|
| October 7, 2004 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Taking Digs At The Dapper Don |
|
There is the matter of his ingrate son, Junior, picked up on prison bugs cruelly badmouthing his old man and his way of life; there is daughter Victoria, who seems determined to turn the name Gotti into shorthand for a greedy, dysfunctional family. And then there is the matter of the massive excavation in a Queens lot launched this week by the FBI as they search for bodies the Dapper Don may have carefully hidden years ago. Let’s start with the big dig. On Monday, the FBI began mining for corpses at The Hole, a long forgotten mob graveyard near Gotti’s old stomping grounds in Lindenwood, Queens, not far from his old Howard Beach home.
Authorities say they
are looking for bodies dumped there by several crime families, but Gotti
would be right for believing they’re most interested in
unburying some of his
old crimes. The FBI learned 19 months ago, from high-level Bonanno turncoat Salvatore (Good Looking Sal) Vitale, that there were remains at the site, but did nothing until picking up new info from an unnamed source about Gotti’s gang also using it. Vitale told the feds last year that capos Dominick (Big Trin) Trinchera (left) and Philip (Philly Lucky) Giaccone – killed in 1981 along with Alphonse (Sonny Red) Indelicato – were buried there. In relating the murders of |
|
“Massino once commented to (Vitale) that the bodies of all three captains had been disposed of at the same place. Massino was surprised that only (Sonny Red’s) body had surfaced,” the report said. (Not only does it make sense that the killers would bury all three in the same location rather than lug them to different parts of the city, it raises a question: Why did authorities never dig for the others in 1981, when they found Indelicato, a few weeks after all three disappeared.) Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn had plenty of time to search for the bodies before Massino’s trial – they did conduct two separate digs for other victims, one successful – but opted against it. Neither the U.S. Attorney’s office nor FBI spokesman Jim Margolin would explain the delay. A primary reason for moving on the information now, three months after Massino was convicted of the murders, was recently acquired intelligence that three Gotti rubout victims, including former neighbor John Favara, were also buried there. As Gang Land reported in March, 2001, investigators believe that a Gotti hit team abducted and killed Favara and disposed of his body in 1980, four months after he killed young Frank Gotti in a tragic car accident. “All murder victims are important, but some are more important than others,” said one law enforcement official. “Favara was a totally innocent victim. He was not involved in organized crime. That’s certainly a factor.” The other Gotti victims believed to be buried there, sources say, are Thomas DeSimone and his brother-in-law, Joseph (Joe The Barber) Spione, who both |
|
disappeared in 1979. DeSimone, a Luchese associate, was murdered for killing a Gotti pal, Ronald Jerrothe, in a dispute over a woman, sources say. They add that Spione was executed to silence him.
Authorities declined to
say from where the new information emanated, but said the FBI believed it
was credible, and stressed that closure wasn’t the only reason
The Dapper Don took even tougher digs, however, from his son John A. In a textbook case of mob nepotism, the late Mafia boss made Junior (left) a millionaire by bringing him into the family business and promoting him way beyond where his experience or capabilities would dictate. Now, although he never dared say it to his father’s face, Junior has been badmouthing his late dad to his friends, cohorts and even his personal attorney. Worse, the quotes wound up on tape and in the newspapers. “I know my father loved me, but I got to question how much, to put me with all these wolves,” Junior complained last year. “My father couldn’t have loved me to push me into this life,” he added, according to an FBI transcript of the jailhouse conversation. “I am ashamed of who I am,” Junior despaired at another point. “I would rather be a Latin King.” |
| Bringing Down Father |
|
When the late Dapper
Don was still alive, he angrily told
Victoria in a
jailhouse
rant to use her married name – Agnello – on the book jackets on her novels.
This would spare her sons taunts about their gangster
granddad that she had
complained about. But smart and cagey as he was, the old boss just didn’t understand modern marketing methods – not to mention the profit potential of proper product ‘branding.’ To hype her cable show, Victoria and her three sons, all dressed in fashionable black, struck gangster-esque poses for photos snapped in front of their luxurious Westbury mansion. The picture has been widely used by A&E to promote the program in magazine and newspaper ads. A month ago, promoters upped the publicity another notch, adorning black pizza boxes that A & E dis- |
|
tributed to pizzerias in Los Angeles and Manhattan. On the sides of the boxes, along with the usual extra toppings like pepperoni and extra cheese, customers were also offered “special toppings” including jewelry, luxury cars, and hair products. We know
someone who actually got one of these collector items from Mike’s Pizza, at
338 Third Ave, when she and her friends ordered four slices “to go.”
“We’ve done many things designed to drive tune-in,” said A & E spokeswoman Vicky Kahn, adding, “We also had Victoria Gotti look-alikes giving out bisGottis, you know, instead of biscotti.” And, Kahn assured Gang Land, these promotions are all authorized by the star of the show. “We run everything by her, definitely." |
| Editor's Note: Gang Land is taking a week off. The column will resume on October 21. |
| editor@ganglandnews.com |
||
| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2004- All Rights Reserved |