series. The dispute was ultimately resolved outside of court. All next episodes' development was halted by the network in 2008. Rachel Hoffman On February 22, 2007, a traffic stop in Tallahassee, Florida, resulted in Rachel Hoffman being found in possession of 25 grams of marijuana. Then, on April 17, 2008, police searched her flat and found 4 ecstasy tablets and 151.7 grams of marijuana. Police allegedly threatened to put her in jail unless she worked as an undercover informant for them, according to her account. She was then dispatched untrained to an undercover gathering to purchase a weapon and a significant quantity of narcotics from two alleged drug traffickers. The suspects relocated the drug purchase while she was there. When she departed the buy place in the car with the two suspects, the police officers who were keeping an eye on the sting lost sight of her. The identical gun she was intended to purchase was used to kill her by the two suspects while they were in motion. Two days later, her corpse was discovered close to Perry, Florida. One of the murder suspects was convicted of first-degree murder and given a life sentence without the possibility of parole on December 17, 2009, which would have been Rachel Hoffman's 25th birthday. Trial for the second murder suspect is set for October 2010. Interesting Fact: On May 7, 2009, a law called “Rachel's Law” was passed by the Florida State Senate. Rachel's Law requires law enforcement agencies to (a) provide special training for officers who recruit confidential informants, (b) instruct informants that reduced sentences may not be provided in exchange for their work, and (c) permit informants to request a lawyer if they want one.    Mr. Big The Royal Canadian Mounted Police created Mr. Big, sometimes known as "the Canadian method," in the early 1990s in response to unsolved killings. It is employed in Canada and Australia, but many other nations, like the United States and England, view it as entrapment. The technique works something like this: An undercover police unit poses as members of a fictitious gang, into which the suspect is inducted. The suspect is invited to participate in a series of criminal activities (all faked by the police). In addition, the “gang members” build a personal relationship with the suspect, by drinking together and other social activities. After some time, the gang boss, Mr. Big, is presented to him. The police have a fresh interest in the first crime, and the suspect is instructed to provide the gang with further information. They clarify that Mr. Big might be able to affect the course of the police investigation, but only if he confesses to the full extent of the crime. He is also warned that if he conceals any other previous offenses, the gang could decide against working with him in the future since he would be a burden. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police are shown in the picture above carrying the hats of the four officers who were killed in Edmonton, Canada, in 2005 at a memorial service. Two of the men serving prison sentences for the murders made confessions to Mr. Big operatives.Interesting Fact: In British Columbia, the technique has been used over 180 times, and, in 80% of the cases, it resulted in either a confession or the elimination of the suspect from suspicion. However, cases of false confessions and wrongful convictions have recently come to the public's attention, and many are starting to question the controversial technique. In 2007, a documentary was made, called Mr. Big, that was very critical of the procedure.   You can't talk about undercover operations without talking about the mob. Here are five badasses who infiltrated the mob.   In law enforcement, working as an undercover officer carries the high risk of discovery by criminal suspects, leading to violence, torture and death. But the rewards can be huge, with wire recordings and eyewitness testimony that can result in arrests and convictions. A trained officer knows how to strategize, win the confidence of their targets and get them to reveal what's needed to build a case to take to trial. It requires an unusual kind of person, able to work under stress, stay focused, pull off the character he or she is playing and be prepared to tell many lies. What follows here is a list of five remarkable individuals whose undercover operations, despite real dangers, resulted in the convictions of leaders and associates of organized crime, over almost a century. This list leaves out many other famous undercover officers, whom we would like to recognize in the future. Perhaps because of the gravity of the investigations, and the financial resources required, all of these undercover officers worked for agencies of the U.S. government. MICHAEL MALONE Mike Malone worked undercover for the Treasury Department's Intelligence Unit. In the late 1920s, he infiltrated Al Capone's Chicago Outfit and helped convict the crime boss of tax evasion. Michael Malone had all the makings of an undercover agent who would successfully infiltrate Al Capone's Chicago gang for nearly two years. Malone, whose parents came over from Ireland, grew up in New Jersey and meshed well with its European immigrants, eventually learning to speak Gaelic, Italian, Yiddish and Greek. With his “black Irish” dark hair and skin, he resembled someone from southern Europe. After finessing his way into Capone's inner circle in 1929, Malone proved invaluable to his superiors in the Treasury Department pursuing a tax evasion case against the Chicago crime boss. Despite the danger, Malone kept an iron will. Blowing his cover would have proved fatal. But given his skills, it didn't happen. While Malone kept up the charade, he delivered information that proved incriminating not only for Capone, but for his top enforcer, Frank Nitti (aka Nitto). Malone remained disguised within Capone's bootlegging band even for a time after the feds filed tax charges against Capone, Nitti and Capone's brother, Ralph, in 1931. When Capone's jury trial commenced, and the Treasury Department removed Malone from his undercover job, the agent gained a bit of respect from the embarrassed gang chief himself. In the Chicago courthouse, Malone happened to enter an elevator where Capone stood with his defense lawyers. “The only thing that fooled me was your looks,” Capone is said as to have remarked to Malone. “You look like a Wop. You took your chances, and I took mine. I lost.” From 1929 to 1931, Malone fed intelligence about Capone that would culminate in the historic conviction of the nation's most notorious Mob boss. His fascinating story began after his service in World War I. With law enforcement his career goal, Malone joined the Treasury Department's Intelligence Unit later known as the “T-Men.” Early on, in the 1920s, Malone appreciated how donning disguises brought him closer to the suspects. He posed in everyman roles such as garbage man and shoe shiner. Elmer Irey, chief of the Intelligence Unit, had worked with undercover agent Malone on Prohibition cases. Once, Irey enlisted Malone to smash a West Coast version of “Rum Row,” rumrunners selling contraband Canadian liquor from ships off the coast of San Francisco. Malone posed as gangster from Chicago in hiding, with money to invest in illegal booze. He devised a nighttime sting operation. Agents posing as bootleggers drove speedboats out to the booze-laden mother ship and, after money changed hands, Malone fired off a flare, signaling the U.S. Coast Guard, which boarded the mother ship and arrested the astonished bootleggers. President Herbert Hoover entered office in March 1929, a few weeks following the infamous St. Valentine's Day Massacre in Chicago, where seven men associated with Capone's bitter rival in bootlegging, George “Bugs” Moran, died in gunfire. Hoover conferred with Irey and urged him to compile a team of special agents to “get Capone” on tax charges. Meanwhile, another team of Prohibition Unit agents in Chicago, headed by Eliot Ness, would attack Capone on violations of federal liquor laws under the Volstead Act. Irey appointed Special Agent Frank Wilson, Malone and several others to the get Capone team. Meanwhile, a group of wealthy business executives in Chicago, called the Secret Six, donated large sums of money for expenses to assist the feds in getting Capone. Malone used their largess to purchase some expensive clothing to look the part of a well-heeled hoodlum that Capone would envy. Malone set about infiltrating Capone's underworld at its core – the Lexington Hotel, where the boss and his men lived. Wearing a fancy suit, purple shirt and white hat, Malone sat in the lobby, reading newspapers for days on end. He spoke in an Italian accent, introduced himself as “Mike Lepito,” met Capone men playing craps and played the part of a mobster. He mailed letters to friends in Philadelphia, who