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Thomas Bilotti

Thomas "Tommy" Bilotti (March 23, 1940 – December 16, 1985) was an American mobster who briefly served as underboss of the Gambino crime family in New York City. It was his promotion that helped trigger the 1985 assassination of Gambino boss Paul Castellano; Bilotti would end up killed as well as part of the assassination.

Thomas Bilotti
Bilotti's 1969 NYPD mugshot
Born(1940-03-23)March 23, 1940
New York City, New York, U.S.
DiedDecember 16, 1985(1985-12-16) (aged 45)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Cause of deathGunshot wounds
Resting placeMoravian Cemetery, New Dorp, Staten Island
OccupationMobster
Known forUnderboss of the Gambino crime family
PredecessorAniello Dellacroce
SuccessorFrank DeCicco
AllegianceGambino crime family

Criminal career edit

The son of Italian immigrants Lillian (née Rosso) and Anthony Bilotti, he was born on the Staten Island borough of New York City.[1] As a young man, Bilotti became an associate in the crew of John "Johnny D" D'Alessio, a caporegime in the Gambino crime family who controlled illegal gambling and other rackets on Staten Island. He later became a criminal associate of John's brothers Alexander "Pope" D'Alessio and Michael "Mikey D" D'Alessio. Bilotti also spent time as the chauffeur and bodyguard of Alexander "The Ox" DeBrizzi, an uncle of the D'Alessio brothers who controlled the Staten Island waterfront for the Gambino crime family.[2][3] He became an integral member of the D'Alessio crew and was involved in labor racketeering, extortion and loansharking.[4] In 1969, Bilotti was arrested on Staten Island on a felony charge of possessing stolen property.[5] He gained a reputation for violence. In one incident, Bilotti assaulted Colombo crime family associate Robert Pate.[4] The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) agents Joseph O’Brien and Andris Kurins described Bilotti in the book Boss of Bosses: The Fall of the Godfather: The FBI and Paul Castellano as: "He was basically a pit bull with shoes on. If he had a business ability beyond choreographing a shakedown or calculating the interest owed on shylock loans, it didn't show. In a milieu not known for its conversational finesse, Bilotti distinguished himself by spluttering inarticulateness... He was short – five feet seven. He was stubby – a rock-solid two-twenty. He wore a bad toupée. He had no tact, no charm, no sense of humor. He had a big mouth, and his piggish eyes were too close together. To the concept of self-control he was a stranger".[6] Bilotti was a reputed hitman for the D'Alessio crew,[4] and was allegedly involved in at least eleven murders.[6]

Bilotti was a resident of 33 Kensington Avenue on Staten Island in April 1970, when he and an accomplice, Thomas Papanier, were observed discarding firearms and arrested following a shooting in Jamesburg, New Jersey. Bilotti and Papanier were apprehended as they ran from the scene of the shooting, in which African-American teenager Emory Parks suffered superficial injuries when he was struck in the back of the head by birdshot pellets.[7] The quick arrest of the pair occurred as the Jamesburg area was in the midst of significant racial tension after riots at the local high school, and police from Spotswood and Monroe Township were on alert.[8] Although police suspected that the duo were responsible for Parks' injuries, Bilotti and Papanier were initially charged with carrying a concealed weapon, carrying a pistol without a permit and failing to secure a permit to purchase a pistol.[9] A Middlesex County grand jury ultimately indicted the men only for illegal possession of concealed weapons.[10]

In 1971, John D'Alessio allegedly recruited Thomas Bilotti and his brother Joseph to murder Thomas "Tommy Edwards" Ernst, the common-law husband of D'Alessio's daughter Theresa.[4] Ernst, who was in debt to two Staten Island mobsters, survived an initial attempt on his life at a Grasmere diner on August 31, 1971. He then agreed to meet with D'Alessio at the Wild Acres bar in Dingmans Ferry, near D'Alessio's summer home in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania, on September 2, 1971. After leaving the D'Alessio country mansion on his way to the meeting, Ernst's Cadillac was overtaken by three men in a car who opened fire at him. However, this murder attempt also failed when Theresa D'Alessio, who was not supposed to be present, returned fire with a semi-automatic rifle.[2] Ernst reportedly identified the two shooters to the Pennsylvania State Police before withrawing the identification.[11] Ernst was ultimately killed on April 6, 1972 when he was ambushed and shot twice by an unidentified gunman on the porch of John D'Alessio's home at 151 Jumel Street in Great Kills, where he had been making a visit to Theresa D'Alessio.[12]

