PBD Podcast - “Should’ve Had Him Killed” - John Gotti Jr Finally OPENS UP On His Father, Gravano & Gambino Family

Episode Date: December 11, 2024

Patrick Bet-David sits down with John A. Gotti to discuss growing up as the son of the infamous John Gotti, the impact of RICO laws, Roy Cohn’s influence, and life inside the Mafia. Learn how media,... loyalty, and legal battles shaped the Gotti legacy and their sworn enemies. ---- 📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": ⁠https://bit.ly/41rtEV4⁠ 📰 VTNEWS.AI: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/3OExClZ⁠ 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g57zR2⁠ 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g1bXAh⁠ 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: ⁠https://bit.ly/4eXQl6A⁠ 📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4ikyEkC⁠ 👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/3ZjWhB7⁠ 🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: ⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/3BfA5Qw⁠ 📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://bit.ly/4g5C6Or⁠ 💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! SUBSCRIBE TO: ⁠‪@VALUETAINMENT‬⁠ ⁠‪@ValuetainmentComedy‬⁠ ⁠‪@theunusualsuspectspodcast‬⁠ ⁠‪@bizdocpodcast‬⁠ ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. DISCLAIMER: According to available records, John Gotti clarified that the referenced incident involved a razor blade rather than a knife. Additionally, an account involving Gotti Sr. and Walter Johnson suggests that Johnson, aware of potential threats from the Aryan Brotherhood and Mexican Mafia within the cell block, preemptively struck Gotti Sr. in an effort to be removed from the block. Subsequently, Johnson was transferred to the West Coast and, upon release, reportedly suffered a stabbing attributed to members of the Latin Kings as retaliation for the altercation with Gotti Sr. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support

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Starting point is 00:00:21 and having your unused data roll over to the following month. Every month. At Fizz, you always get more for your money. Terms and conditions for our different programs and policies apply. Details at Fizz.ca. Let me tell you about John Cotty. This is who he was. If you hurt anybody close to John that he loved, there was no way he wasn't going to hurt you. What happened to Frankie and what influence did that have on your father? A transit authority cop stops him. He pulls out the gun and kills the cop. Oh my god. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:48 Did Gravano tell you how he became a rat? You would never call him that to his face. Sammy said once a mafioso, per your mafioso for life. Is he still a mafioso, he thinks? I've never seen anything like this. It was magnificent to watch. Have you ever seen that recording? Yeah, I have it. I have it and we used it as evidence evidence in our trial the United States government is the most powerful entity in the world Will you agree for sure? Yeah, I beat them
Starting point is 00:01:11 They played fair the first trial the second trial now the gloves came off and they got dirtier and dirtier and dirtier And this is what they did now. That's a very interesting twist right there once and for all let's end this madness This is crazy. I mean the Goddys are the most tried family in history and I'm the most tried Gotti After six to seven years of speaking with John Gotti jr's camp He finally agreed to come and do a long-form podcast and it wasn't one hour not two Three and a half hours on top of that. he brought a folder this big with stack of documents of himself, of Sammy de Bull Gravano. He was not complimentary at all with Sammy de Bull Gravano and Sammy and I have done
Starting point is 00:01:56 many podcasts together, Mafia States of America. I told him about some of the questions, hey, if you're saying all these bad things about Sammy, why is it that your father put him as an underboss? Isn't that on your father? You have to kind of hear his answer. Then his case about when he met 40 minutes with the feds years ago, he got criticized for meeting with feds and cooperating. And he gave his argument. He showed all the documents on when he did it. You'll be able to decide for yourself. I asked him an interesting question about how his father would have felt about him meeting with the feds when he spoke to them for the 40 minutes.
Starting point is 00:02:31 You have to hear the answer he gives. Then there was a couple moments where he got very emotional and we talked about his youngest brother Frankie. I asked him about a lot of different folks. John A. Light's name came up. His answer is very surprising. It's not what you would have thought he would have said about him and many others. We talked about the history, New York
Starting point is 00:02:49 today versus the past, the two presidents he was very complimentary about, his family, himself, what he's doing now since he's been out for 15 years, how aggressively negative and critical he was about the US government and the Rico system. We talked about that a lot. Anyways, it'll be a historic top of a interview where when I mean historic, if you've been watching the other interviews in the past of the mobsters I've had on, Michael Franci's, Sammy Frank Collada, Oscar Goodman, you know, Philly and Eddie, Ralph Natata, there's a lot of them, you're definitely going to love this.
Starting point is 00:03:28 But if you're somebody that's also a person who fancies with movies like Godfather or Goodfellas or power plays or strategies or communication, he's going to make a case to you where for the last two hours you're going to think you're sitting down with a lawyer making an argument. The question is, do you buy it or do you find some leaks in his argument? You will be the judge of that. Having said that, here's my names. If your name is Kennedy, you know, you're going to be tied to the Kennedy family. You got Trumps, you got Bush, you got Rockefeller. But when it comes down to this last name and first name, you know where it goes.
Starting point is 00:04:39 And it's John Gotti. And today, after I think six years, I was trying to do this interview. Seven. Is it seven years? Seven years. We're finally doing this, I was trying to do this interview. Seven. Is it seven years? Seven years. We're finally doing this, John. Yeah, at the fight. This is a mirror, at the fight.
Starting point is 00:04:50 At my son Johnny's fight. At the fight, that's right. Good memory, yes, at the fight. It's pro debut. I remember that. And I had something going, I don't know what it was. I'm like, he was talking to Chris, but it's great to have you here.
Starting point is 00:05:00 It's my pleasure to be here. It's great to have you. It's an honor. Yes, likewise. And you know, for me, when I accidentally got into this world of interviewing, But it's great to have you here. It's my pleasure to be here. It's great to have you. It's an honor. Yes, likewise. And you know, for me, when I accidentally got into this world of interviewing, you know, the world and different folks, and it was always, Pat, you got to get John, you got to get John, you got to get John.
Starting point is 00:05:15 I'm like, look, we got to figure out how to make this work. And I'm glad we finally did. I got so many things I want to talk to you about. I mean, your history, family family things that are going on today Things that are going on both politically How some things are legal today that used to be illegal were some of the stuff that the life was doing But starters just very basic question before we get into the story John how much of the life still exists today like are they still? Acting like active gangsters mobsters in America? You know, I'm so far removed. I'm about 26 years removed from that life.
Starting point is 00:05:52 I'm only 15 years removed from prison. So you're incorporated when you're in prison, you're on the compound, you're doing time with a lot of fellas from the streets. You have to understand what Rico did to understand where the status of where that lifestyle is today, okay? Rico was a law that was basically constructed sort of in the beginning as a civil law. It was good, and it's Robert Blakey, he's a Notre Dame law professor. He constructed the law to be used civilly at first, and then he slowly evolved it to use it in the criminal aspect.
Starting point is 00:06:24 And at, you know used civilly at first, and then he slowly evolved it to use it in the criminal aspect. And at, you know, civilly in 1970, I believe it was first introduced as a law, if my memory serves me right. And then by 1979, I want to say, 1979 into 1980, they made two criminal indictments. I believe those were the first two criminal indictments. One was against a guy named Fonzo Waltyri, Frank Tyri, who they accused of
Starting point is 00:06:47 being the leader of the West Side, the Genovese family. And again, when I say the names of families, these are names that the government and the media had established. I don't know these names, they know these names, they establish them for the press and they identify various names. But he was accused of being the shot caller for that group and then you had a guy named Tony Pro Provenzano who was the union leader, the teamsters union leader that was always adverse and had a plug of heads with Jimmy Hoffa out of New Jersey. So they were respectively in 79, 80,
Starting point is 00:07:25 two indictments came about. Tony Provenzano? Tony Provenzano, yep. And he died while in prison. They both were convicted of RICO. Now, I remember driving in the car with my dad and my father saying to me, he had said that in 79, he came home in 77.
Starting point is 00:07:43 Did the state bid, he came home in 77, August, and we're driving in the car, and he heard it on 1010 Winds News. My father used to always put on 1010 Winds News. That's always in his car. If he went to music, it would be Jimmy Roselli or Anglebert Humperdinck, but he had 1010 Winds News on. And when it came over the radio about the first conviction,
Starting point is 00:08:00 and again, my memory doesn't serve me correct, which one fell first. I want to say Tony Provenzano, that he fell first. Indictments, like I said, were within a year. My father said, that's the beginning of the end. I remember him turning to me and saying, I didn't understand what he meant. You know, I didn't quite,
Starting point is 00:08:15 because I'm in military school at the time. I was a bit naive to certain things. But at this point, you already know how dad makes money. Well, you know what? You pretty much understand. When you come from Howard Beach, and the only way I can really closely make the public understand it, to understand it, you have to make a correlation.
Starting point is 00:08:35 And the correlation would be, have you ever seen the movie The Town? Of course. Okay, with Ben Affleck? Great movie. Great movie. It's the famous line, right? Well, I was away with a lot of those guys. A lot of those guys I was in Raybrook with, all good, solid kids, Irish kids.
