By M. Thomas Nast
I am a politico and longtime Republican. I am using a pseudonym. The publisher knows who I am.
Many believe I am a Richard Luthmann nom-de-plume. I assure you, I am not Luthmann or a figment of his imagination. I am very real. I am “boots-on-the-ground” on Staten Island. I have been for a long time.
This is my anonymous outlet to talk about what I see and hear on the front lines. If you think you know who I am, think again. I’ll deny it when asked and won’t crack under questioning.
This installment has three sections. The first is about Vito Fossella’s statesmanship in the face of an ugly situation, pitting good people against good people. The illegal migrant disaster threatens the entire community. But I won’t let you forget that the NYPD is there to protect the community and do its job. Senator Lanza and others got caught up in a moment, but I think we’re all square now, thanks to Vito.
The second part is about a recent political birthday party for one of North Shore Councilwoman Kamillah Hanks’ good friends, campaign contractors, and the recipient of lucrative WBE government contracts steered from the Councilwoman’s office. There was plenty of “gossip” from that event, and I’m not in the business of gossip except when it’s dripping with government corruption. When there are conflicts of interest and potential crimes, they should be investigated. Also brewing is a SI Dems county fight that cannot be ignored.
The last section is the first part of my interview with Richard Luthmann. We have known each other for a few years. I was surprised and saddened to see what happened to him. He recently filed a document with the court reporting something very difficult for him. He was the victim of prison rape and sexual assault. He wanted a forum to start talking about things, and I agreed with certain limitations as he has a letter of intent with a documentary maker for his story. I told him I would speak with him about the law enforcement aspects. In this installment, Luthmann says Staten Island’s Chief Law Enforcement Officer, District Attorney Michael E. McMahon is one of the “public faces” of his prison rape.
Trouble on the Barricades
The NYPD puts up barricades in NYC when there will be a protest. In impassioned situations, especially like we have with the illegal migrant crisis, barricades promote safety and preserve law and order. Unchecked demonstrations, however peaceful they may begin or are intended to be, will result in riots. This is an indisputable fact. History and human nature tell us this.
American riots have been around since before the American Revolution. “No taxation without representation” was the rallying cry when colonial Americans protested the Townshend Acts. Those protests turned into full-out riots, the most famous being the Boston Massacre and the Boston Tea Party.
In 1863, in Richmond, Virginia, women gathered in the street to protest a massive city-wide food shortage that disproportionately affected the city’s lower-class citizens. “Bread or blood,” they chanted outside of the governor’s office. When their pleas were ignored, things went awry in what would come to be known as the Richmond Bread Riot.
The 1863 NYC Draft Riots
In the same year, the worst riots in American history occurred in New York City, with skirmishes on Staten Island.
The Civil War Draft Riots began early on the morning of Monday, July 13, and continued for five days. A new federal draft law had stoked the anger of working-class New Yorkers. The law made all male citizens between 20 and 35 and all unmarried men between 35 and 45 subject to military duty. The wealthy could buy their way out by hiring a substitute or paying a $300 fee (approximately $6,000 today).
Thousands of white workers—mainly Irish and Irish-Americans—started by attacking symbols of authority - military and government buildings. Initially, the rioters became violent only toward people who tried to stop them, including the insufficient numbers of policemen City leaders initially deployed.
By the afternoon, the rioters had moved on to target blacks because black men were exempt from the draft, as they were not considered citizens.
A mob of several thousand people stormed the Colored Orphan Asylum on Fifth Avenue near 42nd Street. Though none of the children were harmed, the rioters took bedding, food, clothing, and other goods and set the orphanage on fire.
On the third day, rioting spread to Brooklyn and Staten Island. Only after the arrival of 4,000 federal troops on July 16 was law and order finally able to be restored to the City.
The New York Draft Riots remain the deadliest riots in U.S. history, even worse than the 1992 Los Angeles Riots (Rodney King) and the 1967 Detroit Riots.
Public Responsibility to Stop Riots and Rioters
Our community leaders and elected officials have a responsibility to recognize that social tensions can naturally become a “powder keg” ready to explode. None of the good people on Staten Island want a repeat of Crown Heights or the George Floyd riots of 2020 happening on their block.
But some don’t. Martin Luther King Jr. is praised in history textbooks for his peaceful protesting. However, he tacitly sanctioned riots and the violence and destruction that followed. He called it “the language of the unheard” in an interview with CBS News in 1966.
