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John Gambino

Giovanni "John" Gambino (Italian: [dʒoˈvanni ɡamˈbiːno]; August 22, 1940 – November 16, 2017) was an Italian-born American mobster. Born in Palermo, Sicily, he became a made member of the Gambino crime family in 1975 and a capodecina or captain, and head of the crime family's Sicilian faction, appointed by family boss John Gotti in 1986, according to Mafia turncoat Sammy Gravano.[1][2]

John Gambino
Born
Giovanni Gambino

(1940-08-22)August 22, 1940
Palermo, Sicily, Italy
DiedNovember 16, 2017(2017-11-16) (aged 77)
OccupationMobster
AllegianceGambino crime family
Conviction(s)Racketeering, drug trafficking (1994)
Criminal penalty15 years' imprisonment

Transatlantic Mafia clan

Together with his younger brothers Rosario (Sal) and Giuseppe (Joseph) he formed a faction in the crime family known as the Cherry Hill Gambinos for their base of operation in the New Jersey town of that name. Although they were distant cousins of family boss Carlo Gambino, they did not owe him allegiance. They were Sicilian Mafiosi, men from Palermo, whose father had brought the family to New York in 1964. The Gambino brothers ran the Cafe Valentino on 18th Avenue in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn (later renamed as Cafe Giardino).[3]

The Gambinos hailed from the Passo di Rigano neighbourhood in Palermo, just as the Inzerillo clan, headed by Salvatore Inzerillo. Together the Inzerillo-Gambino Mafia clan formed a transatlantic Mafia family, based in Palermo and New York.[4] The Inzerillo clan had been on the verge of total extermination by Totò Riina and the Corleonesi during the Second Mafia War in Sicily when in 1981 the family boss Salvatore Inzerillo was killed. With the intervention of the Gambino crime family in New York, a deal was worked out that allowed the surviving Inzerillos to take refuge in the US, with the agreement that none of them, or their offspring, could ever return to Sicily.[5] Many went to the New York area and joined forces with the Gambino family. They were dubbed "gli scappati" (the escapees).[6]

Heroin trafficking

Despite a ban on drug dealing, the Gambino's were heavily involved in international heroin trafficking out of Bensonhurst.[7] John Gambino was the converging point in the United States for a consortium of heroin traffickers of the Sicilian Mafia, composed of the Inzerillo family and Stefano Bontade, and the final destination for its shipments of heroin that was refined in laboratories in Sicily from Turkish morphine base. His relative Salvatore Inzerillo was the Gambino brothers’ principal interlocutor, the central personage in Sicily, with myriads interests and heavy capital investments.[8]

Giovanni Falcone, the investigating magistrate who was assigned the investigation into heroin trafficking case in 1980, estimated that by the late 1970s the Inzerillo-Gambino-Spatola network was smuggling US$600 million worth of heroin into the US each year.[9]

Money laundering

Gambino had close relationship with the Italian banker Michele Sindona. They dined often and openly at the luxurious Hotel Pierre on Fifth Avenue or the Gambino’s Café Valentino. Gambino was a frequent guest at New York dinner parties in Sindona’s honour. When Sindona got in trouble and was indicted for the bankruptcy of the Franklin National Bank, John Gambino procured a false passport and helped to stage a bogus kidnap in August 1979, to conceal a mysterious 11-week trip to Sicily before his scheduled fraud trial.[4]

However, Sindona also had put the Mafia’s heroin money at risk, due to his financial malpractice. The real purpose of the kidnapping was to issue sparsely disguised blackmail notes to Sindona’s past political allies – among them Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti – to engineer the rescue of his banks and recuperate Cosa Nostra’s money. Gambino accompanied Sindona’s attempt to recover the money, but the plans failed and Sindona was arrested, leading to the indictment of the Inzerillo-Spatola-Gambino network. It remains unclear if any of the Mafia money Sindona had lost was recovered.[4]

Indicted in 1980 in relation with the heroin trafficking network, he was convicted and sentenced to six-and-a-half years jail sentence for heroin trafficking in Palermo (the sentence in absentia was confirmed by Italy’s Supreme Court in 1985). However, Gambino remained free because the US did not agree with Italian requests for extradition.[10] John and Joe Gambino were acquitted in a 1984 New Jersey drug case in which their brother, Rosario, was convicted and sentenced to 45 years in prison.[11]

