John Gotti <BGSOUND SRC="gambino.mid" LOOP=INFINITE>
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Gambino crime boss John Gotti, the most powerful Mafia leader in New York in the 1980's and early 90's, headed the old Carlo Gambino Mafia family which controls all the important New York rackets. This criminal enterprise brings in 500 million dollars annually and is one of the most powerful crime families in the country next to the Genovese crime family of NY. To make it to the top, Gotti and his associate Sammy Gravano went ahead and planned the murder of their boss, Paul Castallano, in December 1985 in front of Manhatten's Sparks Steak house. They had six of their top guys carry out the shooting successfully. After their boss was dead, the family voted Gotti to take over as boss and Gravano to be made underboss. Gotti named his consigliere Frank Locascio. Through the next few years Gotti was determined to stay out of prison and run the family the best he could. The government charged him three different times with felony cases and Gotti beat them all. But on December 12, 1990 a 13 count RICO indictment was brought against Gotti for conspiring to murder former boss of the family
Paul Castellano. John Gotti, underboss Sammy Gravano, and consigliere Frank Locascio were all arrested at the Ravenite social club in Little Italy, NY. While in jail, Gotti talked with Gravano about maybe trying to bribe President Bush with $5 million dollars to give them a pardon out of jail. Gravano, facing a life sentence and realizing Gotti was crazy, switched sides and testified against Gotti and Locascio in exchange for a greatly reduced sentence. He ended up only serving three years in prison and admitting to 19 murders. Sammy "the bull" became Sammy "the rat" and Sammy "the liar" Gravano.


On June 23, 1992, John Gotti was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole and delivered to Marion Penitentiary in Illinois, the toughest and most inhumane prison in the country. Nobody has ever stayed at Marion more than three years straight without getting transferred to another prison because it is so tough, twenty-three hours a day lockup. John Gotti still resides there today making it the longest stay ever at Marion, over seven years. Mr John Gotti had passed after a long fight with throat cancer. RIP Gotti



MSSBC - John Gotti Dies

Taking Down A Boss, Paul Castellano

FBI Wiretaps to convict Mr Gotti

Life Behind Bars

Nate's Dominion Home
Big Paul Castellano Hit At Sparks Steak House in Manhattan, NY in the mid 80's.  Gotti believed this man was at his end of prime and also was dissatisfied with his "no drugs" policy, and saw a route to become head of gambino crime family by whacking him. At the same time Gotti was under heat by the family for making an unsanctioned hit on a soldier that hit another member without consulting Castellano.   Families like the Genovese and Columbo's were highly dis-satisfied at  the hit of boss Big Paul, for you cannot kill a boss to become one. Staying true to their mob heritage the other families conspired to kill gotti for the murder of Castellano. 6 People posing as doormen at the Sparks Steak House, opened fire and emptied their rounds into Big Paul.
Death Certificate
Gotti�s first step up the mob ladder came at the expense of Carmine Fatico�s legal woes. Gotti�s next step would come in a similar manner, but this time it was Dellacroce�s problems with the law.

Aniello Dellacroce and John Gotti hit it off right away. In many ways they were like two peas in a pod. In Gotti: Rise and Fall, authors Jerry Capeci and Gene Mustain give this insight into Dellacroce�s personality: ��he was Carlo�s bad cop. He was fierce, violent, foul-mouthed and clever, and Carlo relied on him when a mix of treachery and trickery was needed to settle some contentious matter.� Operating out of the Ravenite Social Club on Mulberry Street in the heart of Manhattan�s Little Italy, Dellacroce was highly visible in the neighborhood � so much so that a 1972 Senate committee investigating organized crime actually identified him as the boss of the Gambino Family.

Another thing Dellacroce and Gotti had in common was their bad habit of losing big in gambling. In 1968, Dellacroce was indicted for income tax evasion after reporting an income of $10,400 when his actual income exceeded $130,000. In addition, the IRS discovered that, while on a three-day vacation in Puerto Rico, Dellacroce had lost more in gambling then he claimed as income for the entire year. Dellacroce was sentenced to a year in prison, and then after he refused to testify before a grand jury, five more were added on, even though he was granted immunity.

