STATEMENT:
Louis "The Coin" Colavecchio, who agreed to speak to the Litchfield-Morris Rotary earlier this year, has cancelled his appearance scheduled March 15 at noon at Forman School. Colavecchio requested a substantial fee for his appearance last week, however, the volunteer service organization does not pay for speaker appearances. Colavecchio, 76, also noted he is in poor health.
Presenting in place of Colavecchio are retired Connecticut State Police Det. Sgt. Jerry Longo, now senior investigator at Mohegan Sun; and Jeff DeClerck, senior investigator at Foxwoods. Longo, who arrested Colavecchio for making counterfeit slot machine tokens, wrote an introduction for Louis The Coin's memoir, "You Thought It Was More." Longo and DeClerck were among many investigators and law enforcement agencies who worked on the case, including the U.S. Secret Service.
- Andy Thibault, Speaker Committee Chair, Litchfield-Morris Rotary.
ABOUT JERRY LONGO & JEFF DeCLERCK
Retired Detective Sergeant Jerry Longo oversees the Connecticut State Police Museum and Educational Center as chairman. He is the president of the Connecticut State Police Academy Alumni Association, a director of the Connecticut State Police Academy Educational Foundation, and is the intelligence officer for an international group. Sergeant Longo teaches history at the Connecticut State Police Academy. He is currently a senior investigator with the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Commission at the Mohegan Sun Casino.
Jeff DeClerck, senior investigator, Gaming Commission, Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, is a member of the New London County Detective’s Association, the Rhode Island Detective’s Association, Connecticut Gang Investigator’s Association -- having served on the Board of Directors for 3 years -- and is a board member for the International Organization of Asian Crime Investigators and Specialists, the host of the annual International Conference on Transnational Organized Crime and Terrorism. Through these memberships, Jeff has established an extensive intelligence network that includes casino industry investigators, as well as law enforcement personnel at the local, state federal and international level to aid in the identification and investigation of activity occurring at Foxwoods Resort and Casino. Jeff is the recipient of the 2002 United States Attorney’s Award for his role in the investigation of a multi-state counterfeit check cashing scheme which was a joint effort with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, West Hartford CT Police Department, Fairfield CT Police Department and the New Jersey State Police Division of Gaming Enforcement.
2002 Connecticut Law Tribune Column on Louis The Coin
The Other Side Of The Coin
March 11, 2002
Louis Colavecchio is not your average jeweler.
The North Providence, R.I. entrepreneur brought his talents to Connecticut several years ago. He had already hit Las Vegas. The casinos will never be the same.
Colavecchio can duplicate or create almost anything made out of precious metals or stones. All he needs is a sample.
Foxwoods had been booming for about five years when Colavecchio set his sights on Connecticut; Mohegan Sun had just opened.
Colavecchio never talked about his friends -- at least to police. But one of the important numbers in his personal phone directory was for Louis “Baby Shanks” Manocchio, the reputed Mafia boss of Rhode Island. Manocchio lives in Providence’s Federal Hill Neighborhood, where he once operated the CafĂ© Verdi restaurant. He was convicted of a mob hit in 1968, but that was overturned by the Rhode Island Supreme Court. Manocchio's only other brush with the law came three years ago when he gave his mother a dishwasher and a refrigerator stolen from Connecticut.
Before Colavecchio could move on the casinos, he needed to do some homework. He also needed some serious equipment. Colavecchio's expert analysis revealed he needed the following: precious metals including copper, zinc and nickel; a 150-ton press from Italy; and laser-cutting tools to cut, shape and create dies to stamp out the coins. The coins were tokens, to be used in Las Vegas, Atlantic City and Connecticut.
When state police brought a sample of Colevecchio’s product to Foxwoods, the experts did not believe it was counterfeit. Some called it a masterpiece. State police advised the casino to keep track of inventory; the token counts were bound to be off because of the surplus. Meanwhile, the inventories at Atlantic City casinos were multiplying like rabbits.
“We know that he hit Vegas hard,” an investigator told me. “But since many of the directors of security there were former FBI agents, they denied it. The problem did not exist. It never happened.”
Evidence mounted. A surveillance team comprised of detectives from Las Vegas, New Jersey and Connecticut waited for Colavecchio to hit New Jersey or Connecticut again. He chose New Jersey. This time he used only $100 tokens. It was easy. There were fewer machines to watch.
Colavecchio was arrested in Atlantic City in late December 1996. The pinch did not make the papers for about a week. In his car, Colavecchio had 750 pounds of counterfeit tokens, a fake police ID, a handgun, maps of casinos and various casino documents.
The FBI, Secret Service, three state police agencies and Providence police took inventory at Colavecchio’s Providence operation. The government had to rent two storage facilities to store all the loot that was seized.
Everyone took their turn arresting Colavecchio. He hired a former Rhode Island attorney general as his lawyer.
Foxwoods and Mohegan Sun acknowledged finding a total of at least $50,000 in fake tokens. Investigators borrowed microscopes from local high schools to inspect mounds of tokens. It took them weeks just to determine that Colavecchio hit one Mohegan Sun jackpot for $2,000.
Colavecchio ended up in a conference room and getting VIP treatment at Mohegan Sun. His lawyer had worked out a deal. Colavecchio showed law enforcement how he did the job, and promised to help the casino tribes and the state ward off any future raids. They say he was a hero in Providence as well. Colavecchio served a short sentence and did not “rat out” any of his friends.
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