Starting point is 00:08:47 They lived in that conclave there. You couldn't, you couldn't, one way in, one way out. How they used to pinch those kids when they used to do a score is they'd block the bridge and get them every time coming back one way or the other. Well, Howard Beach is very similar. There's only two ways. One way in, of course, Bay Boulevard,
Starting point is 00:09:05 and the back way dumping into Brooklyn. Close knit, everybody's the same. More than not, people were like my father. I wasn't unique that my father was in prison. My next door neighbor's father was in prison, or uncle or cousin, or somebody else was in prison for similar situations. They were all part of the street element.
Starting point is 00:09:25 So really, you were, if you were an Italian-American and you lived there, you were more so inclined to know or be a part of that life or have relationships than not. If the answer would be not, then you were the odd duck. You were the exception, I was the rule. Okay? You would be the exception, and I would be the rule. So if you were that guy that. You were the exception, I was the rule, okay? You would be the exception and I would be the rule. So if you were that guy that didn't really know any better
Starting point is 00:09:49 or didn't have a friend or didn't know somebody that was in the street life, you were the exception. Because the rule was we all knew each other. We were real tight there, and you couldn't come in or out without us knowing about it, and that's basically the way it went down. So at that point, you're growing up, you get an understanding.
Starting point is 00:10:05 Your father's a bit different. He's the list on his taxes, he's the professional gambler. I just scratched my head, what exactly is a professional gambler? I'm not quite sure. And my mother always was that solid rah rah person in his corner. She adored my father, never asked questions,
Starting point is 00:10:24 but P.S. she would stand up, she'd go nose to, you know, and never asked questions, you know, but PS, she would stand up, she'd go nose to nose with me if she had to, or if someone goth at bib would say something negative about my father, she would take you to task. She would tighten your ass up really quick, my mother. So she didn't ask, we couldn't get those, if I was a kid and I was inquisitive, and I would want to ask that question to my mother she would say your father provides very well for us That would be the response so you'd have to go out to the streets to learn about what's going on What time it really is did she grow up in the same streets like the day no no my well
Starting point is 00:10:55 It's a great story my mother's from a Long Island City My father's a Brooklyn guy. Okay, we're seeing from the Bronx evolved from the Bronx But raised in you know, Brownsville, East New York, Brooklyn area, okay? Home of Murder Incorporated. Albert Anastasia was his idol growing up. And they had met one day, my mother was 17 years old, and she was applying for a barmaid job. She was in Brooklyn, hitting the circuit,
Starting point is 00:11:20 trying to get a barmaid job, and she was being harassed by a guy who followed her out of one of the interviews. So she looked into a bar and she seen a group of gentlemen sitting at the end of the bar, opened the door and walked in and she says, excuse me. She said, do you mind I sit here? This guy's bothering me, some guy's bothering me.
Starting point is 00:11:37 My father's sitting, he's a 19 year old young punk, if you want to say it, okay, with a three quarter leather jacket, he's sitting there, the hair's just licked back. He says, who's bothering you? And she says, well, no, this guy's just following me and I just feel very uncomfortable. He says, sit right over here. Guy opens the bar door and looks in,
Starting point is 00:11:54 sees my mother sitting with my father at the bar and just turns and my father shoots him a look and he just runs out. And they began to talk at that point. She was 17, he was 19. They moved in together a short time later and they were never separated. Wow prison only separated the only prison separated them Wow So when when she like at what point did she not mean even if you know some of these stories at what point did she? know how he provides
Starting point is 00:12:20 His friends you go into the Copacabana Yeah, okay You go to and that's where my father would take my mother. As his girlfriend, as his bride, as his wife. Constant companion was Angelo Ruggiero, who's my father's boyhood friend, since they were ten years old. My Aunt Marie, my Uncle Angelo's wife, became very close to my mother.
Starting point is 00:12:40 You'd see the characters there. You knew exactly what you were dealing with when you walked in the Copacabana. You knew you weren't at the Friars Club. So she kind of got an idea. She's like, I know I'm... Very intelligent woman, my mother, very perceptive. She understood what time it was. Now, let me ask you, is the culture of when you get into it,
Starting point is 00:12:57 because when my wife and I were getting ready to get married, I told her, I said, listen, I don't know what you're looking for as a husband. I'm going to be running, gunning, and't know what you're looking for as a husband. I'm going to be running, gunning, and this is going to be the life. Are you okay with it? Did they have that conversation or no? It's just...
Starting point is 00:13:15 Absolutely. Absolutely. In fact, it reminds me of a story years later. My mother would get a little... When things really got complicated, and this is like 1985, you know, things got really complicated and he became now, you know, my father was a local hero, local celebrity in Howard Beach, Brooklyn, in the boroughs, but nobody knew him. He was a local guy, you know, there was a news story I remember when I was in military school about the Garmin Center and it
Starting point is 00:13:41 was the first time I ever seen my father on TV, I had seen him on TV, and that was like 1980, 81, that just flashed on. But now, 85, he was basically pushed onto the world stage. The media made him, created this Dapper Don situation, this character they created, and it became very complicated life at that point. Everywhere now, we had to be, you know, on our guard, basically. And my mother, at some point, post-85,
Starting point is 00:14:11 my father got pinched in 86. He went back in, he got remanded as bail. He was indicted on the... He was indicted in March of 85 on a racketeering case, which he was the first to beat any of the RICO cases. And this was, he was remanded, his bail was remanded in 86, April, I believe. Frankie DiCicco was killed in a car bomb.
Starting point is 00:14:34 And a short time later, I had a hearing and they decided to take my father off the street in 86. He came home, we beat the case, first one to win the RICO's, everybody fell. Commission case. Why is that? Why did he beat him? Is it lawyer? Is it fear? Is it connection? The government would want you to believe
Starting point is 00:14:49 that my father fixed the case, okay? And they actually, you know, through that Gravano character, they said that they got to a juror. A juror. Now, let's be a devil's advocate. Let's say Gravano was correct. Let's say that did happen. Let's say he got to the jury.
Starting point is 00:15:06 What about the other 11? They didn't exist? There's 12 juries. Last I remember, in a felony federal case in America, I've tried many, there's 12 juries that decide your fate. So let's just be the... Let's pretend that John Gotti did get to that jury. Let's pretend, okay?
Starting point is 00:15:23 What about the other 11 jurors that voted not guilty? Okay, they all had their own mindsets. So all 12 across the board voted not guilty, and John was the first one. And you're asking me why do I believe he won the case? I'm gonna tell you why. Bruce Cutler, at that time the case started out with Neil de la Croix as the lead defendant,
Starting point is 00:15:42 and John Gotti, my father, was accused of being a captain under Neil, and he was the lead defendant, and John Gotti, my father, was accused of being a captain under Neil, and he was the second defendant, and then they had, you know, seven more co-defendants right on down the line, including my Uncle Gene. And the lead attorney was Barry Slotnick on that case. Barry Slotnick represented Neil de la Croix, and Bruce Cutler, who was a disciple,
Starting point is 00:16:00 was under Barry Slotnick, took my father as the second seed. Once Barry's... once Neil de la Croix died of cancer, Barry Slotnick thought he was gonna take my father as the lead defendant. My father says, no. I came to the dance with Bruce. Bruce is gonna stay right here.
Starting point is 00:16:16 And that was the creation. And what we got to see, Pat, was an evolution of two individuals. I've never seen anything like this. It was magnificent to see, Pat, was an evolution of two individuals. I've never seen anything like this. It was magnificent to watch. Okay? Bruce Cutler, here's a guy that his father, Murray,
Starting point is 00:16:32 was a NYPD police officer, became an attorney. Bruce Cutler was a prosecutor at a Brooklyn DA's office. Someone that John Gotti would hate, he would hate any prosecutor, and he would hate his father for being a cop. Okay, my father would, on the norm, would say, I wouldn't even talk to you. You're a prosecutor, and your father was a cop. Hit the bricks.
Starting point is 00:16:52 But that was the lawyer, that was the structure, that when Neil took the... had got the case, Barry Slotley came on board, my father was assigned Brucie, but they developed an amazing rapport, and I saw Bruce evolve almost into... My father was assigned Brucie, but they developed an amazing rapport, and I saw Bruce evolve almost into an alter ego of John Gotti's. And he had the balls to stand up and actually perform,
Starting point is 00:17:16 to go against the government, to say exactly what he felt, to take the indictment that was trash, that was so ill-prepared, to throw it into the garbage pan and say, this is rancid, and the jurors watched his theatrics. They were won over. They saw how John Gotti composed himself. They saw how he comported himself.
Starting point is 00:17:35 And I think a lot of them began to fall slightly in love with him, or evolved to liking his character, and how the humor. One of the co-defendants was a gentleman named Lenny DeMaria. Very funny, very witty guy. Like, he would say little jokes in between, little quips in between.
Starting point is 00:17:51 And I think it was the combination, the chemistry of those individuals that were on trial that won that jury over. That, the chemistry of those, along with Bruce Cutler and these personality of lawyers, the Santangelo brothers, Richie Raybock and so on, the personality of the attorneys on that case, I believe that's what won the day.
