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Libertina Rizzuto follows the casket of her husband, Nicolo, from the church after funeral services for reputed organized crime boss Nick Rizzuto, in Montreal on Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Leonardo Rizzuto, left, and his sister Bettina Rizzuto, right, leave after a funeral service for their grandfather, reputed organized crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto, in Montreal, Monday, November 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) The casket of Nicolo Rizzuto is carried into the church for funeral services for the reputed organized crime boss Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) The funeral procession leaves the church after a funeral service for reputed organized crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto in Montreal, Monday, November 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) A police officer examines a suspicious package that was left on the steps of the church before a funeral service for reputed organized crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto in Montreal, Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Security personnel point out a man (not shown) as he leaves the visitation for Nicolo Rizzuto at a funeral home in Montreal, Sunday, November 14, 2010. (Peter McCabe / THE CANADIAN PRESS) A bullet hole is framed by tree branches in the backyard window of Nicolo Rizzuto's Montreal home is shown on Thursday Nov. 11, 2010. (Peter Ray Rakobowchuk / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Pallbearers carry the casket of Nicolo Rizzuto into Montreal church Notre-Dame-de-la-Defense, Monday, Nov. 15, 2010.

Mourners attend Rizzuto funeral as police look on

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CTV News Video

CTV National News: Genevieve Beauchemin
It was the final farewell to 82-year-old crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto in Montreal's Little Italy Monday. Ten black vehicles and one gold coffin could be seen at his funeral. Rizzuto was killed last week by a single shot through his kitchen window.
CTV Montreal: Caroline van Vlaardingen reports
About 800 people attended funeral services for Nicolo Rizzuto at Notre Dame de la Defense church, the 86-year-old so-called mafia godfather was shot in his home Wednesday. Investigators will be watching his funeral closely, snapping photos of those who attend Monday.
CTV Montreal: Rob Lurie on the mob funeral
Dozens of onlookers stood outside the Notre Dame de la Defense church Monday to view the spectacle as 86-year-old mobster Nicolo Rizzuto was laid to rest. Security guards are keeping reporters and other unwanted guests away from the service.
Power Play: James Dubro, author
An organized crime expert says Nicolo Rizzuto's family is one of the longest running mafia families for the last 50 years in Montreal. This is a transition and whoever is the last standing at the end of this war will be the boss of the Italian mafia.
CTV Montreal: Stephane Giroux on the visitation
Body guards and a heavy police presence loomed as visitation continued Sunday for slain Mafia don Nicolo Rizzuto, gunned down in his home Wednesday night.
CTV News Channel: Angelo Persichilli, columnist
An award winning political journalist with the Toronto Star explains why it is important for the police to be observing the funeral service for murdered Mafia don Nicolo Rizzuto.

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Libertina Rizzuto follows the casket of her husband, Nicolo, from the church after funeral services for reputed organized crime boss Nick Rizzuto, in Montreal on Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Leonardo Rizzuto, left, and his sister Bettina Rizzuto, right, leave after a funeral service for their grandfather, reputed organized crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto, in Montreal, Monday, November 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) The casket of Nicolo Rizzuto is carried into the church for funeral services for the reputed organized crime boss Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) The funeral procession leaves the church after a funeral service for reputed organized crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto in Montreal, Monday, November 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) A police officer examines a suspicious package that was left on the steps of the church before a funeral service for reputed organized crime boss Nicolo Rizzuto in Montreal, Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Security personnel point out a man (not shown) as he leaves the visitation for Nicolo Rizzuto at a funeral home in Montreal, Sunday, November 14, 2010. (Peter McCabe / THE CANADIAN PRESS) A bullet hole is framed by tree branches in the backyard window of Nicolo Rizzuto's Montreal home is shown on Thursday Nov. 11, 2010. (Peter Ray Rakobowchuk / THE CANADIAN PRESS) Pallbearers carry the casket of Nicolo Rizzuto into Montreal church Notre-Dame-de-la-Defense, Monday, Nov. 15, 2010.

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Libertina Rizzuto follows the casket of her husband, Nicolo, from the church after funeral services for reputed organized crime boss Nick Rizzuto, in Montreal on Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. (Ryan Remiorz / THE CANADIAN PRESS)

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Date: Mon. Nov. 15 2010 9:33 PM ET

Hundreds of mourners crowded into a Montreal church Monday for the funeral of mob patriarch Nicolo Rizzuto, who was gunned down at his home last week at the age of 86.

Family members, lawyers, accountants and many of Rizzuto's friends packed Notre-Dame-de-la-Defense Church for the 90-minute funeral, which was conducted completely in Italian.

Outside the church, hundreds of curious onlookers watched a procession of black cars carry family, as well as Rizzuto's gold coffin, to the morning service, which was also under heavy surveillance by police.