Operation Iron Tower

On December 1, 1988, Italian and US law enforcement cracked down on the Gambino-Inzerillo network again with Operation Iron Tower. Italian and federal prosecutors indicted some 200 defendants in Italy and the US on drug trafficking charges. Among the arrestees was Joe Gambino, the owner of Cafe Giardino. A crowd of about 100 had gathered at the cafe to hear a newly arrived Italian singer. Federal agents moved in as the entertainment ended with one agent coming to the mike and saying, in effect, "This is your last dance." Some of the partygoers thought it was a joke and laughed, while a few tried to run but were caught. John Gambino wasn't charged – the FBI couldn't gather enough evidence against him – but was described in the court affidavit as the current leader of the "Brooklyn-based Sicilian faction of the Gambino family."[10][11]

The brothers were released after initial indictments in 1988 and 1989.[12] John Gambino was arrested on January 4, 1990. He later was charged in a superseding indictment with narcotics and racketeering violations. On January 5, 1990, he was released on a US$2 million personal recognizance bond signed by his wife Vittoria Gambino and his son Tommy Gambino.[13]

Due to testimonies of Mafia turncoats such as Sammy Gravano of the New York Gambino crime family and Francesco Marino Mannoia, an Italian pentito who had become a government witness, Joe and John Gambino and six other defendants – including Francesco Inzerillo – were indicted on charges that they smuggled and distributed drugs, operated a number of organized-crime enterprises and took part in the 1988 murder of Francesco Oliveri. However, the brothers failed to appear at their arraignment on September 1, 1992, at the Federal District Court in Manhattan, forfeiting US$5 million bail.[14] Electronic monitoring bracelets intended to keep track of them had been removed with the approval of the Government in July that year.[12][13]

Arrest and trial

On September 17, 1992, they were arrested in a secluded motel suite in Fort Lauderdale, South Florida, where they were said to have associates who would help them flee to Venezuela, where they owned an interest in a ranch. They were returned to Manhattan for trial.[13][15]

In February 1993, the trial against John and Joe Gambino, and their associates Lorenzo Mannino and Matteo Romano, started. The prosecution portrayed them as the main distributors of heroin smuggled from Italy and South America to Miami and New York by the Sicilian Mafia, while the defense countered that the central drug and murder charges in the case were based on the uncorroborated testimony of Marino Mannoia and Gravano, whom the defense depicted as "killers and liars".[1] The trial ended in mistrial in June 1993 when a jury was unable to reach a verdict on charges of racketeering, drug trafficking and murder.[16]

Marino Mannoia was admitted into the Witness Protection Program in the United States (Italy had no such programme at the time). He testified he had met with John Gambino personally, who had inspected the quality of the heroin Marino Mannoia was refining in Palermo. His testimony finally induced the Gambinos to plead guilty to drug trafficking in an arrangement with prosecution.[17]

Guilty plea

In June 1994, after prosecutors recommended 15-year sentences without parole, the men agreed to plead guilty to the racketeering charges stemming from activity that took place from 1975 to 1992.[18][16]

The pentito Gaspare Mutolo revealed that he organised a 400-kilogram shipment of heroin to the US in 1981. The Cuntrera-Caruana Mafia clan received half of the load, while John Gambino took possession of the other 200 kilograms. The shipments were financed by a consortium of Sicilian Mafia clans, who had organized a pool to provide the money to buy the merchandise from Thai suppliers.[19]

Release

In prison Gambino survived a stroke, heart attacks, and open-heart surgery. Sitting in a wheelchair, he was released in October 2005, but was later arrested to face an extradition request by Italy.[20] He was released on bail. In September 2006, he was freed when a federal judge overruled a decision that would have extradited him to Italy to face drug charges. The judge ruled that Gambino had already served a 15-year sentence in the US for drug trafficking and murder and could not be tried again for the same charges in Italy.[21]

According to court papers filed in Brooklyn Federal Court, John Gambino was one of a three-man panel that ran the Gambino family, jointly with Daniel Marino and Bartolomeo "Bobby" Vernace after Operation Old Bridge in February 2008 decapitated the leadership. They oversaw a slimmed-down criminal gang of 200 made men active in drug trafficking, extortion and loansharking, according to the FBI.[22] He was a high-ranking member of the family along with his wife's nephew Frank Cali.[23] On November 16, 2017, Gambino died of natural causes in New York.[24]