With all due respect to Dr. King and his legacy, rioting is not free speech. It’s not protected. Not one iota. Left unchecked, you will see rioters breaking into retail stores, stealing items, breaking glass, and burning things like buildings and police cars. Everything we saw in the spring and summer of 2020 - that was never prosecuted.
On my block, you will see members of the frenzied mob walking into the wrong house and getting carried out. For me and men like me, such a situation would make Kyle Rittenhouse look like a pop gun booth at a carnival. Protecting the streets is one thing. Protecting our homes and our families is another level. The entire situation invites a level of danger requiring self-defense that certain elements will decry as vigilanteism. These conditions should be avoided at all costs.
That is why it was extremely distressing to see certain community leaders and elected officials acting in dereliction of their duty.
Doing A Job
What many forget is that NYPD officers are doing a job. It can often be the most hostile work environment known to man. The job is necessary and too often goes underappreciated.
Few have done the job better than Assistant Chief Joseph M. Gulotta, the NYPD borough commander for Staten Island. While a Deputy Inspector in Brooklyn busting gangs, he received a death threat because he was too good at his job.
Using the Internet to track down gangs, Gulotta received his own online threat from an off-shoot branch of the Cryps street gang.
“They put a $150,000 bounty on his head and called for these animals to go kill him at home, where his family lives,” said a source close to Gulotta who wished to remain unnamed.
“[Gulotta] had a sit-down with [the Cryps] in Brownsville. He told them to stay on their side of the street, and we would stay on ours. Everyone agreed to leave families out. [We] went in one hundred deep. You could tell they were scared shitless. The whole contract got squashed.”
Chief Gulotta is not a man who is rattled easily. And this was readily apparent at a recent Staten Island anti-illegal migrant protest.
Anti-Cop Rhetoric
I have been at the protests and spoken to people on both sides. I understand the issues and the emotions.
What I don’t understand is the disdain for the NYPD. Social Media posts are flying around comparing NYPD officers to Nazis. The one below, particularly crass, compares Chief Gulotta to Nazi mass murderer Heinrich Himmler.
I get that there’s free speech. But this isn’t a free speech issue. You can’t say “Fuck the NYPD” now and expect to stand in lockstep with Blue Lives Matter the next time ANTIFA and Black Lives Matter come around to cause trouble. You can’t support law enforcement and their families only when it suits you.
It’s tough to be a professional police officer. When you put on the badge and the uniform, you put away your personal politics. There is a strict chain of command. You follow orders, and that is part of trusting others with your life.
Not everyone agrees with Mayor Eric Adams. I certainly don’t. The handwriting has been on the wall with two years of open borders. What did Adams expect when he spent his entire time in office as NYC’s virtue signaller in chief? He’s a cop, and he should know better. I really thought he wasn’t this much of a political dunce.
There are plenty of cops who voted for Curtis Sliwa. And there are plenty of cops who admire what people like him, Scott LoBaido, and John Tobacco are doing to press the unmanageable illegal migrant issue. But they lose their moral high ground when they abandon law and order.
Anyone who would compare NYPD officers - who want nothing other than to protect their community - to authoritarian mass murderers is way off base.
John Tobacco assures me that’s not what was going on from his end. “As the proud son of an NYPD cop, I spent my life backing the blue. But this Mayor has hijacked the once proud NY Finest…and reduced [them] to arresting grannies and providing aid and comfort to illegals. This crisis has pitted good people like our cops against good people just trying to protect their children and their neighborhoods.”
I hear Tobacco’s sentiments and am happy he clarified something that has bad optics. But neither Chief Gulotta nor the NYPD rank and file are the Mayor’s goons. They are professional police officers. You should never attack a good cop for doing his job to score political points.
But State Senator Andrew Lanza did just that. At a recent protest, fifty or sixty people were within earshot of the barricade. Lanza tried to play to the anti-authoritarian sentiments in the crowd. He said something snarky to Chief Gulotta about the cops doing their jobs.
“Good to see you, Mr. Senator. What’s it been, three years? It takes a good protest to get you out these days, I see,” Gulotta said with a smile.
Lanza came back with a few expletives. Then he said, “You’re done. I’ll have your job.”
“You think I’m afraid of you. I had a hit out on me in Brownsville,” the chief said with a slight chuckle.
