Source: Toronto Star (Canada) Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jul 1998 Author: Peter Edwards, Toronto Star Staff Reporter 14 HELD FOR PLOTTING TO SMUGGLE DRUGS Police in four nations worked on Project Omerta Last year, Alfonso Caruana described himself as a $400-a-week worker in a car wash. Yesterday, police alleged he is a major organized crime figure. Caruana, 52, his brothers Pasquale and Gerlando, and nephew Giuseppe were among 14 people arrested in early-morning raids on their homes in Woodbridge, Montreal, the United States and Mexico. Police from four countries held a news conference at an RCMP building on St. Clair Ave. to allege that Caruana, of Woodbridge, is a ``major figure in the Cuntrera-Caruana organized crime family. This group specializes in large-scale drug smuggling and money laundering.'' ``This organization has been recognized as the largest, most powerful drug smuggling and money laundering organization in the world that has been successfully operating for the last 30 years,'' said RCMP Inspector Ben Soave, head of the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit that took part in the raids yesterday. The organization is ``in a much bigger league, say, than the Gambinos,'' Soave said, referring to the top New York City crime family once run by mobster John Gotti. In a Montreal court last year, Caruana testified that he was a $400-a-week car washer, although neighbours interviewed yesterday say he drives a late-model Cadillac and Mercedes. ``If organized crime was the game of hockey, Mr. Caruana would be Wayne Gretzky,'' Soave said. Caruana was nabbed in a project code-named Omerta, the Italian word for conspiracy of silence, which is appropriate for the tight-lipped man. ``He operates in the shadows,'' RCMP Staff Sergeant Larry Tronstad said in an interview after the news conference. ``He's very, very, very cautious.'' And now Caruana and the other 13 face charges of conspiracy to import cocaine, conspiracy to traffic in cocaine, and importing cocaine. The bail hearing for Caruana and the others arrested here or brought to Toronto from Montreal was set for this morning at old city hall court. Despite his notoriety in police circles, Caruana enjoyed relative privacy in his $400,000 home on Goldpark Ct. in Woodbridge until the arrests, the culmination of a two-year joint investigation involving the RCMP, Toronto police, Peel Region police, York Region police, the OPP, la Bret du Quebec, Montreal Urban Community Police, and police in the United States and Italy. He liked to frequent coffee shops along Highway 7 and Steeles Ave., Spadina Village at St. Clair Ave. W. and Spadina Rd. N., and a nightclub on Dufferin St., south of Steeles Ave., Tronstad said. Caruana has no record of violence. When arrested, Caruana held his head high, even when the police cruiser in which he was travelling was surrounded by news photographers at 32 Division, near Bathurst St. and Sheppard Ave. Caruana found himself in a Montreal courtroom in March, 1997, trying to fend off Revenue Canada's demand for $29.8 million in unpaid taxes and penalties. At the time, Superior Court Justice Derek Guthrie said he didn't believe Caruana's explanation of what happened to $21 million that went through his bank account in 1981 - one of several years Caruana didn't file an income tax return. ``I don't believe a word he said,'' Guthrie said in court last year, adding that Caruana ``had almost no memory of extraordinary large sums of money and what he did with it.'' But since Caruana declared bankruptcy, and at the time reported a net income of $400 a week, Guthrie ordered him to pay only $90,000 of the tax bill over the next three years. During the court hearing, Revenue Canada lawyer Chantal Comtois asked if he was the Mafia's godfather. ``If only it were true,'' Caruana replied. ``Is it true that you owned 160 square kilometres of land in Venezuela near the Colombian border?'' the lawyer continued. ``Everything is false,'' the Woodbridge man replied. Caruana was first noticed in the Toronto area in the mid-1990s, although he and his family first came here in the mid-1960s, when he was a teenager. He came here on a winding route, from the dusty Sicilian village of Siculiana in southern Sicily to Montreal, South America and Britain. The Caruana family married into the Cuntrera family of Siculiana in the 1950s, and continues the practice. After getting into tax troubles in Canada in the mid-1980s, Caruana moved to Venezuela, where he says he worked as a pig farmer. After his quick exit from Canada, Revenue Canada seized some $800,000 in assets. During his income tax hearing last year in Montreal, Caruana was hard-pressed to explain who brought him the money, or what it was doing in Switzerland. ``You went back and forth - Venezuela, Montreal, Switzerland?'' Guthrie asked. ``No, I had it brought to me,'' Caruana replied. ``By whom?'' the judge asked. ``By travellers,'' Caruana replied. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)