EXCLUSIVE: RI Mob Boss Luigi “Baby Shacks” Manocchio Released From Prison

Russ Moore, GoLocalProv Contributor

EXCLUSIVE: RI Mob Boss Luigi “Baby Shacks” Manocchio Released From Prison

Luigi Manocchio
Luigi Manocchio—often referred to as “Baby Shacks”—the former Rhode Island organized crime boss, was released from a federal prison in North Carolina to a halfway house today, according to Ed Ross a spokesman for the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Manocchio, 87, is finishing out the remaining months of a five-and-a-half year sentence that was given to him as part of a plea deal three years ago this month, for his role in an extortion plot that demanded Providence strip clubs pay him thousands of dollars in protection money on a monthly basis as part of a scheme that took place over decades.

According to an Huffington report from 2012, Manocchio told the court that he deserved to bear some responsibility for the crime due to his position, but denied ever threatening anyone in the scheme.

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“By virtue of my position, I inherited the deeds of my associates…I don’t want my family or any of my friends to believe I personally threatened anyone,” Manocchio told the court, according to an AP report from 2012.

Manocchio was the longtime boss the of the Patriarca crime family, from the mid 1990s until 2009.

Two others, Edward Lato, and Alfred Scivola, both of which are also admitted high ranking members of the Rhode Island mafia, were also arrested and pled guilty to the extortion plot in 2012 and were sentenced to prison time. Lato is serving a 9 year prison sentence while Scivola was sentenced to 3 years and 10 months prison time and was released last October.

There was some speculation, particularly from his lawyer, when he was sentenced that Manocchio would serve out the rest of his days in prison. That fear is looking unwarranted as Manocchio took a major step toward freedom today.

Reentry Centers

Ross told GoLocal that inmates who are serving the remaining months of their sentence are routinely transferred to residential reentry centers, commonly referred to as halfway houses, in an effort to help the inmate to transition from the prison environment back into the community.

The whereabouts of the prisoners are accounted for at all times, he said, and the prisoner is normally only allowed to leave the halfway house for specific reason, such as attending church, or going to work. Most prisoners at halfway houses are expected to work or look for work, but given Manocchio’s advanced age, he’s 87, it’s unlikely that he’d be expected to work, Ross said.  

According to data on the website of the Bureau of Prisons, Manocchio will be released on November 4 of this year, which means he will have served roughly 3.5 years of his 5.5 year prison sentence.


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