Mob Figure Torched Deli, Sought To Snuff Out Competitor, Police Say
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

What started out as an arson investigation into a deli fire that some believed was anti-Muslim backlash in the months after the attacks of September 11, 2001, has led investigators to the conclusion that a Gambino associate ordered the hit to keep a competitor under control.
Edward “The Irishman” Fisher, 54, was charged with ordering the 2001 firebombing of My Deli & Grocery in the Fox Hills section of Staten Island. Investigators yesterday said the owner of the deli, Hamim Syed, 48, was planning to open another deli that would compete with Fisher’s bagel shop.
When threats didn’t deter Mr. Syed, a Pakistani immigrant, Fisher turned to two underlings to carry out the arson attack, the commanding officer of the NYPD’s Arson and Explosion Squad, Lieutenant Dennis Briordy, said.
“It took this whole deli out,” he said, adding: “He wanted it to go away.”
At 4:50 a.m., the men appeared at the door of the deli at 200 Rhine Ave. with a lit commercial fireworks launcher. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives classifies the launcher as an “extremely powerful destructive device,” a spokesman, Special Agent Joseph Green, said.
Anthony Maniscalco, 36, held the door, while Salvatore Palmieri, 54, tossed the explosive inside, Lieutenant Briordy said. Within minutes, the store was completely engulfed in flames. Four employees managed to escape without injury.
Fisher faces charges of loan sharking, arson, arson conspiracy, and possession and use of a destructive device during a crime of violence. Prosecutors said he faces a minimum sentence of 35 years in prison on the arson and destructive device charges. Both Maniscalco and Palmieri began serving five years in prison for conspiracy to commit arson in August 2005.
As the investigation unfolded over the years, the detectives and agents uncovered a network of mob violence and extortion in Staten Island connected to Fisher and his men.
In addition to Fisher’s arrest, the joint investigation by the New York Police Department, the FBI, and the ATF yesterday resulted in seven other arrests on a wider range of charges, including racketeering, loan sharking, extortion, and murder.
Also arrested was a Genovese family soldier, John “Little John” Giglio, 48, who was charged with nine racketeering acts, and crime family associates Vincent “Vinny Bastille” Garcia, 34, Richard Dacunto, 44, John “Hammer” Laforte, 38, Anthony “The Retard” Stocco, 24, and Raymond Spitale, 62.
Palmieri was also charged with the 1990 murder of Ronald Peteroy outside of a bar on Forest Avenue. If convicted, he faces life in prison.
All the men, except Mr. Stocco, were remanded without bail in the District Court of the Eastern District of New York because of a flight risk.