Starting point is 00:18:10 Now that's, you're born 64. 64. That's 86. So you're 22 when this is happening. So you're there every day, you're watching whole thing. Well the trial was 87, the trial started 86. The culmination ended in March of 87. When he beat it. He beat it, yes. When he beat Yes. This has never happened before never happened
Starting point is 00:18:27 Okay, so when that happened Did other made men or whoever what were they sitting there saying? Who's the lawyer you used? We can beat these guys. Let's use the same method. Is that kind of what became it's the model It's sort of Bruce became a very sought-after attorney at that point because he was nobody who was an unknown attorney at that point He was basically a second seed to Barry Slotnick was a very well-known attorney But Bruce he was like a newly anointed one of those assistants that will come in that you'd throw him on a case with you And a lot of times what the lawyers did they were cute So what they would do is they would say they see they were couldn't wait for a bunch of guys for a big indictment
Starting point is 00:19:04 You know one of these groups get indicted, 12 guys, 13 guys. And if they knew, for example, like Barry Slotnick knew he had Neil de la Croix, he would come with two or three of his lawyers and say, hey, Neil, let's put this one with John Gotti. Let's put this one with this one. So he'd get more money. They get more work for his firm. And they would have the case on lockdown. They'd have the case on lockdown. So, yeah, that was normally what would happen there. In 85, 86 is Roy Cohn.
Starting point is 00:19:30 Does he still carry the same kind of weight? I think he died by then. He died of AIDS by then. Did he die in 86? What year did he die? I think maybe 84, early 80s. He contracted AIDS and he died young. Can you pull up what age, what year was it?
Starting point is 00:19:44 86. 86 he died. But at that he still carry on? He wasn't practicing anymore. I know for a fact that 86, 85, he was no longer practicing. He was very sick. He was deathly ill. At what point would you say, did you ever have a chance to meet Roy or no? I did briefly in Manhattan one night at Harry's Bar in Helmsley Palace. What year was that? That was 83, I want to say. So that's three years before he died.
Starting point is 00:19:56 So you had a chance to meet Roy. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him.
Starting point is 00:20:04 You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet him. You had a chance to meet Roy or no I did briefly in Manhattan one night at Harry's bar in the Helmsley Palace what year was that what That was 83 I want to so that's three years before he died So was he already sick and was he already going through it or no somewhat? Okay, somewhat. What did your dad think about him? He used to often tell a story in the difference between when he would try to lecture me if I had a comfort level and I had a case, because my first trial, I was 22 years old, it was 87, my first trial. And when my father was on trial, he'd beaten March,
Starting point is 00:20:29 I'd beat my case in June. So we were basically on trial together, my father. He was in the fed court, I was in the state system on trial. So I was comfortable with an attorney named Mike Coral. And he was the go-to guy from Queens by us. And he was almost like a family to us, very close to my father, my uncles, and everybody else. So I told my dad, with my case, I said,
Starting point is 00:20:51 Dad, I want to go with Mike Cuoro. And he says, no, no, I got the lawyer for you. You're going to go with this attorney right here. And I said, but I'm comfortable. He says, look, listen to me, kid. He said, let me explain a story to you. And he told me that when he got indicted on the McBrattney case, okay, and this is a story to you. And he told me that when he got indicted
Starting point is 00:21:05 on the McBrattney case, okay, and this is a case that there were multiple eyewitnesses. McBrattney, I don't know if you're familiar with the case, McBrattney was the leader of an Irish crew that were kidnapping Italian bookmakers and Italian money guys and holding for ransom. And ultimately they kidnapped a guy named Manny Gambino, a relative of Carl Gambino's, okay?
Starting point is 00:21:30 And I believe a ransom was paid, if I understood the story correctly, and they killed him anyway. So at that point, there was a search and destroy mission where is that each group put together three different individuals to hunt down this Irish crew and wipe them out and kill them all. And my father was very successful and the last one was to the lead, it was Mc...
Starting point is 00:21:53 His name was McBrattney, James McBrattney. He was the last one to be tracked down and killed. And on that case, there was a barmaid as a witness, there were patrons in the bar that were witnesses. Tough case to beat. He was a fugitive. He went on a lam. And he was tricked into coming in, my father, by a cooperator.
Starting point is 00:22:12 He saved his life. Meanwhile, years later, the guy was on the... He was a co-defendant in my dad's 85 case, but he was exposed as a cooperator. Tricked to coming in. He was pinched at that meeting. And then he had to stand trial for the McBrady killing. So at that point, a move is made.
Starting point is 00:22:29 Carl Gambino and Neil de la Croix move aside, Mike Coro and Roy Cohen steps in. Now, my father told him the story that Mike Coro's sitting there, and he's almost pleading with the judge to try to get a delay in the case. And I'm sitting there, my father's standing, and Mike's sitting there,
Starting point is 00:22:47 and the judge is showing him no respect at all. He's showing him absolutely no respect at all. Like, no, no, no. He says, John, on cue, the doors burst open, and Roy Cohen, a little diminutive man, walks in, and he's not even paying attention. It's like he's like a loof. His glasses are down, he's reading something, he's just like walking by, and people are trying to say hello, and he's not even paying attention. It's like he's like a Louv. His glasses are down, he's reading something,
Starting point is 00:23:05 he's just, like, walking by, and people are trying to say hello, and he's not even acknowledging them. He's just walking right past them. Yeah, he's walking right by, okay? And he gets to the front, and he says, uh, how are you, Rana? He says, uh, Roy Cohen here for John Gotti. My father's looking. He don't know Roy Cohen.
Starting point is 00:23:19 He's looking at him. My father's my lawyer, you know? And he's saying, so, uh, well, Mike... He said, no, no, no, no. So Mikera's my lawyer, you know? And he's saying, uh, well, Mike... He said, no, no, no, no. So Mike's whispering to Roy, and Roy tells him, shh, sit down. And he sits down.
Starting point is 00:23:31 You've got to be kidding me. Sit down. And he says, Your Honor, we're asking for an extension here. And he says, John, the whole vibe in the courtroom changed. Everything completely changed. Like that. The judge gave the extension. Next thing you know, he negotiated the plea.
Starting point is 00:23:47 Seven years, multiple witnesses. He was accused of murder. Seven years, I had to do three years on this. I do that standing on my head in the box, he said. Three years, he did, and Roy orchestrated that plea. So talk about power. Is that the first time you met him? No, my father met him for the first time. That's the first time your father met? No, I know my father met him for the first time. Yes. I never met him
Starting point is 00:24:07 Yeah, I've never met him. I met him later on in my three right up until that point So at this point when he he just walks in right he has no idea He's gonna walk in no, but he knows who he is or he doesn't he knows who he is He knows he did a lot of reputation a lot of work for call in a lot of work for Neil But he knew of him never met him Did you watch the recent movie that came out called the apprentice the story of Trump? Okay, because he's the he's the main character in the movie that makes it right What was his business model for having a kind of power that yet was it the og blackmail business model?
Starting point is 00:24:42 Is that what he goes back to McCarthyism? I mean he was powerful back then Senator McCarthy when he he saw something Was it the OG blackmail business model? Is that what he had? It goes back to McCarthyism. He was powerful back then. Senator McCarthy, when he saw something, he saw a quality in this young Roy Cohen. And again, I have never watched anything on Roy Cohen, but it's an observation that you make when you're reading books and things of that nature.
Starting point is 00:24:57 Having only met him one time, and bits and pieces of tidbits of stories that my father had told me, that there was a persona there. He was sort of identified as the prince of the Velvet Mafia. tidbits of stories that my father had told me, that there was a persona there. He was sort of identified as the prince of the Velvet Mafia. And you know what the Velvet Mafia was?
Starting point is 00:25:10 Velvet Mafia was the underground of New York, the gay community, that these guys had a lot of powerful, influential people were there, and Roy knew everything. Roy knew all the bodies were buried. He knew who was who and what was what, okay? He knew what high ranking individuals, what judges, what, everybody played a different role. The Velvet Mafia.
Starting point is 00:25:32 That's what we used to call them back in the day. The Velvet Mafia, the gay men who helped shape men. I've never even seen this before. That's wild, the Velvet Mafia. Yeah, yeah. So is it like when you say what they knew the bodies were buried? Is it like they knew who liked men and they knew who came to those parties?
Starting point is 00:25:47 It's today, today, you and I, society, we accept everything. We accept if you're a good person, you're a good person, whatever your choices are, okay? Then they did not. Then in the 50s, 60s, 70s, they discriminated against people. You couldn't, it could not happen.
Starting point is 00:26:02 So it was like almost a sin to be gay back then, okay? Because society was harsh on that. Religion was harsh on that. Well, Roy was that, and he was the guy who knew all the secrets and all the answers. And understanding also, this is even before that point of the Velvet Mafia in the 60s and the 70s. Remember, he was a powerful attorney that in his own right, won a string of cases. McCarthy saw him
Starting point is 00:26:34 and wanted this kid. He wanted this young guy, this brash young gentleman. He wanted them next to him, guide him on the law. And then they began to go through the blacklisting of Hollywood and the communism trials and all that other stuff. And that was the McCarthyism, the era of McCarthyism. That was the beginning of it, his power with the Senate, it only grew. And then it evolved into what you see, the Velvet Mafia. Wow.
