
| Vincent Gigante | |
| Born | March 29, 1928(1928-03-29) Manhattan, New York, U.S. |
|---|---|
| Died | December 19, 2005 (aged 77) Springfield, Missouri, U.S. |
Vincent "The Chin" Gigante (March 29, 1928 – December 19, 2005) was a New York mobster who headed the Genovese crime family. Vincent "The Chin" was one of five brothers; himself, Mario, Pasquale and Ralph all became mobsters in the Genovese family. Only one brother, Louis, did not become a Genovese mobster and instead became a priest.[1] Dubbed "the Oddfather," by the press, Gigante often wandered the streets of Greenwich Village, Manhattan in his bathrobe and slippers, mumbling incoherently to himself, in what Gigante later admitted was an elaborate act to avoid prosecution.[2]
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Vincente Ignazio Gigante was born to humble and law abiding emigrants, Salvatore, a jewel engraver and Yolonda Gigante, a seamstress. His parents were first generation immigrants from Naples, Italy and never learned the English language. Vincent has his extended family relatives settled in New York City, New Jersey and North Boston, New York who are all law abiding citizens. He dropped out of school at the age of sixteen to pursue a professional boxing career. Vincent made an attempt to lead a legitimate life and attended a specialized textile high school, but quit to go to work a number of blue collar occupations. As a young teenager he idolized and wanted to mirror the life of actor Marlon Brando after seeing the film On the Waterfront. He earned the nickname "The Chin" from his boyhood moniker given to him by his mother who gave him the nickname "Chincenzo" and from a problem that arose in his boxing career where he would loose consciousness when punched in the chin. He had two brothers, Mario born on November 4, 1923 and Ralph who followed him into a life of organized crime and Louis who became a Roman Catholic priest. He is the father of Andrew and Salvatore Gigante Jr. and uncle of Ralph Gigante Jr., the son and namesake of his brother, Ralph Sr. a recognized mob associate involved in labor racketeering and father-in-law to Genovese crime family associate Robert Fyfe.
As a teenager he became protege of Genovese crime family patriarch Vito Genovese and Philip Lombardo. Between the ages of seventeen and twenty five, he was arrested seven times on charges ranging from receiving stolen goods, possession of an unlicensed handgun and for illegal gambling and bookmaking. Most of the allegations were dismissed and the longest sentence he served was sixty days for the illegal gambling conviction. During this time he stated that he was employed as a tailor.
His brother Louis insisted that Vincent had a tested IQ of only 69. His mother Yolanda, when questioned about her son's alleged leadership of the Genovese crime family she stated, "Vincenzo? He's the boss of the toilet!" A psychiatrist retained by his relatives said in an affadavit that Vincent "suffers from auditory and visual hallucinations and delusions of persecution." Gigante had two families and lived in two different places. Psychiatrist Dr. Eugene D'Adamo, who was his "primary treating psychiatrist" saw Vincent from 1973 to 1989 and stated that, "he has been diagnosed since 1969 as suffering from schizophrenia, paranoid type with acute exacerbations which result in hospitalization." His list of alleged mental illnesses later included Alzheimer's Disease. He alleged had to take daily medications for his mental ailments which included prescriptions that included Valium, Thorazine and sundry and other calmants. This helped Vincent avoid prosecution for his crimes by pleading to be legally insane. Since 1969, D'Adamo reported that Vincent had been treated on twenty different separate occasions for psychiatric disorders at St. Vincent's Hospital in Harrison, New Jersey. These visitations all subsided with news of criminal indictments being handed down against him.
He maintained a residence in Old Tappan, New Jersey with his wife Olympia Grippa who he married in 1950 and their five children, Andrew Gigante, Vincent, Salvatore, Carmela and Lucia. He maintained his second family in a town house located at 67 East 77th Street, near Park Avenue in the Upper East Side, Manhattan with his long time mistress Olympia Esposito and their one son and two daughters. But he was rarely seen at his Old Tappan residence and instead at his mother's apartment located at 225 Sullivan Street in Greenwich Village. He grew up on the same streets in Greenwich Village where he spent most of his adult life. His personal chauffeur and bodyguard was Dominick (Baldy Don) Canterino, who was a top Genovese crime family mob captain.