References

  1. ^ a b Rackets Trial for Gambino Brothers Opens, The New York Times, February 2, 1993
  2. ^ Drug Dealing Was Banned By Mob, U.S. Witness Says, The New York Times, April 15, 1993
  3. ^ Sterling, Octopus, p. 107
  4. ^ a b c Sterling, Octopus, pp. 190-202
  5. ^ Changes in Mafia Leadership Reveal New Links to US-Based La Cosa Nostra, DNI Open Source Center, November 19, 2007
  6. ^ , Time Magazine, November 5, 2007
  7. ^ Davis, Mafia Dynasty, p. 219
  8. ^ Sterling, Octopus, pp. 199-200
  9. ^ Shawcross & Young, Men Of Honour, pp. 77-78
  10. ^ a b Sterling, Octopus, pp. 304-07
  11. ^ a b Dozens Are Seized in New U.S.-Italian Drug Sweep, The New York Times, December 2, 1988
  12. ^ a b Monitoring Had Been Stopped On Two Mob Suspects Who Fled, The New York Times, September 4, 1992
  13. ^ a b c United States of America v. John Gambino, United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit. - 17 F.3d 572, February 24, 1994
  14. ^ Gambinos Miss Court Date, Forfeiting $5 Million, The New York Times, September 3, 1992
  15. ^ 2 Gambinos Are Seized In Florida, The New York Times, September 22, 1992
  16. ^ a b 2 Admit Importing Heroin For Mafia Crime Family, The New York Times, January 7, 1994
  17. ^ Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 304
  18. ^ 3 Mob Figures Draw 15-Year Terms in Drug Case, The New York Times, June 15, 1994
  19. ^ The Rothschilds of the Mafia on Aruba, by Tom Blickman, Transnational Organized Crime, Vol. 3, No. 2, Summer 1997.
  20. ^ Prison term ended, a member of crime family faces new charges, The Boston Globe, October 15, 2005
  21. ^ Reputed mobster freed from prison, The Boston Globe, September 12, 2006
  22. ^ Zambito, Thomas (June 7, 2009). "Beyond Gotti: New ways to make loot". New York Daily News. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
  23. ^ It's A Mob Family Circus 2009-07-14 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Post, March 8, 2009
  24. ^ "È morto John Gambino, il mafioso di Pizza Connection". l'Espresso (in Italian). 2017-11-24. Retrieved 2018-02-11.