Starting point is 00:26:56 Did your dad ever tell you a story about a time that somebody wanted to kill him and take him out? Because that's too much power. Roy? Roy. I've never heard that, no. Okay, no. Yeah, because you think about having, and by the way-
Starting point is 00:27:07 I think the government, if anybody, when you say somebody would want to kill him, I would probably say, if you see what's going on today now, like with the speed diddy trial and Jeffrey Epstein when he hung himself, okay? Allegedly. Yeah, well, I was in that unit.
Starting point is 00:27:22 It's pretty tough that all the cameras failed. But anyway, that being said, when you see today, when people have that kind of information, when they possess that wealth of information on other powerful individuals, sometimes you outlive your useful purpose and you become expendable. And Roy Cohen was a very powerful individual
Starting point is 00:27:42 that knew a lot on a lot of different people. So, you know, maybe AIDS did them a favor, And Roy Cohen was a very powerful individual that knew a lot on a lot of different people. So, you know, maybe AIDS did them a favor, did some powerful individuals a favor, but I don't know if someone would have wanted to kill him. If anybody would wanna kill him, I would believe maybe it'd be somebody within the government or some high executive in some big business.
Starting point is 00:28:01 It's only speculation on my part, but in speculating, I would believe that that would be the case. Wow, so he was hated more by the government than by the mob, he was actually friendly with the mob. Oh sure, well why would the mob, why would the street element hate him, why? If you were friendly with, say for example,
Starting point is 00:28:20 Carlo, okay, and other individuals, okay, and you were there, you were ready to do your job. You were ready. When you were called, you came in and you produced these remarkable results. I would embrace you. I don't care what you did. As long as you can achieve the results that we need
Starting point is 00:28:38 to accomplish our objective, you're okay with my money. So I would say that if anybody would want to have hurt Roy Cohen, it would have been probably either a governmental element or it would have been maybe an executive of some big company or maybe in Hollywood where a lot of them were persecuted. These were very powerful men with a lot of money
Starting point is 00:28:59 and he began with him and Senator McCarthy destroyed a lot of careers. I mean, you're talking about boatloads of money sailed out as a result of these guys getting blacklisted, couldn't produce movies, actors on the shelf for life. Yeah, that's wild. I mean, when you hear stories about this guy, there's so many documentaries on him
Starting point is 00:29:19 and interesting books on him. He is a very unique character. Very interesting to read about. Going back, John, I think... I'm gonna be sure to watch that. I think it'll be entertaining, especially for you to watch. Absolutely. Going back to when I go through the story and I think about the young John yourself with your father, is it true that the first time you met your father. Right. Is it true that, you know, the first time you met your father, you were eight years old? No, no, no, that's not true.
Starting point is 00:29:50 Because he was gone for a few years? What was it? Well, always met my father. I used to visit my father. Meaning he was in jail. Did you guys go visit or not? My first birthday, my father was doing a year in Riverhead. He was doing a larceny bid in, I think, auto theft bid, rather, in Riverhead.
Starting point is 00:30:06 He did a year there. That was my first birthday he was there. And then he came home for a brief amount of time. And then he went back in. In 1968, he got the hijacking charge. So I was four years old at that time. He went in and did... he came out in 72. So he did four years on the hijacking charge.
Starting point is 00:30:24 So if you want it... he came out in 72. So he did four years on the hijacking charge. So if you want it, he came home in March of 72. So that would make me just eight years old. So most of my life, young life, my father was in prison. But like I said, I mean, I visited him regularly. My mother was dutiful, she was loyal, she always took us. She would pile us in the car, and my grandfather or one of my uncles would drive us to Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.
Starting point is 00:30:48 We'd pile in the visiting room. In fact, I've got, you know, I still have several, in my book, Shadow of My Father, I have a picture of me as a little buck in the visiting room with my father. He's in the- How often would you guys go visit? Well, again, it's not like today, you know, it's easy.
Starting point is 00:31:04 It was far more accessible today, but back then My mother would probably go every couple every two or three months We would go, you know, she'd break the kids up. It was hard to take us all So maybe I seen my father in the course of a year. I'd see him three times. Maybe Possibly four in your first eight years. How long was he out? Maybe possibly in your first eight years. How long was he out? First eight years we got one four five. I want to say in and out I would say by the time I was well, I say this by the time I was 13. He had nine in so first eight years I let's say five but by the time I was 13 he had nine in so 13 years old
Starting point is 00:31:43 He's only been with you for four years in the house where he come home you see him Yeah, yeah got and then at this point you still don't know what he's doing. You don't know what business he's in You know, he's different, you know, he's different, you know, he's you know, he's absolutely different Look I mean He walked different He talked different and it was remarkable because I Because I used to, as I got older, I would watch my father, and I would be in amazement. Like, we would, and you know, we'll discuss that
Starting point is 00:32:11 maybe a little bit later about the evolution of what he became. But at that point in my life, you look at him, and you say to yourself, I know this much. I know I played Little League Baseball, and I know my coach. I know my kids in the block, their fathers, you know, who's a blue collar worker, hardworking individual, whatever have you. I know how they've all comported themselves.
Starting point is 00:32:32 Everybody spoke Brooklynese. We all simile spoke. But John was different. The first day he came home, when he came home from Lewisburg, he was different. Brown Lincoln Continental, that's what he came home in, a chocolate brown Lincoln Continental. The car pulls down the block, pulls in his driveway,
Starting point is 00:32:51 we live in a row of row houses, second off the corner, little green awning, simple house. And he gets out of the car, he's got a light brown mock neck, chocolate brown suit with a matching overcoat. And it gets out of the car with jet black hair. And I've described it in my book. It was Tony Curtis with muscles. He came out of the car and he looked
Starting point is 00:33:14 and he just surveyed the area. He got out of the car, he shot his jacket, he fixed it, looked down, he saw it. I waved to him and he just walked like he owned the place. Like he never saw the house before because we moved there from South Brooklyn when he went to prison. So he found the house okay, drove himself home,
Starting point is 00:33:32 found it, parked his car, saw me, walked up the stairs like he always was there, like he owned the place, literally, so to speak. So in watching him and watching his mannerisms, watching how my mother deferred to him look He was different than my friend's father's that's for sure that much I did know so that starts that's the foundation and then as you get a little older also pat you begin You become more perceptive. Okay, people gossip and say, you know, your father's in prison
Starting point is 00:34:00 No, my father's not in prison. My father's in a military camp and he's in a construction aspect. They have to build things there Oh, yeah. Okay, and then you evolve more and more you become more and more when was the first time you realize he is really in prison How old were you? I? Would probably say Maybe it struck me as a little odd, you know eight years old. At eight years old, got it. It's kind of like a Santa Claus element, right? Seven, eight, seven years old, and I turned eight in February of 72.
Starting point is 00:34:33 He came home in March. Around that time, you understand, because he's coming home, he's coming home, he's coming home, and you start putting the pieces of the puzzle together. Listen, we don't give kids credit. The kids today are a lot smarter than we were because they're stimulated by computers and everything else and far more in interaction
Starting point is 00:34:50 in that respect, but they don't have the personal skills that we have in personal interaction. But they're literate. They read so much, they can hit a button, true or not true, and they can find almost anything they want to find. But you start to put the pieces of the puzzle together and you come to an understanding that everything's a little different here. That makes sense because even back, maybe there's not internet, it's not like you're on TikTok. John Gotti, you know, is back in, you don't have access to that, right? You're living in this community. Either in the newspapers or it's like word of mouth. That's it. Pony Express. You go to military academy in your, is it 79 when you go? I think 79 when you go.
Starting point is 00:35:29 78 to 82 I was there. Right. So when you go there, what's the story where you're sitting there and there comes a story on TV. Right. You know, John Gotti and everybody's watching like, wait a minute, what was that story? What did that have? I was in the day room.
Starting point is 00:35:44 I was in the day room and we had a TV the TV was in the day room so we had some downtime we weren't drilling whatever have you or playing sports you go to the day room watch TV and I'm watching and it was like an undercover operation they're talking about the garment center and I had a picture of my father with a gray sport jacket on and he had a bandage on his hand because he was here in Florida, and he knocked the biker out at a red light. So I remember that when that happened, he had a chipped
Starting point is 00:36:10 tooth in his hand. He got infected. So you'll see that surveillance. You'll see him with a gray sport jacket on, or a gray silk shirt. And he's talking to, I remember correctly, he's talking to Alphonse, a guy named Fonzie Sisca, in front of the Ravenite.