Bilotti's first wife Catherine died of cancer in her mid-30s, and he subsequently remarried to Donna, a Brooklyn beauty parlor owner. He had a severely autistic son who had been institutionalized since childhood, and although Bilotti visited the boy regularly, he rarely spoke of him.[6] Bilotti was best man at the wedding of actor Gianni Russo, a fellow native of Staten Island.[13] Another Bilotti brother, Jimmy, worked for the singer Frank Sinatra in Las Vegas for several years during the 1970s and 1980s.[14]

Castellano protégé edit

Over the years, Bilotti became a close aide-de-camp and confidant of another Gambino capo, Paul Castellano, who reportedly saw much potential in the ambitious Bilotti and took him on as a protégé. He served as Castellano's primary chauffeur, bodyguard and enforcer.[1] Although Castellano had worked hard to cultivate a sophisticated image, he chose the thuggish Bilotti as his protégé because he was "vigilant, hardworking, fearless, and, above all, loyal", according to O'Brien and Kurins.[6] The agents described his traits: "As long as he was waiting on Paul Castellano, Tommy Bilotti was deferential, subdued, watchful yet calm, like a dog on a rug. His self-esteem derived from adoration of the master, and he could afford to be well-behaved. Problems occurred, however, when Bilotti was sent on errands of his own. Out of sight of the Boss, he got rambunctious. He tried to play the big shot; he overdid things. He got creative in a sadistic sort of way, and embroidered gratuitous cruelty through what should have been straightforward business transactions".[6] In one incident, Bilotti entered a Staten Island bar armed with a baseball bat to collect an interest payment from the owner, who was still recovering and trying to pay medical bills from a beating sustained weeks earlier. He berated the bar patrons and owner before unzipping his pants and ordering the bar owner to put his mouth on him, saying to the patrons looking on: "You see? He likes it".[6] O'Brien was warned by Bruce Mouw, the supervisor of the FBI's Squad C-16, which was assigned to investigate the Gambino crime family: "Don't ever talk to Tommy Bilotti alone. He doesn’t play by the rules, [and he has a] very short fuse". In an incident when O'Brien followed Bilotti to a beauty parlor owned by his second wife Donna, Bilotti left the parlor by a back door, entered another car and pulled up next to the vehicle from which O'Brien was carrying out surveillance and confronted the agent. Describing Bilotti's demeanor during the encounter, O'Brien said: "Now, most people, when they are building up to a fit of rage, need some give-and-take, some goading, to get them really psyched. Not Tommy Bilotti. When he got mad, it was like a nuclear reactor going into a meltdown. Once a certain threshold was reached, the process just fed on itself, the voltage increasing exponentially until the fuel was all used up and everything within a certain radius had been leveled. His voice got louder and louder, he made less and less sense. Soon he was just spitting out curses wrapped in random phrases, his face purple, his nostrils distended, ropy veins standing out on his pit-bull neck".[6]

Following the death of Carlo Gambino, Castellano was elevated to boss of the Gambino crime family in 1976.[4] Gambino's decision to appoint Castellano as his successor essentially split the family into two factions; Castellano's "white-collar" branch, and a "blue-collar" wing led by underboss Aniello Dellacroce.[15] Bilotti was subsequently inducted as a "made" member of the family in October 1977, and his older brother Joseph followed suit in 1980.[5] When Castellano moved into a custom built palatial mansion at 177 Benedict Road atop Staten Island's Todt Hill in 1980, Bilotti moved into a less ostentatious home nearby. He was a regular visitor and dinner guest at Castellano's mansion and was considered a close family friend. However, when Castellano started an affair with his live-in maid Gloria Olarte, Bilotti kept it secret from Castellano's wife Nina. Bilotti, along with Salvatore Barbato, also provided security for Castellano and his estate. Bilotti and Castellano regularly vacationed together at Pompano Beach, Florida.[1] Castellano promoted Bilotti to capo in the fall of 1981, and he oversaw a crew of soldati ("soldiers") that included his brother Joseph Bilotti and John Gambino.[5]

In addition to maintaining a large loansharking book, Bilotti was granted lucrative new business ventures by Castellano. The pair were partners in Scara-Mix, a concrete-supply company headquartered at 2537 Richmond Terrace in West New Brighton which continuously won profitable contracts.[16] The company obtained more than $2 million in subcontracts on city and Transit Authority construction projects between 1984 and 1986 alone.[17] Paul's son Philip Castellano was installed as president of Scara-Mix, and Bilotti served as the company's vice president, overseeing day-to-day activities on various construction projects in New York City and New Jersey in which the Gambino crime family had an interest.[16][17] He was also heavily involved in the Steam Fitters Local 638 of the Plumbers Union that was represented by George Daly, an associate who belonged to Bilotti's crew.[18][19] Daly served as Local 638's business agent until his 1987 conviction for soliciting bribes to ensure labor peace.[20][21]