Thankfully, Staten Island’s political contingent has a grown-up in the room named Vito Fossella. The Beep quickly got between the two and diffused the situation before anything more was said.
“Chief, he’s been my best friend for fifty years. I’ll take care of him, and you take care of what you have to,” BP Fossella said.
Vito gets it. You can fight for Staten Island without fighting against the police. The interests of the community are most often aligned with law and order.
A week ago, after a favorable court decision by Staten Island Judge Wayne Ozzi stopping migrants from being housed at Saint John Villa, Fossella made a phone call, sending a message to Hizzoner: “Don’t appeal. Let it sit. Let’s all fix this.”
Fossella wants common sense leadership. “People’s hearts are in the right place in trying to help, but we have to be logical and put the taxpayers of this city first and put the emphasis where it belongs, on the federal government,” he said.
Adams never called Fossella back. Hours later, the Beep read on his news feed that the City was appealing the ruling, in a move famed Law Professor Alan Dershowitz termed “schizophrenic,” with the NYC Law Department arguing for the right to shelter in one court and against it in another.
I have no idea what Adams is doing or what he’s aiming for out of the illegal migrant crisis. But if he wants to alienate all sides, including an NYPD that goes to bat for him each and every day, he should continue on his current course.
As I said before, NYC’s ship of government is lost at sea, as lost as its Mayor when it comes to common sense policy solutions.
Birthday Bustle
EDITOR’S NOTE: We included this section based on popular demand in an earlier readership poll. Don’t forget to VOTE in the poll above before the politicians discussed below find a way to steal them.
Political Contracts
The birthday girl’s name is Jaclyn Tacorante. She has a successful media and public relations company. JMT Media’s website boasts she is “an award-winning marketing and public relations professional with over 20 years of experience in both agency and client-side settings, serving Fortune 500 companies, including Canon, Puma, Harley-Davidson and Proctor & Gamble.”
The current City Councilwoman, Board of Elections Commissioner, Special Assistant to Mayor Adams, the birthday girl’s husband, and other local business figures were flanking the birthday girl at her table.
But there were inauspicious absences. Where was Kamillah’s boyfriend, Kevin Barry Love? Was he not invited? Or did he “decide” to stay home and take bong hits in his basement?
Is his popularity with Kamillah and Diane Savino as low as it is with a fine young woman from New Lane: “He talks big, but he’s full of shit,” said the North Shore Democrat. “We don’t need no silver-haired, silver-tongued con man coming round here.”
Kamillah’s biggest political liability did get something right. It wasn’t about trying to stab State Senator Jessica Scarcella Spanton (who was also absent) in the back. No one believes he didn’t try to cut the “gumada compact” with Charles Fall - the deal that spared Kamillah a primary this year.
Kevin’s resin-soaked brain got something right about the “Elections Department” that oversees everything that happens in NYC Elections:
“You can’t, you don’t run for election in or hold office in New York City without dealing with the ah, um, the Elections Department. They are worse than the IRS,” he said, searching for the words.
The “Elections Department,” or as sober people refer to it, the NYC Campaign Finance Board, has records showing a clear financial link between Councilmember Hanks and the birthday girl.
JMT Media made $9,000 from Kamillah Hanks in the hotly-contested 2021 NYC election season. She was also paid handsomely through Hank’s Youth Build and Historic Tappen Park, both funded with taxpayer money.
But this year, Kamillah has no real elections. There was no primary. (Thanks to Kevin’s deal?) Jay O’Donovan and Debi Rose will probably both get more write-in votes than the no-name Republican who qualified for the ballot without county support.
No election? No problem!
That’s where steering City contracts comes in. JMT Media is unofficially a “preferred vendor” for Councilmember Hanks. According to a source who did not want to be named, the recipients of City Council discretionary contracts awarded by Hanks, particularly minority women businesses, are being sent over to JMT Media. The source says so much so that JMT Media is turning away private business.
Maybe the birthday girl’s name should be Jacki Ta-contracto-rante.
But here’s the kicker. None of this is strictly illegal. Maybe unethical and within the purview of the Conflicts of Interest Board, but not unlawful. Unless, of course, the Councilwoman (or her husband) are benefitting.
Knowing Kevin, he stayed home because he was counting the money in his “envelopes.” Or maybe these two are brazen enough to put it into the bank in their “consulting” company.
