Showing posts with label mob. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mob. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

John Gotti Jr. in the News in this day-and-age?

Gotti Jr. Stabbed

Gotti was leaving a CVS in his home town of Syosset, New York, when he was stabbed in the abdominal area. Supposedly he was breaking up a fight between two individuals that he did not know when the stabbing occurred. Gotti was taken to the hospital were he was treated and let go, and is now expected to make a full recovery.

Obviously, any Gotti story is going to make the news, but this one has a little more behind it, say authorities. When Gotti was question about the stabbing, in true mob fashion he refused to talk. Lead detective of the case says that anyone that was stabbed would give up any information they could to bring their attacker to justice.

The Nassau Police Department has joined the investigation, but have no comment on what they are investigating at the time. One can only speculate that they are probably trying to find out if there was an attempted hit on his life for leaving the mob, or maybe he is still in the mob and this was a case of mob violence.

John Gotti Jr. was tried four different times on racketeering charges, all of which ended with a hung jury. His silence could be nothing more than not wanting to bring back any passed life problems, or not wanting to give any other reasons for the FBI to open his cases back up again.





Saturday, September 21, 2013

Were is Whitey Bulger's Money?


The reputed Boston mobster James "Whitey" Bulger", who was convicted last Aug, on 31 accounts of charges ranging from murder (11), extortion, money laundering, and racketeering, is back in court again.

Schedule to be sentenced on Nov. 13, right now the federal government is after all of Bulger's money. Bulger was on the run from the government for 16 years where he spent most of his time in the a San Monica hideaway with his girlfriend.

At this hideaway authorities claim they have found 30 guns, some loaded, and an assortment of knives and a Taser and over $800,000. hidden in the walls. But that does not satisfy authorities, they say that through shake downs of drug dealers, gambling rings and other ileagle activity, extortion, rent payed to him by criminals, Bulger is worth somewhere around $25,000,000.00.

It is claimed that Bulger has many safety deposit boxes all around the world, and without his help chances are they won't be able to find any of that money. Considering that Bulger has always been a outlaw, I don't see how anyone could see him giving up any of the money to the authorities. Even though  he probably will not ever see freedom again, not disclosing the location and bank accounts of his money will be one last screw you to the people he has been against all his life.

Saturday, August 17, 2013

The Last Don: Vincent "The Chin" Gigante

 Who was the "Chin" Gigante                                    


Vincent "Chin" "Gigs" Gigante was the boss of the powerful Genovese crime family for years. Sometimes referred to as "The Oddfather," since the mid-1960s, Gigante had been regularly seen wandering the streets of Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City, in his bathrobe and slippers, mumbling incoherently to himself. In 2003, as part of a plea bargain, he admitted in court that his insanity had been a long act staged to avoid conviction under an insanity defense. He was due to be released from prison in 2010 before his controversial death in 2005.


Early on in "Chin" Gigante's Life

He was one of five sons of Salvatore Esposito Vulgo Gigante, a watchmaker, and Yolanda Scotta, a seamstress, both of whom had immigrated from Naples. His mother usually addressed him as "Cincenzo," a diminutive of Vincenzo, the Italian version of Vincent, and his boyhood friends shortened that into his lifelong nickname, "Chin". Gigante dropped out of Textile High School in Manhattan in the ninth grade and became a protégé of Vito Genovese. Between age 17 and 25, Gigante was arrested seven times, but he was fined only once and jailed for a one-time 60 day sentence for a gambling conviction. He claimed to be a tailor but was better known as a boxer, he won 21 of 25 light-heavyweight bouts between age 16 and 19, according to Nat Fleischer's Ring Record Book. Club boxers in those days fought four and six-round contests in neighborhood arenas, usually getting a percentage of the tickets they themselves sold. One of Gigante's managers was a Greenwich Village neighbor, Thomas (Nicholas Pasciuto) Eboli, who later became the boss of the Genovese crime family.

Gigante retired from boxing around 1946 and became involved in organized crime, specifically the Genovese Cosa Nostra family. It is alleged that he was the triggerman in the 1957 botched assassination of Frank Costello, then boss of the Genovese family, in the vestibule of Costello's apartment building. Rumor was that Costello knew "Chin" was the triggerman, but would not identify him publicly - even though Costello's doorman identified Gigante as such - he was acquitted of attempted murder charges in 1958. In 1959 Gigante was imprisoned for dealing in heroin and paroled five years later.


"I Can't Be a Boss, I'm Legally Insane"                    

In 1969 Gigante escaped conviction on bribery charges by producing a number of prominent psychiatrists who testified that Gigante was legally insane, suffering from schizophrenia, dementia, psychosis, and various other mental disorders. With this success he decided to use this as a strategy with which to thwart law enforcement and he allegedly enlisted his mother and wife in this endeavor. In 1986, Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno was considered to be the boss of the Genovese family when he was convicted on charges of murder and racketeering and sentenced to 100 years in prison. Vincent "Fish" Cafaro, a ranking member of the Genovese family, became a cooperating witness and revealed that Gigante had been the boss since 1981 and that Salerno had been acting as a front man. However, charging and convicting somebody who, like Gigante, exhibited all the hallmarks of mental illness was going to be very difficult.

