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- <text id=92TT0775>
- <title>
- Apr. 13, 1992: Wanted -- A New Godfather
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 13, 1992 Campus of the Future
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 30
- ORGANIZED CRIME
- Wanted: A New Godfather
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Teflon Don John Gotti turns to Velcro, leaving the powerful
- Gambino crime family in disarray
- </p>
- <p>By BONNIE ANGELO
- </p>
- <p> It was bad luck to be a gangster in New York City last
- week. As the jury fore woman chanted the verdict -- guilty of
- murder, guilty of racketeering, 13 counts in all -- godfather
- John Gotti could only sit with his thin-lipped smile frozen
- while the underworld came crashing down around him. In guarded
- talks, the Gambino family's second string scrambled to regroup,
- shuddering with the knowledge that turncoats were singing, the
- feds were listening and more indictments were on the way.
- </p>
- <p> It was a very good week, on the other hand, to be one of
- the U.S. Attorneys or FBI agents who for six years had tried
- and tried again to scratch the Teflon Don. Each time the
- elusive leader of the nation's most powerful crime family
- persuaded the jury he was nothing more than a misunderstood
- plumbing salesman. But this time the government's case looked
- perfect. The witnesses did not lose their memories on the stand.
- The tapes were clear. The underboss spilled the grim details.
- The jury was protected. "The Don is covered with Velcro," said
- the assistant director of the FBI's New York office, James Fox,
- "and every charge stuck."
- </p>
- <p> Throughout the 10-week trial Gotti gave every indication
- that he still believed in his own invincibility. He wore the
- trademark suits and helmet of hair like armor, as though his
- natty legend would protect him once again. Overflow crowds
- craned for a glimpse of him; the tabloids kept up a colorful
- commentary, not only on the testimony about loan-sharking,
- extortion and murder but also on his choice of neck wear and the
- fluff of his pocket handkerchief. In court he made mocking
- gestures, blew a kiss at lead prosecutor John Glee son and
- growled loudly at U.S. Attorney Andrew Maloney. At one point
- Judge I. Leo Glasser threatened to throw Gotti out of the
- courtroom.
- </p>
- <p> It was the judge's conduct of the trial that may give the
- defense its excuse for appeal. First, Glasser barred Gotti's
- longtime lawyer Bruce Cutler from defending him. Then, in light
- of charges that the last two Gotti juries had been tampered
- with, he ordered that the jurors remain anonymous, identified
- only by number, and sequestered for the duration of the trial.
- </p>
- <p> The ever indignant lawyers instantly called the trial "a
- glorified frame-up" and vowed to appeal. But whatever the
- outcome, John Gotti is now an unmade man. Many lower-rung
- mobsters did not like his high-profile strutting for the media;
- they were especially outraged that it was his right-hand man,
- Salvatore "Sammy Bull" Gravano, who delivered up his old mentor,
- as well as underboss Frank Locascio. "The safest place for John
- Gotti is in jail," observes Michael Cherkasky, head of
- investigations for the Manhattan district attorney. Gotti may
- hope to run the Gambino operation from prison, as Colombo boss
- Carmine Persico, serving 100 years, is trying to do with his
- family, but dissension is too strong among the Gambinos.
- </p>
- <p> For one thing, their empire is under siege from all sides.
- The nation's 24 Mafia families, which make at least $60 billion a
- year, are a tempting target for the new Asian and Hispanic gangs
- that are moving in on their territory. The government has more
- big cases in the pipeline. In New York, where the Mob is most
- virulent, four of five bosses are in prison or under indictment,
- and two more leaders of the Colombo mob were arrested last week
- for murder. "Our cup runneth over," exulted Maloney.
- </p>
- <p> That leaves the remaining capos jockeying for position, a
- scramble that began long before the trial was announced. With
- such enormous stakes, the godfather race could touch off a
- Gambino war. Three candidates lead the field. Capo James "Jimmy
- Brown" Failla has a strong track record in running the lucrative
- private garbage-carting business, but at 73 he may lack the
- stamina for big-time crime. Joseph "Butch" Corrao can cite
- success in overseeing gambling, restaurants and loan-sharking
- in Manhattan's Little Italy. Then there is John Gotti Jr., 28,
- cut from the same cloth as his father but widely disliked. Tommy
- Gambino, son of the family's founding father, once seemed a
- likely successor, but in February he pled guilty to antitrust
- charges and was ordered to abandon the trucking monopoly that
- gave the family control of the garment center.
- </p>
- <p> The toll taken by internal warfare is reflected in the
- fading power of New York's Lucchese, Bonanno and Colombo
- families. The Genovese family, the Gambinos' rival for power,
- has not been as hard hit by internal strife. The Genoveses, with
- only 300 soldiers, may find this an ideal time to muscle the
- Gambinos out of some of their business.
- </p>
- <p> Nowhere across la Cosa Nostra is there a leader with the
- clout and thuggish charisma of John Gotti. Following the
- verdict, Gotti's distraught daughter, Vicki Agnelli, hurled an
- angry comment at reporters: "My father is the last of the
- Mohicans. They don't make men like him anymore. They never
- will." Law-enforcement officials surely hope she is right.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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