Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast - Ex-Mafia Enforcer Breaks Silence: The Brutal Truth About the Mob
Episode Date: January 29, 2025Sal Polisi shares crime stories with a lot of heavy hitters in the mafia like John Gotti, Sammy The Bull, & Michael Franzese Invest In Yourself Podcast https://www.youtube.com/@UC6wGSATB9uusaUCvI...CpJZ_Q Follow me on all socials! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/insidetruecrime/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mattcoxtruecrime Do you want to be a guest? Send me an email here: insidetruecrime@gmail.com Do you want a custom "con man" painting to shown up at your doorstep every month? Subscribe to my Patreon: https: //www.patreon.com/insidetruecrime Do you want a custom painting done by me? Check out my Etsy Store: https://www.etsy.com/shop/coxpopart Listen to my True Crime Podcasts anywhere: https://anchor.fm/mattcox Check out my true crime books! Shark in the Housing Pool: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0851KBYCF Bent: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV4GC7TM It's Insanity: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08KFYXKK8 Devil Exposed: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08TH1WT5G Devil Exposed (The Abridgment): https://www.amazon.com/dp/1070682438 The Program: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0858W4G3K Bailout: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/bailout-matthew-cox/1142275402 Dude, Where's My Hand-Grenade?: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BXNFHBDF/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1678623676&sr=1-1 Checkout my disturbingly twisted satiric novel! Stranger Danger: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BSWQP3WX If you would like to support me directly, I accept donations here: Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/MattCox69 Cashapp: $coxcon69
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I got involved in a bank scam that was huge.
Like, I only got maybe, say, a million, two million.
The guys who got the money was the vice president of the bank, they got 80 million.
So they busted the vice president, and they forgot about my million dollars.
I see all the jurors getting in the limousine.
The next morning, I went up to the prosecutor.
Are you guys, morons and what?
You got all the jurors riding the limousine.
You don't think John Gotti's going to reach one of those jerks.
He's going to pay off.
A juror, a brideroom, and he's going to win this case.
Say, Sal, you're looking at too much television.
And that's exactly what happened.
I predicted it.
And of course, years later, Sammy, Sammy the Bull told the story.
That's exactly what they did.
They paid off a witness 60 G's.
And God, he became a superstar.
One time I had docked the truck and brought it to Jimmy,
we went into the building.
So I give you $72,000.
And I go, wait a minute, let's think about this.
Let me call Dom.
I called Dom in the company.
He came back down in an hour, Jimmy.
He said, okay, I'll give you $90,000.
I go, we were hijacking so many trucks.
We would get information from the guys who worked at Kennedy Airport.
Well, we hijacked a truck full of Italian shoes.
When I got it over to Jimmy Burke, I would call up.
He said, come over quickly.
You got a problem.
Got the guy coming, the Jewish guys come and look at these beautiful Italian shoes.
You got a problem.
I go, what's the problem?
You got 8,000 pairs of shoes, but they're all left.
Hey, this is Matt Cox, and I'm going to be doing an interview with Salvatore Polisi and Adrian Martinez.
It's going to be a super interesting interview.
Adrian's going to be helping me out.
He knows all about Sal.
And so it's going to be about an hour interview.
So I appreciate you guys watching.
Check out the interview.
So where were you, you know, where were you born?
Were you, it was this in, you know, New York, New Jersey, Brooklyn, New York.
And I had an Italian family, I had an uncle that was deeply entrenched in the mob.
Actually, my uncle, and I think the guy that was my father, because I'm not sure.
My uncle might have been my father.
My father might not have been my father.
But in the late 20s, 29, 30, like a couple of years before, you know, prohibition ended,
they were driving a horse and wagon from Long Island, bringing bulls up to New York City.
So they were 20, 21 years old, involved in crime.
and they knew all these criminals.
So my uncle Tony stayed with crime his whole life
because he was a gambler.
He was a swashbuckling, you know, high-energy guy
who drove fancy cars, pinky diamond rings, beautiful women.
And eventually in the 60s, he got involved
with a guy named Sonny Franzisa.
A lot of people knew he was.
That's Michael Francis is right.
Right, Michael.
I met Michael in 78 after he got made, shook his hand.
Didn't see him.
Oh, my God.
until 2013 we did a show
for National Geographic together
and they trucked us around the limousine
and you know I said Michael
I go Michael you realize you were royalty
I was in the street
you didn't have to do what I did
you didn't rob no banks
white collar crimes
yeah yeah you know Michael was very smart
very shrewd so you know you never know
who you're going to meet and then 30, 40 years later
you meet him again or you read about
yeah so I started
out with my uncle in a gambling operation. From there, I got involved with the guy who came out
of prison that was close to Carmine Persico's name was Little Dom Dominic Cato. And he was the hitman.
So the thing about Catoldo was his dad and my uncles and dad, they all knew each other in the 30s.
So instantly, that's what gives you credibility, family. And I got involved with him and he taught me
the ropes. I mean, I used to watch him do hijackings. I wasn't allowed to go near the truck. I would just
go to the building where they
unloaded the truck.
And when they unloaded the truck, I met
a guy who I thought was really clever
and his name was Jimmy Burke,
which was the same guy that
De Niro played. And believe me,
I love Jimmy Burke. He was
smart. He was smarter
than Scorsese painted him.
He was slick.
I mean, he was a gangster's
a great guy. One time
I had docked the truck and bought it to Jimmy,
we went into the building. He said,
I give you $72,000. I don't
Remember, it was like South American coats, women's coats.
And I go, wait a minute, let's think about this.
Let me call Dom.
I called Dom in the company.
He came back down in an hour, Jimmy said, okay, I'll give you $90,000.
He upped at 18, just like that.
So he was the guy who was sharp.
He would play the cards.
I mean, you know, try to get over on buying stuff because he knew it was stolen.
And we did well together.
Eventually, I was in jail with him.
I knew his wife, Mickey.
They had guards in the penitentiary with that were corrupt.
I knew his daughter Kathy, his son Frankie worked for me. He was a cloth thief. So I knew the family. We were like, thick as thieves. That's what they said.
Yeah, no. I mean, so Sal, you really, at the beginning, just started off with gambling. And then eventually it just led into more and more crimes and bank robberies, heists and different stuff like that. And in the beginning of this interview, too, you talked about doing white-collar crimes. And, you know, that's what Matthew was involved with as well.
So, I mean, what did that look like?
Was that in the earlier years as well, I'm assuming?
No, that was in the later years of them.
I left New York City.
I had a million dollars.
And I went upstate New York about 100 miles.
I built the racetrack.
I actually had two stock car races.
I spent about a million dollars in three years.
Then I was property for them broke.
So I went back and said, I'll take a shot.
I'll sell cocaine because cocaine in 80, 81, 82 was really hot.
I wasn't sure.
You know, it was a drug.
And I got busted, so in the Coke came.
So, I mean, at that point, how did you get busted?
You know, I got caught with my hand and cookie jar.
I had a little blonde girl selling Coke for me.
You know, they caught her.
They wrung her out.
They flipped her.
And then she told them who was giving her the Coke.
And oh, my God, this guy's on the triangle up there in Queens with all the other
mob guys.
But at that point, that was like 84, right around.
that time I had done a few, you know, computer crimes. One of them happened to be, you know,
in competition with God, he didn't know it, but I got involved in a bank scam that was huge.
