Organized crime organizations operating in the digital age are vulnerable to sophisticated law enforcement surveillance techniques, as demonstrated by the Rizzuto crime family case where hidden cameras and microphones captured every conversation, meeting, and transaction, ultimately leading to the dismantling of the empire and the imprisonment of its leaders.
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Francesco Arcadi: Montreal's Most Hunted Mafia Boss | The Rizzuto Crime Family DocumentaryAdded:
October 31st, 2005, Halloween night in Montreal. Four men in masks approach a home in the darkness. They aren't trick-or-treaters. They're kidnappers.
Within minutes, Nicolo Veracalli is dragged from his house and vanishes into the night. A ransom note is left behind.
$9 million or he dies. But the panic doesn't stop there. Inside the Conenza Social Club, one man is unraveling.
Francesco Arcotti, acting boss of the Rudo crime family, is trapped. Hidden RCMP microphones capture him, admitting the family is running out of money.
"There's no money now," he tells his associates. "Just leftovers." "The most powerful criminal in the city, refuses to leave his own headquarters. He believes the moment he steps outside, he'll be killed, and the police are recording every second of it." This is the story of Franchesco Arcotti and how the man running Montreal's mafia lost control of the city around him. This video covers real events involving violence, kidnapping, and organized crime. Viewer discretion is advised.
Miss the button? Go ahead, subscribe now so you don't forget later. January 20th, 2004. Montreal police surround a mansion in a Hunik. Inside, they arrest Vito Rudo, the boss of Montreal's most powerful crime family. The charges trace back 23 years. A triple murder inside a Brooklyn social club in 1981. Three rival captains in New York's Banano crime family gunned down in an ambush.
Prosecutors say Veto himself was inside the club that night, emerging from a closet with a gun in his hand. One of the shooters. The arrest sends shock waves through Montreal's underworld.
Veto fights extradition for 31 mugs, but everyone knows where this is heading.
The Rudo family needs someone to hold things together. A leadership committee forms around the aging Nicolo Rudo senior consiglary Palorrena, veteran loyalists, and one rising figure, Franchesco Arcotti. The committees don't work in the mafia. Someone always becomes the real boss. Suddenly, the Calabrian outsider is running Montreal's streets. Franchesco Arcotti had a problem. He was helping run a Sicilian empire without being Sicilian himself.
Born in 1964, Arati arrived in Canada during the Calabrian immigration wave and started his criminal career with the Kotroni crime family. But by the 1980s, the Kotronis were finished. The Rudos had violently taken control of Montreal.
Tilling the Kotroni leadership in a bloody internal war, Arcotti made a calculated decision. He switched sides.
This made him an outsider. The Razuda family was Sicilian. Its leaders nearly all from the same small villages in Sicily. Blood and birthplace mattered.
Arati was Calabrian, from a different region, a different culture. He didn't have the legitimacy that came with bloodlines. He had to earn his place through loyalty and violence. And he did. He proved himself so valuable that Veto Rudo brought him into the inner circle. Every January, Arcotti vacationed with Veto in the Dominican Republic, proof of how deeply the boss trusted him. Within the family, they called him Compare Frank. But Arcadi was not Veto. Unlike Veto, Arcadi lacked diplomacy. He was feared, not respected.
A mid-level soldier suddenly running an empire. And he inherited power at the exact moment police surveillance in Montreal was becoming more aggressive than ever. Franchesco Arcadi operated like it was still the 1970s.
Holding meetings openly and social clubs and cafes, speaking freely about murders and drug deals. He never saw the cameras go in. By the time he took power, the Consenza social club was already wired.
Every word, every meeting, every crime, all of it recorded. Between 2004 and 2006, Franchesco Arcati runs the Rudo family's operations from the Conenza Social Club on Jerry Street in Montreal St. Leonard neighborhood. On the surface, the Conenza looks ordinary. Men play cards. Espresso machines hiss in the background, but hidden RCMP microphones are capturing the headquarters of Montreal's mafia.
Construction company owners, union bosses, and topranking mobsters stream through the clump constantly. Decisions are made here. Money changes hands here, and the police are recording everything.
Arrotti leads what's known as the young Turk faction. His top lieutenants are Franchesco Delbalsso and Lorenzo Giardano, aggressive enforcers in their 30s who operate from Barlanic in Laval.