Starting point is 00:36:23 And he's got his hand like this and he's talking and you see his hands bandaged up. And that was the same exact, they showed that picture. And this is, let's say 81, I mean, I could be awful slightly on my dates, I'm trying to piece together my head, 81. And it said this man, John Gotti, is a captain in the Soens Gambino crime family,
Starting point is 00:36:43 and the Garmin Center's controlled by Tommy Gambino, and all these players. And I'm looking, and I'm looking, and I see I'm sitting in the back watching the TV. And all of a sudden, I'm sweating a little bit. I'm getting nervous. Like, my sphincter's tightening up now. I'm sitting there, I'm like, oh shit,
Starting point is 00:37:00 I'm getting very uncomfortable. And all of a sudden, the front row, and they're talking to each other, and they all turn, and they're like talking to each other and they all turn They're looking at me now. He's got the same name as you. I says yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah sure does. Yeah the guy says another one of the Cadets says oh I saw him here
Starting point is 00:37:18 God he was here with you two weeks ago Yeah, yeah, it's my father Well, sir big I quiet, you know, we're quiet and watching the TV and I'm like, oh god, please I knew two weeks ago. Yeah, yeah, it's my father. And also everybody got quiet. Everybody got quiet and they're watching the TV and I'm like, oh God, please. Like I'm counting the seconds till this ends. This program's gotta end now. I'm counting the seconds here.
Starting point is 00:37:35 And that was really like, now I became educated, okay, so to speak. Now you're educated, okay? That's the point where you become educated. When I try to, you? That's the point we become educated. When I try to, over the years, when you read about your father, so many different stories written about him, right? Persona, personality, King of New York, all this stuff, all these great nicknames that
Starting point is 00:37:57 he has. But at some point, something happens where the level of rage can go to a whole different level for different people, for me. One day my dad and I are sitting down and we're having a conference. He's watching all these mob interviews. He says, what do you think about these guys? They did this and they did that and they killed and they did this. And I say, yeah, I mean, that's the life they were raised in. And he says, well, you know, I could never kill anybody. I could never do this. I could never do that. I'm like, look, at the time, you had only one grandkid
Starting point is 00:38:28 and daughter, I mean, Grace. I said, what would you do? What are you capable of if somebody does something to your granddaughter? You just see my dad like, suddenly gets the rage going, right? And he says, I'd be capable of doing anything to protect my granddaughter. I said totally totally right the story with Joseph Kennedy Joseph Kennedy for me is one of the guys I really like to study on because
Starting point is 00:38:56 He's the guy that could have been a gangster some say he was a gangster for him to be able to build a family That's about the father or the father the father Joseph the father, Joseph Kennedy, the OG, OG. That's right, I mean the father, he was a bootlegger. That's right, that's right. I mean, he was, you know, later on he became the chairman of SEC and I think it was all these different things that he did. But some happened to him when his oldest son died, right?
Starting point is 00:39:19 When that took place, it changed him. The story about your, I think it's your younger brother. My brother Frankie Boy, yeah. Frankie. What happened to Frankie and what influence did that have on your father? Well, you know, look, I mean, we've, at that point in our lives, I'm sure my father experienced a lot of losses in his life, meeting friends and whatnot, but we've never experienced something so close to home. So he didn't, he was away a good portion of Frankie Boy's life. Nevertheless, he was like the apple of his eye. He really was.
Starting point is 00:39:50 Frankie was a good kid. He's a chubby kid with curly hair, you know, cherub face. His little cherub face. What bothered him the most? Well, naturally, he lost his son, but that particular day, Frankie was always, he was a tough kid. He was always fighting in school, always getting in he lost his son, but that particular day, Frankie was always, he was a tough kid, he was always fighting in school, always getting in trouble.
Starting point is 00:40:08 So finally my father had enough. He used to call my mother Butch. It was a nickname for my mother. He said, Butch, go get this kid and bring him home right now. She went and got my brother Frankie, and I was away at military school at the time. She brings him to the house, she tells my father, my mother would take beating for us if she had to.
Starting point is 00:40:23 She was fiercely loyal to our kids. She says, Johnny, I'm telling you right now, don't put your hands on him. Keep your mouth shut, go get him. Walks in the house, and as soon as he comes in the house, and he had it with Frankie, and he gives him an ass whipping. Gives him an ass whipping.
Starting point is 00:40:38 Are you there, you're seeing this? No, I'm in military school, my way. Got it. I heard afterwards, and this is where my father, he ate him up. It completely ate him up because he gave me, he never put his hands on Frankie, but he had enough. That's it.
Starting point is 00:40:50 He says, this kid needs, my father was raised in a house where his father used to beat him just to let him know he was there. But yet he showed a lot of restraint and he hit his own kids. If my father gave me five beatens in my life, I probably deserved 15. Showed a lot of restraint in his own children. Okay, never hit my sisters never would raise his hands and Frankie boy you know, he was he was the the
Starting point is 00:41:13 Younger than I was he wasn't he wasn't the fifth my brother Peter's the fifth but Frankie boy was sort of like treated like almost like the baby there and He gave him this beaten and That was it. He told him it it's it, up to your room, you're punished, that's it, ba ba ba. He told my mother, he's not to leave this house. You understand me, he don't leave this goddamn house. That's it.
Starting point is 00:41:35 And my father leaves. Well, Frankie sneaks out of the house and meets up with some friends, goes on a mini bike, and gets hit by a car and gets killed. I didn't know that story, Jack. Yeah, that's what happened. So he came off the Belt Parkway, and a car, the sun was low and a car nailed him, hit him,
Starting point is 00:41:53 dragged him about several hundred feet. He was stuck under the car, actually. And yeah, it was, my mother got the call, and she raced Barefoot three blocks down to what has happened and she saw him in the street. Oh My god, yeah. Yeah When did you hear about it when did they call you my father sent the car to come get me at military school and They came to my room. They told me that put your service uniform on
Starting point is 00:42:28 and someone's coming to pick you up. Someone's coming to pick me up with my service uniform on. I said, make any sense? He said, we don't know anything else. So I had to go to my quarters, put my service uniform on, my white gloves, my hat, and I waited. I sat there and waited. Car pulls up and driving the car was a gentleman
Starting point is 00:42:47 who did time with my father in Lewisburg. His name was Charlie Deek, Charlie D'Acaneo, and another gentleman named Mark. He recently died in prison. They picked me up, got in the car. They wouldn't say anything, they wouldn't talk. They were very somber. And like Mark was sort of like holding back and crying.
Starting point is 00:43:07 So I'm saying something ain't right here. I'm not asking any questions. I'm figuring maybe something happened to my father. I don't know. And then we get home, I pull in front of the house. They tell me wait here. I see everybody by my house. Lot of people there.
Starting point is 00:43:23 They both get out of the car and I'm in the car by myself now, the back seat, wait here, I can't get out and go in my own house? And I'm sitting there, and I'm sitting there, and I'm fidgeting in the car, and I'm saying, well, what if I see my father walk out, I would, he's okay. What could this be all about?
Starting point is 00:43:38 Never hit me. And he takes me out of the car, takes me for a walk, he says, you know, your brother's gone. He told you this? Did. I am so sorry. I did not know this whole story. Wow.
Starting point is 00:43:55 And at this point, while this is taking place, I mean, it's holy moly. Yeah. It was, you sort of think to yourself. You say, maybe if I didn't go away to school and I was here, it wouldn't have happened. So for several years, I beat myself up over that. But I know my father most certainly beat himself up over it.
Starting point is 00:44:18 He would never show that emotion. My father was a true soldier. He sat for three days. We had Frankie's wake for three days Three days he postured by that coffin and he greeted people from all over They came in Buffalo Pennsylvania they came from all over and he greeted everybody and he'd walked them over and show him his son Brush his hair back and he kept it all together. He kept it. I could I couldn't keep it. Oh my god No way. I couldn't keep it together. Oh my God, no way. I couldn't keep it together.
Starting point is 00:44:45 But when he had his own quiet time, when he had his own time, that's when he would mourn. You know, you'd hear him at night. He'd mourn. You ever saw him in front of you? Like, when he never showed it? No, never one time. He wouldn't show me that weakness.
Starting point is 00:44:59 He wouldn't show anybody that weakness. He wouldn't do it. He just wouldn't do it. He would do it. My bedroom was attached to his den. So the vent was right there, it was a thin wall that's attached. So where my bed was,
Starting point is 00:45:10 there was a vent to the right side of my bed, and that's where the couches were, and there was a fireplace in his den. And I would hear him. I'd hear my father. He would mourn on his own terms to himself. How did that change him? Like, how did you see that change him?
Starting point is 00:45:28 You know, he was a strong guy. It changed my mother forever. She's still not well today. She's still not right today. I mean, she often drifts back to Frankie Boy all the time. She's still in the same house. She won't change his room. She's never gonna move on.
Starting point is 00:45:41 I ask her to, you know, Ma, move out to the island with us. Get rid of the house, stay with us. No, no, no, no. She says, my son's in this house. I still hear my husband come up the stairs at night. Wow. I'm staying here, this is my house. Frankie's room is still the same.
