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Authors: Gene Mustain

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Heroin dealers Gene Gotti, John Carneglia, and Anthony Rampino fared worse. Gene and Carneglia are in federal prison until 2018. Rampino is in state prison until 2012.
After getting away with feigning insanity for three decades, Gotti nemesis Vincent “Chin” Gigante, long-time boss of the Genovese Family, was convicted of labor racketeering and put away for 12 years, thanks again in part to testimony by Gravano.
The Gigante trial was Gravano’s last trip to the witness stand for the government. It helped promote sales of his life story, which had come out a few months before. Later in 1999, however, the
Arizona Republic
disclosed that he was living in the Grand Canyon state, and Gravano gave its reporter some quotable words.
“I’m not running from the fucking Mafia,” he said. “I was a boxer. I know what it’s like to get hit. I know what it is to fight. You lose your fear. I could go to Montana and live 20 years in a cabin and be scared to death. Or I can live here … I choose to live here.”
At the time, Gravano ran a Phoenix construction company. He and his supposedly estranged-wife Debra also operated a Scottsdale restaurant. But these were not their most lucrative operations. On the side, they and their two adult children were also running an illegal party-drug business.
State authorities caught up with them first and later the federal government weighed in. For his part, Gravano pleaded guilty and is headed off to prison for a good long time.
Jack D’Amico, who served on a three-capo committee that helped Junior carry out his father’s wishes from prison during the mid-1990s, was indicted in the same case that led to Junior going away for six or so years. D’Amico pleaded guilty too, but only to bookmaking, and he served 17 months before getting out in September 2001.
The summer Junior and D’Amico went away, a woman who mounted an impressive Gotti fan club on the Internet and ran it for four years, called it quits and closed the site. She took down hundreds of upbeat items and photos of Gotti, Junior, Victoria, and Cutler.
In a last message to Gotti fans, Melissa (Ravenna) Angelini wrote, “Unfortunately, all good things must come to an end.”
The end for John Gotti went on a long time. The first stories hinting that the end was near appeared in the fall of 2000. In the meantime, various treatment crises prompted more stories and transfers between a prison hospital and a hospital in Springfield, Missouri. Each time, his lawyers and spokesmen kept saying what a fighter he was and how, even as they complained about this or that condition of confinement, he never complained about anything. Even if he were no longer in charge of orchestrating public opinion, how the public perceived him remained a large part of the John Gotti story.
If his Family has its way, he will be buried next to his son Frank and father John Sr., in a famous old cemetery in Queens where several infamous gangsters, including Carlo Gambino and Aniello Dellacroce, are buried.
These gangsters from Gotti’s life, and most others there, lie in crypts marked only by their names and dates of birth and death. No slogans, no last words. No use giving writers anything to work with. But Gotti leaves his warehouse of tape-recorded words, including those he employed to describe the way he believed things went in his crime Family after he went away for good.
“If I had to give a mark, a grade on how every situation was handled—the lawyers and everything else, jobs and getting jobs and working and all that—I can’t put a passing mark on one incident,” he told brother Peter in 1998, in prison, before the cancer came.
Naturally, he had his reasons why, and no one who ever knew John Gotti or came to know him would be surprised. “Why do you think this group of people fell apart without me?” he asked, before providing, as he often did, his own answer:
“Everyone became their own boss, set their own moral codes, set their own reasons, their own rhymes, and that’s the end of it … that’s the end of the ballgame.”
POSTSCRIPT
O
N JUNE 10, 2002, three days after we finished this book, John Gotti died, giving us this last-second opportunity against a tight publishing deadline to make a few last comments.
We had every reason to suspect it, because we have been on the story 17 years and seen what happens in the media when a big Gotti headline comes along, but we were still amazed at the amount of coverage his death generated. Front-page stories and full-page photographs. Lengthy obituaries. Lots of essays by columnists. Much man-on-the-street. Many sidebars on this or that aspect of the man and his legacy. It went on several days, with follow-ups about disputes that erupted over shipping his body home to New York from the prison hospital where he died in Springfield, Missouri.
We didn’t measure the inches, but from the memory of our participation in that story, too, the death of Frank Sinatra—a big hero in New York who had a much longer time at the top—didn’t get near the attention Gotti’s did.
Naturally, we contributed. The
New York Daily News
published our obituary on Gotti and excerpts from one of our other books. The
New York Post
excerpted this book.
The New York Times
invited us onto its op-ed page. Reporters and broadcasters from Los Angeles to Auckland and New York to London called to ask for our comments.
All of it was evidence that for all the bad he did, Gotti was good on one level—as we said earlier, he lived up to our expectations of what a gangster is. The Gambino crime family is in ruins, because of him, but he looked, sounded, and acted like a gangster, and with such enthusiasm that we all became at least interested in his story, if not captivated. Our expectations come from our gangster movies, and Gotti was right off the big screen.
Ordinary people picked up on that, and used movie terms to talk about him. “He played that tough-guy role to his dying breath,” the former warden of the prison hospital where he died told the
Daily News
.
Meeting expectations, Gotti became part of our popular culture—he often was a case of life imitating art imitating life, but people were interested enough to pay attention. This is why the media gave us terrible new details about the suffering and indignity of his last few months of surgically imposed silence. It is why we learned he was to be buried in a crypt alongside son Frank, the boy on the minibike, in that Queens cemetery where so many gangsters lay. It is why we were told that while Roman Catholic officials would not grant his relatives’ wish for a Mass of Christian Burial, they would permit a church memorial service, but with no coffin present.
