Is it common for a NY company to list a guy who's been dead for 2 years as it's Chairman, CEO and Principal? Oddly enough I've seen other links that list Armand Cerrone as 20 Iroquois Inc's POC. He's dead too...
DOS Process (Address to which DOS will mail process if accepted on behalf of the entity) 20 IROQUOIS, INC. 4625 WITMER ROAD NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK, 14305
Chairman or Chief Executive Officer MICHAEL A CERRONE 4625 WITMER ROAD NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK, 14305
Principal Executive Office MICHAEL A CERRONE 4623 WITMER ROAD NIAGARA FALLS, NEW YORK, 14305
appext9.dos.state.ny.us
The hardest-working man in Niagara Falls died early Monday morning.
Mark Cerrone, who built a one-truck business into a contracting empire that bears his name and includes construction, demolition, maintenance, excavation and landscaping subsidiaries, died after a five-month battle against cancer. He was 50 years old.
"No one could outwork him," said Cerrone's longtime friend and attorney, Ned Perlman. "He would go day and night -- not just for the money, but to make sure the job was done right and to provide for his employees."
The oldest son of Josephine and the late Vincent Cerrone, he graduated from Bishop Duffy High School in 1975 and worked for his uncle, Armand Cerrone, as a heavy-equipment operator and foreman before starting Mark Cerrone Inc. in 1999. niagarafallsreporter.com
Armand V. Cerrone, owned contracting company 0 Comments | Buffalo News, Dec 21, 2007
Armand V. Cerrone, who built up a Niagara County contracting company that worked on projects that included Artpark and the Niagara Power Project, died unexpectedly Wednesday in Mount St. Mary's Hospital, Lewiston. He was 83.
Mr. Cerrone, of Youngstown, started a small hauling business in the late 1940s with one dump truck that he purchased after returning from World War II. The business eventually grew into Armand Cerrone Inc., a Witmer Road contracting firm that did work on hundreds of projects in the region.
Mr. Cerrone, who attended schools in Niagara Falls, joined the 101st Airborne Division of the U.S. Army in September 1940, when he was 16. His unit was surrounded in the Battle of Bastogne and was involved in campaigns in the Ardennes, central Europe, southern France, the Rhineland and Rome.
When he returned home, he planned to use his military earnings to purchase a car but soon found they were still rationed because of the war. Instead, he bought a truck that he eventually used start a small business that turned into long contracting career, said his son, Michael A.
"It was a process of hard work and opportunities that arose in Niagara Falls. At that time in the '50s and '60s and into the '70s, it was quite a boom town," Michael Cerrone said. "This was his passion."
Mr. Cerrone served as president and owner of the company until his death. findarticles.com |