Gravano watching his back....?
By Dennis Griffin
(Third in the three part series)
In December 1999, Thomas “Huck”
Carbonaro, a made man of the Gambino crime family, and family associate Sal
“fat Sal” Mangiavillano, were dispatched to Phoenix,
Arizona to locate and kill the ultimate Mob traitor, Sammy “the Bull” Gravano.
The
pair found their target and began doing the planning and research necessary to
carry out a successful hit. One scenario was to do a traditional shooting,
which would require the killers to be in close contact with their victim.
Another option was for Sal to assemble a bomb to kill the very dangerous
Gravano. Huck and Sal returned to New
York City for the Christmas holiday and then got ready
to finalize their plans.
The Mission
– Part II
In late
January 2000 the hit men flew back into Los
Angeles and brought their surveillance and bomb-making
equipment with them. After picking up their car they stopped at an Army surplus
store and bought a folding military shovel called an entrenching tool. When
Huck asked why they needed the shovel, Sal told him they might have to temporarily
bury some of the bomb material until it was needed.
That
explanation seemed to satisfy Huck. But it wasn’t completely true. In reality,
Sal thought he might need the shovel to dig a grave for Huck. He knew that two
people could keep a secret if one of them was dead. If they pulled off the
Gravano hit the heat from the feds would be tremendous. Sal was prepared to
make sure his partner’s lips were sealed permanently.
They
picked up the guns they had purchased previously from the flea market and continued
to Phoenix .
Upon arriving they sought to rent a hotel suite with a kitchenette so they
could eat in and keep out of the public as much as possible. Their first
attempt turned out to be a bust. In a low conspiratorial tone, the female desk
clerk said, “I shouldn’t be telling you this, but the FBI is in town having a
convention and most of our rooms are booked. All we have left is a smoking
room." Sal was a heavy smoker, so that didn’t bother him. But living with
the FBI did. Huck was a known made man of the Gambino family and Sal was a
known bank robber. It would be way too risky to hang around and possibly be
spotted by an agent who knew them. They decided to get out of town for a few
weeks and return after the feds cleared out.
Before
leaving, they rented a storage unit to stash the weapons and electronic
equipment. Then they drove to Las Vegas , stored
the car and caught a flight back to New
York . Their plan to return to Phoenix got put on hold, though, when the
mother of Louie Vallaro, Huck’s crew boss, passed away. Huck had to stay around
to attend the funeral for two reasons. The first was a matter of showing
respect to his boss. The second was the fact that the FBI would undoubtedly do
a surveillance of the funeral. If a guy in Huck’s position wasn’t there, it
would be a red flag to the feds. When Gravano was killed, they’d quickly
connect the dots.
On
February 24, 2000, the day before they were going to leave for Phoenix ,
Sal was driving alone underneath FDR
Drive in New York ,
when he heard over his car’s radio that Sammy Gravano had been arrested in
Phoenix on
state drug trafficking charges. Gravano, his wife, son, and daughter, were all
alleged to be part of a criminal syndicate dealing the designer drug Ecstasy.
Shortly
after the report aired, Sal’s special pager that only Huck had the number for
went off. He pulled the car over and called Huck. Sal broke the news to his
partner about Gravano’s arrest. They met at a Greenwich
Village location an hour later to discuss the situation. The conclusion
was that there were no options available to complete the hit. With Gravano back
behind bars he was out of their reach. Their mission was over. The Arizona authorities very
possibly had unknowingly saved the traitor’s life.
After
all the planning and plotting, no one was injured or killed. Only a few people
knew about the planned hit, and none of them had a reason to blab about it. So
it appeared that all the involved parties would go on with their lives and the
attempt to kill Gravano would never be mentioned again.
But
things don’t always end up as they first appear.
A Tale to Tell
The
story of the plan to kill Gravano didn’t remain a secret for very long. A few
months later, Peter Gotti let the cat out of the bag when he complained to Mob
associate Michael "Mikey Scars" DiLeonardo that he had spent $70,000
on the Gravano hit and didn’t have a body to show for it. Gotti even questioned
whether Carbonaro and Mangiavillano had actually gone to Arizona at all.
And in
June 2002, 16 months after Gravano’s arrest, it all became known to law
enforcement. At that time, Sal was in jail awaiting an anticipated five to
seven year sentence for his guilty plea in a federal racketeering case
involving numerous bank burglaries throughout New York City . In addition, his December 2001
indictment under RICO for armed bank robbery and interstate transportation of
stolen money was still pending. And besides facing some serious prison time, he
was not at all happy with his gangster friends.
The
incident that triggered Sal’s unhappiness occurred shortly after he was jailed
on the December indictment and involved a Christmas card. The card Sal received
was from Huck Carbonaro and contained a check that Sal could deposit in his
jail commissary account. The check was in the amount of $50. To Sal, that was
an insult. He’d made his organized crime associates lots of money over the
years and would have done murder for them. But they had totally ignored him
since his arrest. And now Carbonaro slapped him across the face with a $50
offering. “What a piece of garbage,” Sal said of the gift. “That fifty bucks
was no more than lunch money.”
Time
passed, but Sal’s anger lingered. His colleagues continued to treat him like a
leper, increasing his resentment. Sal took stock of his situation, the amount
of prison time he was facing and the level of support he was receiving from his
colleagues. There was a lot of the former and almost nothing of the latter. The
evaluation caused him to conclude that loyalty to the Mob was a one way street.