Starting point is 00:45:55 Still the same, still the same. So my mother, it had this profound effect on her that she never recovered from. She's still, you know, Frankie's dead 44 years and she never recovered from it. She never recovered from it. But my father, you know, he was a soldier. He, when we had the opportunity,
Starting point is 00:46:15 when he was in Marion, Illinois, which was the only level six prison in the country, when he was in deadlock, we weren't allowed to touch. So we had a plexiglass between us. You had to pick up a phone to talk. That's your visit. So for seven and a half years, that's how I visited my father.
Starting point is 00:46:30 And he'd come down and he'd be shackled up and unchained and put in this locked area and then he'd pick up the phone and we would talk. That's how, and at times he would drift back and talk about Frankie Boy and you'd see. That's when his eyes would change, his facial expressions would change. But he was a soldier.
Starting point is 00:46:48 He was a tough guy. He kept it right here. He knew exactly how to control his emotions. And he expected, he had the same expectation from me. And back then I couldn't do it. And still now, talking about it, I get emotional. My brother and I, we shared the same bed. So I still can't.
Starting point is 00:47:03 I'm not him. But he had that ability. He had that ability. With Uber Reserve, good things come to those who plan ahead. Family vacay? Reserve your ride as soon as you book your flights. To all the planners, now you can reserve your Uber ride
Starting point is 00:47:18 up to 90 days in advance. See Uber app for details. Is it when that took place? And I'm wondering, like, is that what got that anything about his temperament, rage, anything change? And I've read a lot of different things about the story of the individual. Was it intentional? Was it accidental? Did you did you ever get to the bottom of what this accident...
Starting point is 00:47:46 You know, I don't know all the particulars. There were stories that the guy was drunk. I don't know. I mean, again, I'm limited in my knowledge and what I would want to look at. I did know this. They lived around the corner. I was friends with his son. I liked the family. I did. So two families got torn apart.
Starting point is 00:48:06 You know, he ended up missing some time later. And I don't know all those particulars. But if we would say that Frankie's death would sort of bring my... make my father into a different character, or, as you say, there's a rage aspect there, no. Let me tell you about John Gotti. This is who he was.
Starting point is 00:48:26 John Gotti was a guy that, when he loved you, he loved you to a fault. He used to say it all the time, John, you know me, I have a tough time showing people the door, John, even when they're wrong. Okay, he loved you, he loved you to a fault. However, if you got on his wrong side, you had a problem, and if you hurt anybody close to John that he loved,
Starting point is 00:48:48 there was no way he wasn't gonna hurt you. Just the way he was. That's it. That's the way he felt. So the speculation is that it may have been somebody, like he may have been directly involved in him being missing four months later. Is it possible? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:04 Do I know? If you would have told, if you would have shown me irrefutable proof right now, you would have shown me that. Would I go, oh my God, oh my God. No, you know what I would say? Okay. Not surprised. Okay, you know, it's, that's,
Starting point is 00:49:21 John was a street guy. I pretty much summed him up. If he loved you, he loved you, you weren't gonna hurt somebody close to him, but not him hurting you. It's just the way it was. What did you, I heard you say something. You said something about if you were a prosecutor,
Starting point is 00:49:38 if you were a cop, you know, what did he love? What did he fear? What did he hate? Loved loyalty. He loved loyalty. Loved his family, loved loyalty, loved his friends. He loved the camaraderie. I think he loved the camaraderie of what he was. A little bit more that he loved his family, possibly. I'm not sure.
Starting point is 00:49:57 I believe maybe he had some reservations about that later on in life. But I know that in the heat of it all. he should have been born 2,000 years earlier, and he would be Hannibal. He should have been born... That's the kind of... Look, I want to spend the next several hours just talking about John Gotti, but you can't give me that kind of time. And I can go into it, and I can make you understand.
Starting point is 00:50:21 When I'm done, if you didn't like him, I'll get you to like him. If you like him, I'll make you love. When I'm done, if you didn't like him, I'll get you to like him. If you like him, I'll make you love him. Because when he walked into a room, he lit it up. He was handsome and charming, very charismatic individual and super intelligent.
Starting point is 00:50:36 We would go out, here's what we did, and I kept the tradition for years. We would go the first week of every month and my father would take all the lawyers, all the high powered lawyers in New York to dinner. And it would be the first week of every month and my father would take all the lawyers, all the high powered lawyers in New York to dinner. And it would be the usual cast of characters. With my father, it'd be Jackie D'Amico, Jackie the actor, myself, Bobby Borello.
Starting point is 00:50:54 We'd be there and then it would be 10 lawyers. And we'd be, you know, you'd pick the restaurant, whether it was our place, we had a restaurant called Danoy on 74th and New York or it was another place in particular. But he'd pick a different place. He'd you tell Jackie Jackie D'Amico was in charge I can nose was in charge of that pick the place and every first of the month first week of the month We take all the lawyers to dinner and the last week of the month We take doctors to dinner Tommy Gambino would come to dinner and he had Schneider Pavilion long-aligned hospital
Starting point is 00:51:21 Because we did a lot of fundraising through Tommy. Tommy raised an enormous amount of money. Tommy was a pillar of society, great, great guy. Raised enormous amounts of money for Long Island Jewish Hospital, especially the Schneider Pavilion, which is the cancer wing, children. And through my father, they raised millions. I know Tommy himself raised millions.
Starting point is 00:51:41 So we made it customary. At the end of the month, my father would have dinner with Tommy, some of the old-timers, and Tommy would bring, like, a lot of the doctors back then to dinner. And I would watch my father hold court with the lawyers, and his vernacular would be beautiful, wonderful. He'd perfect talk.
Starting point is 00:51:58 Trees became threes, okay? Same with doctors. Same thing. And then all of a sudden, we'd be at dinner with all the fellas, and this would be John Gotti. One hand in the pants like this. Three's became three's, okay? Same with doctors, same thing. And then all of a sudden we'd be at dinner with all the fellas, and this would be John Gotti, one hand in the pants like this. You know, and I just lost $3,000.
Starting point is 00:52:12 $3,000 on these fucking rat jets. $3,000 I just lost. He'd become Brooklyn all over again. He had a 140 IQ, and he had the ability to adapt to his environment. He had a 140 IQ. He had a 140 IQ, and we didn't test him. The Bureau of Prisons his environment. He had a 140 IQ. He had a 140 IQ. And we didn't test him. The Bureau of Prisons tested him.
Starting point is 00:52:27 He had a 140 IQ. And he had the ability to adapt to his environment. So if he was sitting with lawyers, he'd hold court appropriately. If he was sitting with doctors, he would hold court appropriately. If he was sitting with gangsters, hoodlums, street guys, he'd hold court appropriately. He wasn't going to start now, you know, all of a sudden being prim andums, street guys, he'd hold court appropriately. He wasn't gonna start now, all of a sudden being prim and proper, and suddenly his T and his finger,
Starting point is 00:52:52 he was a hoodlum, he was a hoodlum's hoodlum. He was described on wiretap from hardcore guys would say, you see that guy, John Gotti? That is a hoodlum's hoodlum. I think that's the highest compliment you can get if you're a hoodlum, buy a hoodlum I think it's the highest company you can get if you hoodlum bio hoodlum yeah that's that's and by the way while you're there at the peak of your father's popularity where he can't walk anywhere who else at this time is who
Starting point is 00:53:18 else are the kings of New York at the time would you put Trump at that level or not yet well Trump I mean 80s he already, right? He's that his dad Fred Trump was it was it was an iconic figure in the construction industry I mean especially we come from in Queens. So Jamaica Estates I believe that's where they're from and Donald Trump and I were alumni because he graduated class of 64 I'm class of 82 New York Military Academy both graduated the same school. So we have that in common We're both Queens guys. His dad, Fred, was an iconic figure in Queens. He built a lot of buildings there.
Starting point is 00:53:50 And Trump, at that point, was beginning to evolve into his own right. Donald Trump was now into the 80s, starting to evolve into his own right. He was taking the mantle from his dad, and he was carrying it moving forward. And I believe he described one time in an interview that his brother was an alcoholic.
Starting point is 00:54:04 Donald Trump's brother was an alcoholic, Donald Trump's brother was an alcoholic. So basically, everything, the responsibilities of the family would be stowed onto his shoulders, Donald Trump's shoulders. And he had a great reputation in construction back then. I know that he always spoke well of my dad in any conversation, any off-camera conversations
Starting point is 00:54:24 he had with individuals. I know my father spoke well of my dad in any conversation, any off-camera conversations he had with individuals. I know my father spoke highly of him for his business prowess. I'm not sure if they had a relationship or not. I'm not sure. You know, you have other liars and punks that make things up, make stories up, that they, yeah, we knew Donald Trump,
Starting point is 00:54:38 we paid Donald Trump. Listen, for the most part, it's probably all bullshit. Everybody can make any story they want to make up but the reality is the reality Yeah, there was a story. I think Sammy did send me the bully says we try to buy him out and we couldn't do it Yeah, he turned us down and I could tell you this much you I've seen and dealt with a lot of cooperators They think the government had employed in my tenure in my trials And if the government had employed, in my tenure, in my trials, over 100 cooperators came against me, and they forgave 110 murders
Starting point is 00:55:10 to bring these guys against me. And many of them were complete frauds and fakes. Sammy Gravano was who we said he was. He was part of John's administration. He found his way through the door because of Frankie DiCicco, because Frankie was a somebody, and Sammy was not a somebody. He found his way on Frankie's coattails. When Frankie got killed, Sammy became a somebody.