The system works like a corporate structure. The old guard makes decisions at the Conenza. The young executives handle operations at the len. Bags of cash constantly move from the streets to the bosses. Stacks of hundreds wrapped in elastic bands. Shopping bags filled with bills. RCMP surveillance captures the deliveries again and again. The empire runs on cocaine trafficking, sports bookmaking, illegal gambling, extortion, and construction industry control. But the real money comes from two operations. First, Montreal Trudeau Airport. Arcotti has corrupted dozens of customs agents and baggage handlers.
Cocaine moves through the airport hidden in luggage carts, food containers, and shipping crates while corrupt employees wave it through security. In 2005 alone, police seize over a ton of cocaine.
That's just what they catch. Orati even charges other criminal organizations a 3% tax for the privilege of using his airport. Second, the online gambling operation. Dell Balso runs a massive sports betting website that generates over $26 million between 2004 and 2005.
26 million from a telemarketing floor and a server on a Mohawk reserve.
Surveillance cameras film Arotti and Paulo Renda counting the cash on tables at the Conenza, separating the money into piles, deciding who gets what. By 2005, Francesco Arcotti is helping run one of the most profitable criminal organizations in Canada, and hidden cameras of both the Conenza and the Leneck are documenting every move. But beneath the business operations, there's violence. In spring 2000, Arcadi meets with Paulo Jervasi, a family associate who runs strip clubs in Montreal.
Jervasi has been selling cocaine to the Rock Machine, a rival biker gang at war with the Hell's Angels. The Rudo family is allied with the Hell's Angels.
Jervasi's business threatens that alliance. Arcadi tells him to stop.
April 20th, 2000. Jervasi's son, Salvatore, is murdered. His body is found stuffed in the trunk of his Porsche parked outside his father's home. Paulo meets with Arcadi again, who denies any involvement, but repeats his warning. The pressure campaign lasts years. Four months later, Paulo Dervasi is shot and badly wounded. Two days after that, police wire taps capture a conversation between Arcadi and Veto Rudo. Arcad's words are recorded.
There's only one way, he says. A bullet to the head. Then comes a car bomb in February 2002. Jervasi survives again.
Finally, on January 19th, 2004, gunmen catch up with him. He's shot and killed inside his car. Four years, three failed murders. The fourth one succeeds.
Arcades violence isn't limited to mob wars. He even tries to monopolize Montreal's coffee market, threatening restaurant owners to buy mocha doro coffee exclusively. Police bugs record him telling an associate. As soon as you see a different package of coffee, you tell them, "I'll break down the whole place." When a restaurant in Booerville refuses to comply, Arcadi sends three men to destroy the establishment. They trash the entire place over coffee. In January 2004, Arcadi orders Delo to collect a debt from a machine company owner. Delbalso makes a phone call that police record. The guy that's going to make you eat out of a straw for 6 months if you don't pay him. Delboso says, "You hear me? I know you have it on tape.
Don't worry about it. Just pay the bill, okay? And I'm not going to come and tell you again the next time I break your head, okay?" Dell Balso is the family's enforcer, the man sent to terrify people into paying. In December 2004, a gambling addict racks up over $800,000 in debt from Dell Balso's betting site.
RCMP cameras capture the response inside Barlenic itself. Del Balso, Jordano, and another mobster beat the man on camera.
The three men never even look for surveillance equipment. Every crime filmed, every threat recorded, every murder planned on tape. The RCMP doesn't need more evidence. They already have everything. The only question left is when they decide to move. In 2004, while Franchesco Arati is running the Rudo family's daily operations, multiple Canadian law enforcement agencies unite under one investigation, Project Colise. It becomes the largest organized crime investigation in Canadian history. $35 million, over 700 officers. One goal, penetrate the Razudo organization from the inside. The breakthrough comes when investigators secretly hide microphones inside the walls of the Conenza Social Club.
Cameras disappear into the ceilings of Barlan in Laval. November 2nd, 2004. The surveillance goes live. From that moment forward, every conversation, every meeting, every transaction is being recorded. The mobsters have no idea.
Over the next two years, RCMP surveillance intercepts over a million conversations. They discuss murders.
They count cash. They plan drug shipments. They threaten people. And the police are capturing every second of it.