With Fatico keeping a low profile and Dellacroce in prison, Gotti, still in the status of an associate, began making regular visits to family boss Carlo Gambino. Years later, Gotti would be overheard on a bug calling Gambino a �rat mother fucker� and a �back door mother fucker� for never promoting him, but in 1973 the young hood stood in awe of �Don Carlo.�

A student of Niccolo Machiavelli, the Italian philosopher, Gambino had a habit of quoting from �The Prince.� Later while in prison, Gotti would also study the writings of Machiavelli, to the point where he could quote whole parables. Gotti strutted proudly in front of the Bergin crew as he relayed orders from the revered family boss. Although Gambino�s edict to stay clear of drug dealing fell on deaf ears, other orders were obeyed. One of the rulings that came down from Gambino was that family members were to stop the practice of kidnapping other criminals, which at the time was �in vogue.� Gambino put the ban in effect after the kidnapping and murder of Manny Gambino, Don Carlo�s nephew.

The killing of Manny Gambino, and the subsequent murder of Irish mobster James �Jimmy� McBratney, would become part of the Gotti myth.
John Gotti, The story of, The Life. October 27th, 1940- June 10, 2002
This man was a "robin hood" for many, though his life was crime, I have much respect.
"Nobody Rolls Sevens And Elevens Forever" - John Gotti
In the early 1970s a wave of kidnappings took place in New York City. Incredible as it may seem, the victims were members and associates of the city�s crime families. In Tough Guy: The True Story of �Crazy� Eddie Maloney, co-authors William Hoffman and Eddie Maloney discuss the kidnappings Eddie and his gang were involved in. Maloney also details his friendship with Jimmy McBratney.

The two men met when both were incarcerated at Greenhaven State Prison in New York. Maloney described McBratney as a devoted family man who stood six-foot-three and weighed 250 pounds. A weight lifter, McBratney could bench-press 400 pounds. Maloney continues: �Jimmy McBratney was locked up for armed robbery. He was quiet, a listener and learner, and soon we were discussing heists we might do together. He knew about guns and wanted to become a collector, but closest to his heart were his wife and two small children and their house on Staten Island, and his goal of saving enough to own a nightclub. I learned Jimmy was very loyal to his wife, and that all the talk in the yard about 'broads' upset him. His wife visited regularly and wrote every day.�
In October 1972, Maloney became part of a kidnapping ring with McBratney.  It was the brainchild of two wiseguys from the Gambino Crime Family - Flippo and Ronnie Miano. Claiming they only wanted ten percent of the ransoms, Flippo told Maloney that his motive for the kidnappings was revenge. �The guys I�m setting up have fucked me and my people on business deals in the past. It�ll give me pleasure to see those greedy fucks suffer,� Miano boasted.

The kidnapping gang consisted of Maloney, McBratney, Tommy Genovese, a distant relative of Vito�s, Warren �Chief� Schurman, and Richie Chaisson. The first kidnapping was of a Gambino capo called �Frank the Wop.� The escapade went off without a hitch and the gang got away with $150,000. Over the next two months, the gang completed three more successful body snatches. However, on December 28, 1972 their luck changed. McBratney outlined a plan to grab a Gambino loanshark named �Junior.� Late on this bitter cold afternoon, Maloney stuck a gun in Junior�s stomach and ordered him into a car. When Junior put up a fight, Maloney used a gun to hit him over the head a couple of times before shoving him into the back seat and taking off. Two young witnesses to the crime followed them for a while before they were scared off, but not before they recorded the license number and turned it over to a relative with mob connections.

A friend of Maloney�s, in whose apartment they were holding Junior, and through whose mother they had rented the abduction car, spilled his guts to the wiseguys after some hoods showed up at his mother�s house asking questions. McBratney was in a panic when he realized the mob had his name, as well as Maloney�s and Schurman�s. After a relatively small ransom, $21,000, was paid, McBratney arrived at the apartment to pick up Schurman and return the victim. Schurman was supposed to have taped Junior�s eyes before covering them with sunglasses, but the slow-witted hood had failed to do it right.