john, gambino, giovanni, john, gambino, italian, dʒoˈvanni, ɡamˈbiːno, august, 1940, november, 2017, italian, born, american, mobster, born, palermo, sicily, became, made, member, gambino, crime, family, 1975, capodecina, captain, head, crime, family, sicilian. Giovanni John Gambino Italian dʒoˈvanni ɡamˈbiːno August 22 1940 November 16 2017 was an Italian born American mobster Born in Palermo Sicily he became a made member of the Gambino crime family in 1975 and a capodecina or captain and head of the crime family s Sicilian faction appointed by family boss John Gotti in 1986 according to Mafia turncoat Sammy Gravano 1 2 John GambinoBornGiovanni Gambino 1940 08 22 August 22 1940Palermo Sicily ItalyDiedNovember 16 2017 2017 11 16 aged 77 New York City U S OccupationMobsterAllegianceGambino crime familyConviction s Racketeering drug trafficking 1994 Criminal penalty15 years imprisonment Contents 1 Transatlantic Mafia clan 2 Heroin trafficking 3 Money laundering 4 Operation Iron Tower 5 Arrest and trial 6 Guilty plea 7 Release 8 ReferencesTransatlantic Mafia clan EditTogether with his younger brothers Rosario Sal and Giuseppe Joseph he formed a faction in the crime family known as the Cherry Hill Gambinos for their base of operation in the New Jersey town of that name Although they were distant cousins of family boss Carlo Gambino they did not owe him allegiance They were Sicilian Mafiosi men from Palermo whose father had brought the family to New York in 1964 The Gambino brothers ran the Cafe Valentino on 18th Avenue in Bensonhurst Brooklyn later renamed as Cafe Giardino 3 The Gambinos hailed from the Passo di Rigano neighbourhood in Palermo just as the Inzerillo clan headed by Salvatore Inzerillo Together the Inzerillo Gambino Mafia clan formed a transatlantic Mafia family based in Palermo and New York 4 The Inzerillo clan had been on the verge of total extermination by Toto Riina and the Corleonesi during the Second Mafia War in Sicily when in 1981 the family boss Salvatore Inzerillo was killed With the intervention of the Gambino crime family in New York a deal was worked out that allowed the surviving Inzerillos to take refuge in the US with the agreement that none of them or their offspring could ever return to Sicily 5 Many went to the New York area and joined forces with the Gambino family They were dubbed gli scappati the escapees 6 Heroin trafficking EditDespite a ban on drug dealing the Gambino s were heavily involved in international heroin trafficking out of Bensonhurst 7 John Gambino was the converging point in the United States for a consortium of heroin traffickers of the Sicilian Mafia composed of the Inzerillo family and Stefano Bontade and the final destination for its shipments of heroin that was refined in laboratories in Sicily from Turkish morphine base His relative Salvatore Inzerillo was the Gambino brothers principal interlocutor the central personage in Sicily with myriads interests and heavy capital investments 8 Giovanni Falcone the investigating magistrate who was assigned the investigation into heroin trafficking case in 1980 estimated that by the late 1970s the Inzerillo Gambino Spatola network was smuggling US 600 million worth of heroin into the US each year 9 Money laundering EditGambino had close relationship with the Italian banker Michele Sindona They dined often and openly at the luxurious Hotel Pierre on Fifth Avenue or the Gambino s Cafe Valentino Gambino was a frequent guest at New York dinner parties in Sindona s honour When Sindona got in trouble and was indicted for the bankruptcy of the Franklin National Bank John Gambino procured a false passport and helped to stage a bogus kidnap in August 1979 to conceal a mysterious 11 week trip to Sicily before his scheduled fraud trial 4 However Sindona also had put the Mafia s heroin money at risk due to his financial malpractice The real purpose of the kidnapping was to issue sparsely disguised blackmail notes to Sindona s past political allies among them Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti to engineer the rescue of his banks and recuperate Cosa Nostra s money Gambino accompanied Sindona s attempt to recover the money but the plans failed and Sindona was arrested leading to the indictment of the Inzerillo Spatola Gambino network It remains unclear if any of the Mafia money Sindona had lost was recovered 4 Indicted in 1980 in relation with the heroin trafficking network he was convicted and sentenced to six and a half years jail sentence for heroin trafficking in Palermo the sentence in absentia was confirmed by Italy s Supreme Court in 1985 However Gambino remained free because the US did not agree with Italian requests for extradition 10 John and Joe Gambino were acquitted in a 1984 New Jersey drug case in which their brother Rosario was convicted and sentenced to 45 years in prison 11 Operation Iron Tower EditOn December 1 1988 Italian and US law enforcement cracked down on the Gambino Inzerillo network again with Operation Iron Tower Italian and federal prosecutors indicted some 200 defendants in Italy and the US on drug trafficking charges Among the arrestees was Joe Gambino the owner of Cafe Giardino A crowd of about 100 had gathered at the cafe to hear a newly arrived Italian singer Federal agents moved in as the entertainment ended with one agent coming to the mike and saying in effect This is your last dance Some of the partygoers thought it was a joke and laughed while a few tried to run but were caught John Gambino wasn t charged the FBI couldn t gather enough evidence against him but was described in the court affidavit as the current leader of the Brooklyn based Sicilian faction of the Gambino family 10 11 The brothers were released after initial indictments in 1988 and 1989 12 John Gambino was arrested on January 4 1990 He later was charged in a superseding indictment with narcotics and racketeering violations On January 5 1990 he was released on a US 2 million personal recognizance bond signed by his wife Vittoria Gambino and his son Tommy Gambino 13 Due to testimonies of Mafia turncoats such as Sammy