Like, I only got maybe, say, million, two million. The guys who got the money was the vice president
of the bank, they got 80 million. So they busted the vice president, and they forgot about my
million dollars. That was like 1982. Well, when I flip with the FB,
I met a guy.
I said, what do you do?
You're an agent.
I'll never forget it.
His name was Peyton.
And I thought it was Walter Payne because he was black.
So I do bank frauds and paper crimes.
They go, really?
Like, what kind of bank frauds?
I said, you over here at the chemical bank where the $80 million was?
He's go, yeah.
Did you get all the money?
Because I was the cooperating witness at the point.
He said, we got all of it but about a million.
I go, oh, I said, did you know that that Joel D. Cohen, the coin dealer,
moved that million he's how would you know that he got all lustered he was guarding me and my
agent came in and says come here take a walk with me you just don't ever talk about that again
we're going to forget you've mentioned but i was very egotistical back to those days
that i just got to tell the feds say look i got raided a million and by the way daddy was
involved in that and he was ripping off the guy who could move the money he was only given 10 of 15
When I met the guy said, look, I'll give you 50% of the money that you move from that bank to my bank.
Because that's amazing.
So I gave him 50%.
Then we made like, you know, a million, million and a half feet.
That was the first time I did any paper crime.
That's what I called it.
It wasn't like a violent crime.
It was a funny crime.
But it wasn't like a crime that where I got excited.
I got excited with the gun jumping on running board of a truck or robbing a bank or something like that.
I learned that you could make a lot of money in the 80s with, you know,
with the stop market and all that kind of stuff.
But it didn't excite me.
So once I flipped and left, I went and found other things and had to make money legitimately.
And boy, oh boy, did I have a run.
I haven't told anybody those stories, but maybe this year we'll start letting some of that out.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, going back to like when you were, you said you were a teenager and you, like, when did you first start getting,
into
you know
basically do
working with the mob
I mean at what age like you know
we just jumped
we just did a huge
yeah we did a long year jump
when I was 20
when I was 20 which was 1965
I was 20 years old
and 65 my uncle
had a gambling operation
so he taught me gambling in New York
in those days
there was no
lotto
there was no off track Betty
you know so the mob
had like a license
You know, you had bookmaking, and then you had loan sharking, and they had numbers.
Once the city and the state started to change all that, the mob lost their power, but they didn't
want to admit that.
So in my 20s, I got involved with my uncle, which led me to this guy Catalgo.
Dominic Cataldo, he was a professional killer, hitman, and he was a con.
He was a con.
Of course, he became a maid guy on the carmine person.
So by the time I was 22, 23, I was under his wing.
And I was spoken for.
In those days, the boss would know, this was after Joe Colombo got shot, which was
72, the boss would know who was with that family.
And I was officially with the Colombo's.
Even though I jockeed back and forth with John Gotti, which was Gambinos, I was
officially listed with the Colombo.
So Gardy had no power over me.
I just had to walk a fine line because he was an interesting guy.
You know, he wouldn't take any crap for anybody.
But I played with him.
He played with me.
He was a lot brighter than most people think.
Oh, yeah.
To be a boss with crime family, hell yeah.
I mean, those guys said it'd be geniuses.
I mean, in the wrong, in the wrong field.
But, you know what I mean?
You have to be really smart to be a boss in one of them.
So I started to do all that stuff, you know, in my 20s.
By the time I got, of course, by the time I was 26, my uncle had gone away for bank robbery with Sonny Fransis.
were on this national bank robbery investigation. And it was my dream to rob a bank. So I did rob a bank with two
older guys. It's in the book. One guy was funny. They were both in their 60s. And these guys had been
released from Alcatraz. And one guy said, look, we don't have a lot of time to rob the bank
because I got diverticulitis. And the other guy said, what the hell do you care? He's, I got colitis.
So one guy couldn't take a shit. The other guy was shitting all day lost.
and they couldn't jump over the counter
so we were like a comedic
three stooges
and I ran in there leaped over the counter
26 scooped up the money
and I eventually learned a lot
from them and moved on because
you know all they could do is hold guns
on everybody in the bank and
you know I wanted more than just
26,000 that was the first bank
after that I hit him for 70, 80
and in those days Matthew
no camera
no plastic
glass, plexiglass, okay?
No armed guards in banks.
And by the way,
nobody used credit cards in
1970, 70s, 71
they used like Dinus Club
or something, you know? So there was one
thing in the bank.
And they asked,
why do you rob banks?
Because that's where the money is.
And that's what I laughed
all the way. You know, we did some
biggie stuff.
Matthew,
it's a lot of fun. I don't know if you
guys recently seen there was a in the news they had this like maybe like a few days ago they had
posted there was a mafia guys in new york like associates of the lukezi family they went and tried
to rob a bank or not a bank but a jewelry store and what had happened was they all got busted
literally i think you know the next day they had phone calls they had all this stuff and boom i mean
the stuff sounds talking about i mean you can't do this you can't get away with it unless you're
no some super tech genius i mean this stuff doesn't exist anymore but no i mean too many cameras man
on every block you know and that's why these stories are so i don't know what you did but you probably
did paper crimes but how long ago was that how many years um it was probably what uh about roughly
18 years ago oh yeah a lot different it's yeah we didn't have google then
I don't know.
Yeah, well, so Matthew, do you want to kind of start talking about his involvement with the Sinatra Club and with?
Yeah, at what point, what were you doing?
So that was in your early 20s.
You're saying now, you know, when did you get involved in the Sinatra Club?
Did you open the club or?
Here's what happened.
I got shot by a cop.
I was driving a Corvette and he tried to pull me over and I went past him.
He shot.
And the back window of the Corvette went in, went into my spine.
So I had to get a surgery to get the bullet out.
When I came out, my arm was in a sling.
Cataldo picked me up.
He said, oh, let's go see these guys over in this little club they got.
It was only like 10, 20 blocks from where I live.
I said, whose club is it?
Oh, it's Danny and Charlie Faticos.
I go, oh, he's in the Goddies hang out there.
But nobody knew who John Gotti was in 71.
So we go there, and I see this scurvy little place.
dirty tables, mixed up chairs, you know, stinky place.
And we left.
And I said, hey, down, why don't we open up a nice little club?
I'll get, because I had money.
I was dealing drugs.
We were living, Cataldo and I were living a secret within a secret.
Because you weren't supposed to tell anybody you were dealing drugs, but we were, him and I.
So we had a lot of money, and always may believe I made another school and had pockets
full of money. So I went and got this little building. I put nice chairs in, nice tables.
And on Monday night, in the fall of 71, football, NFL football was 9 o'clock at night.
And everybody would gather to pay off your weekly debts or winnings, collect, pay, whatever.
And we would meet at the Sinatra Club in exchange, you know, who won, who lost.
And after the 9 o'clock game went on, because it was net.
TV. There was no such thing as cable in New York at that time. We'd watch the game and play
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time january came we had three tables i had good catered food in there good booze and i had a couple of
fine working professional women a block away and the guys could go visit the girls it was like i was sort of
taking a leave from Vegas, how they treated gamblers and babies.
And that place ran until February of 72, and that's when Gotti came out.
Well, Gotti had made such an impression on other guys, especially drug deals.