Conspiracy edit

Aniello Dellacroce's death from cancer on December 2, 1985[22] started a chain of events that led to Castellano's murder two weeks later.[23] A group of Gambino mobsters, including members of Dellacroce's faction as well as onetime Castellano loyalists, conspired to assassinate Castellano and supplant him with John Gotti as head of the family.[24] The main conspirators who composed the dissident faction were Gotti, Joseph "Joe Piney" Armone, Frank "Frankie D" DeCicco, Robert "DB" DiBernardo and Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano – collectively known as "the fist".[25] Several factors contributed to the conspiracy to kill Castellano; his failure to attend Dellacroce's wake was an insult to the Dellacroce family and his followers.[26] Secondly, Castellano named his bodyguard Bilotti as the new underboss, a decision which caused insult to other members of the family who felt they were more deserving of the position. Castellano also hinted that he planned on breaking up Gotti's crew over rumors of drug dealing.[27]

Gravano suggested killing both Castellano and Bilotti while they were eating breakfast at a diner.[28] However, when DeCicco tipped Gotti off that he would be having a meeting with Castellano and several other Gambino mobsters at Sparks Steak House on December 16, Gotti and the other conspirators decided to kill him then.[29]

Death edit

 
Sparks Steak House entrance at 210 East 46th Street

On Monday, December 16, 1985, Bilotti drove Castellano to the prearranged early evening meeting at Sparks Steak House in Midtown Manhattan, on East 46th Street near Third Avenue.[30] A hit team (Salvatore Scala, Edward Lino, and John Carneglia) waited near the restaurant entrance; positioned down the street were backup shooters Dominick Pizzonia, Angelo Ruggiero, and Tony Rampino.[31] Gotti, along with Gravano, observed the scene from a car across the street.[32]

As Castellano was exiting the car at the front of the restaurant at around 5:26 pm EST, the gunmen ran up and shot him several times.[33][34][35] Allegedly, Carneglia was the gunman who shot Castellano in the head.[36][37] Bilotti was shot as he exited from the driver's door; before leaving the murder scene, Gotti drove past to view the bodies.[32][38][39]

Aftermath edit

Bilotti is buried fifty yards away from Castellano in the Moravian Cemetery of New Dorp, Staten Island.[1][4] He left behind ten children, including a six-week-old baby daughter; his wife Donna suffered a nervous breakdown and a miscarriage. Bilotti's lucrative loansharking business was taken over by Joe Watts, who was given Bilotti's shylock book as a reward for acting as a backup shooter in the Castellano assassination.[40] His former home on Staten Island was later purchased by the actor Steven Seagal.[6]

Five years after Castellano's murder, Gotti was arrested by the FBI in late 1990 on racketeering charges,[41][42] and denied bail 10 days later.[43][44] On April 2, 1992, with the help of Gravano becoming a government witness, Gotti was convicted of numerous racketeering charges, including the 1985 Castellano and Bilotti murders.[45][46][47][48][49] On June 23, Gotti was sentenced to life in federal prison,[50][51][52] where he died of throat cancer a decade later in 2002.[53][54]

In the TV movie Boss of Bosses, Bilotti is portrayed by actor Richard Foronjy. In the 1996 made-for-TV movie Gotti, Bilotti is portrayed by actor Ron Gabriel.

Further reading edit

  • Davis, John H. Mafia Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the Gambino Crime Family. New York: Harper Collins, 1993 ISBN 0-06-109184-7
  • Maas, Peter Underboss: Sammy The Bull Gravano's Story of Life in the Mafia
  • O'Brien F. Joseph Boss of Bosses: The Fall of the Godfather: The FBI and Paul Castellano