Nicolo Rudo is filmed hiding wads of cash in his socks. Construction company owners are recorded handing envelopes to mob leaders. The evidence is overwhelming and still the family operates as if nothing has changed. The most damaging recording never happens in Montreal. January 2003. Veto Rudo and Franchesco Arati take their annual vacation to the Dominican Republic, staying at the Casa Dempo Resort. They share a room overlooking the famous Diro golf course. What they don't know is that at the RCMP's request, Dominican police have planted listening devices in the room. One night, Veto starts talking. He tells Arotti the full story of the infamous Banano family murders.
He describes bursting from a closet with a gun in his hand. He describes the shooting. There was blood all over the place. The RCMP records every word. This confession obtained a full year before Veto's arrest will become the key evidence that sends him to prison in the United States. Back in Montreal, the surveillance cameras continue documenting criminal activity. December 2004, the cameras watch as Delbalso, Giodano, and another mobster beat a man who owes gambling debts. The beating happens inside Barlanic itself. The three men never look around for cameras.
January 2005. Jeppi TorΓ© tries to cheat Arati on a cocaine shipment from Haiti, secretly importing far more than he declared to avoid the family's tax. The RCMP, monitoring the shipment, seizes all of it. The bugs record Arati's response. He finds every member of Tori's crew. He forces Tori to hand over all future profits as punishment. April 2006. Cameras capture Arotti and Paulo Renda sitting beneath fluorescent lights at the Conenza. stacks of cash spread across the table in front of them.
Arrocotti identifies whose money it is as they count. This is compare Rocco and Lorenzo's. He says the camera records everything. The police have everything they need, but they keep watching.
You've already heard how this begins.
October 31st, 2005. Four men in masks.
Nicolo Veraricoli kidnapped. A ransom note demanding $9 million. The kidnapping traces back to a failed drug deal and a debt dispute tied to the Hell's Angels. Earlier, Arati had humiliated Luigi Demo during a confrontation at the Conenza. Now, De Mo has taken one of Arcotti's men. What you haven't heard is what happens inside the Conenza social club. While the RCMP bugs are running, Arrotti falls apart. He's terrified. He tells the others there's no money to pay the ransom. There's no money now, Arati says. Just leftovers.
The bugs capture the acting boss of Montreal's mafia. Panicking inside his own headquarters. Arotti believes the Frenchmen, his term for the Hell's Angels, are working with Demo against him. He refuses to leave the club. He believes the moment he steps outside, he'll be killed. Verali is eventually released, but the crisis isn't over. A few days later, Luca and Patrico Demo walk into the Conenza Social Club with their guns drawn. It's a message, an implied threat. After they leave, the bugs record Arati whispering that he's afraid of the crazy guys. He doesn't want to leave. He's trapped in his own headquarters. Enemies closing in from outside. Police recording from inside.
And Arati, hiding in a building filled with hidden cameras, has no idea the walls are about to come down. A white Cadillac rolls through downtown Montreal just before midnight on August 30th, 2006. Two motorcycles pull alongside at a traffic light. The riders open fire.
Dominico Macki, a 35-year-old enforcer for the Rudo family, is killed instantly. But police believe the killers made a mistake. Mackrie drove a Cadillac nearly identical to Franchesco Arotti's. He was driving directly behind Arotti when the shooting happened. The hit was likely meant for Arati himself.
Retaliation tied to an earlier mafia murder. The cameras at the Conenza Social Club capture the meeting that follows. Delbalsso and Jordano are furious. They want immediate revenge.
Roco Seleso urges caution. Arrocotti, clearly shaken, insists they have to respond with force. Then he makes an announcement. I'm leaving for Italy immediately. Paulo Renda gives some advice that's captured on the surveillance equipment. What you got to do now? Find an island. Take your wife and leave. Instead of retaliating, Arati disappears. He leaves Montreal for Italy with his wife, abandoning the city he was supposed to control. The acting boss is now hiding overseas, terrified that the next assassination attempt will succeed. While Arati hides in Italy, events in Montreal continues spiraling.
August 17th, 2006, Veto Rudo is finally extradited to the United States. During the drive to the airport, Veto Rudo makes a chilling prediction to the two RCMP officers transporting him. He warns them they will regret the day he left Canada. The violence that had already erupted is only the beginning. You will see what will happen when I leave. Vito says he apparently believes Arati is not capable of leading the family in his absence. October 2006, Arati returns to Canada from Italy. He thinks the heat has died down. He's wrong. On the morning of November 22nd, 2006, Operation Kizay strikes. Over 700 police officers execute the largest organized crime takedown in Canadian history. At a cottage in Hemingford near the US border, RCMP officers arrive to arrest Franchesco Arotti. When he sees the police, Arati crashes his car into a ditch trying to flee. Officers discover militarystyle weapons, body armor, and an arsenal hidden inside the cottage.