Not that he was dealing drugs.
They liked him.
And he started bringing all these guys in.
He said, look, I'm bringing all these players in.
Some of them are high rollers.
So we said, Dominic Catalgo, said, let's give you a piece of the action.
So we gave him 20% of the game.
So if we cut 5,000 for the week, he got 1,000.
Basically, he got money to gamble.
He blew it anyway every week.
He wasn't a good card player.
He was a terrible gambler, by the way.
In contrast to Jimmy Burke, who was a great gambler.
Jimmy Burke should have been in Vegas.
He could count every card.
Brilliant guy.
I love the guy.
And he had a stone face and was hard to beat him.
So, God, he wasn't a good gamble.
But we had a lot of fun.
And a lot of crime took place there, meeting of all kinds of guys.
I mean, guys that came in there, the famous informant Willie Boy Johnson sat at the table
who Gotti eventually had killed.
I mean, he was given information to the feds for like 20 years.
We had all kinds of people there.
It was really an interesting mix, and it was only a block and a half from where I lived.
Mike Sinatra Club was on 87th Street.
Goddy's Club was on 100 and, let me see, 100.
I think it was
108th Street
so he was like 15 blocks away
but the neighborhood
had several clubs
with different families
out in their club
but I had the Colassius club
I had nice chairs
nice tables
and I called Italian restaurants
Chinese restaurants
and brought in catered food
to feed the guys
Yeah and Matthew
the whole premise of the Sinatra club
is that there's
it was important
because there was always
these internal wars going on
with all the five crime families
in New York or there's
beefs between other factions and families and stuff like that but they would always come to the sinatra club
that salad opened up with his partner dominant cataldo and they would uh all get along there they'd
gamble they set up certain different crimes heist whatever they wanted to do and they'd just get along
there so i mean it was a it was a neutral it was a neutral spot it was a church yeah sleep out
yeah yeah how did you come up with uh the sinatra club why oh that that's that that's that
That's a great question.
So we had this one guy there who was about 300 pounds.
And we started to play, like, you know, for a couple hours.
Then it started to get into by the winter.
We would stay at 18, 20 hours.
Well, this guy was about 300 pounds, and he never washed.
He stumped.
So I'd bring him a can of right guard.
And he was a fat guy, and I called him Roundy.
I go roundy.
Go in the bathroom, spray yourself.
I know you can't miss a hand.
He don't want to miss any hand.
So eventually, you know, his mother.
would call. We had a pay phone in there.
And called. I go, Randy, it's your mother.
Ma, what do you want? What do you want?
She's, where are you? You haven't been to home for two days.
Where are you? And he looked over, and there was a jukebox
that we had put in there.
I had one of the guys steal the jukebox. It came from a Polish bar.
I said, get rid of those, you know, Buffett,
whoever was the Polish fingers.
And Sinatra had retired, so go buy all these Sinatra records and stick it in there.
and you know the top would come up you didn't have to pay he looked over at the
few bucks and ma i'm at the sinatra club and that's working
he can't get to be laughing yeah it's a good thing for this place the sonatra club
and that roundy he was uh what was it uh carmine galante's nephew or something
yeah yeah he was the wise guy's nephew and uh yeah he was the character i mean a lot of these
guys got killed along the way after i mean
And I closed the Sinatra from 74.
I went to federal prison.
So we had it for three years.
But it was three years of like Disneyland, man.
Disneyland for the mob.
I mean, you know, it was funny.
It was a funny place.
Every week there would be stolen merchandise, all kinds of things going on there.
You know, the only thing we didn't allow any women in there.
So they were down the block.
Yeah.
So, well, I was going to say, you just reminded me of something.
I wish I could remember his name.
the guy they called the chin he used to walk around crazy crazy yeah so one of the guys
underneath him was my sally like for like two months he was called a lamb or somebody like that or
i forget i want to i forget his name um he had gone to prison for well first of all he went to
prison for like three or four years and then just as he was about to get out the feds re-indicted him
on like tax evasion or something and so he went for another um he had to do another like four
years um yeah um i i think he'd only been arrested one time and i remember he was listen he was
he was the coolest guy
you know of course he's in you know he's locked up he's got you know they've got
he's got somebody cooking for him so three people are going to commissary
he's buying everything out of the kitchen you know I mean he's got money but he's got
nothing to do um so that was Vincent Vincent Chaganty was the thing
the chin oh okay but but it was yeah Matthew's talking about someone that was
a cellmate that was under Vincent right we I'm not sure I believe I can't
remember his name. He was the coolest. Where were you? Which one? I was in Coleman.
Coleman Federal. This was in, no, this was in the low at the Coleman in the low.
Wow. And he'd just been
re-indicted. Like he'd been re-indicted. Like he had maybe a year
or two to go. Uh, anyway, he, I just, I always remember
he said, he said, I, I'm, oh, but prior to this, this arrest, he said, I've only been
arrested one time. Wow. And they dropped the charges.
And I was like, well, I said, why'd they drop the charges?
He said, you know, he said, this guy, he said, I owned a construction company.
And he said, one of the guys that owned the construction company, or what, sorry, one of the guys that worked at the construction company had lent money.
And the guy, one of the guys wasn't paying, what couldn't pay the money.
And he said, oh, well, I forget the guy's name.
Let's say it's John or Anthony.
And I say, he goes, well, you just wait till Anthony finds out.
He says, and because the guy, he was, well, the guy got scared and went to the feds and
the state and got wired up.
He said, came back and said, well, what if I don't pay?
What's, what's Anthony going to do?
He said, oh, listen, he said, you don't want to know what the answer to he's going to do.
And he went on and on and he's going to do this.
He's going to get your, whatever, break your fingers or do something.
And so he then, so they went out and got an indictment,
grabbed the guy that made the threat.
So they've got all these guys.
They've got the main guy who wore the wire.
They have the guy that said Anthony's going to hurt him.
And so they come and they surround this guy's house.
And he wasn't even at the house.
He said, I was at my girlfriend's house.
He said, my wife calls me at my girlfriend's house and say, hey,
your fucking house is surrounded.
So he's all right, all right, go out there.
He's called the lawyer, tell him I'll turn myself in, you know, Monday.
so he said on Monday I turn myself in I get right back out and I said so what happened he said
yeah he said they dropped they had they had they had dropped the charges like four or five six
months later I said why and he goes you know that guy that the guy that the guy that wore the wire
and I said right he said he had like an accident oh no one yeah went over an accident and he goes
I said what do you mean an accident he said um you know they they I said like
like he got hit by a car accident he said they they found him in a um tears they found him in a dumpster
and i well oh was he a garbage man i said like you know he slip and fall in the compactor and ended up
in the dumpster or he said you know you know matt i like you he said but you know when you
wear wires back then on people he said you know you tended to have accidents yeah he said he had
an accident, they dropped the charges.
Because then I got arrested like 20
years later. And he said, for this
fucking thing. Yeah.
Yeah. No, they got
their humor like Sal had said,
like John Gotti and his
brother, Gene, or one of them, you know,
just the same thing. I mean, they just had
they were really, they just moved on
with life after doing something
like that. Yeah, John was,
John was extremely witty. He's a very
witty guy. He was. And,
he was always ahead of everybody else.
