Pubdate: Thu, 24 Feb 2000 Source: Bakersfield Californian (CA) Copyright: 2000, The Bakersfield Californian. Contact: PO Box 440, Bakersfield, CA 93302-0440 Website: http://www.bakersfield.com/ Author: Patrick Graham, The Associated Press GRAVANO BUSTED IN DRUG RING PHOENIX - Former Mafia hit man Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano, a mob turncoat whose testimony helped put crime boss John Gotti behind bars, was arrested Thursday for involvement with a drug ring, police said. Gravano was not selling narcotics but helped finance the drug ring and was a "mentor" to the ring's leader, Michael Papa, the founding member of a white supremacist gang, said Phoenix police spokesman Jeff Halstead. Thirty-five members of the ring, which allegedly trafficked the drug ecstasy, were arrested including Papa, Gravano's wife, Debra; son Gerard; daughter Karen; and son-in-law David Seabrook. A judge set Gravano's bail at $5 million. Gravano, a confessed hit man, ravaged the Mafia by defecting to the government, making headlines when he helped convict Gotti and dozens of other gangland cronies. Authorities called him the most important mob turncoat in U.S. history. "His primary testimony against the mob doesn't give him a free ride to facilitate drug dealing in Arizona," state Attorney General Janet Napolitano said. His bombshell testimony, along with conversations secretly taped by the FBI, finally put Gotti, the so-called "Teflon Don," behind bars for life in 1992 after three previous acquittals. Under his deal with prosecutors, Gravano admitted to 19 murders, but served only five years for racketeering. He then entered the federal witness protection program, but dropped out in 1997 saying he wanted to live normally, not always looking over his shoulder for "some kid" hoping to "make a name for himself by taking me out." By 1999, he was making a new life in a Phoenix suburb, living under an assumed name but telling a reporter for The Arizona Republic he didn't think he was in any real danger. "I'm not running from the (expletive) Mafia," Gravano told The Republic last year. Attorney Ron Kuby, who represents the families of Gravano's 19 murder victims in a civil suit, said Gravano's insistence that he was repudiating his criminal ways had been a scam. "I wonder how the government officials who cozied up to this mobster must feel. First they allow him to get away with 19 murders, then they turn him loose to deal poison to the unsuspecting people of Arizona," Kuby said. On its Web site Thursday, The Republic reported the ring targeted Phoenix area teen-agers and rave music clubs. The drug operation allegedly sold upward of 30,000 ecstasy pills a week. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D