Joseph Romano was convicted in January on charges he gave orders to have the prosecutor's breasts cut off as well, and that body parts should be preserved in formaldehyde as proof both people were dead. He claimed today that he was framed by federal agents who fabricated the scheme as part of an undercover sting operation.
"I don't care what sentence you give me as long as I know one thing: I'm innocent," a defiant Joseph Romano told the judge in a rambling statement in federal court in Brooklyn.
He insisted that the FBI targeted him to silence him. "They want to bury me," he said, pointing at grim-faced FBI agents sitting in the audience. "They want to shut me up. ... I've never hurt anybody."
US District Judge John Keenan told Romano that he deserved life behind bars because trying to orchestrate a pair of contract killings "cannot be tolerated in a civilized society." Romano listened quietly, then gathered up a stack of documents and thanked the judge as he was led out of the courtroom.
The inmate agreed to wear a wire and introduce Romano to an undercover federal agent pretending to be a hit man named Bobby Russo. Over the course of several recorded conversations, Romano arranged through a former business partner to pay the undercover agent USD 40,000 to carry out the killings, referred to in code as "Dodge trucks."
Romano also was accused of trying to arrange an assault on a Long Island mechanic for repossessing one of his vintage muscle cars. Undercover investigators staged a photo to make it look as though the mechanic had been knocked out in a beat-down.
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