They would just, you know,
they'd follow him. And I mean, even the
older guys who were made guys, they trusted
him. They really trusted him completely.
And they bought into his visions, which was, you know,
cool. He wasn't a drug dealer, but he was around all these
drug dealers. And they all gave him money.
But he was a gambler, a bad gambler. So he could lose a lot
of money. And this guy could lose
$50,000 or $100,000 on a weekend
betting football games.
games you know no kidding i mean matthew so you were bringing up some stories about prison and the
commissary and everything do you want sow because he was kind of at that point where he had got
arrested but in prison he kind of had the same situation with like i'm wondering oh listen back
then they had it way better than we have like you guys could do some like it's practically state
prison where i was at um yeah so when so after the synotrarchical
What, did you get arrested during that time?
I mean, no, I got out.
I won a case.
I only did like 12 or 13 months.
I got 25 years and I manipulated the system.
It actually set a law in federal court in the Eastern District of New York.
And when I got out, I had met some guys in prison that was simply genius.
I'm telling you, a guy who's the funniest guy.
Every once in a while, I would do a rende.
about him. And he was actually the subject for Bronx tale. And his name was fat Gigi
English, Louis Inglis. Big, heavy-sac guy like this, like 300 pounds. And how I got his attention was
I was in Lewisburg Penitentiary, but outside they had the farm. And a friend of mine,
she had a brother-in-law that was on the farm. And so my wife would drive up with his
wife, and I'd say, buy some Dunhill cigars. In those days, three or four dollars was a lot of
money for a cigar. It was like a, you know, Cuban cigar. So Frankie outside the wall would come in for
lunch, and he'd hear me four or five cigars. Well, I'd take this one cigar and go over and see fat
Gigi. This is a guy who made mega, mega millions. He was part of the purple gang, okay?
And he would sit outside. It was a nice day out. He turned the chair around, smoked the cigar
He'd be making love to the cigar, like a cigar in prison was like,
look, you're in prison, you know, and he would tell me stories, amazing stories.
I got some of them.
It'd take me half an hour to tell a story.
But what happened was my name was Lubas, which meant crazy in Italian.
He goes Lubas.
He says, you're 28 years old.
What are you going to do when you get out of here?
Now, he had a Harlem accent, different from Brooklyn.
When the Harlem guys from the Bronx talk, they spit.
You go, hey, fuck a new boss.
What are you going to do when you get out of here?
Got this big belly smoking a cigar, ruling, right?
I go, I don't know.
He's but you hijacked trucks, you are banks.
You got to give that up.
You've got to move ahead to what?
You got to invest.
Invest in what?
In a spoon and a strainer.
And you mix drugs.
You can get drugs for 5,000 an ounce.
You can bring back 40,000.
You can step on at 18 times.
These guys
On July 18th
Get excited
This is big
For the summer's biggest adventure
I think I just smurf my pants
That's a little too excited
Smurfs
Only did this July 18th
For professional drug dealers
This guy was in the middle of Harlem
I mean
They dealt with Frank Lucas
And the gang up there
So I said oh really
I said well
I said well who would I look for
When you get out
Don't worry I'll set you up
You know
Well, I thought about it
And once I found out
My friend Foxy, my crime partner was killed
By the Tommy D. Simone guy
That was it. No more guns, no more robberies
I immediately went into drug business
Now in 7576
It might not sound like a lot of money
I was making $25,000 a week cash
That sounds like a lot of money
That was a brand new Chevy was $3,500
A Lincoln was $8,000
A portion was $12,000
So 25,000 a week, I could buy an house every other week.
But he was right.
Bad Gigi was right.
That's where the money was, the drugs, and it was heroin.
And I learned the business.
I mean, never got busted for heroin.
Never.
But anyway, you know, I was doing all kinds of things.
Right.
At a corvette shop, I owned 11 corvettes, a Porsche, two jewelry stores,
a real estate business, never got busted, never.
So I did that for about all five, six, seven years.
And I wanted to get out of New York City.
So I bought 100 acres upstate New York, and I built the racetrack.
That's about a million dollars up there.
But it wasn't meant for me to make money in the racetrack.
In those days, nobody even knew what NASCAR was in 1980.
It was just starting to get on television.
And, you know, I was living, the thing I found out, you probably could identify with this, Matthew.
You're making a lot of money illegally, and you're spending, and spending and spending.
once you stop making the money
if you don't stop spending
you're going to go backwards quick
right you know the old
expression was yeah
I was dealing drugs and then what happened
I started to eat like a bird
and shit like an elephant
everything's going out
and it's coming in
so yeah you learned your lessons
you know it was an interesting life
I left New York
about that time ago God he was making the move
and I was still around him.
I still knew all those guys, you know,
and they were moving up.
They were whacking out guys.
He was already made, became a captain.
By the time 84 came,
it wasn't long before you had visions of taking over the whole family,
which he did the following year in 85.
By that time, I had already went into the program,
testified against the judge.
I was sitting in Texas.
What happened with that?
How did that come about?
Well, I had this judge that I used to pay off in Queens.
If I got arrested, I'd pay the judge off and throw the case out.
Or I went to another judge.
We had judges that were taking money.
We could do anything we wanted there in state court, not federal.
Right.
So I got busted, and I went to the feds.
I said, look, because I could fix that case, it was a cocaine case in the state of New York.
I'll fix this case, and I'll do it while you guys wire me up.
I don't need you because I can beat this case.
But I went out of New York when kids were teenagers.
I got to get him out of New York.
And I did that undercover.
He got busted.
He went to jail.
The judge, I went to the witness protection program.
And the moron, U.S. Marshals put me down in Texas.
And they said, well, this is where you should be.
You've got to blend in.
That's the fuck.
It's a New York guy going to blend in Texas.
I felt like cousin Vinny, you know, in the South.
So I had a hard time doing that
Both my kids were good athletes
And I was hanging out thinking I was done with the government
But once you learned that the government had a contract
And he said I had to peer
You know, I need trials
Just about that time the year went by
After God he killed Castellano
Okay
And they had a recall case on him
And he said, you're
They brought me up to Detroit
They interviewed me for three days
You're going to be the first witness
In a Godi
rocketeer in RICO case.
I go, you can know you're the best storyteller.
We got in New York.
There go.
All right, so I go to New York,
and the case opens up in the fall of 86.
And I'm watching what's going on.
I go downstairs secretly in the courthouse
with two-way mirrors,
and I see these two limousines back up in the garage.
And I'm waiting for the van,
take me out, find me out in New Jersey.
I see all the jurors getting in the limousine
The next morning I went up to the prosecutor
Are you guys morons and what
You got all the jurors riding the limousine
You don't think John God
He's going to reach one of those jerks
He's going to pay off a juror
A bribe and he's going to win this case
Say Sal, you're looking at too much television
And that's exactly what happened
I predicted it
And of course years later
Sammy Sammy the Bull told the story
That's exactly what they did
They paid off a witness 60 G's
and God, he became a superstar.
Yeah, you did.
He was a public figure.
The public loved him.
And, I mean, you know, the mob loved him.
And there I was down in Texas for the next few years.
And I got involved in Hollywood.
Quietly, I used a Jewish name.
I started writing.
I was good at it.
I sold a couple of scripts.
I worked with great writers.
Got a lot of fun, you know.
