ADVERTISEMENT
Published: January 21, 2009
TAMPA - A man with a 34-year criminal record who talked in secretly recorded conversations about two slayings and other crimes has agreed to plead guilty to a federal weapons charge.
Thomas Guth, 59, faces a maximum prison sentence of 10 years on the charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm. He is being held without bail.
A year after Guth was released from federal prison in 2003, his lawyer told a judge in Chicago that Guth wanted to start a new life in Pueblo, Colo.
The judge agreed to release Guth early from probation so he could move with his son, then 15.
The two ended up living in Clearwater in a condominium Guth bought for $500,000. Before long, authorities say, Guth was selling a gun to another felon and planning an armed robbery.
Investigators also suspect he was involved in mortgage fraud and a stock scheme, court documents state.
According to Guth's plea agreement, in January 2008 he possessed a semi-automatic handgun with a loaded magazine containing 26 rounds. In an exchange that was recorded on audio and video, Guth sold the gun for $1,000.
Guth was recorded as he talked about two slayings, killing a dog and bombing a liquor store, prosecutors say in court documents. After his arrest in March, he told agents he was responsible for a bombing. Agents think the bombing was connected to organized crime and happened in or near Addison, Ill., in 1982.
Agents are trying to identify the slayings. Guth didn't acknowledge those when interviewed by law enforcement, prosecutors say.
According to the defense, Guth served four years in the Army, including 16 months in Vietnam, and later was diagnosed as having post-traumatic stress disorder. The diagnosis was given by a doctor working in a prison where Guth was serving a 13-year sentence for drug conspiracy.
Guth told investigators he wanted to work in law enforcement after his military discharge, documents state. When that didn't work out, he started working in a massage parlor.
He opened his own massage parlors in the Chicago area and started associating with Italian mobsters, committing crimes with them, prosecutors say. Mobsters told him two Polish brothers who owned several liquor stores were not paying money to La Cosa Nostra and needed to be sent a message.
Guth said he agreed to blow up one of the stores, records state.
He was not arrested in that incident, but he has at least 19 prison sentences and arrests, starting with a 1975 arrest for keeping a house of ill fame, prosecutors say. He also was charged in 1975 with keeping a house of prostitution in Schiller Park, Ill., and arrested the next year for pandering, keeping a place of prostitution and soliciting for a prostitute in Waukegan, Ill.
Reporter Elaine Silvestrini can be reached at (813) 259-7837 or esilvestrini@tampatrib.com.
ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement
TBO.com - Tampa Bay Online ©2009 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC. A Media General company. Member Agreement | Privacy Statement | Work With Us
| * To: | |
| Your Name: | |
| Your Email Address: | |
| Personal Message [optional]: | |