Gigante brought his sons, Vincent Esposito and Andrew Gigante into the family using Vincent as his messenger to the rest of the family and using Andrew to control the waterfront operations. Gigante was arrested and charged in 1990 on charges of racketeering and murder, but it was another 7 years before he was brought to trial. Throughout those 7 years, Gigante's lawyers produced witness after witness who testified that Gigante was mentally ill and unfit to stand trial. However, all this changed when a number of prominent Mafia members from various families began to cooperate with the government in the early 1990s.

Foremost among the cooperating witnesses was Salvatore Gravano, aka "Sammy the Bull," former underboss of the Gambino crime family, who became a cooperating witness in 1991 and testified that on two occasions when they met, Gigante was perfectly lucid and clear in his thinking. Other "turncoat" witnesses such as Phil Leonetti of the Scarfo (Bruno) crime family of Philadelphia implicated Gigante in ordering a series of murders in the early 1980s of members of the Bruno family. Additionally, Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso, former underboss of the Lucchese crime family, implicated Gigante in enlisting Casso and other members of the Lucchese family to kill John Gotti, Frank DeCicco and Gene Gotti, all members of the Gambino family, soon after John Gotti became boss of the Gambino family in early 1986. Gigante used a new structure to control the Genovese family. The structure was set up with an Official Boss who would pass orders through a Messenger to the Street Boss and the Street Boss would then give orders to the Underboss of the family and the Capo's would either answer to any one of the 3 positions and never Gigante directly. This was Gigante's way of keeping a low profile and making sure no one knew who he was.




"Chin" Gigante Finally Gets Sent to Prison

Gigante was finally convicted on several racketeering, conspiracy, and related charges in the summer of 1997 and sentenced to 12 years in a federal prison. Despite his lawyers' and psychiatrists' claims that he has been legally insane for more than 30 years, and thus incapable of running a large and sophisticated organized crime operation, the jury convicted him on all but the most serious charges of murder which would have mandated a life sentence without the possibility of parole. Gigante continued to run the crime family from his cell, the administration was organized with a Ruling Committee who answered to the Street Boss and the Street Boss would get orders from Gigante from the person who was the family Messagario(messenger), which was his son Vincent Esposito.

As part of a plea bargain in an obstruction of justice trial stemming from his efforts to delay his racketeering trial, on April 7, 2003, Gigante admitted in court that his insanity was an act. He received a sentence of three years to be served after his current sentence was completed. He was due for release in 2010.


The Death of the "Chin" Gigante

Gigante died on December 19, 2005 from complications of heart disease at the same federal prison hospital in Springfield, Missouri, where John Gotti died three years earlier. On Friday, December 23, 2005, after a service at Saint Anthony of Padua Church in Greenwich Village, his body was cremated at the historic Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. He is survived by eight children (5 from his wife and 3 from his mistress) and his prominent cousins from Boston. (The cousins spell their name both Gigante and Giganti.) Gigante's lawyer, Flora Edwards, has said that the family intends to sue the federal government over Gigante's health care treatment while in prison. In November 2005, Edwards filed a lawsuit in federal court to compel officials at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri to transfer Gigante to an acute care hospital. The federal government responded to that in sealed court papers. Gigante rallied physically--from labored breathing, oxygen deprivation, swelling in the lower body and bouts of unconsciouness when he was transferred and placed under private care. After leaving the private health care facility, he returned to the Federal Prisoner's Medical Center in Springfield, MO, where he died 10 days later on December 19, 2005.


Saturday, March 16, 2013

Joseph Massino: The first mob boss to turn into a RAT

One of the most important rules of the mob is never become a RAT, but what if you are the families boss? Former Head of the Bonanno family, Joseph Massino, took the stand aginst current acting boss of the Bonanno family Vincent "Vinny Gorgeous" Basciano.

This would be the first time the government would ever have a head boss of a family turn government witness. Joseph Massino spent a long time in the mob even spending prison time after the famous Donnie Brasco court cases were all said and done.

After prison, Massino became boss of the Bonanno family and successfully ran the family until 2003 when the law would catch up with him again and end his mobster career.

With pressure from prosecutors to take his home where his wife lived,  other unclaimed assets and with a death plenty looming, Massino caved and agreed to be the first boss ever to take the stand. He took the stand against acting boss of the Bonnano family, Vincent Basciano, who was already serving time in prison. The move by the goverment was prompted so they could put the death penalty in play for Basciano. The play would fail for the government, but in the end both Massino and Basciano, unless some unheard of turn of events happens, they will be living their last days behind bars.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

James Gandolfini: Tony Soprano

                                                  

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