wrote back. Capone's guys broke into his room, noted his pricey checkered suits and silk underwear. They opened his mail from Philadelphia, read the letters written, impressively, in underworld lingo they understood. They informed Capone. Finally, Capone sent a cohort down to the lobby to ask “Lepito” about his business in town. “Keeping quiet,” Malone replied in his Italian inflection. In the coming days, over drinks, Malone told the guy he was on the lam for burglary in Philadelphia. That got Malone invitations to play poker and trade gossip with the gang, then dinner at their hangout, the New Florence, and then to attend the birthday party Capone planned for Frank Nitti at the Lexington. Malone met Capone at Nitti's party. The secret agent's new acquaintances included big-shot hoods Nitti, “Machine Gun” Jack McGurn, Jake “Greasy Thumb” Guzik, Paul “The Waiter” Ricca, Murray “The Camel” Humphreys and Sam “Golf Bag” Hunt. Malone was in. He discreetly phoned Wilson about what he'd overheard within the gang. Wilson and his aides traced signatures on bank checks while pursuing tax evasion cases against Nitti and Guzik. A federal court in Chicago convicted Guzik, who got a five-year sentence. But Nitti skipped town. Malone, assigned to find him, followed Nitti's wife to an apartment building in Berwyn, Illinois. There, the cops nabbed Nitti, later sentenced to 18 months in prison for tax evasion. Then the police pinched Al himself following his 1931 indictment on tax charges. “Mike Lepito” was there at the Lexington when Al Capone arrived back, triumphant about his release on $50,000 bail. Malone listened and reported to Wilson about Capone's scheme to bribe and fix the jury in his favor. The feds moved quickly and a judge created a new list of jurors. Malone then reported Capone's plot to hire five gunman from New York to kill four federal officials in Chicago – including Wilson. With safety measures in place, Capone ordered the gunmen to leave town. Capone's trial, after a judge refused to plea bargain with the Mob boss, started in October 1931. Four days afterward, Malone finally gave up the act. The news spread fast to Capone and his men. Malone had heard that Phil D'Andrea, Capone's bodyguard, planned to bring a concealed gun into the courthouse. Malone and another agent frisked and disarmed D'Andrea, and had him arrested. A jury Capone could not fix found the boss guilty on 22 criminal counts. The judge gave him 11 years in the federal pen and a $50,000 fine, plus court costs. Months later, in early 1932, the Intelligence Unit had Malone, Irey, Wilson and Special Agent A. P. Madden probe the kidnapping of aviator Charles Lindbergh's son. The team's persistence paid off within two years, with the capture (and conviction) of suspect Bruno Hauptman, who still had some of the marked currency the agents convinced Lindbergh to use as ransom money. Malone had other notable cases. In 1933, Irey assigned him to find fugitive New York gangster Waxey Gordon, wanted for tax evasion. Malone located Gordon in a remote cottage in the Catskill Mountains. Special Prosecutor Thomas Dewey took the case, and the court put Waxey away for 10 years. A year later, Malone infiltrated Louisiana Governor Huey “Kingfish” Long's crooked crew. After Long's assassination, the IRS won a tax fraud conviction against Malone's target, Long's close aide, Seymour Weiss. In his last undercover operation before his death, the Intelligence Unit gave Malone a large amount of cash and a Cadillac to use in Miami Beach, disguised as a rich syndicate man. He found and reported what the agency wanted – details of a coast-to-coast illegal abortion ring. After Malone's death in 1960, Wilson described him to a news reporter as “the best undercover agent we ever had.” JOSEPH PISTONE Joe Pistone is one of the FBI's most celebrated undercover agents. Using the name Donnie Brasco, he infiltrated the New York Mafia and helped produce 200 indictments. Courtesy of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In New York City during the mid-1970s, the FBI investigated a rash of truck hijackings happening each day. The agency assigned agent Joseph “Joe” Pistone to go undercover for six months to find out where the Mob-connected thieves took the stolen cargo. His adopted name was “Donnie Brasco.” He was so effective as a wiseguy that the FBI let him keep it up. No one knew how far the investigation would lead, or what it would mean for Pistone, who started as an agent in 1969. His experience would eventually prompt the mobsters in New York to put out a $500,000 contract for his murder, but it never happened. In the end, the evidence and trial testimony he provided in the 1980s produced 200 indictments of Mob associates and more than 100 convictions. His work decimated the Bonannos, one of New York's five major crime families. Pistone's journey while undercover, impersonating a mobbed-up jewel thief, would last an incredible five years, from 1976 to 1981, during which he penetrated the upper levels of the Bonnano organization. No FBI agent had made it inside the Mob like that. The agency beforehand had to rely on informants. Pistone took a class to learn about jewelry to make his affectation believable. In Brooklyn and Manhattan, he roamed bars and restaurants frequented by Mob types. He communicated using the street smarts he absorbed growing up as a working-class Italian-American kid in Paterson, New Jersey, where he went to Italian social clubs and encountered local hoods. Years in, he had the Bonanno circle so convinced that it moved to have him a “made” man shortly before the FBI ended his assignment. At first he befriended low-level mobsters. He wore a wire to record conversations, and committed to memory names and license plates since taking notes would obviously raise red flags. By 1976, he'd won the trust of important Bonnano members, notably family soldier Benjamin “Lefty Guns” Ruggiero, said to have killed 26 people, and capo Dominick “Sonny Black” Napolitano. Ruggerio recommended him so that he could join the clan. Pistone's Mob activities centered in New York and Florida, taking him away from his wife and young daughters for extended times. Pistone even had to vacation with his demanding cohorts. He moved his family members out of state for their protection. As “Donnie Brasco,” Pistone helped Ruggerio transfer stolen goods and sell guns. He engaged in loansharking, extortion and illegal gambling. Once, while pretending to be an expert in burglar alarms, angry Mob associates intent on committing burglaries demanded he reveal the name of a mobster who would vouch for him. The FBI used an informant to quell their suspicions. In the 1997 film Donnie Brasco, undercover agent Joe Pistone is played by Johnny Depp, left. Al Pacino, right, plays Benjamin “Lefty” Ruggiero. In 1981, the situation intensified again when the crime family commanded him to kill an adversary. The FBI pulled him out of the sting. It was time to start making cases, and for him to testify in open court as himself. Starting in 1982, Pistone's testimony over the next several years in racketeering cases sent more than 100 mobsters to long prison terms. Prosecutors considered him crucial to convicting 21 defendants in the “Pizza Connection” case of pizzerias used to traffic in heroin and launder money for the Sicilian Mafia. Pistone went into hiding and later retired from the FBI, unscathed, in 1986. In the 1990s, Salvatore “Sammy the Bull” Gravano, former underboss for the Gambino family who turned FBI informant, said the embarrassment from the “Brasco” case drove bosses in New York's crime families to suspend the Bonanno group from its board of directors. But Pistone couldn't stay retired. In 1992, at age 53, he requested reinstatement with the FBI, which agreed only if he would enter the agency's strict training class, lasting 16 weeks at its base in Quantico, Virginia. Pistone endured the rigorous course alongside recruits in their 20s. He passed and the FBI rehired him, at least until the mandatory retirement age of 57. Pistone's 1988 book on his undercover experiences, Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia, was a bestseller. Based on the book, actor Johnny Depp portrayed Pistone in the 1997 feature film Donnie Brasco, with Al Pacino as Ruggerio. JACK GARCIA Jack Garcia was an FBI undercover agent of Cuban descent who convinced members of the Italian-American Mafia that he was Italian. He took part in more than 100 undercover investigations over a 26-year career. Before he succeeded in infiltrating New York's Gambino crime family, FBI agent Joaquin “Jack” Garcia had to go school. That is, the FBI's “mob school,” where he received an education in how to hit the ground running with veteran mobsters. His teacher was special agent Nat Parisi. First off, Parisi said, do not carry a wallet – wiseguys carry wads of currency, often