Gangster who ratted out ‘Mafia Cops’ dies0 comments

By barbra
Posted on 24 Jul 2009 at 3:51pm

"Who says he's dead?" says Breslin. "I made a study of the man and I wouldn't believe him if he told me today was Wednesday. He might have a reason to want me not to know it was Thursday."

"Who says he's dead?" says Breslin. "I made a study of the man and I wouldn't believe him if he told me today was Wednesday. He might have a reason to want me not to know it was Thursday."

Burton Kaplan, the bespectacled Jewish gangster from Brooklyn whose turncoat testimony was pivotal in bringing the murderous “Mafia Cops” to justice, has died.

Kaplan, 75, was in the federal witness protection program and had been relocated outside New York State, sources told the Daily News. They said he died of natural causes.

The mob rat’s daughter, Deborah Kaplan, a respected Manhattan Supreme Court justice, declined to comment.

For years, Kaplan was the go-between for gangster Anthony (Gaspipe) Casso and NYPD Detectives Louis Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa, who passed confidential information to the crime boss and carried out hits for the Luchese crime family.

“Without Burt Kaplan‘s cooperation, the full scope of their corruption and betrayal would never have been known,” said Mark Feldman, the former chief of the organized crime section for the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office, which prosecuted the dirty duo.

In 2004, Kaplan was suffering from prostate cancer and serving a 27-year sentence for marijuana trafficking when he was approached by an investigator from the Brooklyn district attorney’s office who convinced him to flip.

“I can’t honestly say I did this for my family,” Kaplan, a garment industry businessman, explained at the Mafia Cops’ trial. “I did it, in all honesty, because I felt that I was gonna be made the scapegoat in this case.”

Former NYPD Detective Thomas Dades, who was instrumental in cracking the case, said Kaplan was haunted by the murder of innocent victim Nicholas Guido, who was gunned down on Christmas Day 1986 by hit men acting on bad information from the Mafia Cops.

Eppolito and Caracappa were convicted of eight murders and are serving sentences of life without parole.

jmarzulli@nydailynews.com

The News and the Post are both reporting the death of Burt Kaplan, the turncoat mob associate whose testimony convicted the two worst New York City detectives in history – the so-called Mafia cops.It sounds plausible. Kaplan, 75, had prostate cancer and was serving a no-exit prison term of 27 years when he agreed to flip and tell about his role as the middle man between rogue detectives Louis Eppolito and Steve Caracappa and a murderous mob chieftain named Anthony “Gaspipe” Casso.

Greg Smith, author of “Mafia Cops,” who wrote today’s News story with the always accurate John Marzulli, says he’s convinced. Natural causes, says the News.

But Jimmy Breslin (pictured), who wrote about Kaplan’s epic turn on the witness stand before Judge Jack Weinstein in “The Good Rat: A True Story,” isn’t convinced. “Who says he’s dead?” says Breslin. “I made a study of the man and I wouldn’t believe him if he told me today was Wednesday. He might have a reason to want me not to know it was Thursday.”

As a witness, Breslin says, Kaplan told the truth. “He was something. The minute he sat down in the witness chair. He started talking and that was it. If he’s dead it is a great loss to the romance of our times. Who else is there? Gotti Junior?” Photo (cc) wikipedia.

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