Will they get away with it? Maybe. Kevin could be like Hunter Biden and just say he’s trying to protect the KPH “Brand.”
Or they could ask Bobby Digi and NYC Commissioner of Cultural Affairs Laurie Cumbo for tips. Before, Henry was a failed Assembly Candidate and the owner/operator of several failed businesses. But after getting on a knee at the Met Gala and knocking Cumbo up (not necessarily in that order), Digi is flush with contracts.
Henry’s naysayers are many, but doesn’t the guy deserve another chance? Hell, America loves a comeback story. Look at Marion Barry. Failed businesses pale in comparison.
You can smoke crack with hookers, but the constituents might still be willing to give you another chance…or three.
So now, is Bobby Digi flush with NYC taxpayer money because of the largesse of his baby mama’s office?
Did Kevin Barry Love acquire a Councilwoman, a Council seat, and the unfettered right to bilk NYC Taxpayers?
And what does Diane Savino know? Or Board of Elections Commissioner Michele Sileo? They are sitting right there!
These are all questions for an investigation that seems more than ripe.
SWORD Fight
Who doesn’t like Lisa Simpson? She’s the young, wide-eyed idealist. She’s the good kid who studies hard, plays fair, and trusts the system. When she grows up, she can be anything, including the President of the United States.
Staten Island Democrats elected their own grown-up Lisa Simpson as County Chair in the person of Laura Sword.
Now, Councilwoman Kamillah is making moves, telling her supporters to gear up for a county fight. Hanks wants to replace Sword. The two women are not on speaking terms.
According to a source, former State Committee member for the 61st Assembly District, Priscilla Marco, wants no part in the fight. She will not go against Laura Sword no matter what she is promised. Marco knows the meaning of loyalty and the true worth of a promise from Kamillah or Kevin Barry Love.
The word is that progressives, liberals, and regular democrats are still in Laura Sword and the County’s camp. Most are still ticked off that Debi Rose, the County Committee choice for the vacant Board of Elections commissionership, was vetoed.
“I frankly more than a little embarrassed that Debi Rose, our overwhelming pick, was single-handedly vetoed and replaced with the lawyer wife of an ex-cop who left under the most serious of circumstances. Acquitted does not mean innocent. Ask OJ,” said a Democratic Party district leader.
The numbers are breaking three to one against Hanks.
“Kamillah had no right to do what she did. Debi was our choice and deserved that spot on the Board of Elections. She doesn’t listen to the constituents,” said one unnamed North Shore community leader.
“She over-reached her power and over-played her hand. The problem is when you do that in the wrong spot, you go bust. It’s just the latest political miscalculation in a long line from Kamillah and Kevin. I wish they would just stop,” said another unnamed Democrat and member of D.O.R.C.
“It was nothing more than political payback for Debi taking away the Youth Build funding after the dirty 2017 race. But Debi wasn’t the one who went dirty, and Kamillah went running to the Republicans to make up the shortfall,” said a former Rose staffer.
A political consultant had this to say: “There is no winner here. The one person who has an opportunity is Charles Fall. If he plays his cards right, he can carve himself out an entire enclave, which could translate into the seat and the influence he has always wanted.”
The Luthmann Interview - Part 1
EDITOR’S NOTE: Richard Luthmann had a telephone interview with Modern Thomas Nast. Because of the length, it has been broken into several parts. Luthmann discussed his shocking revelations of prison rape and sexual abuse disclosed last week in documents filed in Brooklyn court.
MODERN THOMAS NAST: Richard, how are you?
RICHARD LUTHMANN: I’m good XXXX. How are you?
MTN: I am well. So, let’s jump right in. You filed papers in Brooklyn court. What was that about?
RL: The papers were filed in connection with the Fake Facebook case. They were actually filed by Jonathan Fink, my legal advisor and co-counsel. The judge, Judge Donald Leo, appointed Fink to be on my side in the case. I wanted to represent myself after my old lawyers Mario Romano and Arthur Aidala went off the case.
MTN: What is the purpose of the papers? Why did he put them in?
RL: The point right now is that the conviction is illegal. They claim I took a plea in the case, and I knew what was going on. That it was voluntary, knowing, and intelligent. That I was told what the ramifications were. The problem for them is that none of that is true. There is a transcript of the plea, and I didn’t say any of these things. The judge who took the plea didn’t ask me some of the crucial questions to make the plea stick.
