Assistant Chief Edward Delatorre, the NYPD’s borough commander, is the subject of an internal affairs investigation following multiple news reports on real estate dealings in the Bronx, the police commissioner said on Monday.
Among them, the acquisition by his wife of several default properties formerly owned or connected to acting boss Vincent Basciano aka “Vinny Gorgeous” and a mob captain, Dominick Cicale, according to a WNYC report.
“I read the article today…based on that I think we knew about it a little before hand I had a discussion with Joe Reznick, our deputy commissioner of Internal Affairs, and we opened up an investigation,” said NYPD Commissioner James P. O’Neill at an unrelated press conference hosted by Mayor Bill de Blasio.
Every year, NYPD ranking officers are required to report outside sources of income for themselves and their spouses to the Conflicts of Interest Board.
Officers are forbidden from engaging in business dealings with known criminals, or using insider information about investigations for financial gain, according to Conflicts of Interest Board website.
Delatorre’s lawyer Hayes Young told WNYC the chief never interacted with or received money from mobsters, and characterized the purchases as arm’s length transactions between the chief’s wife and a small Bronx-based bank, Ponce De Leon Federal Bank.
In March 2011, Ponce De Leon was looking to absolve itself of $650,000 in loans made to ADL Construction LLC, according to WNYC.
Owners of the construction company included a mobster, the wife of a mobster and the girlfriend of a mobster associated with the Bonanno crime family, the report said.
The loans went bad after the arrests of Bonanno crime family members in 2004 and 2005, then, the property was tied up in lawsuits for years, according to the report.
Finally, in 2011, the bank sold the ADL Construction debt to Chen Wang Realty Corp. The documents are signed by Delatorre’s wife, a licensed real-estate broker and former Nassau County prosecutor, the report said.
Six months later, in September 2011, she took ownership of the property at a foreclosure auction and a little over two years later, she transferred the property to a company she owned with her husband, according to the report.