I slept with the first wife, got a young gal, got her,
got a daughter, got a new son,
and I was inventing toys and doing all kinds of legal stuff.
I didn't do anything legal after they gave me a new name.
Never, never again.
Never again.
And had one.
What was the new name?
I don't tell anybody that name.
How long,
though, how long did you go under that name?
Well, I went under that name for years until I started doing some interviews
and using my real name, Salvador Polisi.
So I would go, you know, use my real name in Hollywood.
I got involved with really cool actors.
I mean, I was friends with Ernest Pogneye before he died.
I mean, I met a lot of cool people.
I got a lot of respect there because they said,
this guy is the real chili palmer.
If you remember the movie.
Jorny, yeah.
They said, he's coming to our party.
Meet this guy.
He's the real chili parma.
And that's what they called me.
silly. It was funny. Just
goofy stuff happened. And I had a big
personality, so I had fun.
You know, I made mistakes in that
business. I wrote the scripts in Hot for Club.
A guy got a whole of it, and I went
to a party, and he says, give me this
script. I'll give you a quarter of a million.
You wrote this as a drama.
It's not a drama. I go, what do you mean? He's you're a
funny guy. This could be
funnier than my blue heaven.
And he had won the Academy Award
for the Sting.
Okay. Give me this script.
give me and the wife I was with at that time she said no I don't give it to him
250 is nothing we didn't get rich I didn't give I didn't give him the script and then we
waited years and we wound up making the movie Sinatra Club for peanuts and you know it didn't
come out the way it should have came out so I made mistakes I turned down David Chase
I met David Chase two years before the soprano aired that with him told a bunch of
stories it's come work for us you could be a technical advisor and I met the two
that were writing for him they started with nothing they made good money and
then recently they got very very rich they created blue bloods husband and wife
you know the Tom Seller thing you're right yeah they got rich nice people they
nice people you know that were real pro writers but I didn't want to be working for
somebody else I want to do it myself Hollywood is Hollywood's a crazy place but I
a lot of fun. I learned the business, got involved with some production companies, got
involved with some directors. And eventually, I got the money to make the Sinatra Club, which was no
money. You know, it's like a million bucks. That was nothing. Nowadays, Tom Cruise uses two million
to eat. I mean, it was kind of interesting in his situation, too, Matthews, because
with the Sinatra Club, he had made the movie and then wrote the book about it. And usually
his vice versa. Yeah. Yeah, the movie got me a book deal.
Yeah, I was going to say it's, well, one, it's funny because I, you mentioned Ernest Bourdine, I actually just watched Escape from New York a few days ago.
Yeah.
But the other thing is, I was going to say that it's funny how many guys that are involved in crime get out and then get involved in the movie business.
I met a guy who was the Cuban guy.
he came in to read for us
for sonata, but a little part.
He had like two lines, big, heavy set guy.
And he came in, he said, do I have to read the sides?
You know, when you're casting, you give them a piece of paper
a couple of lines, they read.
I said, no, what's your name?
He said, Joey, do what you want.
He's let me do my stick.
The guy was amazing.
Nobody knew him 14 years ago.
It's Joey Diaz.
The comedian, yeah.
Yeah, the Canadian.
And now we've been friends for years.
He calls me, invites me to meet you.
shows, you know. Joey is the cool guys from, and if you ever saw his show, you laugh,
your ass off. But I did a appearance with him at the Pasadena Ice House. I couldn't believe
how fast he is. I mean, he was like Robin Williams fast, you know, amazing, quickly, you know,
interacting with the audience. He brought me up. I gave him a book and I just got the book out,
signed and he goes, hey, come on, you guys, stop buying me. You see the woman over there,
I get off. She says, hey, I just, I just bought your book online. It was like,
Oh, my God, I'm selling books in a comedy club, you know, but he's a great guy.
You know, we've been friends forever.
You'll probably come on our show.
I just like the guy.
He's a for real guy, you know, because you grew up with Italians.
He's really a Cuban guy.
He plays a good Italian.
I was going to say there's tons of, like, TikTok clips of him and Joe Rogan, and every time I watch him, he's, you know.
He's hilarious.
He's hilarious.
Yeah.
I met him, you know, in nine, eight or nine.
We did the movie in nine, ten.
And then I lived four blocks from him.
And he had a shell back then called Beauty and the Beast or something.
And he would call me with half coffee.
And he says, hey, you know what?
I think my girl's going to have a baby.
I go, really?
And so he had a daughter.
And then last week I talked to him.
I go, hey, where are you?
I don't know yet.
What is your daughter doing?
Playing softball.
She's 10.
I go, oh, my God, where'd those 10 years go?
I mean, you know, he's back in New York.
And he's just a nice guy who's very.
Very creative. He's really a great guy on stage.
Do you ever see him on stage?
No. I mean, I'm in Tampa, Florida. I'm not sure he gets to Tampa, Florida.
He's all over the country. Yeah. It's all over.
Yeah. If he did, I would. That's for damn sure.
Yeah. Nice guy, though. He just never forgot. I said, hey, you've got to have that part, man.
I get him a little part. And then he did a movie with Tenaro. He started getting some movie rolls, you know.
And you don't forget people when you meet them. You know, he's a good guy.
um yeah he uh so how long so i don't so you were only you only lived under the uh witness protection
name that's protection for what five or six years oh no no i got the name in 85 and then i split
with my first wife 87 met this young gal i was with her 19 years so i did 19 years with that new
name. So I'd be, I would be in the Bay area with the new name, go to L.A. and use the old name, make
believe I'm chilly palm. You know, drive down in LA. Can I say? I mean, one of my best friends
wrote Sandlot and the guy's an amazing writer. So he liked me. We became friends. And I always
got jobs. Hey, come on. I'll give you a couple thousand a week. Come up to Vancouver. We're going
to shoot Sandlot too. And I know the guy for 20 years. You know, we were just friends. You know,
You mean people, you strike up a friendship, you know, you don't play any games with them.
It's interesting because, you know, Hollywood, you know, the mob will kill you with a gun.
Hollywood don't beat you to death with a pencil.
I mean, overall, though, I mean, everything that, you know, we talked about today, I mean, it's just, it's a whole different error.
So when people think about all these stories and stuff, I mean, it's, you got to keep in mind, like, you know, like he said, Google didn't exist.
you know cameras and all that kind of crap so that's why he was able to do this kind of stuff i mean
sal has turned his life around i mean he's not in that you know doesn't have that same mindset he
never did any crime after i didn't see this stuff matthew as valuable podcast about 12 or 13 years
ago a guy came to me he was a big radio producer he said i heard that you uh change your ways in
life and you used to be a bigot and a racist and all this stuff i go
Oh, yeah, my two kids, you know, growing up, I taught them the right thing.
I never used any, you know, racist comments and stuff.
We want, and he says, you were once homophobic.
I go, yeah, there's a lot of things.
I was taught this crap.
I said, but I did a speaking engagement at a editing house.
It was about 100 people changing their careers to become editors.
And I talked about change, like massive change.
And this radio producer said, I want you to go on a show with this woman.
I talk to her about you.
go yeah who is it and uh it turns out that she was uh kind of always forget her name
she won academy ward she's a singer uh she's lesbian god everybody knows him but so i went and i
did her show and we talked about change and uh what the heck was her name again gosh i did about
an hour with her you know and go i don't make a lot of changes it wasn't just for me for my kids what
Melissa Etheridge.