MTN: You know my background. You’re telling me you took a plea in the case and didn’t know what was going on? You were a lawyer.
RL: That’s exactly what I’m telling you. How sharp would you be after months of rape and torture? I took a plea, and I was not advised of my rights. I would have taken advantage of the benefits I would have been afforded if I had been informed about them. But at that time, I was mentally whacked. I was fruit loops. I was fried rice in my mind because of torture and prison rape. Also, they took a video plea, which was illegal, absent an express waiver. They never asked me on the record for one. The proper procedure, you know, is to bring prisoners back physically. A shitload of law enforcement personnel have jobs transporting prisoners. Should we ignore the law and sack all the cops who move prisoners around?
MTN: Ok, so let’s back up. Let’s talk about the big issues. I saw your affidavit. You claim that you have PTSD?
RL: Yes. My diagnosis was recently changed to PTSD. I am finally getting the mental health treatment I need. I am working with an excellent psychiatrist who treats the prison population in Miami-Dade as part of his practice. He specializes in these issues. He went through my records. He said right away that my primary issue is PTSD, and that my first focus should be on the trauma and getting out of the fight/flight mode I am in. He says that’s the most important issue. The way he put it, he said, “You treat the bleeding artery before you treat the arthritis.”
MTN: That makes sense.
RL: Yeah. My entire previous diagnoses have been called into question. He does not believe I have any bipolar disorder or other disorders. Obviously, he thinks there is some anxiety and other issues, but the main thrust is PTSD.
MTN: So, I have the affidavit here, and it says this:
“The PTSD event/basis also includes prison sexual assaults, which would never have occurred had Special Prosecutor Nelson not committed crimes to layer this legally unfounded NYS case on top of the federal case. The result was a Bureau of Prisons “detainer” raising my custody points by six points and, per se, disqualifying me from going to a prison camp. With the federal charges alone, I would have gone to a prison camp for non-violent white-collar federal criminal charges. I don’t blame my prison rapists. I personally blame Eric Nelson, Michael McMahon, and the rest of his co-conspirators.”
There is a lot to unpack here. Let’s talk about the big thing first. What’s the deal with the sexual assaults?
RL: I was raped in prison. I was sexually assaulted on numerous occasions. And it was in the time before the plea. I was also tortured. I was placed in solitary confinement and in the SHU for almost two months. The United Nations says 15 days in solitary is torture. I dealt with over three times that much. By the time I took my plea, federal law said I should not have been in federal prison at all. I should have been taken back to the New York State system, where I would have enjoyed a bunch of rights they don’t give you in the feds.
MTN: You say that you blame Eric Nelson and Michael McMahon for your rape. How is that?
RL: They are the public faces of my rapes. Along with Ronald Castorina, a judge who lied and perjured himself in the grand jury in my case so McMahon could get his indictment. Nelson is the special prosecutor, and he suborned the perjury. McMahon was the marionetteer, and he pulled all the strings. The Bureau of Prisons Director also has culpability because of the conditions they are deliberately indifferent to in federal prisons.
MTN: Those are some incredible allegations.
RL: They are. But this is an incredible case. I was physically held down by a pack of wild animals. My cheeks were spread. I was face-down, and they did what they did. They took turns—seven or eight of them. I could have fought off two or three. If I was in a cell, like at MDC Brooklyn or a higher security prison, it would have been just one other person. No problem.
I can’t name names publicly because they hunted like a wolfpack, and most had MS-13 or cartel connections. I put myself and my family in harm’s way if I report them. These sick bastards will come to kill you, and the government is not in the business of protection. The government doesn’t give a fuck.
And that was the case back then, too. They would have put me back into the SHU for my “protection,” where I would have been tortured. So I have named the public faces of my rape. They are the people who I feel committed crimes and put me there in the first place. They are McMahon, Nelson, Castorina, and others.
MTN: You said you don’t “blame” your prison rapists. What does that mean?
RL: You can’t blame an animal for being an animal. You have to blame the government for deciding to imprison all these foreign nationals instead of deporting them. They give them 10 and 15 years for drug cases to feed the prison industrial complex. They give all these government employees something to do. Bodies to watch. Why are they our problem? I don’t believe this happens to me if they are not in that prison.
