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Robert Perrino : ウィキペディア英語版 | Robert Perrino
Robert Francis Perrino, also known as "Bobby Perrino" (February 9, 1938, Fordham, Bronx – May 4, 1992, Port Richmond, Staten Island) was the Superintendent of Deliveries at ''The New York Post'' from the 1970s until 1992 when he was murdered. He was a Bonanno crime family associate of Italian-American descent. Perrino was the leader of "The Post Circulation Crew" (as referred to by Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau in court) which allegedly existed to control the circulation department of (the now defunct) ''New York Post'' printing press and distribution center (located at 210 South Street) by means of extortion, coercion, the falsification of business records, larceny and bribery. The crew also became involved in loan sharking, drug trafficking and the selling of stolen firearms. ==Biography== Robert Perrino was the son-in-law of Bonanno crime family underboss and former consigliere Nicholas Marangello. He was born to first generation immigrants from Brindisi, Italy, and not to be mistaken as a relative of Anthony Peraino. Perrino was a former New York Police Department (NYPD) law enforcement officer policing the Little Italy, Manhattan neighborhood during an unremarkable twenty-year career. His retirement from the NYPD and introduction to his subsequent career in organized crime remains a mystery to authorities. Perrino lived in Knickerbocker Village, where his father-in-law Nicholas Marangello and other members of the Bonanno crime family resided. He maintained daily contact and worked alongside other crime family members at ''The New York Post'', a mere three blocks away from his home. Perrino was hired in the late 1960s as the Superintendent of Deliveries for the ''New York Post'' to replace Bonanno crime family mobster Anthony Michele. Later, he moved from Knickerbocker Village to a waterfront mansion on Huntington Bay in Huntington, New York with his wife and children. After his disappearance, police discovered in his Huntington home a stunning arsenal of firearms, including some with erased serial numbers, plus $105,000 in loose currency. Months following his disappearance, Perrino's picture was broadcast on the television show ''America's Most Wanted'', but the show elicited no tips. Law enforcement officials and most News and Mail Deliverer's Union (NMDU) workers assumed Perrino had been murdered. He was declared legally dead in 1997.
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