Nobody asked us, but we think his Family should have been able to say good-bye the way they wished. Death is always a sad ending, even for the villain’s family.
So long, John Gotti. You were a great story.
 
Gene Mustain
Jerry Capeci
June 14, 2002
INDEX
A
Abbamonte, Oreste
Abbott, James (FBI Agent)
Agnello, Carmine
Ain, Stewart
Alesandro, Patricia De
Anastasia, Albert (boss)
Andrea Doria
Apalachin Conference
Arc Plumbing and Heating Corporation, Gotti’s “employment” at
Armone, Joseph
Arnold, Miriam (witness of Jimmy McBratney murder)
attorneys.
See also
U.S. attorneys
Blakey, G. Robert
Cohn, Roy
Coiro, Michael Cutler, Bruce
appeals Judge Nickerson’s decision to deny bail to Gotti
“Brucification” of defendants
complaints of press coverage during federal trial
disqualified from federal case against Gotti
RICO trial
Slotnick, Barry
audio bugs
Augello, Anthony (Colombo soldier)
B
babania, information on Salvatore Ruggiero’s drug dealings
Bartels, John R.
Bartley, Kirke
Battista, William (Billy)
beatings, Collado, Antonio
Beatty, George
Bergin Club
Cardinali, James
dice game arrests
fight between Gene Gotti and John Gotti
gambling hall
Gotti’s rise to captain position
Gotti’s visibility, Fourth of July celebration
informants
relationship between Dellacroce and Gotti
taped conversations used in O’Connor case
Berkowitz, David
Bilotti, Thomas
events leading up to murder
murder
Gotti voted control of Family after
Gotti’s behavior after
Gotti’s behavior leading up to
naming as underboss by Castellano
rise to power under Paul Castellano
Blakey, G. Robert (lawyer)
Bonanno, Joseph
Bonavolonta, Jules
bookmakers
Borriello, Bartholomew
Borriello, Bobby
bosses.
See also
families; underbosses Anastasia, Albert
Castellano, Paul
appointment as boss
death
discussion with Dellacroce about Caiazzo-LaForte affair
events leading up to murder
family boycott of wake
indictment as beneficiary of conspiracy
murder
naming Thomas Bilotti as underboss
receipt of Mercury Pattern Service problem from Gambino
relinquishment of control over Gambino Family to Aniello Dellacroce
rise to power
taped account of Apalachin Conference
taped conversation with Joe Gallo
“White House” bug
Colombo, Joseph
Dellacroce, Aniello
assignment by Gambino to be underboss
consent to make Gotti captain
death
high profile
pretrial hearing
relationship with Gotti during Bergin days
soldier years
tax case
Fatico, Carmine
loan-sharking cases
Galante, Carmine
Gambino, Carlo
Genovese, Vito
Gigante, Vincent
Mangano, Philip
Maranzano, Salvatore
Massino, Joseph (boss of Bonanno Family)
Persico, Carmine
Riggi, John (boss of DeCavalcante Family)
Salerno, Anthony
show of respect for Gotti after Costellano murder
BQ 11766-OC
belief that Gotti was dealing in drugs
Gene Gotti’s position in Family dealings
hijacking information
on Piecyk case
Salvatore Ruggiero’s continued contact with Gotti
targeting by Giacalone
Brownsville Stompers
Brownsville-East New York, childhood years
bugs.
See also
informants; surveillance
Angelo and Langella’s Brooklyn restaurant bug
Castellano’s “White House” bug
conversations about money-making ventures
drug dealings
Nettie Cirelli’s apartment
conversation between Frank LoCascio and John Gotti
conversation with Sammy about jury tampering
Gotti discusses murders
Gotti talks of murdering DiBernardo, Milito, and DiBono
revelation of tapes to prosecutors
Nice N EZ Auto School
Ravenite Social Club
audio bug
conversation about promoting John Jr.
conversation between Michael Coiro and John Gotti after Coiro is found guilty
video surveillance
Burke, Jimmy, dinner with Michael Coiro
C
Caan, James
Caiazzo-LaForte affair
Capone, Al
captains
Armone, Joseph
Carrao, Joseph
Failla, James
Gaggi, Anthony
Gotti’s assignment as captain
LaForte, Joseph
Mosca, Ralph
Cardinali, James
beating of Antonio Collado
bus thief capture
cocaine addiction
conversation with Diane Giacalone
dealings with District Attorney’s office
dinner between Jimmy Burke and Michael Coiro
drug dealing
involvement in fight between Gene and John Gotti
meeting with Special Agent Paul Hayes
murder of cocaine dealer
murder of Michael Castigliola
parole terms
prison time
relationship with Gotti
relationship with Willie Boy
RICO trial testimony
sandbagging of Diane Giacalone
Carneglia, Angelo
Carneglia, Charles
Carneglia, John
Carmine Agnello beating
charged for murdering Albert Gelb
FBI-Strike Force investigation for drug dealing
indictment
pleads Fifth Amendment
Sparks case sentencing
subpoena
cases.
See also
indictments
Carneglia, John
Coiro, Michael
conversation with Gotti after his guilty verdict
Gleeson’s prosecution of
Dellacroce tax case
Armond
indictment
federal case against Gotti
closing arguments
DeCicco’s murder during trial
Gotti plans for jail time upon losing appeal for bail
Gotti surrenders to prison time
indictment
Judge Leo Glasser disqualifies Cutler and Shargel from case
jury deliberation
jury selection
Lewis Schilero’s testimony of Cosa Nostra-speak
press coverage
Salvatore Gravano’s testimony
BOOK: Mob Star
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