Vincent Gigante was a short lived professional light heavyweight boxer who was known as "The Chin" Giganti. He fought twenty-one matches and lost four, boxing 121 rounds and ended two matches with total knockouts. On February 19, 1945 he boxed against Pete Petrello in Madison Square Garden and was knocked out in the first round. During his successful boxing career he weighed between 126 and 167 pounds. His first professional boxing match was against Vic Chambers on July 18, 1944 in Union City, New Jersey which he lost, then he fought at the stadium a second time against Vic Chambers again on June 29, 1945 and successfully defeated him. He also fought in the Madison Square Garden against Luther McMillen on March 8, 1946 which he won, and Buster Peppe on July 19, 1946 which he also won. His last match was against Jimmy Slade on May 17, 1947 which he lost in Ridgewood, New York by being knocked out. During this match he suffered a severe cut over his right eye, causing the referee to stop the fight and award it to Slade.
Vincent was an ex-professional boxer who weighed close to three hundred pounds. He earned his Mafia credentials as an enforcer in the 1950s.[1] Gigante ran a crew from Greenwich Village that was formerly overseen by Vito Genovese and later Anthony Strollo ("Tony Bender"). Gigante's crew was based out of the Triangle Social Club, located at 208 Sullivan Street, but also met with fellow crew members at the Dante Social Club at 81 McDougal Street, and the Panel Social Club at 208 Thompson Street. Besides those locations, Gigante met with gangsters and business associates at his mother's apartment located at 225 Sullivan Street. He was involved in bookmaking, loansharking and was imersed in labor racketeering involvement with New York City's construction and haulage industries.
Gigante's closest associates included his brother Mario Gigante, sons Andrew Gigante and Vincent Esposito, Dominick Alongi, Venero Mangano ("Benny Eggs"), Frank Condo ("Frankie California"), Dominick DiQuarto, Thomas D'Antonio, Frank Caggiano, Louis Manna ("Bobby"), Dominick Cirillo ("Quiet Dom"), Joseph Denti, and Joseph Sarcinella.
The crew controlled many of the organized crime activities throughout downtown Manhattan, and Gigante would go on to become the most powerful boss of the New York La Cosa Nostra from the early 1980s until his death. Some of the rackets included labor racketeering, gambling, loan sharking, hijackings, and extortion of businesses. Through his brother Mario, who later became a capo of his own crew, the Gigantes maintained influence in the Bronx, Yonkers and upper Westchester.
On May 2, 1957, he was ordered by Vito Genovese to murder Frank Costello, a close friend of Lucky Luciano and Meyer Lansky and one of the best-known underworld figures in the United States. Vincent shot Costello as he entered the lobby at 115 Central Park West, where he had an apartment, on the corner of 7nd Street, Manhattan. But just as Gigante fired his .38-caliber handgun, Costello moved, causing the bullet to graze the right side of his head. Because Costello went down as if he was dead, Gigante thought the mob boss was dead and sped away in a black Cadillac.
Costello refused to identify his attempted assassin, yet the doorman at 115 Central Park West did. But when tried for the shooting, his defense team effectively challenged the credibility of the doorman, and Gigante was acquitted in 1958 on charges of attempted murder.
In 1959, he was convicted with Genovese for heroin trafficking and sentenced to seven years in prison. He should have received a longer sentence but the sentencing judge was swayed by a flood of letters from residents of Greenwich Village and Little Italy attesting to Gigante's good character and his work on behalf of juveniles. He was paroled after five years. Not long afterward he was promoted from soldier to the rank of captain, running his own crew in Greenwich Village.[1]
Vincent Gigante was a protege of both Vito Genovese and ultra-secretive boss Philip Lombardo ("Benny Squints"). As boss of the family, Gigante strengthened the family's stranglehold of some of New York City's most lucrative rackets, including the New York Coliseum, Jacob K. Javits Center, labor racketeering, the drywall business, Concrete Club, Fulton Fish Market, drug trafficking, private waste industry, and gambling.
Gigante was a very reclusive boss, managing to never be picked up on a wiretap by the FBI or other law enforcement agencies and managed to remain on the streets longer than all of his contemporaries. Gigante made Venero "Benny Eggs" Mangano his underboss and sent his orders only through his closest associates thereby insulating himself from the other family's bosses and lower ranking wiseguys.
While preferring to remain behind the scenes, Gigante would not hesitate to authorize the use of violence and was responsible for ordering the slayings of Philadelphia crime family mobsters John Simone ("Johnny Keys"), Anthony Caponigro, Fred Salerno, and Frank Sindone for the unsanctioned 1980 murder of Philadelphia boss Angelo Bruno, and Philadelphia mobsters Frank Narducci and Rocco Marinucci for the unsanctioned murder of Philip Testa, Bruno's successor. Gigante also ordered the murders of Genovese soldier Jerry Papa and many other New York City wiseguys who failed to adhere to the powerful Genovese boss's directives.