Starting point is 00:55:30 John being that consummate diplomat, okay, and always looking loyal to Frankie DiCicco, was a tough guy, really good guy. That was his, one of his proteges. So he was brought along for the ride and became more than what he should have become. But that being said, to my father's fault, he did, Sammy did evolve to that point,
Starting point is 00:55:51 but many of the stories he had told was one more bullshit than the next. He sort of took himself and put himself in John Gotti's light and put John Gotti almost in his light. And to me, what really makes me, and again, I'm a civilian, 26 years. I have no axe to grind. and put John Gotti almost in his light. And to me, what really makes me... And again, I'm a civilian, 26 years. I have no acts to grind.
Starting point is 00:56:09 People say, well, you're angry. Why am I angry? I won. I won. The United States government is the most powerful entity in the world. Will you agree? For sure, yeah. Have they toppled governments? Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:56:22 Have they killed heads of state? Many times. Some say it just happened. I beat them. Yeah, have they toppled governments? Absolutely. Have they killed heads of state many times? Some say just happened. Yeah, I beat them Five trials in 37 months five federal indictments 37 months. I'm here talking to you. I'm not bitter I'm excited Christmas is coming. I'm gonna be with my grandkids. We'll be with my family. I'm excited I feel bad for my brothers that I left behind in prison, but I am I am guy you're ever going to meet. I'm thrilled to be here. I'm not bitter. But when you've got a view, all this nonsense over and over again, and the lie after lie, and the fact that they've given absolution to 110 murders to over 100 individuals, and you
Starting point is 00:57:00 can watch someone like Sammy Gravano, that sit there who took the coward's way out. A coward. He is a coward. Let's make no mistake about that, okay? He didn't do his time. He went in a witness protection program. He went into witness units, comfy, cushy units. He was... If he wasn't at a safe house in Quantico, Virginia, then he was in a comfortable witness unit.
Starting point is 00:57:21 Even his last bid, he talks about how he got a... a... a badge of honor from the Aryan Brotherhood, clover on his arm. He was in a rat unit in ADX, Colorado with other rats. So he took the easy way out. He doesn't have the right. Just go do your time. You did your time. You got away with whatever you got away with.
Starting point is 00:57:45 You got caught selling drugs to kids. You were released again from prison. Go on with your life. Tell your stories. Even if half of them are fabricated, go tell your stories. Don't you tell my father, or John was gonna sell me out first. Listen to me.
Starting point is 00:58:00 There's not a rat that would tell you that. There's not a stand-up guy. You won't find a guy like John Gotti. Gotti as we say in the streets and in prison He walked it all the way to the gate He never one time he could have been released from Marion, Illinois any time he wanted to all he had to do was sign a document Everybody else that went there signed that document There was a document that you're agreeing you're no longer the person that were, and you're agreeing to what's called a step-down program. So when you get there, you have to be in Marion
Starting point is 00:58:29 for a total of 18 months usually, and then you can leave Marion, Illinois, and go to a regular penitentiary, a level five facility. Marion was the only level six in the country at that time. My father refused to sign that paper. So he stood for 10 years in solitary confinement. Everybody else signed it. Anybody who went through Marion, Illinois, signed that document, basically stating,
Starting point is 00:58:47 I'm no longer the person I am. Here I am, I'm gonna sign. I'm gonna go to Unicor. I'm gonna work. I'm gonna be a good boy. And you could bring me to a regular prison, because I'm gonna be a good guy, okay? And I'm not saying that I begrudge them
Starting point is 00:58:58 for taking that position, because maybe I would have signed it, too, probably. It's not, you're not ratting anybody out. You're just basically saying, yeah, I'm no longer that too, probably. It's not, you're not ratting anybody out. You're just basically saying, yeah, I'm no longer that guy anymore. Yeah, I'm no longer that guy anymore. I'm not a threat to you, no problem.
Starting point is 00:59:12 My father's ego, his pride, would not let him sign that paper. He should tell them, shove it up your ass. Shove it up your ass, and that's why he spent 10 years in Marion, Illinois. Now... He could have been out 10 years prior to that, and he...
Starting point is 00:59:23 He could have been out 18 months. He could have been out 18 months. He could have been out 18 months. Now, when you're talking, you know this? You and your mother know this? I know this because I handled the attorneys. The attorney I hired for my father to try to get him out of Marion was Linda Sheffield. She was great with BOP, post-conviction issues. I hired her.
Starting point is 00:59:42 And she came and said, look, she showed me. I said, well, there's nothing wrong with this paper. This is basically saying that I do this every day. Would you say I was? No, I'm no longer that guy. You got it, you're right. Okay, she says, well, I'm bringing this to your father. Bring it to my father, tell him. This is how we can get him out of there.
Starting point is 00:59:58 And he told her, you go back and tell my son, if he ever sends something like this again, he can never come up and visit me again. Oh, wow. And that was the end of it We know he never signed the paper. He wouldn't conform to their program. He wouldn't go along what they want to say Okay, I'm no longer John Gotti anymore He was gonna die John Gotti the way he lived is the way he was gonna die and I've interviewed people for projects
Starting point is 01:00:20 I'm working on which we're gonna be coming out shortly with people that were in Marion with my dad projects I'm working on which we're gonna be coming out shortly with people that were in marry with my dad Shot callers for Miami Mexican Mafia shot callers for the Aryan Brotherhood shot callers for the Latin Kings interviewed them all and What they had to say or what it was like to be around this man The the aura that he had the shot calls name was black Bob for the Mexican Mafia He used to refer to my father. What was the name black black bob black bob for the mexican feder-ma He used to refer And king guys keep an eye on the general he's the colon general general
Starting point is 01:00:55 He's like this with his fingers generality and the stories you heard about how they they they Received and accepted and loved and adored my father. This is how you do in time. He taught people how to do time. He taught people how to be a man, how to comport yourself like a man, okay? He did. And then you got someone like Sammy Gravano
Starting point is 01:01:16 who took the shortcut, abandoned his wife and kids, left them in the streets, knowing that people were gonna kill his family, wanted to kill his family, left them like a dog that he was, went into WITSEC units, cared only about himself, and you wanna sit there now and you wanna bash someone like my father,
Starting point is 01:01:32 you wanna sit there and try to damage its character? Shame on him. Shame on him and shame on the government that released him because they knew exactly what he was gonna do. I have his psychological report right here. I have Sammy Gravano's report. And you know what the report says? The report says that A, he's got selfish,
Starting point is 01:01:53 his tendencies lean towards his selfishness, his self-preservation. And it goes on to say, if released from prison, he is a tremendous aspect in his qualities of life that he would certainly avert back to, and I'm trying to piece together word for word, his criminal ways, including violence. And yet two different psychologists,
Starting point is 01:02:16 two different government psychologists, had issued these reports. And both were right, and the government still released him and put him, made him somebody else's neighbor. They didn't make him their neighbor. The FBI agents didn't put him next door to their house. They put him sort of somebody else's house. And what did he do once he went to Colorado?
Starting point is 01:02:33 What did he do? Well, he was in a relationship. I guess it was an abusive relationship. Something happened there. He signed himself out of the program and found his way back to Phoenix, Arizona, where he became a narcotics pusher to kids, okay? And tried to recruit other individuals.
Starting point is 01:02:50 And the government, the FBI, knew a lot of what was going on here. This is why the attorney general in Arizona, Janet Napolitano, they get it right. Janet Napolitano had to do a secretive investigation on him and wouldn't even let the FBI or any federal agency know or anybody else outside of our office know what was going on because she was afraid it was going to be compromised. Now my point is this.
Starting point is 01:03:16 I hardly knew him on the streets, Sammy Gravano. I hardly knew him. Okay. He certainly does not know me. He could say anything he wants about me. He doesn't know me. Okay. That being said, I'm a Queens guy. He was a Brooklyn guy.
Starting point is 01:03:26 I stood in Queens. My father was a man of the world. I was not. I was a Queens guy. Quite simple. But you took the easy way out. What happened to when you met somebody in battle and you either won or you lost?
Starting point is 01:03:40 What happened to giving that person... If you respected that individual, that individual showed up and fought that fight, and you respected him as a man, what happened to giving that respect in death? What happened to honoring that? Could you sit here and say, if this guy hit me the hardest,
Starting point is 01:03:54 and he never quit and came fighting, what am I gonna say now? He was a piece of cake, he was a dog? No, you're supposed to turn around and say, this guy was a worthy adversary. This guy really took it to me. He was something special. My father took it to the. He was something special.
Starting point is 01:04:06 My father took it to the government. He gave them fits, took them four trials to convict him. He beat them three in a row, okay? Took them four trials. Give that man his credit. He was intelligent enough to maneuver you. When everybody else lost, he won. Remember that.
