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{{Infobox Criminal|subject_name =John Gotti|image_name =John_Gotti.jpg|image_size =210px|image_caption =|date_of_birth =|place_of_birth = The Bronx, New York City, New York, United States|date_of_death =|place_of_death = Springfield, Missouri, USA], conspiracy (crime) to commit murder, loansharking, racketeering, obstruction of justice, illegal gambling, tax evasion|status =Deceased|occupation =Boss of the [Gambino Crime Family
[Vincent Gotti
Richard Gotti
Gene Gotti|children =[Angela Gotti
Victoria Gotti
John A. Gotti
Frank Gotti
Peter Gotti, Jr.-->John Joseph Gotti, Jr. (October 27, 1940June 10, 2002), commonly known as John Gotti, also nicknamed by the Mass media as The Dapper Don and The Teflon Don, was a crime boss of the Gambino Crime Family, one of the Five Families in New York City. He became widely known for his outspoken personality and flamboyant style that made him the poster child for mobsters, an image that persists even today.

He was convicted of racketeering (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act), murder (13 counts), obstruction of justice, conspiracy (crime) to commit murder, illegal gambling, extortion, tax evasion and loansharking among others and sentenced to life in prison where he died.

Biography Early life John Joseph "Johnny Boy" Gotti Jr. was born October 27, 1940 to John Gotti Sr. and Philomena "Fannie" Gotti. He was the tenth child of thirteen, two of whom died in infancy. John Gotti Sr. was born in New Jersey to Carmine Gotti, an immigrant from the Naples section of Italy. He and his wife struggled to make ends meet and raised their children in a low-income section of the South Bronx. When Gotti was twelve his family moved to Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, a very tough Italian neighborhood at the time.

As a young boy, Gotti had a quick temper and despised those who were more fortunate financially, and he aspired to be one of the mobsters he always saw walking around the neighborhood.

With his brothers Peter Gotti and Richard V. Gotti he became part of a local street gang that ran errands for the local wiseguys. Gotti focused more on his street education and less on his formal one. He was constantly absent from school and when he was there he was labeled the class bully. He was such a routine discipline problem that the school showed very little interest in his truancy.

In the early summer of 1954, Gotti and a few other hoods participated in a robbery of a construction site. While trying to steal a cement mixer, the mixer tipped over, crushing Gotti's toes. He spent most of the summer in the hospital.

When Gotti was sixteen he quit school for good and joined the Fulton-Rockaway Boys, a local teenage gang that stole automobiles, fenced stolen goods, and rolled drunks. It was at this moment in his life where he teamed up with Angelo Ruggiero and Wilfred Johnson.

During his time with the Fulton-Rockaway Boys, Gotti was arrested five times. All the charges were eventually dismissed or reduced to probationary sentences.

Family In 1960, Gotti met Victoria DiGiorgio, and on March 6, 1962 they were married. They had five children together, Angela "Angel" Gotti, Victoria Gotti, John A. Gotti, Frank Gotti, and Peter Gotti, Jr., named after his uncle Peter Gotti. John and his family lived on 85th Street in Howard Beach, New York.

According to numerous sources, Gotti had three illegitimate children, Annabella "Anna" Gotti, Lidianna "Linsay" Gotti, and Paul "Paulie" Gotti as the result of a longtime affair with Staten Island housewife Shannon Connelly, the wife of a Gambino soldier, Ed Grillo.http://chicagosyndicate.blogspot.com/2006_02_26_archive.html.After Shannon's murder in 1974, Gotti and his wife DiGiorgio had the guardianship of Annabella and Lidianna. Paul Gotti lives with his son, Terenzio "Teddy" Gotti, who is currently running a crew out of Charlotte, NC as the youngest member associated with the Gambino Crime Family.

Career After his marriage, Gotti tried working legitimate careers. He worked as a coat factory presser and a truck driver's assistant, but he was always drawn back to a life of crime.

In 1963, Gotti and Salvatore Ruggiero were arrested by police for being in an automobile that had been reported stolen from a rental car agency. Gotti spent twenty days in jail. Around this time Gotti was arrested often, mostly on petty crimes such as larceny, burglary, and bookmaking.

In 1966, he spent several months in jail for an attempted theft. In 1966, Gotti also became an associate for a crew headed by Carmine Fatico who worked for Aniello Dellacroce, underboss of the Gambino Crime Family.