During his tenure as boss of the Genovese borgata, especially after the unsanctioned 1985 murder of Gambino crime family boss Paul Castellano, Gigante would come to be known as the de facto Capo di tutti Capi, the "Boss of all Bosses", even though that position had been abolished with Castellano. Gigante was the most cunning, intelligent, and generally powerful Cosa Nostra don of his era.
In 1986, the official Genovese crime family boss, Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno was convicted on charges of murder and racketeering and sentenced to 100 years in prison along with the bosses of the other Five Families in what was called the Mafia Commission Trial. However, former mobster and turncoat Vincent Cafaro soon revealed that Salerno was just a front boss, a figurehead; the real boss of the family since 1981 was Gigante.
In 1969, Gigante started feigning mental illness to escape criminal prosecution. He escaped conviction on bribery charges by producing a number of prominent psychiatrists who testified that he was legally insane. The doctors said Gigante suffered from schizophrenia, dementia, psychosis, and other disorders. Gigante allegedly enlisted his mother and wife to help him in these deceptions.
Gigante could pull off many miracles, though his favorite ploy was the "bug act", pretending to be punch-drunk from his boxing days. Even when not under indictment, he prepared for those inevitable times (knowing the police watched him) by picking up cigarette butts off the street and smoking them, gesturing wildly in the air, having long, loud arguments with himself, or dropping his pants to urinate in the street.
Almost every day he would return from his residence to his mother's apartment in Greenwich Village and emerge dressed in a bathrobe and pajamas or a windbreaker and shabby trousers. Accompanied by one or two bodyguards, he crossed the street to the Triangle Civic Improvement Association – a dingy storefront club that served as his headquarters – where he played pinochle and held whispered conversations with his associates.[1]
In 1990, Gigante was arrested and charged with racketeering and murder; however, it wasn't until 1997 that he was brought to trial. During that time period, Gigante's lawyers produced witness after witness who testified that Gigante was mentally ill and unfit to stand trial. However, all this changed when a number of prominent Mafia members from various families began to cooperate with the government in the early 1990s.
Foremost among the cooperating witnesses was Salvatore "Sammy the Bull" Gravano, former underboss of the Gambino crime family, who became a cooperating witness in 1991. Gravano testified that on the two occasions he met Gigante, the mob boss was perfectly lucid and clear in his thinking. Other turncoat witnesses such as Phil Leonetti of the Bruno crime family of Philadelphia implicated Gigante in ordering the murder of several Bruno family members in the early 1980s. In 1994, Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso, former underboss of the Lucchese crime family, implicated Gigante in a 1986 plan to have Casso kill new Gambino boss John Gotti, Gotti associate Frank DeCicco and Gotti's brother Gene Gotti, due to the unsanctioned 1985 murder of John Gotti's former boss, Paul Castellano.
In Summer 1997, Gigante was finally convicted on several racketeering and conspiracy charges and sentenced to 12 years in a federal prison. Despite his lawyers' and psychiatrists' claims that he had been legally insane for more than 30 years, the jury convicted him on all but the murder charges, which would have mandated a life sentence without parole.
On April 7, 2003, he pleaded guilty to obstruction of justice in Federal District Court, acknowledging that his "insanity" was a pretense in order to delay his racketeering trial. This was part of a deal to avoid another set of charges that would have brought on a lengthy trial (he was 75 at the time). Instead, he had another three years added to his sentence.[1]
In 2005, Gigante's health started to decline. He started suffering labored breathing, oxygen deprivation, swelling in the lower body, and bouts of unconsciousness. In November 2005, Flora Edwards, his lawyer, sued officials at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri to transfer Gigante to an acute care hospital. Transferred to a private medical facility, Gigante rallied physically. In early December, he was transferred back to Springfield, where he died 10 days later on December 19, 2005.
On December 23, 2005, after a service at Saint Anthony of Padua Church in Greenwich Village, Gigante's body was cremated at the historic Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. He is survived by eight children (five from his wife and three from his mistress) and his prominent cousins from Boston. (The cousins spell their name both Gigante and Giganti.) Gigante's lawyer has said that the family intends to sue the federal government over Gigante's health care treatment while in prison.
Gigante's release-year was 2010.
| Preceded by Anthony Salerno |
Genovese Crime Family Boss 1981-2005 |
Succeeded by Dominick Cirillo |
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