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Bilotti, Thomas (1940-1985) MafiaHistory.us December 2, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ a b Memories of a mob girl. The fast life and wild times of Island's 'Malafemina' Terry Dee Robert Gavin, Staten Island Advance (September 10, 2000) February 1, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ They Cover the Waterfront Tom Robbins, The Village Voice (February 26, 2002) February 14, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b c d e f Thomas Bilotti Mike Dickson, AmericanMafiaHistory.com (December 23, 2018) July 27, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b c Photo: Thomas Bilotti (Gambino) LCN Bios (January 28, 2023) January 31, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Forgotten Man at Sparks Allan R. May, CrimeMagazine.com (October 14, 2009) September 20, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Jamesburg youth shot, two held" George McCarthy, Asbury Park Press p. 1 (April 29, 1970)
  8. ^ "Jamesburg quiet after outbreaks" Asbury Park Press p. 1 (April 30, 1970)
  9. ^ "Jury to get case of duo in shooting" Asbury Park Press p. 18 (May 20, 1970)
  10. ^ "Two indicted as result of shooting" Asbury Park Press p. 10 (June 1, 1970)
  11. ^ Police Discount Gallo Connection In Slaying on S.I. Richard Phalon, The New York Times (April 8, 1972) February 1, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ The New York Times (July 17, 2023) June 13, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Gianni Russo had to battle Marlon Brando after snagging Carlo Rizzi role in “The Godfather” Tom Wrobleski, Staten Island Advance (October 3, 2022) November 30, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Kitty Kelley (June 1983). His Way: An Unauthorized Biography Of Frank Sinatra. Bantam Dell Pub Group. ISBN 9780553172454.
  15. ^ Scars on Mob Boss Paul Castellano’s Reign Ed Scarpo, Medium (December 30, 2016) December 3, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ a b Thomas "Tommy" Bilotti oocities.org Archived February 9, 2023, at archive.today
  17. ^ a b Supplier of Concrete to City Had Link to a Crime Figure Selwyn Raab, The New York Times (September 14, 1986) March 19, 2022, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Indictment Of Reputed Mobsters Struck Blow to Gambino Family Vera Haller, Associated Press (June 21, 1986) February 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Court aide and 15 others indicted in move against Gambino group Selwyn Raab, The New York Times (June 21, 1986) November 30, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ United States of America v. George Daly and Louis Giardina Justia (October 13, 1987) February 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Supreme Court lets Giardina conviction stand United Press International (October 3, 1988) Archived February 12, 2023, at archive.today
  22. ^ "'Top level hoodlum' dies of cancer". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. December 4, 1985. p. 12A.
  23. ^ Blumenthal, Ralph (December 4, 1985). "ANIELLO DELLACROCE DIES AG 71; REPUTED CRIME-GROUP FIGURE". The New York Times. Retrieved January 4, 2012.
  24. ^ Selwyn Raab (2005). Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 9780312300944.
  25. ^ Jerry Capeci (2003). Jerry Capeci's Gang Land. Alpha Books. ISBN 9781592571338.
  26. ^ Blum, p. 107
  27. ^ Blum p. 112
  28. ^ Blum p. 115
  29. ^ Blum p. 128
  30. ^ "FBI fears murder of Castellano may ignite war for mob control". The Day. (New London, Connecticut). Associated Press. December 17, 1985. p. A1.
  31. ^ Capeci, Jerry (October 2, 2008). "Answers About the New York Mafia, Part 2". The New York Times. Retrieved January 11, 2012.
  32. ^ a b Lubasch, Arnold H. (March 4, 1992). "Shot by Shot, an Ex-Aide to Gotti Describes the Killing of Castellano". The New York Times. Retrieved January 7, 2012.
  33. ^ "Reputed Mafia boss murdered". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. December 17, 1985. p. 3A.
  34. ^ "Crime boss, bodyguard murdered in Manhattan". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (New York Daily News). December 17, 1985. p. A1.
  35. ^ "Mob boss murder leads to bulletin for Lincoln car". The Bulletin. (Bend, Oregon). United Press International. December 17, 1985. p. D4.
  36. ^ . www.youtube.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-14.
  37. ^ "Archives | The Philadelphia Inquirer". inquirer.com.
  38. ^ "Watch America's Book of Secrets Online | Season 2, Ep. 13 on DIRECTV". DIRECTV.
  39. ^ "Vudu - Watch Movies". www.vudu.com.
  40. ^ Ex-mobster sentenced Howard M. Unger, Sarasota Herald-Tribune (June 24, 2002) February 9, 2023, at the Wayback Machine
  41. ^ "Gotti arrested again on rackets charges". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). (New York Times). December 12, 1990. p. 7A.
  42. ^ "Mob boss Gotti nabbed by FBI". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. wire dispatches. December 12, 1990. p. 2.
  43. ^ "Gotti to spend holidays in jail". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). wire reports. December 22, 1990. p. A4.
  44. ^ "Judge refuses to grant bail for reputed mob boss Gotti". Pittsburgh Press. Associated Press. December 22, 1990. p. A8.
  45. ^ "Gotti guilty of murder, racketeering". Spokane Chronicle. (Washington). Associated Press. April 2, 1992. p. A1.
  46. ^ Lubasch, Arnold H. (April 3, 1992). "Mob takes a hit: Gotti convicted". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (New York Times). p. A1.
  47. ^ "John Gotti, Guilty at Last". The New York Times. April 3, 1992. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
  48. ^ "Teflon no more". Milwaukee Sentinel. news services. April 3, 1992. p. 3A.[permanent dead link]
  49. ^ "Gotti verdict opens door to rival mob". Toledo Blade. (Ohio). April 3, 1992. p. 1.
  50. ^ "Gotti gets life prison sentence". Spokane Chronicle. (Washington). Associated Press. June 23, 1992. p. A1.
  51. ^ "Mob chief Gotti gets life sentence". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (Washington Post). June 24, 1992. p. A3.
  52. ^ Lubasch, Arnold H (June 24, 1992). "Gotti Sentenced to Life in Prison Without the Possibility of Parole". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2012.
  53. ^ "Former Mafia boss dies inside prison". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). news services. June 11, 2002. p. 4A.
  54. ^ "Ex-crime boss John Gotti dies". Spokesman-Review. (Spkane, Washington). wire reports. June 11, 2002. p. A1.
American Mafia
Preceded by Gambino crime family
Underboss

