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Court frees Limone after 33 years in prison

By Ralph Ranalli, Globe Correspondent, 1/6/2001


AMBRIDGE - One arm cradling a bouquet of yellow roses, the other wrapped
tightly around his tearful wife, Peter Limone walked out of Middlesex
Superior Courthouse yesterday a free man after allegedly being framed for
murder by the FBI and spending 33 years in prison, four of them on death
row.


''Mr. Limone's long wait is over,'' said Middlesex Superior Court Judge
Margaret Hinkle, prompting applause and tears from a large group of
relatives and supporters of Limone in the East Cambridge courtroom.


Hinkle, who said it was ''now time to move on,'' granted a joint motion by
defense lawyers and Suffolk District Attorney Ralph C. Martin II's office to
give Limone, 66, a new trial and vacate his life sentence.


After spending half his life behind bars for the murder of Edward ''Teddy''
Deegan in 1965, Limone was freed largely on the basis of secret FBI
documents uncovered by a Justice Department task force investigating
corruption in the bureau's use of organized crime informants.


The documents, which were never turned over to defense lawyers in the Deegan
case, suggest that a onetime FBI informant, Vincent J. ''Jimmy the Bear''
Flemmi, planned Deegan's murder, not Limone.


The key witness against Limone - hit man-turned-FBI-witness Joseph ''The
Animal'' Barboza - was Flemmi's best friend.


The documents say that an informant told the FBI who the participants in the
murder were, and Limone and the three men convicted along with him weren't
among them.


The documents also suggest that FBI agents not only covered up evidence that
Limone and three other men were wrongly convicted in order to protect Flemmi
and his gangster brother, Stephen - an FBI informant for nearly 30 years -
but also knew about the Deegan murder plot in advance and did nothing to
stop it.


''The conduct of the bureau at the time of the murder of Mr. Deegan and the
trial of Mr. Limone tarnishes that agency,'' said Hinkle, a former assistant
US attorney.


Limone had harsh words yesterday for the bureau, particularly former Special
Agent H. Paul Rico, who was Barboza's FBI handler and is reportedly a target
of the Justice Department corruption task force.


''He framed me. He knew what he was doing,'' the silver-haired Limone said
of the agent, who is retired and living in Florida. ''He's scum. He set it
all up.''


Overall, however, the mood of the Limone family was joyful and free of
bitterness and rancor.


Flanked by his wife, Olympia, his four children, and six of his eight
grandchildren, Limone spoke mostly of his gratitude for the people who stood
by him and helped him over the years, particularly his relatives and his
attorney, John Cavicchi.


''I just give thanks to the good people I have been involved with,'' he
said. ''I am very happy.''


Prison, he said, was ''very hard, every day in there, knowing I was
innocent.'' His time was made even harder by watching two codefendants,
Henry Tameleo and Louis Greco, die in prison while their appeals were
rejected by court after court.


Defense lawyers allege that Barboza and the FBI framed Limone, Tameleo,
Greco, and a fourth codefendant, Joseph Salvati, in order to settle personal
scores and to satisfy a mandate from FBI headquarters to make cases against
the underworld.


Tameleo was believed to be a top figure in the Patriarca New England crime
family and Limone and Greco were reputed associates.


Salvati, who owed Barboza money, had his life sentence commuted by Governor
William F. Weld in 1997. Martin's office also filed motions with Hinkle
Thursday to vacate Salvati's sentence and grant him a new trial.


Assistant District Attorney Mark Lee said the newly discovered FBI documents
were a key factor - along with other recently uncovered witness statements
and evidence indicating Limone and Salvati's innocence - in their decision
to drop their opposition to a new trial.


''The documents painted a very compelling picture,'' Lee said. ''What
happened here was wrong enough for us to come into court and say that this
mandates a new trial.''


Publicly, Martin's office had no comment on whether they would pursue a new
trial or drop the case, but privately, sources close to the office called it
a practical impossibility because of the age of the case, the doubts cast on
it by the FBI documents, and the fact that Barboza was murdered in 1976.


Limone and his lawyer said they would wait before considering whether to
file a civil lawsuit against the FBI or state prosecutors.


Cavicchi, however, said that based on what has been paid to other wrongfully
imprisoned defendants, ''$5 million might be a good starting point.''


This story ran on page B1 of the Boston Globe on 1/6/2001.
© Copyright 2001 Globe Newspaper Company.

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