bound by the kind of rubber band grocery stores use to keep broccoli together. Also, correctly pronouncing Italian food matters – as Tony Soprano might say, those long pasta shells are not “manicotti,” but “manicote.” Another valuable lesson he learned is that his Mob brethren loved compliments – his favorite one: “Where did you get those nice threads? You look like a million dollars.” In his 26-year career as an FBI agent, Garcia took part in more than 100 undercover investigations, from Miami to New York, Atlantic City and Los Angeles, targeting mobsters, drug traffickers and corrupt politicians and cops. He participated in the highest number of undercover cases in FBI history. In many of his capers, he impersonated a mobster, using the name “Jack Falcone” (in honor of the Italian judge Giovanni Falcone, killed by the Sicilian Mafia in the 1990s). As a backstory, he told his Mob marks about having a Sicilian pedigree (actually he's a native of Havana and grew up in the Bronx) with an expertise in stealing and fencing stolen goods, with jewelry as his specialty. Sometimes, he had to run several undercover roles at once. He took advantage of his fluency in Spanish and Italian, being careful not to mix things up when the phone rang. In the early 2000s, the FBI chose Garcia for what would be the most fruitful infiltration of an organized crime family since Joe Pistone's in the 1970s. While undercover as “Jack Falcone” with the Gambino's family's chapter in Westchester County, New York, for two years, he flashed cash, Rolex watches, diamond rings, flat-screen TVs and other supposed stolen property (items seized in other FBI cases). Much of the cash he held went to pay for expensive dinners – mobsters, he said, are notoriously cheap when the check comes. He gained 80 pounds over the two years. One mobster in particular who liked his money and goods, and would become his almost daily companion, was Gambino capo Gregory DePalma. An “old school” hood who in 2003 finished serving 70 months for racketeering, DePalma right away threatened violence and extorted owners of Westchester-area construction firms, strip joints, restaurants and other businesses. Garcia said he witnessed DePalma commit a crime almost every day. The FBI had Garcia pose as a wiseguy seeking to invest in a topless bar in the Bronx. Garcia's inquiries led him to meet DePalma in 2003. By providing stolen property for DePalma to sell for cash, Garcia convinced him that “Jack Falcone” was an experienced jewelry thief and fencer from Miami. When Garcia hung out with DePalma over the two-year period, he wore a body wire, and the FBI planted bugging devices at DePalma's hangouts. Garcia gave DePalma a cell phone that the talkative mob capo used prodigiously, not knowing the FBI had bugged it. The operation yielded 5,000 hours of recorded conversations used to implicate DePalma and other Gambino men in racketeering. In 2005, DePalma planned to honor “Falcone” by rendering him “made” within the Gambino family. In a recorded conversation, Garcia as “Falcone” replied to DePalma, “I'm honored for that,” he said, in the tape later used in court. “I will never let you down either.” But it wasn't to be. After Garcia witnessed a Gambino soldier beat another member with a crystal candlestick, the FBI shut down the undercover operation. (Garcia and Pistone are the only law enforcement officers ever nominated to be “made.”) Garcia's efforts inside the Gambino crew paid off big time. The evidence he delivered for the FBI resulted in the arrest of 32 Gambino members and associates, including DePalma, Gambino boss Arnold “Zeke” Squitieri and underboss Anthony “The Genius” Megale. DePalma went to trial in 2006. Garcia, who retired from the FBI two months before the trial started, agreed to testify in federal court in Manhattan. The jury found DePalma guilty on 27 counts, and the judge gave the 74-year-old a 12-year prison term. Like Pistone, Garcia's undercover career is chronicled in a memoir, Making Jack Falcone: An Undercover FBI Agent Takes Down a Mafia Family. KIKI CAMARENA Kiki Camarena was an undercover agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration in Mexico. After contributing information that led to major drug busts, he was tortured and murdered by drug cartel bosses in 1985. Enrique “Kiki” Camarena, the late Drug Enforcement Administration agent assigned to investigate drug trafficking in Guadalajara, Mexico, in the 1980s, is famous as one of the most heroic DEA agents ever. But he is more well-known in death than in life. His torture-murder in Mexico in 1985 took place at the hands of drug cartel bosses with the complicity of high-level Mexican government officials, law enforcement and, allegedly, the CIA. At the time, the Reagan administration was secretly training and supplying Central American guerilla fighters, known as the “Contras,” against the leftist Sandinista government in Nicaragua. The U.S. government allegedly granted the cartel bosses free rein to traffic drugs – to the point of using CIA-recruited American pilots to fly cocaine into the United States to sell for cash so the cartel could make donations to buy more weaponry for the Contras. Camarena, born in Mexicali, Mexico, in 1947, moved with his impoverished family to Calexico, California. He served as a firefighter in Calexico, and with a strong desire for police work, joined the Imperial County Sheriff's Department, moving up to its narcotics task force. The experience led to his career in the DEA starting in 1975. Assigned to the DEA office in the “narco paradise” of Guadalajara in 1980, Camarena was a convincing undercover officer with his appearance and ability to speak Spanish and barrio “street” language to fit in with the drug underworld. His target was the powerful Guadalajara drug cartel (which later evolved into the Sinaloa cartel). In the early 1980s, in what he called “Operation Padrino,” Camarena arranged for U.S. agents to seize international bank accounts held by wealthy cartel drug lords. He developed evidence of major marijuana plantations in the Mexican state of Zacatecas, based on informants and overflights in a plane flown by his DEA pilot, Alfredo Zavala Avelar. In November 1984, from his background work, Mexican federal police and the DEA raided enormous pot-growing operations on a ranch in Zacatecas that employed thousands of field hands. The task force confiscated 20 tons of marijuana, burned the crop and made 177 arrests. The bust cost cartel figure Rafael Caro Quintero about $50 million. Caro Quintero believed his operation had the protection of the Mexican army, and the CIA, since he owned a farm used to train the U.S.-backed Contras. He vowed revenge against Camarena. Meanwhile, a DEA force organized by Camarena seized a large cache of cocaine shipped by cartel boss Miguel Felix Gallardo's operation to New Mexico and Texas. Gallardo also believed he had CIA and Mexican official protection. During the fall of 1984, Quintero held meetings with top cartel traffickers Gallardo, Ernesto “Don Neto” Fonseco Carrillo and Ruben Zuno Arce. Also present, thanks to rampant corruption bought by the Guadalajara cartel, were Mexico's minister of domestic affairs and DFA chief Manuel Bartlett Diaz, plus Mexico's defense minister, the head of Mexico's Interpol office and the governor of the state of Jalisco. The agenda was to kidnap Camarena and get him to reveal his informants and other information. Zuno Arce gave the order. Fonseca only intended to scare and release him, but Quintero wanted to kill the DEA man. On February 7, 1985, Quintero and Gallardo directed their henchmen to kidnap Camarena off a street in Guadalajara. As the agent walked from the U.S. consulate to meet his wife for lunch, they forced him at gunpoint into a car and drove him to a residence used for cartel rendezvous. They bound and blindfolded him, turned on a tape recorder and questioned him, during which he was severely beaten and tortured. The lead interrogator was the crooked head of the secret police in Guadalajara, Sergio Espino Verdin. The cartel men wanted to know what Camarena knew about them, their dealings with Mexican officials and the CIA's involvement in drug trafficking. The gangsters also brought in and beat up Zavala, Camarena's pilot. Both men died about two days later, angering Fonseco, who told Quintero not to kill Camarena. Camarena's wife reported him missing and Washington launched what would be the largest manhunt in the history of the DEA. The cartel had the two men's bodies buried, then dug up and relocated to a farm in another state, where Mexican police found them in early March. During his funeral a week later, Camarena's family interred his ashes in Calexico. His slaying triggered an international incident. U.S. officials ordered all cars from Mexico at the border searched, effectively closing it. The investigation revealed