Gotti's criminal career with the Gambinos began with fencing stolen goods from Idlewild Airport out of the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park, Queens. Gotti became successful enough at this lifestyle to move his family to a nicer apartment in Brooklyn.

On November 27, 1967, Gotti and Angelo Ruggiero forged the name of a forwarding company agent and then took a rented truck to JFK's United cargo area and drove off with $30,000 worth of merchandise. A few days later the Federal Bureau of Investigation began surveillance on Angelo and Gotti and caught them loading up more goods, this time at Northwest Airlines cargo terminal. Once outside the terminal Gotti's brother Gene Gotti pulled alongside Gotti's truck and they began to transfer the goods. The FBI swooped in and arrested all three men and found Gotti hiding in the rear of the truck behind some boxes.

In February 1968, United employees identified Gotti as the man who signed for the earlier stolen merchandise. The FBI arrested him for the United hijacking soon after. Two months later, while out on bail, Gotti was arrested a third-time for hijacking--this time stealing a load of cigarettes worth $500,000 on the New Jersey Turnpike. Fatico urged Gotti to hire defense attorney Michael Coiro. Later that year Gotti pled guilty to the Northwest hijacking and was sentenced to four years at Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary. Prosecutors dropped the charges for the cigarette hijacking. Gotti also pleaded guilty to the United hijacking. Gotti spent less than three years at Lewisburg.

After he was released from prison he was placed on probation and ordered to find a legitimate job. Gotti was placed on the payroll of his wife's stepfathers' construction company where he reportedly never showed up for work but remained on the payroll. Meanwhile he returned to his old crew at the Bergin club still working under Fatico. When Fatico was indicted on loansharking charges, he used Gotti to oversee the day-to-day activities at the club. This helped get the attention of the Gambinos, specifically of Dellacroce, and, at the age of thirty-one, Gotti became acting Caporegime.

Dellacroce and Gotti were great friends from the beginning with much in common: They were both fierce, violent, foul-mouthed and clever. This friendship brought Gotti close to boss Carlo Gambino who ran the organization until his death in 1976 when Paul Castellano took over.

Gotti's crew, however, was caught selling heroin, against the rules of the family, and were to be disbanded. Unhappy with the way Castellano was running the family, Gotti and others in the family organized the shooting of the Gambino family boss, Paul Castellano, on December 16, 1985. Castellano was shot six times, along with his bodyguard, Thomas Bilotti, outside Sparks Steak House in Manhattan and Gotti took control of the family.



Following his purported ascension to the top position of the Gambino family, Gotti became known as "The Dapper Don," appearing in public wearing $10,000 hand-tailored Brioni suits and reveling in media attention. Gotti was extremely popular in his Queens neighborhood, where he organized free lavish street parties and festivals, and had a reputation for keeping street crime out. He also hosted the annual Independence Day (United States) near his Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park, a neighborhood in Queens, which featured an elaborate fireworks display and became a major media event.

Gotti was arrested several times throughout his career, and although he served time in both state and federal prison (including a manslaughter conviction in connection with the shooting death of a low-level Irish-American gangster named James McBratney in a tavern on Staten Island in 1973), in the 1980s he was referred to by the media as the "Teflon Don" as he avoided conviction on racketeering and assault charges. Gotti bribed or threatened jury in several trials. He also made use of police informants to keep a step ahead of investigators. While in prison he hired the Aryan Brotherhood for an unsuccessful murder-for-hire.

Gotti became something of a celebrity, and would frequently shake hands and pose for pictures with tourists outside the Ravenite Social Club in Manhattan, where he conducted business. Gotti conducted popular Fourth of July fireworks displays with free food distributed to the neighborhood on holidays such as the 4th, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Gotti's son was supposed to be responsible for the shooting of a radio talk show host for "bad-mouthing" Gotti. However, many feel the shooting was retaliation for a vicious beating of a showgirl who worked at mob-connected "Show-world", run by "DeeBee Bernardo" who had dated Gotti (A Captain in the Gambinos murdered by Sammy Gravano), by a vigilante group connected with that individual.

The last trial Gotti was long under intense electronic surveillance run by the FBI. His club, phones, and other places of business were all bugged. To get around this, he held meetings while walking down the street and played loud tapes of white noise. Eventually the FBI caught him on tape in an apartment above the club discussing a number of murders and other criminal activities. The FBI also caught Gotti denigrating his underboss Sammy Gravano.

On December 11, 1990 FBI agents and New York City detectives raided the Ravenite Social Club and arrested Gotti, Gravano, Frank Locascio, and Thomas Gambino.