Gravano of the New York Gambino crime family and Francesco Marino Mannoia an Italian pentito who had become a government witness Joe and John Gambino and six other defendants including Francesco Inzerillo were indicted on charges that they smuggled and distributed drugs operated a number of organized crime enterprises and took part in the 1988 murder of Francesco Oliveri However the brothers failed to appear at their arraignment on September 1 1992 at the Federal District Court in Manhattan forfeiting US 5 million bail 14 Electronic monitoring bracelets intended to keep track of them had been removed with the approval of the Government in July that year 12 13 Arrest and trial EditOn September 17 1992 they were arrested in a secluded motel suite in Fort Lauderdale South Florida where they were said to have associates who would help them flee to Venezuela where they owned an interest in a ranch They were returned to Manhattan for trial 13 15 In February 1993 the trial against John and Joe Gambino and their associates Lorenzo Mannino and Matteo Romano started The prosecution portrayed them as the main distributors of heroin smuggled from Italy and South America to Miami and New York by the Sicilian Mafia while the defense countered that the central drug and murder charges in the case were based on the uncorroborated testimony of Marino Mannoia and Gravano whom the defense depicted as killers and liars 1 The trial ended in mistrial in June 1993 when a jury was unable to reach a verdict on charges of racketeering drug trafficking and murder 16 Marino Mannoia was admitted into the Witness Protection Program in the United States Italy had no such programme at the time He testified he had met with John Gambino personally who had inspected the quality of the heroin Marino Mannoia was refining in Palermo His testimony finally induced the Gambinos to plead guilty to drug trafficking in an arrangement with prosecution 17 Guilty plea EditIn June 1994 after prosecutors recommended 15 year sentences without parole the men agreed to plead guilty to the racketeering charges stemming from activity that took place from 1975 to 1992 18 16 The pentito Gaspare Mutolo revealed that he organised a 400 kilogram shipment of heroin to the US in 1981 The Cuntrera Caruana Mafia clan received half of the load while John Gambino took possession of the other 200 kilograms The shipments were financed by a consortium of Sicilian Mafia clans who had organized a pool to provide the money to buy the merchandise from Thai suppliers 19 Release EditIn prison Gambino survived a stroke heart attacks and open heart surgery Sitting in a wheelchair he was released in October 2005 but was later arrested to face an extradition request by Italy 20 He was released on bail In September 2006 he was freed when a federal judge overruled a decision that would have extradited him to Italy to face drug charges The judge ruled that Gambino had already served a 15 year sentence in the US for drug trafficking and murder and could not be tried again for the same charges in Italy 21 According to court papers filed in Brooklyn Federal Court John Gambino was one of a three man panel that ran the Gambino family jointly with Daniel Marino and Bartolomeo Bobby Vernace after Operation Old Bridge in February 2008 decapitated the leadership They oversaw a slimmed down criminal gang of 200 made men active in drug trafficking extortion and loansharking according to the FBI 22 He was a high ranking member of the family along with his wife s nephew Frank Cali 23 On November 16 2017 Gambino died of natural causes in New York 24 References Edit a b Rackets Trial for Gambino Brothers Opens The New York Times February 2 1993 Drug Dealing Was Banned By Mob U S Witness Says The New York Times April 15 1993 Sterling Octopus p 107 a b c Sterling Octopus pp 190 202 Changes in Mafia Leadership Reveal New Links to US Based La Cosa Nostra DNI Open Source Center November 19 2007 Top Sicilian Mafia Boss Arrested Time Magazine November 5 2007 Davis Mafia Dynasty p 219 Sterling Octopus pp 199 200 Shawcross amp Young Men Of Honour pp 77 78 a b Sterling Octopus pp 304 07 a b Dozens Are Seized in New U S Italian Drug Sweep The New York Times December 2 1988 a b Monitoring Had Been Stopped On Two Mob Suspects Who Fled The New York Times September 4 1992 a b c United States of America v John Gambino United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit 17 F 3d 572 February 24 1994 Gambinos Miss Court Date Forfeiting 5 Million The New York Times September 3 1992 2 Gambinos Are Seized In Florida The New York Times September 22 1992 a b 2 Admit Importing Heroin For Mafia Crime Family The New York Times January 7 1994 Stille Excellent Cadavers p 304 3 Mob Figures Draw 15 Year Terms in Drug Case The New York Times June 15 1994 The Rothschilds of the Mafia on Aruba by Tom Blickman Transnational Organized Crime Vol 3 No 2 Summer 1997 Prison term ended a member of crime family faces new charges The Boston Globe October 15 2005 Reputed mobster freed from prison The Boston Globe September 12 2006 Zambito Thomas June 7 2009 Beyond Gotti New ways to make loot New York Daily News Retrieved 12 April 2012 It s A Mob Family Circus Archived 2009 07 14 at the Wayback Machine The New York Post March 8 2009 E morto John Gambino il mafioso di Pizza Connection l Espresso in Italian 2017 11 24 Retrieved 2018 02 11 Davis John H 1993 Mafia Dynasty The Rise and Fall of the Gambino Crime Family New York Harper Collins ISBN 0 06 016357 7 Shawcross Tim amp Martin Young 1987 Men Of Honour The Confessions Of Tommaso Buscetta Glasgow Collins ISBN 0 00 217589 4 Sterling Claire 1990 Octopus How the long reach of the Sicilian Mafia controls the global narcotics trade New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 73402 4 Stille Alexander 1995 Excellent Cadavers The Mafia and the Death of the First Italian Republic New York Vintage ISBN 0 09 959491 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Gambino amp oldid 1148578296, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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