PA Lawmaker Caught Up in Illegal Gambling Investigation Wiretap

Submitted by Associated Press on

Written by :

Associated Press

Published on :

GLASSPORT, Pa. — (Associated Press) - A western Pennsylvania lawmaker overheard on a wiretap telling the suspected ringleader of an illegal gambling operation that he would conceal a complaint about the man's video poker machines says he has cooperated with investigators and tried to help the person who complained about the machines.

State Rep. Marc Gergely, D-Allegheny, broke his silence Monday on the wiretap information disclosed last week before the House Democratic Caucus.

In a four-paragraph statement, Gergely said he got a letter in November from a woman who claimed to be a constituent, complaining her husband had gambled away all their money. Gergely said he tried to refer the woman to Gamblers Anonymous and to state troopers who investigate gambling complaints, but his staff couldn't reach her because she didn't have voicemail. The woman was actually an undercover state investigator.

Gergely, who has not been charged, was heard on the wiretap calling Ronald "Porky" Melocchi, 54, the target of the gambling investigation, and telling him about the complaint, according to court documents.

Gergely promised Melocchi, who is charged with running the illegal video poker operation through his Glassport-based Back Alley Vending, he would not pass the complaint along to authorities, the affidavit said.

"Are they going to turn it in ... (to the state police's Bureau of Liquor Control Enforcement)?" Melocchi asked during the recorded conversation.

"Who me? Not me," Gergely replied. "I just want to take care of you. She obviously has no idea that we have a connection. Maybe you guys can identify ... who the guy is and get him stopped ... before something becomes a problem, OK?"

Melocchi, Forward Township police Chief Mark Holtzman, McKeesport Councilman Daniel K. Carr, two former McKeesport police officers and 11 others are charged in the ring. Investigators raided 70 bars, homes, banks and other locations in December, seizing 350 poker machines and about $1 million, according to court documents.

Melocchi, who faces a preliminary hearing Thursday, doesn't have an attorney listed in online court records and didn't return a message left on his home voicemail.

Melocchi donated $3,000 to Gergely's election campaigns since 2006, but the lawmaker said he has since donated a similar amount to Positive Pathways, a for-profit Pittsburgh business that helps people with gambling addictions.

A spokesman for the attorney general wouldn't say if the lawmaker or any others are under investigation.

Gergely's statement said his office has cooperated with investigators including providing dates and times his staff tried to contact the woman about her complaint.

Related Content

Prison

Man Sentenced for Robbing Two Men at Reno Casinos as Hunt Continues for Tamarack Casino Bandit

Authorities say one of the victims was led down an alley and abruptly punched and knocked to the ground where he was then robbed of $1,400 in cash.
Ghislaine Maxwell

Top Republican Lawmaker Signals GOP Openness to Pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell ... Prediction Markets Chances Surge

Polymarket traders are giving U.S. President Donald Trump odds of pardoning convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell a price of +426 (implied 19% chance).
Hairdryer Paris Airport

Gambler Allegedly Used Hairdryer to Steal $35K From Online Betting Site

Paris police are investigating a complaint over alleged tampering of a weather sensor at its international airport, which led to an unusual spike in temperature readings, helping an unknown person make strong profits on the online betting platform Polymarket.
Arrests

43 Nabbed in Bust Tied to Mexican Mafia, Orange County Gambling Operation, Killing at Anaheim Hotel

68-count indictment alleges gang with ties to Mexican Mafia collected extortionate taxes and provided security, including the use of violence, to protect the illegal gambling businesses.