December 2–16, 1985
Succeeded by

thomas, bilotti, thomas, tommy, bilotti, march, 1940, december, 1985, american, mobster, briefly, served, underboss, gambino, crime, family, york, city, promotion, that, helped, trigger, 1985, assassination, gambino, boss, paul, castellano, bilotti, would, kil. Thomas Tommy Bilotti March 23 1940 December 16 1985 was an American mobster who briefly served as underboss of the Gambino crime family in New York City It was his promotion that helped trigger the 1985 assassination of Gambino boss Paul Castellano Bilotti would end up killed as well as part of the assassination Thomas BilottiBilotti s 1969 NYPD mugshotBorn 1940 03 23 March 23 1940New York City New York U S DiedDecember 16 1985 1985 12 16 aged 45 New York City New York U S Cause of deathGunshot woundsResting placeMoravian Cemetery New Dorp Staten IslandOccupationMobsterKnown forUnderboss of the Gambino crime familyPredecessorAniello DellacroceSuccessorFrank DeCiccoAllegianceGambino crime family Contents 1 Criminal career 1 1 Castellano protege 1 2 Conspiracy 2 Death 2 1 Aftermath 3 Further reading 4 ReferencesCriminal career editThe son of Italian immigrants Lillian nee Rosso and Anthony Bilotti he was born on the Staten Island borough of New York City 1 As a young man Bilotti became an associate in the crew of John Johnny D D Alessio a caporegime in the Gambino crime family who controlled illegal gambling and other rackets on Staten Island He later became a criminal associate of John s brothers Alexander Pope D Alessio and Michael Mikey D D Alessio Bilotti also spent time as the chauffeur and bodyguard of Alexander The Ox DeBrizzi an uncle of the D Alessio brothers who controlled the Staten Island waterfront for the Gambino crime family 2 3 He became an integral member of the D Alessio crew and was involved in labor racketeering extortion and loansharking 4 In 1969 Bilotti was arrested on Staten Island on a felony charge of possessing stolen property 5 He gained a reputation for violence In one incident Bilotti assaulted Colombo crime family associate Robert Pate 4 The Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI agents Joseph O Brien and Andris Kurins described Bilotti in the book Boss of Bosses The Fall of the Godfather The FBI and Paul Castellano as He was basically a pit bull with shoes on If he had a business ability beyond choreographing a shakedown or calculating the interest owed on shylock loans it didn t show In a milieu not known for its conversational finesse Bilotti distinguished himself by spluttering inarticulateness He was short five feet seven He was stubby a rock solid two twenty He wore a bad toupee He had no tact no charm no sense of humor He had a big mouth and his piggish eyes were too close together To the concept of self control he was a stranger 6 Bilotti was a reputed hitman for the D Alessio crew 4 and was allegedly involved in at least eleven murders 6 Bilotti was a resident of 33 Kensington Avenue on Staten Island in April 1970 when he and an accomplice Thomas Papanier were observed discarding firearms and arrested following a shooting in Jamesburg New Jersey Bilotti and Papanier were apprehended as they ran from the scene of the shooting in which African American teenager Emory Parks suffered superficial injuries when he was struck in the back of the head by birdshot pellets 7 The quick arrest of the pair occurred as the Jamesburg area was in the midst of significant racial tension after riots at the local high school and police from Spotswood and Monroe Township were on alert 8 Although police suspected that the duo were responsible for Parks injuries Bilotti and Papanier were initially charged with carrying a concealed weapon carrying a pistol without a permit and failing to secure a permit to purchase a pistol 9 A Middlesex County grand jury ultimately indicted the men only for illegal possession of concealed weapons 10 In 1971 John D Alessio allegedly recruited Thomas Bilotti and his brother Joseph to murder Thomas Tommy Edwards Ernst the common law husband of D Alessio s daughter Theresa 4 Ernst who was in debt to two Staten Island mobsters survived an initial attempt on his life at a Grasmere diner on August 31 1971 He then agreed to meet with D Alessio at the Wild Acres bar in Dingmans Ferry near D Alessio s summer home in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania on September 2 1971 After leaving the D Alessio country mansion on his way to the meeting Ernst s Cadillac was overtaken by three men in a car who opened fire at him However this murder attempt also failed when Theresa D Alessio who was not supposed to be present returned fire with a semi automatic rifle 2 Ernst reportedly identified the two shooters to the Pennsylvania State Police before withrawing the identification 11 Ernst was ultimately killed on April 6 1972 when he was ambushed and shot twice by an unidentified gunman on the porch of John D Alessio s home at 151 Jumel Street in