Gotti was charged with 13 counts of murder, conspiracy (crime) to commit murder, loansharking, racketeering, obstruction of justice, illegal gambling, tax evasion, and, for the first time, he was charged with the murders of Paul Castellano and Thomas Bilotti.

Gotti was tried in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York before the Honorable I. Leo Glasser. The federal prosecutor's evidence was overwhelming. Not only did they have Gotti on tape, they also had several witnesses to testify against Gotti. Phil Leonetti, former underboss of the Philadelphia Crime Family was prepared to testify that Gotti bragged to Philadelphia crime leaders that he had ordered Castellano's execution. Prosecutors also persuaded Gravano to testify against his boss with the promise of being entered into the Witness Protection Program. On April 2 1992, after only 13 hours of deliberation, the jury found Gotti guilty on all 13 charges.http://www.crimelibrary.com/gangsters_outlaws/mob_bosses/gotti/don_24.html

During the trial, crowds gathered outside the courthouse to lend support to Gotti, and the court was filled with spectators including Peter Gotti, John "Jackie Nose" D'Amico, and celebrities like Jay Black and Mickey Rourke.

Prison On June 23, 1992, Judge Glasser sentenced Gotti to life imprisonment without possibility of parole. It was assumed that Gotti would serve his sentence at the new federal "supermax" ADX Florence at Florence, Colorado, but instead he was sent to the older USP Marion, where he was kept in a cell 23 hours a day. His cell was underground and measured eight feet by seven feet. He was allowed out of his cell one hour per day for solitary exercise in a concrete-walled enclosure. He was allowed two showers per week and one radio and a small black and white T.V. set in his cell. Meals were delivered to his cell through a slot in the door. In other words, he was in virtual solitary confinement. (This is standard procedure for all inmates in the restricted units at this Supermax Federal Prison.) While in Marion he had been confined along with convicted spies Jonathan Pollard and Christopher Boyce. Four days after John Gotti was imprisoned at Marion, his father John Gotti Sr. died of heart failure at the age of eighty-five. Aryan Brotherhood Prior to being placed in solitary, Gotti was paying fifty-thousand dollars ($50,000) a year to the Aryan Brotherhood for protection, a notorious white prison gang known as "The Brand." In July, 1996, when Gotti decided to stop paying protection money to the gang, he was attacked by a black inmate. Gotti's attacker was a 28-year-old African-American bank robber from the city of Philadelphia. Gotti then offered to once again pay his protection fee and asked the Aryan Brotherhood to place a murder contract on his attacker. However, Gotti died of throat cancer before the contract was completed.

Gotti appointed his caporegime son, John Gotti, Jr. as the family's acting boss who was helped by a three-captain committee to run the family before his death.

Death Gotti died of Head and neck cancer at 12:45 p.m. on June 10, 2002 at the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, where he had been transferred once the cancer was diagnosed. His family claimed he had not received proper care in jail and that faulty dental work had aggravated the disease. Following his death, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn announced that Gotti's family would not be permitted to have a Requiem for Gotti. The church said that Gotti's family would be allowed to have a Mass for the Dead for Gotti only after he had been buried. The Roman Catholic Church had taken similar action against other organized crime figures such as Paul Castellano; but unlike Castellano, Gotti's family was permitted to have him buried in the mausoleum at Saint John's Cemetery, Queens in Queens, next to his son Frank Gotti.

References in popular culture































See also

Notes Further reading

External links {{Infobox Criminal|subject_name =John Gotti|image_name =John_Gotti.jpg|image_size =210px|image_caption =|date_of_birth =|place_of_birth = The Bronx, New York City, New York, United States|date_of_death =|place_of_death = Springfield, Missouri, USA], conspiracy (crime) to commit murder, loansharking, racketeering, obstruction of justice, illegal gambling, tax evasion|status =Deceased|occupation =Boss of the [Gambino Crime Family
[Vincent Gotti
Richard Gotti
Gene Gotti|children =[Angela Gotti
Victoria Gotti
John A. Gotti
Frank Gotti
Peter Gotti, Jr.-->John Joseph Gotti, Jr. (October 27, 1940 – June 10, 2002), commonly known as John Gotti, also nicknamed by the Mass media as The Dapper Don and The Teflon Don, was a crime boss of the Gambino Crime Family, one of the Five Families in New York City. He became widely known for his outspoken personality and flamboyant style that made him the poster child for mobsters, an image that persists even today.