There it is.
She said, boy, I wouldn't have been in a room
with you, an Italian, you know,
an Italian racist and homophobic.
I go, well, I had to give all that up when I,
so I got a new name and I changed it from my way.
Can I come to your house for spaghetti?
But, you know, you never know who you're going to meet
in the life in Hollywood and stuff.
You know, I made a lot of good friends.
Unfortunately, I was too old when I got
there. I mean, I should have been there at 25. No, I got there at 50, you know. But I got some stuff
done. We had fun. I still got energy. And I got a thousand stories, legitimate ones,
and illegitimate, you know. Matthew B. Cox is a conman, incarcerated in the Federal Bureau of
prisons for a variety of bank fraud-related scams. Despite not having a drug problem,
Cox inexplicably ends up in the prison's residential drug abuse program, known as Ardap.
A drug program in name only.
Ardap is an invasive behavior modification therapy, specifically designed to correct the cognitive thinking errors associated with criminal behavior.
The program is a non-fiction dark comedy, which chronicles Cox's side-splitting journey.
This first-person account is a fascinating glimpse at their survivor-like aptness.
inside of the government-sponsored rehabilitation unit.
While navigating the treachery of his backstabbing peers,
Cox simultaneously manipulates prison policies and the bumbling staff every step of the way.
The program.
How a Conman survived the Federal Bureau of Prisons cult of Ardap.
Available now on Amazon and Audible.
Yeah, it's funny when I went into prison, you know, I went into prison and I,
And what I did in prison was I wrote stories.
I just started writing guys stories down.
You know, if I, if you had an interesting story, I would research it.
I'd order the Freedom of Information Act.
I'd order your case file.
I'd order everything and just start putting it together.
And some of them were books.
I wrote about 24, 23, 24 synopses of stories, like maybe 10,000, 12,000 words, you know.
And, like, that's one of the things I do now.
But while I was writing these stories in prison, guys kept telling me, as I got closer to the door, they were like, bro, you got to, you got to do a podcast.
Well, when I went, when I got locked up, there was no such thing as a podcast.
Right.
Like, YouTube had been out for like a year.
Yeah.
You know, Facebook had just come out maybe six months before I got arrested.
So I'm like, what's a podcast?
Like people are like, you know, a podcast.
Like, no, I don't.
They don't even realize that, that word was invented.
you know what I'm saying that wasn't a common thing right they made so I started reading articles
and got out and said okay yeah I should do a podcast when I get I get it and you know they were
saying oh true crime's huge you know like what's true crime what he's talking about they're like
writing crime real crime stories yeah like I didn't even know what I was doing I was doing it
I was already doing this kind of in prison before yeah I didn't even know it and they're
the same thing then you get out and yeah and i and i get the whole hollywood you know beating up
with a pin like i've had multiple things like stolen i've had you know you're watching a tv show
and you realize that the producer ripped your stuff off and went right back and you're right
wow um yeah um yeah i've had yeah a lot of copycatch remember the movie they did about the four
seasons what the hell was that name again it was a big hit movie it was a
about Frankie Valley in the Four Seasons.
It was on stage and became a movie and everything.
I can't think of the name of it.
It was very popular about 10, 15 years ago.
Well, I'm watching the movie with my wife, and I go, did you hear that?
They said, what?
I said, they ripped off one of our ideas or one of the things we did.
She goes, what's that?
I go, we were hijacking so many trucks.
We would get information from the guys who worked at Kennedy Airport.
So we would get especially Italian goods, okay?
Well, we hijacked a truck full of Italian shoes.
When I got it over to Jimmy Burke, I would call up, because we had to drop the drivers off.
I had to hold him for an hour and a half.
He said, come over quickly.
You got a problem.
I go over to the, they call it the drop, the building where the truck was in.
He had these shoes laid out.
He's got the guy coming, the Jewish guys come and look at these beautiful Italian shoes.
You got a problem.
I go, what's the problem?
Did you look at the shoes?
How can I look at the shoes?
We robbed the truck.
Now we're looking at them.
You got 8,000 pairs of shoes,
but they're all left.
That what?
They're all left.
Where's the rights?
They're going to put it on another truck probably.
They didn't want you to get all the shoes,
so they set the left,
and the rights are going in another truck.
What the hell do you do with that?
Yeah, that was the 70s.
We threw the stuff away.
The street part in the movie with Frankie Valley in the four seasons.
they mentioned the shoes.
I mean,
it was,
I loved it.
So they decided to put,
oh, yeah,
we got all kinds of contacts.
We get stolen merchandise.
Sometime we got all left shoes from Italy.
But that actually happened to us,
you know.
So yeah,
they take your stuff and they use it.
That's just the way it is.
Seth,
be careful with it.
Yeah,
I was like I always say,
look,
I'd rather deal with guys in Hollywood,
and rather deal with guys in prison than guys in Hollywood.
Exactly.
And if something goes wrong,
you know, it could go wrong
for the person, you know, fucking you
over. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? In Hollywood,
they just, you know, oh, well, you know,
that just happened. Right. Yeah.
It's always, yeah,
it's a, that's a rough,
it's a rough business. Yeah. Yeah,
it is. Much of that. Ruffling crime.
Yeah, I don't have any interesting
goal in Hollywood. I mean, I'd like to sell the rights.
You know, we stole the rights to one book. We
turned down the rights. I got a big interview
coming up with Netflix. It's not coming out for another
month or two. And there's huge, huge interview. And I went to New York last year. And when I sat down
with the producers from Netflix, I said, what do you guys want? She goes, you know, you're one of the
few guys left that could talk about John Gotti. And so suppose I tell you what he did in
1972. Suppose I give you the conversations. There's no way. That's 49 years ago,
or 50 years ago. Turn the camera on. And we did about an hour with that. How did you remember that stuff?
you can't forget
it's something you don't want to forget
it was like fun you know it was the game
we were playing a game like you know
and I gave him that interview
I don't know how much they used you know
because it's a
you know they're gonna edit stuff out
but it's all good stuff though you know
stuff that no one else could talk about
we can mention that what the show is right
yeah fear city
it's season two I then believe it is
and it's they cover the mafia
different families and stuff
And, yeah, so they got Sal on there making new appearance.
And I think they had on the first season, like John A light, Michael Francie's, yeah, guys like that.
And it was really good.
I enjoyed it.
So Sal has that coming out.
They were pretty secretive.
One day I said to the producer, I want to know one thing.
Did you get Anthony Ruggiano and interview?
Oh, we can't tell you.
So then I reached out.
I heard Anthony.
So then she said the producer, sent me a text message.
Boy, oh boy, you guys are like thickest thieves.
He knew you and you knew him.
And, yeah, well, please don't tell anybody else.
We got him also.
So, you know, I mean, it was interesting how they think they're doing secretive stuff on television.
But it leaks out.
Was it John A-Lite?
I had him on.
I had him, too.
What about, what's the, oh, shoot, Michael, Michael Dowd.
Yeah, the corrupt cop.
I watched the one that you did.