Great Kills where he had been making a visit to Theresa D Alessio 12 Bilotti s first wife Catherine died of cancer in her mid 30s and he subsequently remarried to Donna a Brooklyn beauty parlor owner He had a severely autistic son who had been institutionalized since childhood and although Bilotti visited the boy regularly he rarely spoke of him 6 Bilotti was best man at the wedding of actor Gianni Russo a fellow native of Staten Island 13 Another Bilotti brother Jimmy worked for the singer Frank Sinatra in Las Vegas for several years during the 1970s and 1980s 14 Castellano protege edit Over the years Bilotti became a close aide de camp and confidant of another Gambino capo Paul Castellano who reportedly saw much potential in the ambitious Bilotti and took him on as a protege He served as Castellano s primary chauffeur bodyguard and enforcer 1 Although Castellano had worked hard to cultivate a sophisticated image he chose the thuggish Bilotti as his protege because he was vigilant hardworking fearless and above all loyal according to O Brien and Kurins 6 The agents described his traits As long as he was waiting on Paul Castellano Tommy Bilotti was deferential subdued watchful yet calm like a dog on a rug His self esteem derived from adoration of the master and he could afford to be well behaved Problems occurred however when Bilotti was sent on errands of his own Out of sight of the Boss he got rambunctious He tried to play the big shot he overdid things He got creative in a sadistic sort of way and embroidered gratuitous cruelty through what should have been straightforward business transactions 6 In one incident Bilotti entered a Staten Island bar armed with a baseball bat to collect an interest payment from the owner who was still recovering and trying to pay medical bills from a beating sustained weeks earlier He berated the bar patrons and owner before unzipping his pants and ordering the bar owner to put his mouth on him saying to the patrons looking on You see He likes it 6 O Brien was warned by Bruce Mouw the supervisor of the FBI s Squad C 16 which was assigned to investigate the Gambino crime family Don t ever talk to Tommy Bilotti alone He doesn t play by the rules and he has a very short fuse In an incident when O Brien followed Bilotti to a beauty parlor owned by his second wife Donna Bilotti left the parlor by a back door entered another car and pulled up next to the vehicle from which O Brien was carrying out surveillance and confronted the agent Describing Bilotti s demeanor during the encounter O Brien said Now most people when they are building up to a fit of rage need some give and take some goading to get them really psyched Not Tommy Bilotti When he got mad it was like a nuclear reactor going into a meltdown Once a certain threshold was reached the process just fed on itself the voltage increasing exponentially until the fuel was all used up and everything within a certain radius had been leveled His voice got louder and louder he made less and less sense Soon he was just spitting out curses wrapped in random phrases his face purple his nostrils distended ropy veins standing out on his pit bull neck 6 Following the death of Carlo Gambino Castellano was elevated to boss of the Gambino crime family in 1976 4 Gambino s decision to appoint Castellano as his successor essentially split the family into two factions Castellano s white collar branch and a blue collar wing led by underboss Aniello Dellacroce 15 Bilotti was subsequently inducted as a made member of the family in October 1977 and his older brother Joseph followed suit in 1980 5 When Castellano moved into a custom built palatial mansion at 177 Benedict Road atop Staten Island s Todt Hill in 1980 Bilotti moved into a less ostentatious home nearby He was a regular visitor and dinner guest at Castellano s mansion and was considered a close family friend However when Castellano started an affair with his live in maid Gloria Olarte Bilotti kept it secret from Castellano s wife Nina Bilotti along with Salvatore Barbato also provided security for Castellano and his estate Bilotti and Castellano regularly vacationed together at Pompano Beach Florida 1 Castellano promoted Bilotti to capo in the fall of 1981 and he oversaw a crew of soldati soldiers that included his brother Joseph Bilotti and John Gambino 5 In addition to maintaining a large loansharking book Bilotti was granted lucrative new business ventures by Castellano The pair were partners in Scara Mix a concrete supply company headquartered at 2537 Richmond Terrace in West New Brighton which continuously won profitable contracts 16 The company obtained more than 2 million in subcontracts on city and Transit Authority construction projects between 1984 and 1986 alone 17 Paul s son Philip Castellano was installed as president of Scara Mix and Bilotti served as the company s vice president overseeing day to day activities on various construction projects in New York City