He was convicted of racketeering (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act), murder (13 counts), obstruction of justice, conspiracy (crime) to commit murder, illegal gambling, extortion, tax evasion and loansharking among others and sentenced to life in prison where he died.

Biography Early life John Joseph "Johnny Boy" Gotti Jr. was born October 27, 1940 to John Gotti Sr. and Philomena "Fannie" Gotti. He was the tenth child of thirteen, two of whom died in infancy. John Gotti Sr. was born in New Jersey to Carmine Gotti, an immigrant from the Naples section of Italy. He and his wife struggled to make ends meet and raised their children in a low-income section of the South Bronx. When Gotti was twelve his family moved to Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, a very tough Italian neighborhood at the time.

As a young boy, Gotti had a quick temper and despised those who were more fortunate financially, and he aspired to be one of the mobsters he always saw walking around the neighborhood.

With his brothers Peter Gotti and Richard V. Gotti he became part of a local street gang that ran errands for the local wiseguys. Gotti focused more on his street education and less on his formal one. He was constantly absent from school and when he was there he was labeled the class bully. He was such a routine discipline problem that the school showed very little interest in his truancy.

In the early summer of 1954, Gotti and a few other hoods participated in a robbery of a construction site. While trying to steal a cement mixer, the mixer tipped over, crushing Gotti's toes. He spent most of the summer in the hospital.

When Gotti was sixteen he quit school for good and joined the Fulton-Rockaway Boys, a local teenage gang that stole automobiles, fenced stolen goods, and rolled drunks. It was at this moment in his life where he teamed up with Angelo Ruggiero and Wilfred Johnson.

During his time with the Fulton-Rockaway Boys, Gotti was arrested five times. All the charges were eventually dismissed or reduced to probationary sentences.

Family In 1960, Gotti met Victoria DiGiorgio, and on March 6, 1962 they were married. They had five children together, Angela "Angel" Gotti, Victoria Gotti, John A. Gotti, Frank Gotti, and Peter Gotti, Jr., named after his uncle Peter Gotti. John and his family lived on 85th Street in Howard Beach, New York.

According to numerous sources, Gotti had three illegitimate children, Annabella "Anna" Gotti, Lidianna "Linsay" Gotti, and Paul "Paulie" Gotti as the result of a longtime affair with Staten Island housewife Shannon Connelly, the wife of a Gambino soldier, Ed Grillo.http://chicagosyndicate.blogspot.com/2006_02_26_archive.html.After Shannon's murder in 1974, Gotti and his wife DiGiorgio had the guardianship of Annabella and Lidianna. Paul Gotti lives with his son, Terenzio "Teddy" Gotti, who is currently running a crew out of Charlotte, NC as the youngest member associated with the Gambino Crime Family.

Career After his marriage, Gotti tried working legitimate careers. He worked as a coat factory presser and a truck driver's assistant, but he was always drawn back to a life of crime.

In 1963, Gotti and Salvatore Ruggiero were arrested by police for being in an automobile that had been reported stolen from a rental car agency. Gotti spent twenty days in jail. Around this time Gotti was arrested often, mostly on petty crimes such as larceny, burglary, and bookmaking.

In 1966, he spent several months in jail for an attempted theft. In 1966, Gotti also became an associate for a crew headed by Carmine Fatico who worked for Aniello Dellacroce, underboss of the Gambino Crime Family.

Gotti's criminal career with the Gambinos began with fencing stolen goods from Idlewild Airport out of the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park, Queens. Gotti became successful enough at this lifestyle to move his family to a nicer apartment in Brooklyn.

On November 27, 1967, Gotti and Angelo Ruggiero forged the name of a forwarding company agent and then took a rented truck to JFK's United cargo area and drove off with $30,000 worth of merchandise. A few days later the Federal Bureau of Investigation began surveillance on Angelo and Gotti and caught them loading up more goods, this time at Northwest Airlines cargo terminal. Once outside the terminal Gotti's brother Gene Gotti pulled alongside Gotti's truck and they began to transfer the goods. The FBI swooped in and arrested all three men and found Gotti hiding in the rear of the truck behind some boxes.

In February 1968, United employees identified Gotti as the man who signed for the earlier stolen merchandise. The FBI arrested him for the United hijacking soon after. Two months later, while out on bail, Gotti was arrested a third-time for hijacking--this time stealing a load of cigarettes worth $500,000 on the New Jersey Turnpike. Fatico urged Gotti to hire defense attorney Michael Coiro. Later that year Gotti pled guilty to the Northwest hijacking and was sentenced to four years at Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary. Prosecutors dropped the charges for the cigarette hijacking. Gotti also pleaded guilty to the United hijacking. Gotti spent less than three years at Lewisburg.

