Mafia Retirement Benefits Often Include Funeral, Little Else
No pension, no medical benefits, no prescription plan. When you’re a mob boss, retirement is more bronze casket than golden parachute.
Since the 1930s ascension of the Mafia, its leaders have departed “The Life” almost exclusively through their deaths. Albert Anastasia, Carmine Galante and “Big Paul” Castellano were brutally (and memorably) assassinated; Vito Genovese, John Gotti and “Fat Tony” Salerno died in prison.
A third, more palatable option emerged in recent years: The Witness Protection Program, for those who found relocation to Arizona preferable to prison.
But an actual mob retirement, renouncing all illegal ties and income for a shot at the straight life, is a trick rarely turned. So it’s no surprise that law enforcement officials remain skeptical about John A. “Junior” Gotti’s claim that he did what his father, uncles and brother-in-law could not: quit the Gambino crime family.
Defense attorneys, arguing the 41-year-old Gotti had left organized crime in the late 1990s, managed to win a hung jury in the recent racketeering case against the mob scion. The mistrial indicated at least one juror was convinced that Gotti had gone legit.
Others are not as easily swayed.
“You never leave the mob,” said Bruce Mouw, former head of the FBI’s Gambino squad. “Sometimes you’re wishing you’d never gotten into it, when there’s a contract on your life or you’re going to jail. But you never leave.”
Federal prosecutors agree; they were already considering a retrial for Gotti. Talk radio show host Curtis Sliwa, the target of a botched kidnapping attempt allegedly ordered by Gotti, expressed fear that Junior’s possible release on bail could again make him a target.
The best known example of volunteer mob retirement was Joe Bonanno, who headed one of New York’s original five families. After the bloody “Banana Wars,” Bonanno ceded control of his family and bolted New York for Tucson in 1968. He died peacefully in the Arizona desert three years ago, surrounded by his family, at age 97.
While Bonanno considered himself out of the crime business, authorities disagreed. He wound up serving 14 months in 1985-86 after refusing to testify at “The Commission” trial that earned 100-year jail terms for the heads of the Colombo, Genovese and Lucchese families.
The mob’s induction ceremony, with the burning of a saint’s picture and a blood oath of silence, makes it clear that leaving the family is a move taken at great risk for even low-level members. Death is the penalty for breaking any of the Mafia code, particularly omerta.
Gotti was 24 when he was became a Gambino family “made man” in a Christmas 1988 ceremony at his dad’s Little Italy hideaway, the Ravenite Social Club. But he’s distanced himself from the mob life lately.
Gotti, in various prison conversations recorded by authorities, expressed disgust to family and friends about following his father into the mob. In October 2003, Gotti said his association with the Gambinos had ended six years earlier.
“Believe me, I like it better that way,” he said. “I sleep better … I just want to do my time, go home and go fishing.”
He may go home on bail as early as Monday. But Gotti is likely to remain a target for catch of the day by law enforcers who reject his purported mob repudiation.
Veteran defense attorney Ed Hayes, a Court TV commentator, said Gotti’s defense combined “good strategy and a good lawyer.” But does that mean Gotti is no longer a top-echelon member of the Gambino family?
“Absolutely not,” Mouw said. “The only way of leaving is by the slab. You’re in the mob for life.”
Or death.