and New Jersey in which the Gambino crime family had an interest 16 17 He was also heavily involved in the Steam Fitters Local 638 of the Plumbers Union that was represented by George Daly an associate who belonged to Bilotti s crew 18 19 Daly served as Local 638 s business agent until his 1987 conviction for soliciting bribes to ensure labor peace 20 21 Conspiracy edit Aniello Dellacroce s death from cancer on December 2 1985 22 started a chain of events that led to Castellano s murder two weeks later 23 A group of Gambino mobsters including members of Dellacroce s faction as well as onetime Castellano loyalists conspired to assassinate Castellano and supplant him with John Gotti as head of the family 24 The main conspirators who composed the dissident faction were Gotti Joseph Joe Piney Armone Frank Frankie D DeCicco Robert DB DiBernardo and Salvatore Sammy the Bull Gravano collectively known as the fist 25 Several factors contributed to the conspiracy to kill Castellano his failure to attend Dellacroce s wake was an insult to the Dellacroce family and his followers 26 Secondly Castellano named his bodyguard Bilotti as the new underboss a decision which caused insult to other members of the family who felt they were more deserving of the position Castellano also hinted that he planned on breaking up Gotti s crew over rumors of drug dealing 27 Gravano suggested killing both Castellano and Bilotti while they were eating breakfast at a diner 28 However when DeCicco tipped Gotti off that he would be having a meeting with Castellano and several other Gambino mobsters at Sparks Steak House on December 16 Gotti and the other conspirators decided to kill him then 29 Death edit nbsp Sparks Steak House entrance at 210 East 46th Street On Monday December 16 1985 Bilotti drove Castellano to the prearranged early evening meeting at Sparks Steak House in Midtown Manhattan on East 46th Street near Third Avenue 30 A hit team Salvatore Scala Edward Lino and John Carneglia waited near the restaurant entrance positioned down the street were backup shooters Dominick Pizzonia Angelo Ruggiero and Tony Rampino 31 Gotti along with Gravano observed the scene from a car across the street 32 As Castellano was exiting the car at the front of the restaurant at around 5 26 pm EST the gunmen ran up and shot him several times 33 34 35 Allegedly Carneglia was the gunman who shot Castellano in the head 36 37 Bilotti was shot as he exited from the driver s door before leaving the murder scene Gotti drove past to view the bodies 32 38 39 Aftermath edit Bilotti is buried fifty yards away from Castellano in the Moravian Cemetery of New Dorp Staten Island 1 4 He left behind ten children including a six week old baby daughter his wife Donna suffered a nervous breakdown and a miscarriage Bilotti s lucrative loansharking business was taken over by Joe Watts who was given Bilotti s shylock book as a reward for acting as a backup shooter in the Castellano assassination 40 His former home on Staten Island was later purchased by the actor Steven Seagal 6 Five years after Castellano s murder Gotti was arrested by the FBI in late 1990 on racketeering charges 41 42 and denied bail 10 days later 43 44 On April 2 1992 with the help of Gravano becoming a government witness Gotti was convicted of numerous racketeering charges including the 1985 Castellano and Bilotti murders 45 46 47 48 49 On June 23 Gotti was sentenced to life in federal prison 50 51 52 where he died of throat cancer a decade later in 2002 53 54 In the TV movie Boss of Bosses Bilotti is portrayed by actor Richard Foronjy In the 1996 made for TV movie Gotti Bilotti is portrayed by actor Ron Gabriel Further reading editDavis John H Mafia Dynasty The Rise and Fall of the Gambino Crime Family New York Harper Collins 1993 ISBN 0 06 109184 7 Maas Peter Underboss Sammy The Bull Gravano s Story of Life in the Mafia O Brien F Joseph Boss of Bosses The Fall of the Godfather The FBI and Paul CastellanoReferences edit a b c d Bilotti Thomas 1940 1985 MafiaHistory us Archived December 2 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b Memories of a mob girl The fast life and wild times of Island s Malafemina Terry Dee Robert Gavin Staten Island Advance September 10 2000 Archived February 1 2023 at the Wayback Machine They Cover the Waterfront Tom Robbins The Village Voice February 26 2002 Archived February 14 2023 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f Thomas Bilotti Mike Dickson AmericanMafiaHistory com December 23 2018 Archived July 27 2019 at the Wayback Machine a b c Photo Thomas Bilotti Gambino LCN Bios January 28 2023 Archived January 31 2023 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e f g h Forgotten Man at Sparks Allan R May CrimeMagazine com October 14 2009 Archived September 20 2017 at the Wayback Machine Jamesburg youth shot two held George McCarthy Asbury Park Press p 1 April 29 1970 Jamesburg quiet after outbreaks Asbury Park Press p 1 April 30 