I did get a call once
from FBI years ago
when A-light
came out sort of
like he wanted to go straight
and he said look
could you mention this guy
you know
I said I don't have a problem
with him
but every once in a while
he talks about John Godd
John A-light was
about 10, 12 years old
when we had to start out the club
how could he know any of this
he's a good research
so I don't bad mouth
anybody I just let it go
you know it's okay oh listen i i did a um every interview i did two interviews with um with him
the comment section they they hate i've never i've never seen anybody get so much hate
i mean they just hammer him hammer away at him um he's really nice to me he's polite
to me he was seemed like a nice guy but then again i wouldn't know what's true and what's not true
right right we weren't there so i was but i wasn't there me and matthew
We weren't there.
So, I mean, we're talking about Cuba and being friends with Batista.
I'd be like, oh, okay.
I don't know.
He got a conversation with Trump, didn't he?
Did he?
Oh, yeah.
There was a picture of them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Him and Trump took a picture together.
And then Trump also took one with Joey Merlino, the alleged boss of the Philadelphia.
I was in prison with Joey Marlino.
Well, what?
I had lunch with him a couple of times.
and you know quiet nice guy kept himself yeah well I mean seemed like a nice guy you know
I do like to talk about the guys that I met in Lewisburg I'm going to do a presentation
for Adrian because I think it's really a stage play it's so good because all the guys were
there they ran the prison and if you remember in Goodfellas when Pauley was slicing the garlic
I was in that room
But the guys that was there
Were old school
Oh God, they were old school
You know, how did I know
I was going to play chess with Phil
Chick and Phil Tester
Who later was blown up
In Philadelphia
And then, what's his name?
Did a song on him.
What the hell is his name?
I can't recall
Planet City album
Did a song
The famous singer
You know, so who would know
That in Louisburg that year
there was a dozen guys that movies were going to be done about,
like Frank Lucas, you know?
And it was just interesting that at the time,
those people, nobody knew who they were and where they were going.
Henry was in prison with me.
I mean, I just the laugh at Henry.
Henry's assignment was to steal meat out of the butcher show.
Bring it to Paul.
I mean, you know, it was just a way of it.
And there was no telephones in prison that yet.
They didn't get this, 75.
And the most exciting three days of my prison time
was on the 8th of August
when Nixon got up and resigned
and he said, I'm not a crook.
We all ran around the prison block
looking at each other like,
I'm Sparticus, I'm Sparticus, I'm Spartacus,
I'm not a crook.
And we laughed because we knew he was a crook.
I mean, that stuff built him down.
Then two days later, there was an escape in Lewisburg.
It was the first escape ever
And there was a guy there who
I was skyjacked an airplane
They thought he was D.B. Cooper
And he later went to North Carolina
And the feds killed him
He was a bank robber.
So it was pretty exciting being there
Looking at all the stuff that was going on
And all the guys that were there
I mean there was legendary guys
From what they called a purple gang
From Harlem
I mean you had every group you can imagine from New York
Because it was the beginning of drug sentences
Like big time
10 years, 20 years, bad Gigi Ingleese.
I said, Gigi, you don't talk about your time.
No, nobody could fucking talk about my time.
I'm doing 56 fucking years.
I don't want to hear about a guy who's doing five years.
And eventually he had the cases thrown out and he got released.
But bigger than life guy, I mean, I can tell you a story about him for 20, 30 minutes.
You'd shake your head.
He was just an amazing guy.
I mean, he's just the things that he did on the street were legendary.
And so that's why Chas Palma Thierry put him in Bronxdale.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, that's essentially, yes, he was, Sal had was in prison with a lot of guys.
I mean, there was a lot of from, you know, the five New York crime families, of course.
And then surprisingly, too, a lot of guys from the Philadelphia crime family that would go on to be in a lot of internal wars and be high level ranking guys.
So Sal got to be around them when they're really young.
experience what they were like and stuff like that.
And it's just crazy.
I mean, where he was at and how,
what a big coincidence that he ended up there with all them at the same time.
That fact, G.G. said to me, when you leave here,
because I had an appeal working, I knew I was going to win.
I won my appeal.
I mean, I got 25 years.
I did one year.
He said, when you leave it, just remember one thing.
Don't ever look like, don't ever think prison is the Department of Corrections.
I go, what do you call it?
It's the Department of Corrections.
connections he said
this is where you make all your
connections you come
I'm bloody
listen I used to say I went into prison
with like a GED and fraud
and walked out with a master's degree
like yeah yeah
you learn a lot
there's a lot of smart guys
there's a lot of smart guys in there
and you go well gee whiz he's so smart
how do you get busted well same old
story yeah everybody's gonna get busted
yeah well uh
Do you want, I mean, do you have anything else you want to throw at them before we, I suppose, I mean, I guess we're almost to that hour.
Ask me, whatever, Matthew.
I thought, I don't have anything.
It's so funny because I'm sitting here and as we're talking about this, I'm thinking that would make a good TikTok real.
That would make a good TikTok, you know.
That's a good two-minute story.
That's a good three-minute.
But, no, I was just thinking when I went to, I was at the medium security.
prison in Coleman for about three years and I remember when I first got there I was sitting at the
I was sitting at a table one time with these guys and you know and they're just it was like
when I first got there like you know everybody's pretty quiet and I forget what happened
somebody said I don't know what I don't know what I said but I ended up saying yeah man I got
26 years and well because i did i had 26 years and i remember somebody goes yeah that's a
that's a that's a that's a good bit of time i got 30 years and and i and i turn around and the got
another guy black guy sitting across from me looked up at me and he goes i'm never leaving
oh my god and i thought stop complaining about your time nobody how much coming did you do out of the
I did 13, about almost 13 years.
Oh, yeah.
But paper crime?
Yeah.
Oh, my God.
I was a make for 13 months.
Oh, boy.
Wow.
Very upset with me.
Oh, that's?
Wow.
You make restitution?
No, I still owe 6 million, but I'm good for it.
Oh, that's good.
Yeah.
I'm making payment.
I heard a guy.
I heard a guy once, you know, they said, you owe how many $3 million?
And the judge said, well, when are you going to start paying?
He said, I'll pay, pay soon, you know.
But it probably takes me the rest of my life.
How much you plan on sending in every month?
He's $25.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
You owe all that money, and Michael doesn't owe anything.
That's an evil.
And it's crazy how that works, man.
He got a deal.
He got a deal.
But I got to tell you one thing I've never told this story before, you know, because the mob, prison life, criminals, you know, you got the good, the bad, the ugly, you know.
And I had two kids who I love, and I never once struck them, two kids who grew up to be football players, you know.
And I had this stockbroker in the 70s.
She would come over on Wednesday night because I had bogus names in the stock market.
I'd give him 10,000, 20,000, 30,000.
I was the junkie because I played put.
in calls. I was gambling
with the stock market because I thought it was
sophisticated. I thought I was cool.
He would come home on Wednesday. My first
wife would make a nice Italian dinner
and they'd be there at six. We'd eat
at 637. He'd stay an hour
or so I'll give me an old for money and that
would be that. So it was probably
in the fall. I remember this.
And my kid was 10 years old, my
oldest son. I said
to my wife, where's Sal Jr.?
I don't know.
So came time for dinner.
We got to eat dinner.
Jim is here.
Let's have this.
So we had dinner.
He comes in.
He's 10 years old, like two hours later.
Filty, dirty.
Do you know anything about New York?