And I don’t blame them for being rapists. They are what they are, but they should be properly dealt with. I just think they should go back to their shithole countries and be rapists there. Let their own asshole countries deal with them. We don’t have the balls as a country to give them the death penalty. So let’s get rid of them. Why are taxpayers paying - on average - $75,000+ per year to warehouse these people? They would be eating lizards and wiping their asses with leaves where they came from.
MTN: Ok. Let’s focus on McMahon. Rich, he’s the District Attorney. You do realize he’s legally entitled to send you to jail?
RL: Actually, no, he’s not. Not in my case. He was disqualified because he claimed he was legally a victim of my Fake Facebook pages. He used that as a pretext to cover up the dirty shit his wife was doing as Administrative Judge. She was steering cases from “defense-oriented judges” to pad the conviction rates. Certain judges didn’t get warrant applications. And many criminal defendants were denied due process.
If what really happened came to light, there would have been dozens, if not hundreds, of convictions overturned. It would have been a huge scandal. Judy McMahon would have lost the bench and maybe her law license. You have to ask yourself: why was she removed as Administrative Judge in 2017 if there wasn’t an issue? OCA isn’t stupid. They know what’s coming now with Ron Castorina. My people inside tell me that.
MTN: So you’re saying you had dirt on the McMahons, and that’s why you went away?
RL: I’m not only saying it. Mike McMahon said it back in 2017. He held a press conference a couple of days after my arrest. His press secretary, Brian Laline, covered it in the Staten Island Advance. He said I set out on a “reign of terror" against him and his wife. That’s pure bullshit. He called in favors to weaponize justice, to make me go away and look like the bad guy. I didn’t do anything wrong. I didn’t do everything right, but I didn’t do anything legally wrong. McMahon had to make me go away because I had the power to take both of them down. I still do but in a much different way.
MTN: So you are saying the McMahons are corrupt?
RL: Yep. Without question. Mike McMahon desperately wants to be Bill Murphy. The problem is Bill Murphy took shits with more integrity than Mike McMahon. And he’s not even as Irish as he says he is. His mother was from ancient German nobility, a lineage with ties to the occult, I believe. I’m still researching it. The whole McMahon “brand” is bullshit.
And hopefully, I will get a chance to question him on every one of his misdeeds under oath. I have a long list, from political dirty tricks to conflicts of interest to double-dealing to apparent payoffs. I suspect he’s told people to threaten Judge Leo. My current judge hasn’t been “made” as a Supreme Court justice. I believe the McMahons are trying to pressure the judge with a political blackball. Screw Luthmann and get the judgeship you always wanted. It’s not a figment of my imagination. It already worked with Ron Castorina.
Ask yourself, why, if they “cleared” Judy McMahon, why didn’t she go back to being the Administrative Judge in 2018? Because she’s dirty. And OCA knows she’s dirty. It’s called institutional rot. It’s the same way the Catholic Church hid pedophiles for years while they knew there was a problem.
OCA (the Office of Court Administration) shields Judy McMahon, Ron Castorina, and others they know are dirty. They have engaged in serious criminal activity. And yet, these people are dispensing with justice? It would create a vacuum of judicial authority. If you knew Judge Castorina was a perjurer, which he is, why wouldn’t you tell him to go fuck himself if he’s messing with you in your divorce case? What authority does a perjurer have to judge you?
MTN: Rich, this is pretty serious stuff.
RL: Now you see why I had to be made to go away and discredited. This isn’t just the McMahons. It’s a larger, systemic issue about the New York State justice system not being a justice system. It’s a legal system for sure, but it’s devoid of justice. And it’s devoid of justice because of blatant institutional injustice.
MTN: Could your angst be in the wrong place here? Why Mike McMahon?
RL: McMahon is a persnickety little bitch that likes to hide his injustice behind the law. It reminds me of the scene in Braveheart when the English lord comes and claims prima nocte. The English lord comes and rapes the man’s wife on his wedding night, and he thinks there's nothing wrong with it. Then, when William Wallace comes with his lieutenant for real justice, he tries to say, “It was my noble right.” Bullshit. It’s rape hiding behind the color of the law. McMahon’s not really Irish. He’s more Edward of York. He’s using the law as a shield for his and his wife’s lifetime of misdeeds.
More great articles, you are my hero if they can get rid of the speaker of the house I’m sure you can get rid of Ronald Castorina
Stay safe and be strong my friend you got this
https://www.silive.com/crime-safety/2021/08/trial-by-combat-lawyer-richard-luthmann-released-from-federal-custody.html