1970 Jury to get case of duo in shooting Asbury Park Press p 18 May 20 1970 Two indicted as result of shooting Asbury Park Press p 10 June 1 1970 Police Discount Gallo Connection In Slaying on S I Richard Phalon The New York Times April 8 1972 Archived February 1 2023 at the Wayback Machine Eboli Is 15th Gangland Victim in a Year The New York Times July 17 2023 Archived June 13 2022 at the Wayback Machine Gianni Russo had to battle Marlon Brando after snagging Carlo Rizzi role in The Godfather Tom Wrobleski Staten Island Advance October 3 2022 Archived November 30 2022 at the Wayback Machine Kitty Kelley June 1983 His Way An Unauthorized Biography Of Frank Sinatra Bantam Dell Pub Group ISBN 9780553172454 Scars on Mob Boss Paul Castellano s Reign Ed Scarpo Medium December 30 2016 Archived December 3 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b Thomas Tommy Bilotti oocities org Archived February 9 2023 at archive today a b Supplier of Concrete to City Had Link to a Crime Figure Selwyn Raab The New York Times September 14 1986 Archived March 19 2022 at the Wayback Machine Indictment Of Reputed Mobsters Struck Blow to Gambino Family Vera Haller Associated Press June 21 1986 Archived February 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine Court aide and 15 others indicted in move against Gambino group Selwyn Raab The New York Times June 21 1986 Archived November 30 2015 at the Wayback Machine United States of America v George Daly and Louis Giardina Justia October 13 1987 Archived February 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine Supreme Court lets Giardina conviction stand United Press International October 3 1988 Archived February 12 2023 at archive today Top level hoodlum dies of cancer Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press December 4 1985 p 12A Blumenthal Ralph December 4 1985 ANIELLO DELLACROCE DIES AG 71 REPUTED CRIME GROUP FIGURE The New York Times Retrieved January 4 2012 Selwyn Raab 2005 Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires St Martin s Griffin ISBN 9780312300944 Jerry Capeci 2003 Jerry Capeci s Gang Land Alpha Books ISBN 9781592571338 Blum p 107 Blum p 112 Blum p 115 Blum p 128 FBI fears murder of Castellano may ignite war for mob control The Day New London Connecticut Associated Press December 17 1985 p A1 Capeci Jerry October 2 2008 Answers About the New York Mafia Part 2 The New York Times Retrieved January 11 2012 a b Lubasch Arnold H March 4 1992 Shot by Shot an Ex Aide to Gotti Describes the Killing of Castellano The New York Times Retrieved January 7 2012 Reputed Mafia boss murdered Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press December 17 1985 p 3A Crime boss bodyguard murdered in Manhattan Spokesman Review Spokane Washington New York Daily News December 17 1985 p A1 Mob boss murder leads to bulletin for Lincoln car The Bulletin Bend Oregon United Press International December 17 1985 p D4 YouTube www youtube com Archived from the original on 2013 10 14 Archives The Philadelphia Inquirer inquirer com Watch America s Book of Secrets Online Season 2 Ep 13 on DIRECTV DIRECTV Vudu Watch Movies www vudu com Ex mobster sentenced Howard M Unger Sarasota Herald Tribune June 24 2002 Archived February 9 2023 at the Wayback Machine Gotti arrested again on rackets charges Eugene Register Guard Oregon New York Times December 12 1990 p 7A Mob boss Gotti nabbed by FBI Pittsburgh Post Gazette wire dispatches December 12 1990 p 2 Gotti to spend holidays in jail Spokesman Review Spokane Washington wire reports December 22 1990 p A4 Judge refuses to grant bail for reputed mob boss Gotti Pittsburgh Press Associated Press December 22 1990 p A8 Gotti guilty of murder racketeering Spokane Chronicle Washington Associated Press April 2 1992 p A1 Lubasch Arnold H April 3 1992 Mob takes a hit Gotti convicted Spokesman Review Spokane Washington New York Times p A1 John Gotti Guilty at Last The New York Times April 3 1992 Retrieved January 9 2012 Teflon no more Milwaukee Sentinel news services April 3 1992 p 3A permanent dead link Gotti verdict opens door to rival mob Toledo Blade Ohio April 3 1992 p 1 Gotti gets life prison sentence Spokane Chronicle Washington Associated Press June 23 1992 p A1 Mob chief Gotti gets life sentence Spokesman Review Spokane Washington Washington Post June 24 1992 p A3 Lubasch Arnold H June 24 1992 Gotti Sentenced to Life in Prison Without the Possibility of Parole The New York Times Retrieved January 9 2012 Former Mafia boss dies inside prison Eugene Register Guard Oregon news services June 11 2002 p 4A Ex crime boss John Gotti dies Spokesman Review Spkane Washington wire reports June 11 2002 p A1 American Mafia Preceded byAniello Dellacroce Gambino crime familyUnderbossDecember 2 16 1985 Succeeded byFrank DeCicco Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Bilotti amp oldid 1215428396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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