the CIA connection, leading to bitter clashes between CIA and DEA agents. A federal court in Los Angeles charged 22 defendants in the murders of Camarena and Zavala. Under pressure, Mexican authorities acted, arresting 13 men. Mexican courts convicted Fonseco, Quintero and Espino, and sentenced each to 40 years, although Quintero won early release on a technicality in 2013. U.S. officials are still seeking Quintero to face federal charges. Mexican police arrested Gallardo in 1989, and he received 40 years. A court in Los Angeles found Zuno Arce guilty in the murders in 1990, sentenced him to two life terms in prison, where he died in 2012. In Camarena's honor, in 1985 the National Family Partnership started the National Red Ribbon Campaign, a volunteer anti-drug use and education effort that urges youths to recite a pledge to refrain from drugs, and celebrates “Red Ribbon Week” on drug awareness each October. Camarena's is featured as a character, played by actor Michael Pena, in a chapter of the Netflix series Narcos: Mexico, about on his actions with the DEA. JAY DOBYNS Jay Dobyns went undercover with the Hells Angels outlaw motorcycle gang for 20 months in Arizona on behalf of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. His work led to 16 arrests. For Jay Dobyns, fitting in with the infamous biker gang the Hells Angels for almost two years meant adhering to his undercover alter ego, Jay “Bird” Davis, to the point of obsession. To maintain his cover, he had to divert his mind away from his wife and kids. And it all would be worth it – at least that's what he thought at the time. Dobyns had hit on his best clandestine ruse yet while in Arizona in 2001, after 15 years of service as an undercover special agent with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. While working undercover cases in the late 1980s for the ATF, he'd been injured twice – from a gunshot wound to the back from a suspect in Tucson and when gunrunners hit him with a car during an attempted getaway in Chicago. He took part in investigations of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing and the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Other undercover roles of his ended in the arrests of a Mexican drug boss and members of the Aryan Brotherhood gang. Altogether, he served in more than 500 undercover operations disguised as a hitman and Mob debt collector. He infiltrated organized crime groups and gangs engaged in drug and arms smuggling. In 2001, to gather intelligence as “Davis” for the ATF in northern Arizona, Dobyns worked in the Bullhead City area, posing as a gun seller and an enforcer for a nonexistent collections agency. But his operation was interrupted in 2002 with the now-famous riot and shootout among members of the Angels and a competing biker gang, the Mongols, at the Harrah's casino in nearby Laughlin, Nevada, during the annual River Run motorcycle rally. Two Angels and one Mongol died and dozens of people were injured. The ATF brass soon redirected him to penetrate the dangerous Hells Angels club. Dobyns certainly had the physical part down with his beard and six-foot, one-inch frame he used as an all-conference football player for the University of Arizona. Later, an Angels member would apply tattoos covering his upper arms. Dobyns teamed with another ATF agent, two other undercover officers and a pair of paid informants. The idea was to create a fake biker gang with the aid of one of the informants who once served in a motorcycle gang based in Tijuana, Mexico. The gangster informant and Dobyns would run the gang, called the Solo Angeles, promote it as a pro-Hells Angels crew and request to join the Angels as a “nomad” chapter. The ATF named the setup “Operation Black Biscuit.” As a convincer, Dobyns and his fellow agent feigned an execution of a Mongol member, tying up an agent, placing cow's brains and bloody Mongol clothing on him and taking a photo. Based on the picture, the Angels took the bait and let them hang out and ride with them. They trusted him so much they offered to make him a member of the Angels' Skull Valley Chapter. He was the first law enforcement officer to infiltrate the Angels. His undercover penetration of the Angels lasted more than 20 months, one of the longest ever for the ATF. His work ended with 16 arrests from the Angels gang. But the criminal case, amid problems between the ATF and Justice Department lawyers, fell through in federal court. Federal prosecutors blamed the ATF, saying the agency did not reveal evidence from informants. In 2006, the feds dropped racketeering enterprise charges – the most serious — against all but four of 42 Angels charged in the Laughlin riot. Dobyns' battle with his own employer, the ATF, soon began. He filed suit in federal court against the agency alleging it did not protect him while he was on duty. He won a $373,000 settlement in 2007. The next year, Dobyns's wife and two kids barely escaped after someone firebombed the family home in Tucson. The ATF investigated Dobyns himself as a suspect in the arson. Investigators cleared him. In 2014, the year he retired after 27 years with the ATF, he filed another suit, for $17.2 million, saying the ATF failed to safeguard his family amid death threats. A judge awarded him $173,000. During an appeal, the judge voided the monetary judgment, but recommended discipline for ATF personnel and barred seven Justice Department attorneys from the case. He ordered a special master to investigate government actions in the case, and possible misconduct by the feds in the arson investigation. But the judge died of cancer. The special master in a report said that the first case was fair enough and required no further probe into the federal government. A new judge accepted the recommendation. Dobyns has authored two books, one on his undercover experiences, another on his travails with the ATF. These days, he delivers lectures on his life to audiences at universities and law enforcement associations nationwide. And now some of our infamous quick hitters:   Donald Duck decoy   Police in Fort Lee, New Jersey used a Donald Duck costume as a decoy to catch drivers who failed to yield to pedestrians. Drivers who didn't stop for the cartoon duck were ticketed. One woman, Karen Haigh, fought her $230 ticket.   "They told me that I was getting a ticket for not stopping for a duck," she told Eyewitness News. "But it scared me. I'm a woman. This huge duck scared me."  Coco the Clown   These old clips from the show COPS show a strange undercover police sting, and proves the adage that clowns are usually scary or just creepy. One cop dressed up as Coco the Clown, an outfit that kind of resembles John Wayne Gacy, to catch women working as sex workers. Spoiler: he pretty much sprays all of them with silly string and the whole thing is sad to watch. Amish woman   At least one cop from the Pulaski Township Police Department in Pennsylvania dressed up as an Amish woman in an attempt to catch a sexual predator. Sgt. Chad Adams of the Pulaski Township Police Department wandered the streets for two months in 2014 after police were tipped off that a predator was masturbating in front of children, according to the Associated Press. He posted on the department's Facebook page, “Hey friends, sometimes being a police officer means going undercover and doing what you have to do to catch the bad guy. Now that our investigation is complete I'll share with you this photo! Back in January we had an individual preying on Amish children walking home from school. The male individual was pulling up to the children and getting out of his car and masturbating in front of them. Although we did not apprehend the individual we believe he was caught in another county. I wanted to share with you that we will use all means available to try and protect our children. That includes dressing up as an Amish woman to attempt to apprehend a pervert! Thanks goes out to the Neshannock police and New Wilmington police in assistance with the investigation! Sincerely, Sergeant Chad Adams.”   Sadly, the sting didn't work, but police believe it is because the culprit moved into another county.   DVD Prize sting   Police in Phoenix, Arizona set up a sting to catch people with outstanding warrants, mostly DUIs, in 2002. The people were told they won a DVD player. People thought they were showing up to pick up their prize. Instead, they walked right into their own arrest. Watch as these suspects went from excited to shocked to sad. Panhandling trick   In 2015, undercover cops in California posed as panhandlers to ticket distracted drivers. They stood on the side of the road, posed as panhandlers and holding signs that identified them as police officers. The pieces of cardboard they were holding also stated that they were looking for seatbelt and cellphone violations. For those drivers who weren't paying attention

