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Federal judge dismisses suit by slain mobster’s family against Mordaga

UPDATE: A federal judge has put an end to an attempt by the family of a reputed organized-crime associate from Tenafly to put blame for the unsolved mob-style hit on him on Michael Mordaga, the former chief of detectives for Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli.

Photo Credit: Mary K. Miraglia, CLIFFVIEW PILOT Courthouse Reporter

CLIFFVIEW PILOT was the first to report when U.S. District Court Judge Faith Hochberg dismissed the portion of the lawsuit filed by the heirs of Frank P. Lagano that named Molinelli’s office: READ MORE….

Hochberg yesterday dismissed the rest of the complaint, which claimed that Mordaga blew the 71-year-old Lagano’s cover as an informant, leading to him being shot in the head on April 12, 2007 in the parking  lot of a Middlesex County diner he co-owned.

Lagano’s family was seeking more than $4 million in damages, which they claim the former Lucchese soldier would have earned over the next 14 years if he hadn’t been whacked.

Mordaga, who is now Hackensack’s police director, wasn’t immediately available to comment. However, he previously told CLIFFVIEW PILOT that the lawsuit had no merit whatsoever.

Hochberg agreed, finding that the claims were “not supported by any factual content.” She also ruled that Mordaga was doing his job and couldn’t be sued.

Lagano’s cooperation with law enforcement began after investigators from Molinelli’s office seized more than $50,000 in cash and other items during a Dec. 1, 2004 raid on his home.

The raid was part of “Operation Jersey Boyz,” a sweep that netted 40 or so organized-crime figures in what was billed as one of the largest gambling busts in North Jersey history.

Lagano’s estate claimed that the investigators didn’t produce an inventory of what was taken and then used the haul “to their own benefit or to the benefit of their confederates or supervisors.”

Following the raid, Molinelli’s office went to court in a forfeiture action, indicating that a total of $265,428 was seized, according to court records. The money went into a fund used to subsidize a variety of law enforcement- and justice-related services throughout Bergen County.

As the civil and criminal cases were proceeding, the lawsuit claimed, Mordaga met with Lagano, a personal friend and business associate.

Mordaga gave Lagano the card of an attorney who he said would make “90% of [his] problems go away,” according to the lawsuit.

Instead, Lagano threw in with James Sweeney, a former DCJ investigator, apparently hoping he could dime out fellow mobsters in exchange for a lesser sentence, court papers show.

The estate claimed in its suit that Mordaga told Lagano  he could not “count on Sweeney helping” with Lagano’s legal problems because “Sweeney is going to jail.”

Soon after, someone in the Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office tipped off “alleged members of certain crime families” arrested in a major sweep the day of the raid that Lagano was an informant, the dismissed suit alleged.

This “created a dangerous situation that resulted in Lagano’s death,” it said.

The gangland-style killing still hasn’t been solved. Sweeney, who has since died, brought his own case against the state, in a suit very similar to that filed by Lagano’s estate.

Law enforcement sources with knowledge of the situation told CLIFFVIEW PILOT that Lagano was introduced to Sweeney by another informant who allegedly owed Lagano money.

Two other associates he owed money to ended up shot dead, something Lagano may have been aware of, one of the sources said.

All of them questioned how much, if at all, Lagano cooperated. One noted that the charges from the earlier sweep were still pending against him when he was killed.

PHOTO: Mary K. Miraglia, CLIFFVIEW PILOT Courthouse Reporter

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