After driving a few blocks McBratney suddenly realized Junior�s eyes weren�t taped.  Enraged, he brought the car to a screeching halt. Junior bolted out of the back seat and ran for his life as McBratney fired several shots at him. Meanwhile, Schurman jumped out of the car and retreated to Maloney�s automobile, which was following them. Schurman was sure McBratney would kill him if he ever saw him again, a fact Maloney confirmed.

Maloney suggested to McBratney that he leave the city. McBratney declined the advice and instead decided to keep a machine gun in his car. Just before Maloney was sent back to prison on a parole violation, he and Schurman were drinking in a bar one night when two guys that he described as �stone killers� came in looking for them. The bar manager, a friend of Maloney�s, told the pair he hadn't seen them in a while. While away in prison, Maloney saw a newspaper article about the arrest of McBratney�s killers, featuring the pictures of John Gotti and Angelo Ruggiero. He claimed that they were the two �stone killers� who had been looking for him that night in the bar.

In his book, Maloney never mentions the kidnapping and killing of Manny Gambino, the murder that McBratney allegedly paid for with his life.

So what really happened to Manny Gambino? In the book, Brick Agent, former FBI Special Agent Anthony Villano talks in detail about the alleged abduction. Villano was tipped off that Manny Gambino, the son of Carlo�s brother Joseph, had been kidnapped. Villano�s attempts to help the family were at first rebuffed. A few days later, an attorney for the family called him and asked the FBI to get involved.

Villano reported that the kidnappers asked for $350,000, but the Gambino family claimed they could only come up with $40,000. The agent figured that either Joe Gambino�s side of the family was poor or that having $350,000 in cash on hand might arouse the attention of the IRS.

After receiving new ransom orders, Tommy Gambino, Manny�s brother, was told where to drive to and he took off with Villano on the floor in the backseat. The money drop was made before agents tailing Villano could get into position to observe it. However, one of the agents recorded the license number of a van that was seen in the area. The group went back to the Gambino home, only to be disappointed when Manny had not returned by the promised hour. Over the next several months, Villano continued investigating. Through a contact, he found out the following:

�Manny had fallen in love with a show-biz blonde. He wanted to leave his family because the girl refused to have anything more to do with him unless he gave up his wife and went full-time with her. Manny was advised by his betters in the clan to grow up and forget the blonde. In his circles it was okay to have a mistress but it was bad form to leave your wife, particularly if you were a nephew of Carlo Gambino.�

Villano also found out that Manny had a few financial problems, most likely due to maintaining two households. Since he was heavy into loanshark operations, many in the family felt that Manny had too much money on the street. Through a snitch, Villano found out that one of the people who was into Manny for a large sum was gambler Robert Sentner, an ex-associate. Upon hearing the name, Villano realized the van that was spotted the night the ransom was paid had been rented to a Robert Sentner.

Manny Gambino�s car was found at the Newark Airport. Villano reports that before his body was brought to the burial site, rigor mortis had set in. He was found buried in the sitting position in a New Jersey dump, near the Earle Naval Ammunition Depot. Robert Sentner and John Kilcullen were arrested on December 4, 1972, and charged with kidnapping. Senter later confessed to the murder of Gambino, revealed the names of his other two accomplices, and testified against Kilcullen.  On June 1,1973, he pled guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to fifteen years in prison. .
Gotti Arrested.  Mug Shot
Carlo Gambino
Autographed Photo Of J Gotti in Court
To his family he will remain a kind and loving father, grandfather, brother, uncle. To his friends he will always be "Johnny Boy". Whether you knew him or didn't know him, whether you liked him or didn't like him, he will remain a man of honor and a class act. If you were hungry he would go out of his way to see you were fed. If you asked him a favor he would do what he could. Even to the end he was a "man's man"
Gotti Explains.
John Sketched this while in prison, click on the pic for a larger image, nice picture!
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