united states god american new york university netflix california texas canada world new york city movies chicago australia europe israel starting los angeles washington france england spoilers mexico law news germany san francisco canadian new york times miami european arizona philadelphia german spanish ireland new jersey italian north america pennsylvania alabama berlin police detroit angels illinois irish greek hbo new orleans indian fbi world war ii defense horses trial mexican nazis sweden wolf oprah winfrey alcohol journalists manhattan colombia operations cops nevada senate adolf hitler dutch cia philippines new mexico pl dvd peru federal west coast gps clowns israelis twenty usa today ebay garcia athens bronx col british columbia wearing predator investigation uganda mafia irs johnny depp sting bitch coco palestinians lt bureau lima liberation ferguson cuban drivers assassination edmonton nicaragua crawford fascinating tucson arizona tel aviv oklahoma city hyde dui ramirez amish lexington associated press benjamin netanyahu investigators sgt al pacino werner tvs prohibition hindi blowing prosecutors malone dea claus cadillac numerous firearms tijuana guadalajara havana tobacco mob kenyan hoover coast guard atlantic city justice department courtesy jekyll rolex duchess surrey placing tallahassee florida bogot lair iceman holloway interpol fonseca idf al capone miami beach ninety eyebrows paterson westchester ugandan prince andrew recalls italian americans aruba jalisco atf sicilian virgin islands yiddish central american capone dateline john wayne gacy donald duck deploying federal bureau gaelic acorn mossad gallardo sinaloa treasury department quintero benghazi dumont assigned contras mig de palma gambino hells angels tony soprano air france explosives bjp quantico zavala laughlin dfa mongol nine lives falcone westchester county mongols day massacre mahmood parisi lindbergh to catch minneapolis st charles lindbergh zacatecas entrapment kenyans mexicali herbert hoover michael malone harrah idi amin espino nazi party calexico natalee holloway royal canadian mounted police eastern front joe arpaio donnie brasco catskill mountains drug enforcement administration bonanno sloot camarena hackensack riverrun narcos mexico sandinista michael pena berwyn israeli jews entebbe wop sarah ferguson eliot ness popular front panhandling michael crawford fort lee eyewitness news richard kuklinski secret six stauffenberg giovanni falcone nitti twitty chicago outfit guzik community organizations miguel castro rafael caro quintero brasco sicilian mafia marion barry volstead act pistone caro quintero aryan brotherhood red ribbon week new york mafia in brooklyn kuklinski dobyns bullhead city landrieu ian kershaw joe pistone intelligence unit joran van nitto charles lewis rachel hoffman ruggerio bonnano pizza connection wolfsschanze italian american mafia paul international airport lexington hotel rum row
Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: The Mob Chef

