Copyright 2012 by Adrian Humphreys
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Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data
Humphreys, Adrian, 1965
The Weasel: a double life in the mob / Adrian Humphreys.
Includes index.
ISBN 978-0-470-96451-4
1. InformersBiography. 2. Organized crime. 3. Mafi a. 4. Undercover operations. I. Title.
HV6248.W43H86 2011 364.1092 C2011-901423-8
ISBN 978-0-470-95230-6 (ePDF); 978-0-470-95232-0 (eMobi); 978-0-470-95231-3 (ePUB)
John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd.
6045 Freemont Blvd.
Mississauga, Ontario
L5R 4J3
To Eliana,
My gold standard.
Prologue
Detroit-Windsor border, 1986
This is Marvin The Weasel Elkind, he's a well-connected guy.
It was the introduction Marvin wanted: a crook vouching for him as a fellow crook to a third crook a little further up the underworld food chain. From where he had parked his car in downtown Windsor, The Weasel could see the gleaming dark towers of Detroit's Renaissance Center and, if he squinted to the west, the cabled arches of the Ambassador Bridge that spans the river, linking Detroit on the American side to Windsor in Canada. It is the continent's most heavily travelled border point and Marvin knew the seamless link between automotive giants in both cities had long ago been appropriated by gangsters, making the 32-mile length of the river the carotid artery of contraband.
Marvin chomped on the end of a fat Tuero cigar, grown and rolled in Canada using tobacco seeds from Havana, letting him think he was smoking a Cuban without coughing up so many pesos. The cigars became a smoky signature of his presence that constantly floated back and forth from his thin lips to his corpulent, ring-heavy fingers. Marvin was meeting the owners of a chain of strip clubs who also sold drugs. They wanted to expand and that's where Marvin said he could help.
My Detroit friends want to get into business in Ontario, Marvin told them, giving the businessmen a hard stare to emphasize the dark nature of his proposal. They're looking for partners who can handle it.
The strip club owners had already checked Marvin out, in the haphazard, oral-history sort of way gangsters do, especially in the days before one could Google a name to see if he had been in the newspapers, testifying at a trial, maybe, or otherwise revealed as a snitch. In this cutthroat world, a personal recommendation was the only sure way of getting behind closed doors, which is where Marvin needed to be. Before the meeting, the businessmen had called friends in both countries asking about The Weasel. They spoke to a major boxing promoter in Detroit who knew all the bandits from ringside; he told them Marvin hung around with serious Mafia guys all the time. The club owners also talked with career criminals in Toronto who had known Marvin for decades as a street enforcer, loan collector and mob driver. The owners had themselves seen Marvin hanging around one of their clubs with Ernie Kanakis, a big-time gambler rumoured to have killed three Detroit mobsters coming at him with ice picks.
Marvin was given the nod on all fronts as a known hood and connected guy, and the backroom doors were flung open. They always were.
Marvin brought three Detroit friends to his next meeting. The club owners cleared out their VIP room for them. Shockingly young women gyrated amid a river of booze and food as the talk turned to drugs. The deal was looking good for everyone and as Marvin reluctantly got up to leave, one of his American friends, a firmly built Italian man with a thick moustache, gave the Canadian businessmen his phone number in Detroit.
The mustachioed American looked out across the border from the 26th floor of a skyscraper on Detroit's Michigan Avenue and could just about seea mile awaythe tawdry strip club where he had been with The Weasel. In the daytime, with the bright neon lights dimmed, it looked nowhere near as impressive.
If anyone dialled the number he had given out, the phone that would ring was a few feet away, across his office and locked in the bottom drawer of his desk. Special Agent Rich Mazzari was the only person with a key to that drawer. The phone was a special hotline he used only in undercover operations, secured inside the Detroit field office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Mazzari didn't want anyone else answering it, jeopardizing his investigations or putting the lives of his agents or prized informants at risk. Informants like The Weasel.
The truth was, despite the furtive checking on Marvin's background by the strip club owners, despite Marvin's fearsome streetwise stare and calm demeanour, Marvin was part of this emerging drug conspiracy not as a criminal, although he sometimes was one, and not as a mobster, although he had been that, and not as a thuggish enforcer, although he did that kind of work as well, but as a paid police informant. A career fink. In fact, because of his unique life and special abilities, one of the best. He achieved secret success solving a staggering number of crimes in several countries by infiltrating criminal gangs and conspiracies, bringing down drug traffickers and con men, foreign agents and spies, Mafia bosses and pornography kingpins, corrupt union fat cats and crooked businessmen. He helped to thwart Third World coups, multimillion-dollar frauds, union corruption, political blackmail and murders. He worked for the FBI, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Internal Revenue Service, Scotland Yard, Mexican federal police, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Ontario Provincial Police, city forces and more. He had infiltrated crime gangs in Canada, the United States, Mexico, Ecuador, the Netherlands and the Middle East.
In a beautiful hide-in-plain-sight accident, Marvin was known on the street as The Weasel, but no one could have suspected how masterful a weasel he really was.
Marvin's jobhis government work, as he calls itwas to introduce into this drug conspiracy four people who would not pass such a background check by the crooks: three agents with the FBI and a detective with the OPP. The only way these four were getting past the closed backroom doors was if someone like The Weasel brought them in with him.
This was what Marvin got paid for. This was what he was good at.
This was what he loved.
While Mazzari waited in his Detroit office, Marvin was heading back into the club for another meeting, this time bringing another undercover cop with him.
OPP Detective-Constable Al Robinson was Marvin's police handler. He was known by all of his friends as Robbie, but to the criminals Marvin introduced him to he was Colonel Al Gibson, a former air force officer who had left the military under a cloud of disgrace. The military co-operated in the subterfuge and created false records for a discharged Colonel Gibson in case someone with deep contacts checked on him. Robbie had two wallets, one with his real ID and a second for Col. Gibson. He even had a tattoo on his right forearm, an image of a heart hugged by a flowing ribbon inscribed with the word Mother. Cheaply inked when he was a teenager in homage to his dead mom, it had blurred with age. In the 1980s, the tattooed arm alone deflected suspicion he might be a cop. None the wiser, the crooks all called him The Colonel.