Why should he take it on the chin to protect a bunch of guys who didn’t
appreciate him? He decided to test the waters with prosecutors and see if they
would be interested in making a deal.
Sal
contacted his lawyer. After having refused to speak to the FBI on numerous
occasions, he told the attorney he was now willing to be interviewed. At five
o’clock the next morning there was a bang on Sal's cell door.
"Mangiavillano, court," a guard shouted. Sal was taken to the federal
courthouse in Brooklyn , and then to an office
where his lawyer, a federal prosecutor and two FBI agents were waiting.
“After
some pleasantries, we got down to business,” Sal remembers. “The prosecutor
said, ‘Sal, you’ve been in prison, you were deported and came back illegally. And
you’ve been indicted and arrested again. Quite frankly, you have been out of
the loop for a while and we doubt you have any information we need.’
“I said
if that’s the way they felt to take me back to the jail. I got up from my chair
to head for the door. The prosecutor and the agents chuckled and told me to sit
back down. One of the agents asked me what type of information I had. I told
him I could implicate Peter Gotti—John Gotti Senior's brother and the current
Gambino family boss—in a murder plot. Were they feds interested in talking
deal?”
They
were. And what Sal had to say had not been heard by government ears before. He
said that Peter Gotti had ordered the murder of the despised
gangster-turned-snitch Sammy Gravano. He told agents that on Peter Gotti's
orders, he and Huck Carbonaro had travelled to Phoenix in December 1999 to locate and plan
the murder of Gravano.
Over
several sessions, Sal talked and the feds listened intently. After getting the
entire story, FBI agent Theodore Otto retraced the route Sal said he and Huck
took westward from Brooklyn to Phoenix .
Ted Otto had been one of the agents it attendance at the FBI convention in Phoenix that Huck and Sal
had stumbled into. It all checked out, right down to the snowstorm near Amarillo . Another agent
investigated Sal’s description of the Marathon Pool company office. He reported
that every detail was accurate, including the color of the window frames on a
building across the street. Prosecutors became convinced that Sal’s story was
real and that he’d make a powerful witness.
Based
in large part on Sal's information, federal prosecutors in Manhattan
leveled new charges against Gotti and Carbonaro, both of whom were already
under unrelated indictment in Brooklyn . The
press release issued by the office of the United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York on August 18, 2003 announced the indictment of
Gotti and Carbonaro for allegedly engaging in a conspiracy to murder Salvatore
Gravano. This indictment merged the charges from the earlier indictment in
which the two men, along with Louis Vallario, Frank Fappiano, Edward Garafola,
and John Matera, had been accused of a wide-ranging racketeering conspiracy,
including three murders, extortion, loansharking, bribery, witness tampering and
illegal gambling.
Sal
learned later that his decision to make a deal was a wise one. In addition to
Peter Gotti spilling the beans about the Gravano caper to Michael DiLeonardo,
Huck Carbonaro also had loose lips. Had Sal not gotten his foot in the door
early, the government had located other people who would have implicated him in
the conspiracy. Now those same witnesses would serve to corroborate his
testimony.
While
waiting for the trial to begin Sal saw Garafola and Fappiano in the jail. He saw
fear in their eyes. Perhaps the hard-boiled criminals were beginning to accept
the possibility they had breathed their last free air. Huck Carbonaro sent a
lawyer to see Sal. He wanted him to keep his mouth shut, plead guilty, and do
his time. But Sal was having none of it. His deal with the government didn’t
provide for any specific prison sentence to settle his outstanding charges. But
regardless of how that worked out, he’d told prosecutors his complete criminal
history. Once this ordeal was over his slate would be clean. He’d never again
have to worry about someone ratting him out. He’d done that himself.
The
trial got underway in November 2004. During his three days on the witness stand
Sal told jurors a laundry list of every crime he’d committed since the age of
13. They ranged from auto theft to fraud, extortion, bank burglaries and
robberies, assault and conspiracy to commit murder. And in great detail, he
explained the plot to kill Gravano.
Under
cross-examination, a defense attorney asked him, “You’re only cooperating with
the government because you want to get out of jail soon. Isn’t that right?”
Sal
answered, "I pray to God every night that freedom comes."
The
lawyer followed with, “You want to get free so you can commit more crimes. And
if you get caught for a burglary and get five years, you can do that time easy,
can’t you?”
Sal
said, “No. I’m sick and tired of being in jail.”
The
lawyer took one more shot. “You’d lie to get out of jail, wouldn’t you?”
Sal
stopped him cold. “You’re wrong. If I lie I won’t get out of prison. I’ll be in
for seventy-five years. I can only get out by telling the truth. And that’s the
easiest thing I’ve ever had to do.”
A few
days after that testimony Sal’s prayers were answered. A Brooklyn
judge released him to the federal Witness Protection Program.
On
December 22, 2004, on the strength of testimony from Sal Mangiavillano, Michael
DiLeonardo and two other mob turncoats, Gotti and Carbonaro were convicted of
their roles in the plot to kill Gravano. Coupled with their convictions on
other racketeering charges, both men are in effect serving life sentences.
The
projected release date for the 71-year-old Gotti is May 5, 2032. The now
62-year-old Carbonaro is in even worse shape. He is scheduled for release on
December 24, 2065.
Dennis Griffin is the author of several mob related books, as well as a co-host on the popular radio show, Crime Wire. and his latest radio show on Crime Wire Radio, MOB TALK!
www.dennisngriffin.com
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