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 17:54


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't.(commercial at 9:19)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.html

The Epstein Chronicles
A Look Back: The Mob Chef

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 17:54


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't.(commercial at 9:19)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.html

Our Thing with Sammy The Bull
Fireside with the Underboss - "Gaspipe Tortured Him And Shot Him 15 Times"

Our Thing with Sammy The Bull

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 16:56


Angelo Ruggerio finds out that Gaspipe is spreading lies about him, so he asks John Gotti for permission to whack him. When the hit goes awry, Gaspipe immediately seeks revenge and won't quit until it's settled.

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 60:00


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases. ****************************************************************** To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv *** AND NOW *** The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.com The ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 60:00


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases. ****************************************************************** To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv *** AND NOW *** The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.com The ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The 'X' Zone Radio Show
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 60:01


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases.******************************************************************To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv*** AND NOW ***The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.comThe ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The Best of The 'X' Zone Radio/TV Show with Rob McConnell
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The Best of The 'X' Zone Radio/TV Show with Rob McConnell

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 60:01


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases.******************************************************************To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv*** AND NOW ***The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.comThe ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The Golf Guru Show
Tony Ruggerio - Just Be Nice

The Golf Guru Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022 91:14


follow Tony on IG @thedewsweeper 

Beyond The Horizon
Chef By Day, Mafioso by Night: The David Ruggerio Story (4/14/22)

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 17:57


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't. (commercial at 10:55)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.html

The Epstein Chronicles
Chef By Day, Mafioso by Night: The David Ruggerio Story (4/15/22)

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 17:57


The Mafia is chock full of interesting and wild characters. Some of them are larger than life while others prefer to remain in the shadows. Then there are those like David Ruggerio who were hiding in plain sight. Famous Chef by dad, Gambino wise guy by night, Ruggerio had to find that balance between his two different lives and was able to do so for years. Until he wasn't. (commercial at 10:54)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10650505/Celebrity-chef-David-Ruggerio-admits-mafia-solider.html

Reginald Grant
Thursdays with Arnie "In Memory of Joe Ruggerio."

Reginald Grant

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2022 18:28


Thursdays with Arnie "In Memory of Joe Ruggerio." Joe passed away last week, he left a legacy that impacted so many lives in a positive way. He is survived by his loving wife and two young sons Orlando and Eddie, we will miss him. Your hosts are Arnie Costell, Artist, and former professional Baseball player, Tigers, Astros, Yankees. and former New York Jet Reginald Grant, a business strategist. As they discuss life in America and society, the new phenomena "NFT's" and much more. Join us each week. Find Reginald at Reginaldgrant.com and Arnie at Arniecostell.com. Recorded live from Los Angeles, CA.

The Relatable Voice Podcast
The Celebrity CHEF David Ruggerio talks about his journey, food and his cookbook “A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn” .

The Relatable Voice Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 30:45


Welcome back to another episode of the Relatable Voice! Today, the RV is headed towards New York to speak with David Ruggerio . David is an award-winning writer, Celebrity Chef and restaurant owner in New York City. He is also the author of the new cookbook “A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn”. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Relatable Voice Podcast
The Celebrity CHEF David Ruggerio talks about his journey, food and his cookbook “A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn” .

The Relatable Voice Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2022 30:45


Welcome back to another episode of the Relatable Voice! Today, the RV is headed towards New York to speak with David Ruggerio . David is an award-winning writer, Celebrity Chef and restaurant owner in New York City. He is also the author of the new cookbook “A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn”. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The High Performance Podcast
BITESIZE #54 | Angela Ruggerio: Everything in life is a choice

The High Performance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 2:10


Winter Olympic legend Angela Ruggiero brings the bitesize brilliance this week. Angela is a four-time Olympian and Gold Medalist in Ice Hockey and was the first female non-goalie to play in a men's professional hockey league. In this clip, Angela talks about the advice her father gave her growing up - everything is a choice. You decide how you react. Angela took this advice to become one of the most influential people in sport. Listen and watch to the full episode with Angela Ruggiero - the golden benefits of living a disciplined life: https://www.thehighperformancepodcast.com/podcast/angelaruggiero .......Check out our new limited edition prints in our shop featuring some our favourite messages. https://shop.thehighperformancepodcast.com/ Just a few tickets left for the LIVE TOUR in Edinburgh with Scotland manager Steve Clarke on Feb 18th!Buy here: https://sjm.lnk.to/HPPL And remember to check out our website to join our members club THE HIGH PERFORMANCE CIRCLE where you can get podcasts, keynote speeches and boosts from some very special guests. Join now for an exclusive podcast with sports psychologist Pippa GrangeJust go to www.thehighperformancepodcast.co.uk See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Rhode Island Report
Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio lays out his 2022 agenda

