Martin Bacow
Bacow was described in the wiretaps as 'the back door liaison Teamsters connection to the movie industry.' He was under investigation in 1987 for various suspected offenses, including extortion, insider trading (MCA/Universal), the purchase and sale of narcotics/controlled substances, and the alloca
Martin Bacow was a friend of Eugene Giaquinto, then president of MCA home entertainment division. He was a figure in the FBI wiretap investigation into alleged organized crime penetration of MCA.1
Bacow was described in the wiretaps as "the back door liaison Teamsters connection to the movie industry." He was under investigation in 1987 for various suspected offenses, including extortion, insider trading (MCA/Universal), the purchase and sale of narcotics/controlled substances, and the allocation and use of the proceeds of its trafficking.1
Intercepted conversations revealed Bacow's discussions with Giaquinto about the internal situation at MCA and plans to produce a film about Meyer Lansky. The intercepts indicated that La Cosa Nostra from either Florida or New York City was attempting to get involved in the Lansky film. Bacow also informed Giaquinto that his "guy downtown" (Detective John St. John at the Los Angeles Police Department's Organized Crime Intelligence Division) was tied up with John Gotti and could obtain intelligence reports on organized crime figures.1
Bacow boasted to Giaquinto about John St. John's status within OCID, which allowed him to obtain intelligence reports on organized crime figures across the nation, and Bacow could then pass that information along to Giaquinto. A grand jury investigation into the mob's involvement in the motion picture industry was in the process of being opened at that time, which would have included a close look at Giaquinto, Bacow, and others. St. John called Bacow and told him he would listen and not give up too much, and try to find out what the investigators were looking at and let Bacow know. Bacow then called Giaquinto and related what St. John had said. Giaquinto responded that he would call Edwin Meese and get the investigation shut down.1
Richard Stavin confirmed that the FBI wiretap revealed a conversation in which Giaquinto told Bacow that he would call Edwin Meese and have the FBI's investigation of MCA stopped. No indictment was ever issued against Bacow for any criminal violations, with the prosecution of these suspects reportedly not going forward because no one at the DOJ in Washington D.C. wanted all the wiretap affidavits in the case to be released.1
Sources
- Seymour, Cheri. The Last Circle: Danny Casolaro’s Investigation into the Octopus and the PROMIS Software Scandal. First Edition. TrineDay, 2010. ↩
Local network
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