Nothing.
Do you know anything about New York?
Have you ever heard of Coney Island?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay, and that's where they have the hot dog contest.
I go, what were you doing?
He said, I was helping my friend Joey.
His father was cleaning the garage.
I go, Joey, Joey's the bill?
And his father was cleaning the garage
He says, yeah, he was cleaning the garage
I said, come here
I slapped him in the face like
Like that
I said, you lying little shit
You weren't by Joey's house
How do you know, dad?
They found Joey last year
In the back seat of a car
With a bullet in his head
Damn
Now tell the truth, where were you?
I went to Cody Island
I was riding the Ferris wheel
So that was in 78
I got to tell you
like years later
I bought him a brand new
Trans Am, he went to college,
he played college football
and one day he disappeared
and called him up
I go, where were you?
Dad, oh is that Joey's house?
Don't ask!
That's one of the funny
stories about being an Italian father
but I never struck the kid, just one slap
and I said, don't know the lie again,
he never lied to me again.
It's all it took.
Joey's father.
I said, not only, when Joey's father was whacked, and guess what?
Joey's uncle, they found him in the backseat of the car.
He was whacked.
The whole family got whacked out.
They were doing bad things.
I'm so sorry.
You did 13 years.
Oh, my God.
I'm in the Irish.
I try to, you know, listen, the, you know what the problem is I, you know, I started off
and I was complaining, right?
I got, I got 12 years knocked off myself.
sentence. So technically, I'm supposed to be in prison right now. My outdate, my outdate was
2030. That didn't have to happen. I was lucky. I'm glad. I mean, I, I, I did everything I could
to get those off. But, you know, the truth is, do I, I think, you know, I don't think I, I deserve to go
to prison. I don't think I deserved, I probably deserve 10 years, but. Not that. That's too much time.
But it's not, well, with game time, maybe I would have done on five or six, but the,
Bottom line is that, you know, like, you don't get to make that choice.
Like, it's not up to me.
And the other thing is that, you know, honestly, for every, you know, every time I start
to bitch about it, I think about, I think about some black kid who brought a gun
to a $10 crack sale and is doing 30 years.
Right.
Because of fucking stupid, stupid law or somebody who was selling drugs to people that wanted
the drugs.
And they had a little bit too much and they got some 20 year minimum mandatory.
and right but i'm saying like there's so many unfair um sentences i i don't i try not to bitch
about it and listen i made the best of it yeah it's just like you like like you know look what would
have been a good life you know getting a job at a regular job and raising a family and being a
soccer dad and that's like the right thing i wish sometimes i think well i wish that's what i'd done
Like, it just didn't work out like that.
Right.
I have different memories.
Yeah.
You know?
But I have compassion.
And after January, I told Adrian, we've got to start talking about criminal justice reform.
And any time you want to do a program, get another person, an attorney or somebody, I would love to talk about that because we are so in need of criminal justice reform.
Years ago, when you went in, they had mandatory sentencing.
They took away the judge's power.
and that always bothered me yeah well it it leaves no room for for for doubt it well it leaves no
room to say hey there are extenuating circumstances you know like sometimes you don't
sometimes you don't have a choice you know you're born into a listen you're born into a criminal
basically a family but a criminal organization and you were never given a choice but to do
anything else so so you know i i just i don't know it there's just no good answer but i'll tell you
What's, what's not a solution is, what's not a solution is spending $11,000 to educate a student a year and spending $30,000 to house somebody.
When you know that people with education don't commit as much crime as people without an education.
Exactly.
Why wouldn't you just say, hey, every one probation officer can watch 25 guys.
So why wouldn't you just let these guys out?
Why do you even have a camp?
They have out custody.
You could put them on ankle monitors.
You could, with today's technology, you could monitor where all these guys are.
You could have red zones.
They can't- Drop the close.
Drop the close.
Like, what are you doing?
Like, it's doing nothing but getting votes.
It's all about votes.
And it's big business.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Money.
That's for the answer.
20 and 30-year sentences for filling out some paperwork.
Right.
like that's ridiculous
and some of these sentences are just fucking outrage
and they don't change anything
doesn't reduce crime
well we're going to have to think about doing something
and education is the ass and nasty like you said
if you can educate these people
you know I always said to an FBI friend of mine
why don't we go in there and show
them how much technology and DNA
is available and say don't
commit crime you have no chance
educate them this oh my God
I'll be caught in five minutes
you listen I always thought
I used to always say, you know what they ought to do?
They ought to teach a class in every high school or middle school on the federal sentencing guidelines.
Oh, my God.
And let me know that they're like, wait a minute, I've just been selling dime bags.
No, you sold 30 pounds of pot.
Right.
Because you add all of that up and they'll call it ghost dope and you got caught with 30 pounds of pot.
Now you're going to do five years.
They'd go, five years.
Yeah.
How am I going to do?
No, no, no, I just sound a little.
Little time, 20, 30, no, not how it works.
Yeah.
And you start telling them how it works, and they'll go nuts.
Yeah.
You're like, oh, no, don't, don't.
You said it, education's the end.
Yeah.
That is true.
Guys will call me and say, you know, hey, bro, like, I'll give you five grand,
and you'll just tell me how this works.
I'm like, uh-uh, I'm already on the conspiracy.
No.
I'm already on the indictment.
Right.
You're going to get caught.
No, I would never.
tell on you. Well, let's pretend that's true, which I don't believe. But assume it's true. They've got to get your phone. They're going to run my phone number. They're going to see it at my name, whom I am. They're going to run my record. And they're not even going to, they're just going to add me to the indictment. And then I'm going to go to trial. I can't take the stand to explain what happened because they'll bring up my past record. And the jury will convict me on the fact that I've been in prison for doing the same thing that you got caught with, even though I just told you no.
Don't call you, click.
People just don't understand how it works.
And that RICO, man.
I mean, that's a whole other thing, man.
Yeah, conspiracy, geez.
The government, you know, I mean, maybe Trump has a shot,
but you know, years ago, they used to have a 92% conviction.
I don't know how he's going to beat the case.
I don't know.
Who knows?
It's up to like 97% now.
Yeah, yeah.
Although, let's pay that if you have money, it does equal the, it does equal the, uh, our, um, semi, you know, helps level the playing field to a degree.
Yeah.
That's true.
But we'll see, we'll see how it pans out with him.
But before we do stop, Sal, I wasn't to say, uh, so our, our Patreon channel is called a lifetime of mafia tales with Salvatore Polisi.
and then my name's Adrian Martinez
so you can look it up on Patreon
and then our YouTube is
Invest in Yourself podcast
and it's all together
it's invest in yourself podcast
in a lifetime of Mafia Tales
I know it's a long name
but me and Sound just partnered up
so
it's well you know what we'll do
Colby will put your
your YouTube link
and your Patreon link
in the in the description box
cool perfect
yeah I'll say it over
thank you Matt you appreciate you
yeah I appreciate you
spend in the last hour with me.
I like hearing your history because it opens my eyes.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
He has a whole other perspective on this other side.
Hey, this is Matthew Cox, and I appreciate you guys checking out the video.
Do me a favor and hit the subscribe button, hit the bell so you get notified of videos just like this.
Check the description box for Sal and Adrian's YouTube link and their Patreon.
And thanks for checking out the video.