After he was released from prison he was placed on probation and ordered to find a legitimate job. Gotti was placed on the payroll of his wife's stepfathers' construction company where he reportedly never showed up for work but remained on the payroll. Meanwhile he returned to his old crew at the Bergin club still working under Fatico. When Fatico was indicted on loansharking charges, he used Gotti to oversee the day-to-day activities at the club. This helped get the attention of the Gambinos, specifically of Dellacroce, and, at the age of thirty-one, Gotti became acting Caporegime.

Dellacroce and Gotti were great friends from the beginning with much in common: They were both fierce, violent, foul-mouthed and clever. This friendship brought Gotti close to boss Carlo Gambino who ran the organization until his death in 1976 when Paul Castellano took over.

Gotti's crew, however, was caught selling heroin, against the rules of the family, and were to be disbanded. Unhappy with the way Castellano was running the family, Gotti and others in the family organized the shooting of the Gambino family boss, Paul Castellano, on December 16, 1985. Castellano was shot six times, along with his bodyguard, Thomas Bilotti, outside Sparks Steak House in Manhattan and Gotti took control of the family.



Following his purported ascension to the top position of the Gambino family, Gotti became known as "The Dapper Don," appearing in public wearing $10,000 hand-tailored Brioni suits and reveling in media attention. Gotti was extremely popular in his Queens neighborhood, where he organized free lavish street parties and festivals, and had a reputation for keeping street crime out. He also hosted the annual Independence Day (United States) near his Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park, a neighborhood in Queens, which featured an elaborate fireworks display and became a major media event.

Gotti was arrested several times throughout his career, and although he served time in both state and federal prison (including a manslaughter conviction in connection with the shooting death of a low-level Irish-American gangster named James McBratney in a tavern on Staten Island in 1973), in the 1980s he was referred to by the media as the "Teflon Don" as he avoided conviction on racketeering and assault charges. Gotti bribed or threatened jury in several trials. He also made use of police informants to keep a step ahead of investigators. While in prison he hired the Aryan Brotherhood for an unsuccessful murder-for-hire.

Gotti became something of a celebrity, and would frequently shake hands and pose for pictures with tourists outside the Ravenite Social Club in Manhattan, where he conducted business. Gotti conducted popular Fourth of July fireworks displays with free food distributed to the neighborhood on holidays such as the 4th, Thanksgiving and Christmas. Gotti's son was supposed to be responsible for the shooting of a radio talk show host for "bad-mouthing" Gotti. However, many feel the shooting was retaliation for a vicious beating of a showgirl who worked at mob-connected "Show-world", run by "DeeBee Bernardo" who had dated Gotti (A Captain in the Gambinos murdered by Sammy Gravano), by a vigilante group connected with that individual.

The last trial Gotti was long under intense electronic surveillance run by the FBI. His club, phones, and other places of business were all bugged. To get around this, he held meetings while walking down the street and played loud tapes of white noise. Eventually the FBI caught him on tape in an apartment above the club discussing a number of murders and other criminal activities. The FBI also caught Gotti denigrating his underboss Sammy Gravano.

On December 11, 1990 FBI agents and New York City detectives raided the Ravenite Social Club and arrested Gotti, Gravano, Frank Locascio, and Thomas Gambino.

Gotti was charged with 13 counts of murder, conspiracy (crime) to commit murder, loansharking, racketeering, obstruction of justice, illegal gambling, tax evasion, and, for the first time, he was charged with the murders of Paul Castellano and Thomas Bilotti.

Gotti was tried in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York before the Honorable I. Leo Glasser. The federal prosecutor's evidence was overwhelming. Not only did they have Gotti on tape, they also had several witnesses to testify against Gotti. Phil Leonetti, former underboss of the Philadelphia Crime Family was prepared to testify that Gotti bragged to Philadelphia crime leaders that he had ordered Castellano's execution. Prosecutors also persuaded Gravano to testify against his boss with the promise of being entered into the Witness Protection Program. On April 2 1992, after only 13 hours of deliberation, the jury found Gotti guilty on all 13 charges.http://www.crimelibrary.com/gangsters_outlaws/mob_bosses/gotti/don_24.html

During the trial, crowds gathered outside the courthouse to lend support to Gotti, and the court was filled with spectators including Peter Gotti, John "Jackie Nose" D'Amico, and celebrities like Jay Black and Mickey Rourke.