Security guards kept reporters and other unwanted guests away from the service, while police recorded the attendees and their cars.

James Dubro, a long-time crime reporter who has covered the Mafia for decades, told CTV Montreal that he made it inside the Montreal church before the funeral began.

But he said security personnel asked him to leave, which he did "out of respect."

Dubro said that compared to past mob funerals, the service for Rizzuto was somewhat muted.

"This is very low key, even though there are 400, 500 people in there," Dubro told CTV Montreal on Monday.

There was no eulogy during the service, but the priest spoke and told mourners that Rizzuto "is going to go with God, where everyone's going to go," Leopoldo Seccarecia, who works at the church, told reporters.

Few of the mourners would speak to reporters outside the church. However, those that did remembered Rizzuto as a kind man.

"If anybody needed help, he was there to see what he could do," said one man, who did not give his name.

Suspicious package raises concern

Earlier Monday, a suspicious box package was left on the steps of the church. It had white tape on it in the form of a cross.

Police initially thought the box might have been some sort of funeral tradition, but quickly determined it was not.

"They set up this big perimeter around the church here, kind of keeping people back, wondering exactly what was inside the package," CTV's Genevieve Beauchemin told CTV News Channel from outside the church on Monday morning.

A police officer later picked up the package and carried it away.

Beauchemin said that police confirmed that a note was inside the box, though they are not revealing what the note said.

"The contents of the note will be kept confidential until our investigators have had a chance to look at it," said Montreal police Const. Daniel Lacoursiere.

Mourners were allowed to file into the church after the package was removed by police.

Rizzuto slain at home

Rizzuto died last week after being shot in the head at his Montreal home.

Police believe his killer may have lurked in the wooded area behind his residence, waiting for an opportunity to strike.

Former Quebec provincial police officer John Galianos said police watch mob funerals closely because there are few opportunities for investigators to take photos of known mobsters. And the photos they have on file can quickly become dated.

"People get older, and they start to look different, so they'll be trying to identify these guys," Galianos said in a recent interview with The Canadian Press.

Plainclothes police officers were filming the hundreds of people coming and going from Rizzuto's visitation services on the weekend, while others recorded the license plates of the cars that drove in and out of the funeral home.

But Galianos said he expected few big-name mobsters to attend Rizzuto's funeral, as many faces were absent at the January funeral for his namesake grandson.

The younger Nicolo Rizzuto was only 42 years old when he was shot dead on a Montreal street on Dec. 28, 2009.

His grandfather attended his funeral at Notre-Dame-de-la-Defense in early January.

A family under attack

The killings of Rizzuto and his grandson were only two of several deadly strikes against the family and those close to it in the past year.

The slain great-grandfather's son-in-law, Paolo Renda, went missing in May. His car was found two blocks from his home, with the keys in the ignition. The 70-year-old Renda has still not been found.

The following month, high-ranking Rizzuto associate Agostino Cuntrera, 66, was shot dead as he was walking out of a Montreal warehouse. His bodyguard was slain in the same attack.

Experts say the attacks are designed to knock down the Rizzuto family while many of its senior members, including Nicolo Rizzuto's son, Vito, remain in jail.

Political journalist Angelo Persichilli said it comes down to being "an extermination of the family."

With so many members of the Rizzuto family missing, killed or in jail, Persichilli said it is difficult to say who will take the top spot in the organization now that Nicolo Rizzuto is dead.

Vito Rizzuto, who is in a U.S. jail serving time for racketeering, is due to be released in October 2012 and many believe his life will be at risk. He did not attend his father's funeral.

With files from The Canadian Press and a report from CTV Montreal's Caroline Van Vlaardingen and Rob Lurie

Comments are now closed for this story

Sandra
said
0 0

@ Mike: I thought the same thing, Mike. It seems scandalous that these people are getting any sort of church funeral at all, but here's the thing, I'm not a psychic myself, and I'm not sure if you are, but who am I to judge the state of that man's soul at the end of his life? I can't know -and neither can you- if he came to some sort of a personal repentance, let's say, the last Sunday before he died. If he did repent, most likely it wasn't publicized. Guess his final destination is something between him and Our Maker...


