Home Boston Press Releases 2011 Rhode Island La Cosa Nostra Member Sentenced to 84 Months in Prison for Role in Murder-for-Hire Case
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Rhode Island La Cosa Nostra Member Sentenced to 84 Months in Prison for Role in Murder-for-Hire Case
Anthony St. Laurent Sr. Also Acknowledged Participating in Extortion Conspiracy with Wife and Son

U.S. Attorney’s Office September 21, 2011
  • District of Rhode Island (401) 709-5000

PROVIDENCE, RI—Anthony St. Laurent Sr., 70, was sentenced today to 84 months in federal prison for his role in an attempted murder-for-hire, announced U.S. Attorney Peter F. Neronha, Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, and Richard DesLauriers, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Boston Field Office.

St. Laurent St. also was ordered by U.S. District Judge William E. Smith in federal court in Providence, R.I., to serve three years’ supervised release. St. Laurent Sr. previously acknowledged in a written plea agreement his participation in an extortion conspiracy outlined in a criminal complaint in which he, his wife Dorothy St. Laurent, his son Anthony St. Laurent Jr., and others extorted protection money from bookmakers in the Taunton, Massachusetts area under the threat of violence. St. Laurent Sr. acknowledged in his plea agreement that he is a “made” member of the New England branch of the La Cosa Nostra (NELCN).

According to information presented in court, in 2006 and in 2007, St. Laurent Sr. offered money to individuals, including some known to be violent criminals, to murder Robert “Bobby” DeLuca, another “made” member of the NELCN, in retaliation for Deluca having publicly accused St. Laurent Sr. of being a government informant. According to information presented in court, St. Laurent Sr. phoned an individual in Massachusetts to set up a meeting in Rhode Island on April 12, 2006, at which he solicited the individual to kill DeLuca.

Anthony St. Laurent Jr. was sentenced in December 2010 to 78 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release, to include 500 hours of community service each year during the term of supervised release for his role in the extortion conspiracy. Dorothy St. Laurent was sentenced in December 2010 to three years of probation, the first six months of which were served in home confinement. She also was ordered to perform 500 hours of community service per year during the term of supervised release.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney William J. Ferland for the District of Rhode Island and Trial Attorney Sam Nazzaro of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Unit.

The matter was investigated by the FBI, with the assistance of the Rhode Island State Police and the Providence Police Department.

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