Underworld rejoices as longtime former Bonanno Boss Joseph Massino dies in witness protection program
Joseph Massino, the low-key Mafia boss who stunned the world of
organized crime in 2005 when it was revealed he had become a government
witness, has died after a short illness, sources close to his family
told Newsday.
Massino, once a trim and powerful man who would jump off the Cross Bay
Boulevard bridge in Queens and swim for hours, battled a number of
chronic health conditions including diabetes and obesity. He was 80 and
lived until recently in Ohio. Massino died Sept. 14 at a rehabilitation
facility in the New York City area, according to the sources.
Massino’s youngest daughter Joanne, who asked that her last name not be
published, confirmed his death but declined to comment further.
Over the years Massino navigated the treacherous world of the Mafia
families in New York, all the while running legitimate businesses such
as a sandwich shop in Queens, catering firms in Farmingdale and the
CasaBlanca Restaurant in Maspeth, which he forfeited after a federal
racketeering conviction in 2004.
“He ruled with an iron fist and kept order within the ranks,” said
former FBI supervisory special agent Charles Rooney, who investigated
the Sicilian faction of the crime family in the famous Pizza Connection
drug case.
Through tribute paid to by fellow mobsters along with illegal and legal
earnings, Massino amassed a fortune and after his conviction, had to
turn over $10 million in cash — some of which he had kept in his Howard
Beach home — as well as gold bars and other assets.
Massino actually wanted to cooperate within minutes after a Brooklyn
federal court jury found him guilty in July 2004 of racketeering,
including the orchestration of six mob murders, as boss of the Bonanno
crime family. Massino immediately approached presiding Judge Nicholas
Garaufis and said he wanted to cooperate, at which point Garaufis
appointed him a special lawyer to negotiate.
After several months, it was revealed that Massino, who faced a federal
death penalty trial in a different case, was cooperating against fellow
mobsters. In 2005, Massino formally entered the federal witness security
program. His life sentence was reduced to time served in 2013.
Born in Queens in January 1943, Massino was one of three sons of Anthony
and Adeline Massino and lived close to Maspeth. Massino was an athletic
young man who earned a reputation as being a street tough after
dropping out of school in the seventh grade.
Massino took a number of jobs, including working as a lifeguard at
Atlantic Beach on Long Island. As a young adult, Massino started a
coffee cart business, serving businesses in the Maspeth area.
But it was in the 1970s that Massino became associated with Philip
Rastelli, who rose to become boss of the Bonanno crime family. After
Rastelli went to prison, investigators said his trust in Massino grew.
Massino was inducted into the Mafia around 1977 and became a captain in
1979, according to the FBI. Two years later, in May 1981 according to
federal court testimony, Massino helped engineer the killings of the
three upstart captains — Philip Giaccone, Alphonse Indelicato and
Dominic Trinchera.— suspected of trying to gain control of the Bonanno
family.
After Massino served time in federal prison in the 1980s, he was
officially anointed as boss of the Bonanno family in 1991 upon
Rastelli’s death.
Although Massino was a friend of his neighbor John Gotti, head of the
Gambino family, he didn’t emulate his public stance and nightlife.
Instead, Massino kept a low profile and closed down mob social clubs to
frustrate FBI surveillance. To keep his name out of conversations that
could be bugged, Massino asked that fellow gangsters refer to him only
by tugging on their ears, a gesture that earned Massino the moniker “The
Ear.”
But by 2000, the FBI again focused on Massino. The result was a federal
indictment that led to his arrest on Jan. 9, 2003, along with his wife
Josephine's brother, Sal Vitale. But soon after, Vitale became a
government witness against Massino and testified at the mob boss’s 2004
trial.
After he became a government cooperating witness, Massino helped build a
case against his former street boss, Vincent “Vinnie Gorgeous”
Basciano. Massino also gave information to the FBI that allowed
investigators to dig up the bodies of the captains killed in May 1981.
https://www.newsday.com/long-island/obituaries/joseph-massino-mafia-died-80-maspeth-btvng07p
Fat, rat bastard
ReplyDeleteGood for him
Beanshooter
DeleteYes, He was a rat and that will be his legacy. He was a smart mobster and took the Bonanno
ReplyDeletefamily to the highest level.
Like anyone commenting wouldn't rat in his position
ReplyDeleteExactly. Everyone had betrayed him. Your a sucker, not a gangster to choose these clowns over your own children and grandchildren.
DeleteOnly a rat would say ghis
ReplyDelete