Alex in Edmonton
said
0 0

I agree with Teknik. As a Catholic, it makes me angry that the Mafia associates itself with the Church, but the fact is that the Church is meant to serve its members, and that definitely includes praying for their souls. Non-Catholics need to understand that a Catholic funeral is not a send-off given in honour of someone who lived a good life and deserves recognition for it, but rather a prayer for God's mercy on the soul of the deceased.So don't think that the Church supports the actions of Rizzuto or of any other mafioso. Just a few weeks ago, Pope Benedict publicly referred to the Mafia as "a path of death."


steveyK
said
0 0

It is important because, while these people are criminals, there is some semblance of a "code of conduct" that most crime families would operate by. The people likely offing these folks are Gangs - Haitians, Russian, who knows - but ones that usually don't adhere to the same codes that keep this criminal behaviour somewhat civil. They are the "nouveau riches" of Crime. The old, established families that work quietly and with limited collateral damage are being overtaken by the flashy ones who fight in the streets and really risk the public's safety. I am not in favour of either, but at least the Mafia operates with some consideration and privacy.


Teknik
said
0 0

Nick Rizutto has now left the stage and another criminal will pick up where he left probably, the 'associate', who ordered the hit.

Many here have questioned why is the Catholic Church allowing a funeral happening in a church. God accepts all even the worst sinners hoping they repent while alive meanwhile, the Church provides them help and allows a place to worship God, get baptised, marry, and send them off(funeral).

It doesn't conspire with criminals or condone their actions. Nick was baptized a Catholic and probably attended church a few times therefore, he is allowed into the church. Some could judge him others pray for his soul however, ultimately God will be his judge in eternity where he is now.


Dean in Abby
said
0 0

How can the Catholic Church even consider giving this guy a nice send-off. How hypocritical is that? All his life he's been a ruthless criminal overseeing murders, robbery, prostitution, and gambling. Aren't any of those things written somewhere in the 10 commandments? What a joke. Why is there so much security for these hoods? Live by the sword, die by the sword.


Bettina
said
0 0

RIP Rizzuto ... don't worry about these naysayers on this web page. They are all bad people. For all the bad people on this news item, please have some respect for the man. He was a nice and gentle man who cared about his community. The whole mafia thing is an invention of the media and movie studios. Rizzuto was just a member of a social group that got together and was a hard working man. End of story.


Angry Mac
said
0 0

A lot of people are sticking their heads in the sand with comments like who cares and why are the police wasting money being there. I wonder if these people who comment like that are mob members and dont want the police around gathering evidence. There are a lot of crooked people involved and if the police nab a few more of them - great. The sooner all the crooks are dead the better. Then the construction industry can go back to being an honest industry with much lower prices.Our country will be much better off with all the mafia dead.


Mike
said
0 0

I am curious how these Mafia types at their death are suddenly part of the "faithful" and accorded a church funeral as if they were followers of Christ. I guess its part of the paradoxes associated with the Roman religion. The bible teaches that personal repentance is a prerequisite to salvation and heaven. Religion seems to forget that part. Little wonder credibility is lacking.


B.J.
said
0 0

Why is this important news. Leave it to media to hype things up. One less mafia to worry about.


Sandusky
said
0 0

The public police have been placed on the wrong side of this: the police should not be protecting this family but instead using this funeral as an opportunity to complete mass arrests of all mafiosi in attendence and put them in jail forever where they belong. The Italian mafia has been a cancer on the economies and societies of Canada, the US, and Italy for far too long, having their fingers in the drug trade (which also feeds the Taliban), weapons smuggling, vote rigging, etc., all without paying a single penny in taxes into the public treasury. Good riddance to this worthless piece of gutter trash. He doesn't deserve Last Rites in a holy building.


dwayne in da peg
said
0 0

Perhaps the box left on the church steps contained a tiny little horse head. So long as they are killing each other and not bothering the rest of us.


Paul ~ Kitchener
said
0 0

Here we go again, with the news media reporting, and T.V. coverage of a Mafia Boss's funeral.Who cares what happens within the Mafia, obviously the "Rizzuto's" are on there way to oblivion. The Mafia take care of their own, and it saves normal society a lot of Judicial dollars, & prison keep ~ let them keep to their affairs.When will the news media ever learn to let things rest, and let the police worry about the Mafia ~ (the Mafia doesn't worry about the police).Farewell to Mr. Rizzuto, and many more of your clan will join you, as the crime family changes hands .


Jason Brisebois
said
0 0

I wonder how much we, the taxpayers, are paying for the funeral of this jag-off (police presence and protection). Not to mention the money spent to keep the whole wanker organization in check. My advice: put them all on a plane and send them to Italy.


RGBrook
said
0 0

Amazing... police protection for a crime family. And we report on this story like they're royalty? Am I the only one that thinks this stinks?


nicole maingot
said
0 0

Realy

Rizzuto is the head of the mafia

Do we realy need to see so much news about him

I do not think that he is that important.

Who cares


danR
said
0 0

More old-school media entertainment. Never mind the the drug-, women-, and drug- traffic lords moving up from Central and South America. Assassinating mayors and cops and even military as they go.A worse existential threat to free, uncorrupt, un-Karzai, society than the Taliban.


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