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By
Anthony Olszewski
COPYRIGHT 1996
Jack Terrier was a prominent lawyer
in Hudson City. A "Criminal Attorney", his clients were a miserable mix of small
time bookies, petty drug dealers, and failed thieves. A maestro of the criminal
justice system, Jack would perform before nodding, complacent, if not complicit,
judges many times a day. The truly virtuoso displays took place later on that
evening at a local watering hole, "MacGonigles." There, over expensive Scotch
and free corned beef, judges found leniency to be its own reward. Seated on a
bar stool, members of Hudson City's Finest could be observed slapping the back
of "Good Ol' JT." Detectives, who a few hours earlier could not remember faces,
names, dates, or even the color of their own wive's hair, would now be overheard
giving blow by blow descriptions of obscure welterweight bouts of some thirty
years in the past
Ah, but as Summer must invariably give way to Fall, as
the golden tresses of the young lass must turn to white, all good things must
come to an end! It seems that Jack MacGonigle, owner of the aforementioned
tavern, and his silent partner, and also his brother-in-law, Ivan "Stash"
Piskorskey, Hudson City Police Captain were the possessors of tremendous
stamina. Captain Piskorskey, in addition to his duties as a peace officer, had a
night job at a trucking terminal. He made a deal with the watchman to allow Jack
MacGonigle to drive into the yard with a van. On a daily basis all three helped
themselves to a varied assortment of freight: cameras, cans of crab meat,
typewriters, Oriental rugs, and, as the official report later stated, "many
other items of value."
It's been said that "the wheels of the gods grind
extremely slowly, but they grind exceedingly fine." If you're caught stealing at
some corner candy store, the owner will just give you the old heave-ho, an'
don't let the door hit ya in the ass! Large businesses work differently. It
takes a long time for anybody to realize that anything is amiss. Then there will
be a host of claims to both the trucking outfit and to various insurance
companies for the lost merchandise. When it is obvious to all that the dam has,
in fact, sprung a leak, the FBI will be contacted. The Feds have their own
circular set of maneuvers. They just don't run out to the warehouse and drag
some clown off to Newark. They wait. They watch. They take pictures. No arrests
are made until the snare is around the whole little clique. When the FBI is sure
that they know every part of the scheme, and that there will be convictions, the
whole crew gets arrested at the same time.
So it was here. The FBI had
an agent, using an assumed identity, of course, rent an apartment directly
across the street from "MacGonigles." The premises were kept under surveillance,
both by agents and by motion picture cameras, twenty-four hours a day.
Appropriate listening and recording devices were installed in the walls of the
bar and on both the public and private phone lines. The Feds got the pictures
that they expected - Jack MacGonigle and Captain Stash Piskorskey unloading
cases of goods during the dead of night. The Washington Net also caught a lot of
other fish, both big and small. The FBI got pictures of Jack Terrier,
accompanied by a parade of judges and police going into the bar every night. The
wiretaps heard a host of "arrangements" discussed over the telephone. And the
murmuring sounds that accompany counting, usually of cash, "one hundred, two
hundred, three hundred...." Recordings of judges counting. Recordings of police
counting. Hours and hours of it, every day.
(Work in
progress)
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