Rhode Island Report

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2021 21:17


Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio details his top priorities for the new legislative session, including expanding access to pre-K, funding school construction projects, and replacing the lead water pipes still in use across Rhode Island. Plus, an East Greenwich native shares the story of an infamous chestnut battle from his youth. Tips and ideas? Email us at rinews@globe.com.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Books That Make You Podcast
S:04 E:12 Italian cooking from Brooklyn, with David Ruggerio author of A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn

Books That Make You Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2021 31:11


Books That Make Your Mouth Water—And Cook Like an Italian Chef From grandma's baker's rack to every contemporary kitchen, there is something inspiring about those recipes. They help us cook like a pro, as much as we can, and, of course, make us ever-so-hungry. David Ruggerio is no stranger to the Books That Make You show. A star chef turned author, he previously released his horror novel, “A Wistful Tale of Gods, Men and Monsters”, then “Goodbye and Goodnight”, a love story for the ages. Now, he's here to share some of his incredible recipes with his new cookbook: “A Tomato Grows in Brooklyn”. With this book, Ruggerio takes readers back to Brooklyn, introducing them to the Italian-American experience –and, most importantly, the cuisine – that he knows intimately. New York Times food critic Bryan Miller says, “David Ruggiero has crafted an outstanding book: an evocatively written memoir of a special time and place that nurtured his rise to culinary fame, and a compilation of irresistible family Italian dishes, many with a brazen Brooklyn accent.” Find out more on Books That Make You. You can also follow us on Facebook and Instagram.

Premières
Gaëlle Arquez ensorcelante en Ruggerio dans "Alcina" à Garnier

Premières

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 5:23


Premières s'intéresse cette semaine à la production d'Alcina de Haendel à l'Opéra de Paris (au Palais Garnier) de Robert Carsen (du 25 novembre au 30 décembre 2021), toute en sensualité. Rencontre avec la mezzo-soprano Gaëlle Arquez qui incarne brillamment Ruggiero dans cet opéra baroque, aux côtés de Jeanine de Bicque et Sabine Devielhe notamment. 

The Best of The 'X' Zone Radio/TV Show with Rob McConnell
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The Best of The 'X' Zone Radio/TV Show with Rob McConnell

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 60:01


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases.******************************************************************To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv*** AND NOW ***The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.comThe ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 60:00


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases. ****************************************************************** To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv *** AND NOW *** The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.com The ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Broadcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 60:00


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases. ****************************************************************** To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv *** AND NOW *** The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.com The ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

The 'X' Zone Radio Show
Rob McConnell Interviews - BARRY RUGGERIO - New Jersey Paranormal Investigations - NJPI

The 'X' Zone Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 60:01


Barry is the owner of the dog grooming store and by night, a paranormal investigator in New Jersey. Barry's interest in the paranormal came for his mother telling him a story about her mother who passed away visiting her in the orphanage. His actual pursuit about getting into the paranormal did not start until 2009. Barry started learning about different theories using physics to try to explain paranormal activity that intrigued his interest. After reading many books, Barry studied under Dave Juliano for a brief period of time. Along with his brother, they formed Ruggiero New Jersey Paranormal, which was later changed, after two years to New Jersey Paranormal. In 2016 Barry left the group and became a solo investigator. In 2017 Barry formed New Jersey Paranormal Investigations that does public events, fundraisers and private commercial cases.******************************************************************To listen to all our XZBN shows, with our compliments go to: https://www.spreaker.com/user/xzoneradiotv*** AND NOW ***The ‘X' Zone TV Channel on SimulTV - www.simultv.comThe ‘X' Chronicles Newspaper - www.xchroniclesnewpaper.com

Colm Flynn Podcast
Living in a paradise, life on the Fiji islands: Sanya Ruggiero

Colm Flynn Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2021 79:01


Can you imagine living on a tropical island in the south Pacific Ocean? A paradise on Earth where life moves at a slower rate. That's where my guest for this episode lives and works. Sanya Ruggiero is a consultant communications advisor who works with the UN and other organisations. She is now working on a UN project to provide Covid relief to small business and freelancers in Fiji and neighbouring islands. She is also working on a project to clear radioactive waste left on the Marshall Islands following nuclear weapons testing by the US government. Recently she was has written articles for AlJazeera and worked on projects with ABC, the Australian national broadcaster. Sanya also has a strong Catholic faith, which she says has helped her in life, despite it been sometimes seen as unpopular by some of her colleagues. In this interview I chat to Sanya about her fascinating family story, the history of the Figi islands, and the work she is doing today. Thanks for listening, and follow Sanya on Twitter: @Sanya_Ruggiero

Connected In The Den
EP. 02: Bridging Spirituality + Fitness (The Manifestation Workout) With Joie Lee Ruggerio

Connected In The Den

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 43:51


Raised on Maui, now living in Los Angeles, California - Kundalini yoga teacher + celebrity trainer Joie Lee Ruggerio thought the fitness industry was missing something, more than the physical connection, a spiritual connection. So she developed + birthed into the collective “The Manifestation Workout”. Joie has created the formula to help us “inherent power of our bodies to create change not only for the body itself, but for our whole life.” I sat down with this radiant gem and fellow Trekkie sister to chat about her fantastic workout + membership program, finding + keeping momentum with our spiritual + fitness practices, taking ownership of our energy through the power of manifestation in community, the magic of creating awareness with Kundalini yoga, + oh yeah, finding out we were once practically neighbors! WHAT!?Join us in this feel good chat, + make sure to check out Joie: wearehaumea.comon IG + TikTok: @joililikoi And on YouTube.Make sure to connect with me: @TheWanderingLioness Join your fellow fierce lions in the den on IG: @connectedintheden

Permission to Heal
Permission to Heal Episode #39 - A Conversation with Faust Ruggerio on Creating a Plan for Healing.