News cameras capture him being led into RCMP headquarters in Westmount.
Handcuffs, camouflage jacket, head down, the Calabrian who climbed to the top of a Sicilian Empire, now in custody.
Across Montreal, police teams move simultaneously against the entire leadership structure of the Rudo family.
Nicolo Rudo, 82 years old, taken from his home. Paulo Renda, Roco Soido, Francesco Delbalso, Lorenzo Jordano.
Nearly 1,000 criminal charges follow.
Police seize over $3.5 million. The Rudo Empire has been dismantled. September 18th, 2008. After years of surveillance, wiretaps, and hidden recordings, Franchesco Arcotti finally pleads guilty. conspiracy to commit extortion, bookmaking, illegal gaming, and possession of proceeds of crime. He's sentenced to 11 years in prison. The evidence against him is overwhelming.
Prosecutors play the surveillance footage in court. Arrotti counting cash.
Arotti threatening violence. Arrotti planning crimes. Years of video, hours of audio. There is no defense possible.
It's all on tape. Arrotti walks into Bordeaux Jail believing his nightmare is over. He has no idea it's just beginning. Because while he's locked safely behind bars, everyone he knows on the outside is about to die. Quick reminder, if you're still watching, ask yourself one thing. If this level of surveillance detail matters to you, why not subscribe so you don't miss the next case where the cameras were watching.
While Franchesco Aradi sits in Bordeaux Jail, the Montreal underworld explodes.
The power vacuum he tried to prevent becomes a massacre. December 28th, 2009.
Nick Rudo Jr., Veto's eldest son, is gunned down in broad daylight on a residential street in Notream Degrossass. He's shot multiple times standing beside his car. The heir to the Rudo Empire, killed. May 20th, 2010.
Paulo Renda, Veto's brother-in-law and the family consilier, is kidnapped from his car on a Montreal street. He's never seen again. July 2010. Agugustino Contrera, a powerful Rudo associate, is executed along with his bodyguard in front of his warehouse. November 10th, 2010. Nicolo Rudo, the 86-year-old patriarch who built the family, is eating dinner at his mansion in Cardiville with his wife and daughter. A sniper fires a single shot through the doublepaneed glass of his rear patio window. Nicolo is killed instantly. The man who tried to hold everything together while Veto was in prison. Gone.
Rival factions war for control. Rainald Dejardan. Others. The family is fracturing. The irony is brutal. In 2005, Arcadi was terrified to leave the Conenza Social Club, believing he'd be shot the moment he stepped outside. He was right to be afraid, but he was safe in prison while everyone else died.
Francesco Arcadi is released on parole to a halfway house after serving most of his sentence. The parole board assessment is blunt. You were closed off and followed the law of Omera without opening up about your past or current life. Arcadi promises he wants to retire, manage a garden, raise animals, and spend the rest of my time with my family. He tells them in 2019, his sentence officially ends. Today, Franchesco Arcadi is believed to be living quietly, out of the life. The Montreal mafia he once ran no longer exists in its former form, and Arcadi, the man who briefly held it together, survived by staying behind bars while the war raged outside. Franchesco Arcadi wasn't born to be a boss, and it showed.
Thrusted to power during a crisis, he made critical errors, meeting openly at the Conenza, speaking freely while hidden cameras recorded everything, underestimating modern surveillance.
Remember Halloween 2005? Trapped inside the Conenza Social Club, refusing to leave, terrified he'd be killed the moment he stepped outside. He was right to be afraid, just not of the people he thought. The real threat was already inside the room with him. The cameras, the microphones, the police building a case that would end his empire. Project Kise proved that patient police work could dismantle even the most powerful crime families. The man who once controlled Montreal's underworld ended up a footnote in the Rudo family's bloody collapse. A Calabrian outsider who climbed high, fell hard, and survived longer than most. Not because he was smarter or stronger, but because he was locked away when the killing started. And if you made it this far, you know what to do. Hit the bell. There are more cases like this coming. Cases where the truth is darker than any fiction.
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