Prison On June 23, 1992, Judge Glasser sentenced Gotti to life imprisonment without possibility of parole. It was assumed that Gotti would serve his sentence at the new federal "supermax" ADX Florence at Florence, Colorado, but instead he was sent to the older USP Marion, where he was kept in a cell 23 hours a day. His cell was underground and measured eight feet by seven feet. He was allowed out of his cell one hour per day for solitary exercise in a concrete-walled enclosure. He was allowed two showers per week and one radio and a small black and white T.V. set in his cell. Meals were delivered to his cell through a slot in the door. In other words, he was in virtual solitary confinement. (This is standard procedure for all inmates in the restricted units at this Supermax Federal Prison.) While in Marion he had been confined along with convicted spies Jonathan Pollard and Christopher Boyce. Four days after John Gotti was imprisoned at Marion, his father John Gotti Sr. died of heart failure at the age of eighty-five. Aryan Brotherhood Prior to being placed in solitary, Gotti was paying fifty-thousand dollars ($50,000) a year to the Aryan Brotherhood for protection, a notorious white prison gang known as "The Brand." In July, 1996, when Gotti decided to stop paying protection money to the gang, he was attacked by a black inmate. Gotti's attacker was a 28-year-old African-American bank robber from the city of Philadelphia. Gotti then offered to once again pay his protection fee and asked the Aryan Brotherhood to place a murder contract on his attacker. However, Gotti died of throat cancer before the contract was completed.

Gotti appointed his caporegime son, John Gotti, Jr. as the family's acting boss who was helped by a three-captain committee to run the family before his death.

Death Gotti died of Head and neck cancer at 12:45 p.m. on June 10, 2002 at the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri, where he had been transferred once the cancer was diagnosed. His family claimed he had not received proper care in jail and that faulty dental work had aggravated the disease. Following his death, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn announced that Gotti's family would not be permitted to have a Requiem for Gotti. The church said that Gotti's family would be allowed to have a Mass for the Dead for Gotti only after he had been buried. The Roman Catholic Church had taken similar action against other organized crime figures such as Paul Castellano; but unlike Castellano, Gotti's family was permitted to have him buried in the mausoleum at Saint John's Cemetery, Queens in Queens, next to his son Frank Gotti.

References in popular culture































See also

Notes Further reading

External links

John Gotti - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Joseph Gotti, Jr. (October 27, 1940 – June 10, 2002), commonly known by the media as "The Dapper Don" and "The Teflon Don" after the murder of his former boss Paul ...

John Gotti
John Gotti (1940-2002) Former Godfather Both the Mafia and prosecutors agreed that the most important "godfather" in American crime through the 19902 would be John Gotti, subject ...

John Gotti
Self: 1990s; 1980s; The Best of American Justice: The Mob (1996) (V) .... Himself "American Justice: Target - Mafia" (1993) TV mini-series.... Himself..

John Gotti Agnello - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Agnello (born in Long Island, New York on May 8, 1987) is the son of the mobster Carmine Agnello and Victoria Gotti, as well as grandson of convicted mobster John Gotti.

Past comes back to haunt John Gotti Jnr, Mafia son who went straight ...
Nine years after publicly renouncing his criminal roots John Gotti Jnr, son of the US Mafia’s last iconic figure, was facing a potential life sentence last night after the FBI ...

ITN - John "Junior" Gotti
ITN is the world's leading independent creator of news and multimedia content.

John Gotti's grave
The location and photograph of John Gotti's grave grave. ... Final Resting Place of John Gotti" John Gotti. 27th October 1940 - 10th June 2002

John Gotti arrested on murder conspiracy charges - Telegraph
The alleged former head of the notorious Gambino crime family, John ... Website of the Telegraph Media Group with breaking news, sport, business, latest UK and world news.

Alleged Mafia boss John 'Junior' Gotti up in court on murder charges ...
John “Junior” Gotti, a suspected Mafia boss who has repeatedly been acquitted in trials after juries failed to agree a verdict, was charged today with offences including murder

TSG Mug Shot: John Gotti
Now that John Gotti's pushing up daisies at St. John's Cemetery, all we have to remind us of the Dapper Don are these mug shots--pictures, shattered pictures of the smiles we left ...

 

John Gotti



 
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