Permission to Heal

Play Episode Play 56 sec Highlight Listen Later Aug 4, 2021 64:26 Transcription Available


Are we as positive with ourselves as we can be? Is your internal language, as you talk to yourself, kind and loving? Do look for positives inside ourselves?  Responding to good affirmations about how we're going to live our day? Everything we need is everything's already inside us. It's already there. The world is in here. Everything, – your physical, intellectual, emotional, spiritual needs - it's all in here.Faust A. Ruggiero's professional career spans almost 40 years, and is diversified and compelling, as it has consistently established new and exciting cutting-edge counseling programs in its pursuit of professional excellence and personal life enhancement. He is a published research author, clinical trainer, and therapist. He developed the Process Way of Life counseling program and has developed it into a formal text presented in the Fix Yourself Handbook.Mr. Ruggiero developed and began utilizing the Process Way of Life Program. The program consists of over fifty internal human processes, which can be accessed and developed to help clients address the various conditions which were affecting their lives.Connect with FaustHis WebsiteThe Fix Yourself Handbook  on Amazon (Through the Amazon affiliate program, using this link to purchase books will support my Permission to Heal podcast. Consider buying extras as gifts. )The Fix Yourself Podcast; The Process Way of Life JourneyConnect with MarciMarci's Website, Patreon, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, Facebook Group.Permission to Heal on YouTube.Permission to Land (memoir)  To begin your own journaling practice to take your own long look back, use my guided journal to walk you through this process  - Permission to Land: Personal Transformation Through Writing. Both books are available on www.MarciBrockmann.comAnd where ever books are sold online. Permission to Heal Bookshop - Buy books from the episodes & support independent bookstores.  The Permission to Heal podcast is a passion of mine. I need your help to bring more inspirational episodes to the world; please consider becoming a patron through PATREON. This is where your PATREON subscription comes in. With your subscription, you get perks and swag and the meaningful contentment knowing you are helping me get PTH to the people who need it. Support the show Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/PermissiontoHeal)

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News
7/16/2021: Sens. Ruggerio, McCaffrey

Newsmakers: WPRI 12 Eyewitness News

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2021 26:16


This week on Newsmakers: Senate President Dominick Ruggerio, D-North Providence, and Senate Majority Leader Michael McCaffrey, D-Warwick, discuss the end of the regular legislative session and the prospects for lawmakers returning in the fall to tackle marijuana.

The News with Gene Valicenti
RI Senate President Dominick Ruggerio - Air BnB Bill & Safe Injection Sites - 7-9-21

The News with Gene Valicenti

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2021 9:05


Senate President Dominick Ruggerio spoke with Gene about the Air BnB bill that passed the General Assembly, but was vetoed by Governor McKee, safe injection sites, and more.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Fox Den With Gina B and Mama D
The Fox Den introduction for Faust Ruggerio

The Fox Den With Gina B and Mama D

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2021 2:59


Introduction for upcoming show --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gina-bengtson/support

Pulse of Providence
Pulse of Providence: Senate District 4 Candidates Dominick Ruggerio and Lenny Cioe

Pulse of Providence

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2020 40:31


PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WPRI) — Democratic primary voters in Senate District 4 will have a choice between Senate President Dominick Ruggerio and Lenny Cioe, a registered nurse, for the district that straddles North Providence and Providence.In this episode of Pulse of Providence, Steph Machado ask the two candidates where they stand on issues ranging from the state's budget to Providence schools to the movement to defund police. The candidates also weigh in on Ruggerio's decision earlier this year not to support a bill that would have sent mail ballot applications to all voters for the primary.There are no Republicans running in the race. The primary is on Sept. 8.This episode originally aired on August 25, 2020.https://www.wpri.com/news/pulse-of-providence/pulse-of-providence-senate-district-4-candidates-dominick-ruggerio-and-lenny-cioe/

GOLF's Fully Equipped
DJ's winning TaylorMade Truss putter | Director of the Frederica Learning Center, Tony Ruggerio

GOLF's Fully Equipped

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2020 70:45


On this week's episode of Fully Equipped, hosts Tim Briand, Executive Vice President at True Spec Golf, GOLF's Managing Editor for Equipment, Jonathan Wall, and GOLF's Senior Editor for Equipment, Andrew Tursky, highlight Dustin Johnson's tournament winning TaylorMade Truss putter and discuss if Tiger Woods is really grinding his own wedges. The Gear Spotlight is then put on the new Cleveland RTX ZipCore wedges before our weekly mailbag segment answers a question on technology in clubs for junior players. The episode then concludes with an interview alongside the Director of the Frederica Learning Center, and GOLF Top 100 Instructor, Tony Ruggerio.

The Bartholomewtown Podcast (RIpodcast.com)
Lenny Cioè (challenging RI Senate President Ruggerio in Democrat primary)

The Bartholomewtown Podcast (RIpodcast.com)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2020 36:04


Bill Bartholomew sits down with Rhode Island Political Cooperative candidate Lenny Cioe, who will primary Rhode Island Senate President Dominick Ruggerio.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/bartholomewtown?fan_landing=true)

The Experience with LaFern Cusack
David Ruggerio: Super Bowl Recipes

The Experience with LaFern Cusack

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2020 59:51


LaFern Cusack speaks with David Ruggerio, celebrity chef, about delicious last minute Super Bowl recipes and his award winning novel: A Wistful Tale of Gods, Men and Monsters.

The Bartholomewtown Podcast (RIpodcast.com)
RI Senate President Dominick Ruggerio

The Bartholomewtown Podcast (RIpodcast.com)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2019 19:39


Bill Bartholomew sits down with Rhode Island Senate President Dominick Ruggerio for a n end-of -year conversation at The Rhode Island State House, discussing priorities heading into 2020 and recent economic development projects that mat shape key elements of the next decade for the state.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/bartholomewtown?fan_landing=true)

The Secrets to Winning with Dr. Bhrett McCabe
Developing Excellence with Tony Ruggerio

The Secrets to Winning with Dr. Bhrett McCabe

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2015 29:01


On this edition of the MindSide Podcast, Dr. Bhrett McCabe talks about developing excellence with Tony Ruggiero, the director of instruction at the Country Club of Mobile.