Starting point is 01:04:21 And he refused to back down and be anybody else. Me, I would drive a minivan and I would put a sweatsuit on Put a hat over my eyes. Okay, John right in your face. He was afraid of no one and nothing You give that man his credit and certainly in death you give a man an honorable death You give him his credit to sit there and take the position that this coward had taken and repetitively takes to me is a disgrace Can I ask you a question? So for me when I did that interview? I go to New York all the time. I love New York I love the people I get along with the people and right, you know later on in life when I did ancestry
Starting point is 01:04:58 You know when you find out what your background is all about apparently I'm 18% Italian Someone in my family hooked up with an Italian we don't know about, right? So I've always gotten along with Italians. I go to New York and you have to, you would be like, how could you interview Sammy? He is lying, he's this, he's that. And then I would have some guys that would come up there and say, but look, you heard the recording?
Starting point is 01:05:23 You know, recording when John kinda threw Sammy under the bus. And he made, what I'm saying to you is heard the recording. You know, recording when John kind of threw Sammy under the bus. And he made, what I'm saying to you is in the recording. So Sammy. John should have killed Sammy, quite frankly. Well that's what Sammy said he thought he was gonna kill him. He should have killed him earlier. He should have killed him.
Starting point is 01:05:37 Listen, Sammy was a guy that was green eyes, he was a monster, okay? His is a guy, and he talks about, you know, this is an amazing thing because when they go in front of the judge, when they're gonna get their sentence reduced, all of these cooperatives, what they do is they cry and say, I only pulled the trigger one time. Including Sammy.
Starting point is 01:05:54 He said he only pulled the trigger one time, but now he boasts 19 kills, I killed 19 people. No, he conspired, he schemed and killed 19 people. Let's get that straight. And including two innocent people. Nobody wants to talk about the two innocent people. Why? Why don't anybody want to talk about Alan Kaiser?
Starting point is 01:06:10 A 16 year old boy, that true mistaken identity, not Louis Milito, Sammy Gravano shot Alan Kaiser in the head. I know this because I've interviewed people in his crew. When Sammy flipped, okay, I brought them into the lawyer's offices and told them, look, guys, open up. Be truthful here because they knew I was their protector. They knew that there was a faction within the group that wanted to kill all of them for being loyal to Sammy at one time, including Sammy's family.
Starting point is 01:06:41 I wouldn't let it happen. There's another cooperator named Mikey Scars- deal in auto. He knew all the particulars. In fact, I was using Michael to drive them in. Drive them into the city. I trusted Michael. I said, Michael, they got my word. Safe passage. I made them bring them up to my Pocono house.
Starting point is 01:06:54 This is where they felt comfortable. We hunted together. They were suspicious, thought maybe I was looking to kill them. We met, we spoke. I says, look, nobody's going to harm you guys. Nobody's going to harm you. This is Mikey Scars or no?
Starting point is 01:07:08 This is Mikey Scars was close to me and Michael bringing them in. And I have assured all of Sammy's crew, nobody's going to harm you guys. But I'm keeping you guys, I'm helping you. I'm here, I'm in your corner. John, unless John, that order comes from John and it never will come from John, you guys are safe. But you have to cooperate here with us. You have to go in and talk to the lawyers. You have to tell us everything about Sammy Gravano.
Starting point is 01:07:33 John Gotti met Sammy Gravano for the first time in 1977, when he came out of prison. He met him for the first time. And he only met him through a couple of nightclubs coming and going, okay? He didn't really know Sammy well enough. He began to know him later on in life. So we needed to get all these facts put together.
Starting point is 01:07:49 So I established what I call the Eddie Garofalo file, which was his brother-in-law. Eddie Garofalo was his brother-in-law, his older brother-in-law. And he opened up. And I have all the interview we've done. He opened up. We have it all typed up. And he talks about the rift between Sammy Gravano and Louis Molito.
Starting point is 01:08:08 And the rift happened because Louis Molito, who was a tough guy, a standup guy and a real tough guy in his own right. And Sammy had a problem. Apparently he had a problem with what he thought with some bikers, they roughed him up or whatever. He went and got Louis and came back. And both had guns on him.
Starting point is 01:08:27 Sammy says, that's one of them right there. They rolled up on the kid. Sammy rolled down the window and shot the kid in the head. He always said that Louie Milito did it. Louie Milito never forgave him for putting him in that position. Kid went down as a John Doe at first. Until at some point later on, they came to a conclusion
Starting point is 01:08:44 who this kid was. And even when the FBI was issuing the reports of all his murders, that kid was down as John Doe, okay, which is an insult to his family. Alan Kaiser was down as John Doe, which is an insult to his family. But Louis Milito never let Sammy live that down, that he was put in that position, and an innocent 16-year-old kid
Starting point is 01:09:04 was shot in the head and killed. He never let him live that down. And Sammy, at some point, conspired, because Louie wasn't a... Louie would slap Sammy. Louie was a tough guy, and Sammy wasn't. And at some point, they had it... It just... It came to a point, and Sammy went to the chief and basically made up a story. Uh, this guy's, uh, you know, was loyal to Paul or whatever.
Starting point is 01:09:27 It was a cockamamie story, okay? It's probably above my pay grade. But ultimately, in the end, he conspired and got Louis Milito killed, okay? This is what he does. But you take that, for example, and you take his brother-in-law, ex-brother-in-law, Nick Scabetta.
Starting point is 01:09:43 He talks about how Paul authorized himlaw, Nick Scabetta, he talks about how Paul authorized him to kill Nick Scabetta. If Paul knew who Nick Scabetta was... Excuse my crassness, am I allowed to curse? Sure. Whatever's not nailed down in this room, you can shove up my ass. How's that sound?
Starting point is 01:09:58 If Paul knew, had any idea who a guy named Nick Scabetta was. He was a civilian. From what Mikey Scars told me, he told me, they went to school together. He said he was a happy, goal-lucky kid, riding his bicycle in the area. Yeah, he had some problems, like everybody else, like a lot of other people did at that time. But he didn't warrant the killed.
Starting point is 01:10:14 He got killed because he knew some deep, dark secrets, maybe about Gravano. But that certainly was not a warranted mob killing. Those were two killings there, and you could take them immediately off that list. Those were civilians. So to sit there and project yourself as this guy, this good guy.
Starting point is 01:10:35 He was never a good guy. He was a treacherous, scheming guy. Money was his god. His family was alive because of me. My father, when Sammy first flipped, the first visit was to see him. He was sick to his stomach. He said, you know what, I violated my own ethics, he said. Who sang this, Sammy?
Starting point is 01:10:53 My father sang this to me. In the visit in MCC, when they walked Sammy out that night, the night, the previous night, actually. I think it was November 8th, if I'm not mistaken. He says, punk couldn't do any time. He said, the punk couldn't do any time. He says, that's it.
Starting point is 01:11:07 He couldn't do time. And I says, well, and I'm watching him vent a bit my fault. He's like this, and he's looking back, and he's completely beside himself. Like, you know, he's disappointed not that he didn't expect. He's disappointed in himself for allowing this guy to move up. He's disappointed. His love for Frankie DiCicco and some of the old timers
Starting point is 01:11:27 that were proponents of Gravano, for listening, John had better choices and he allowed this guy to become what he is and he fully knew before they got pinched what he was. He started now to pay attention and see what Sammy really was, okay? And I'm waiting for instructions like, what are we supposed to do?
Starting point is 01:11:46 Here we are, we're sitting here, I'm here, Jackie D'Amico, my Uncle Pete, listening to my father. And then he turns to me and he says, you make sure, John, nobody harms his family. We don't do that. You make sure nobody harms his family. I left.
Starting point is 01:12:03 Gathered everybody up and went to everybody, went to all the social clubs, spoke to everybody, and I said, make sure, make sure, make sure. And I got a lot of pushback. There was a group of individuals that wanted to take his house down. They wanted to take his house down with his family in it. And they wanted it, and they couldn't have, they couldn't have his crew.
Starting point is 01:12:20 They wanted them. And I told them, it's not gonna happen. It's not gonna happen. This is not Italy, okay? This is America. And I told them, it's not gonna happen. It's not gonna happen. This is not Italy, okay, this is America. John Gotti is not those men. It's not gonna happen, and that's that.
Starting point is 01:12:35 And we did not let it happen. Did he care? Did he care? He went into the program, now remember now, he went into the program and did this when the mob wasn't squeamish on hurting people. Maybe they are now, but they had a pension for hurting people back then. A lot of people. Okay? John, let me, is it fair to say, you
Starting point is 01:12:57 know, for the audience that's watching this, rightfully so, you have to defend a hundred percent your father, nothing. So emotionally. And always will. And by the way, no one expects anything different, right? Now, for the viewer who is not emotionally connected, like I remember when I interviewed Sammy, your sister came after me.
Starting point is 01:13:20 I don't know if you remember the, you know. I've never watched the interview. Okay, well I'll tell you. I'm not computer literate, I never watch any podcasts. I don't do it. Well that you know I've never watched it okay. Well. I'll tell you I mean Literate I never watch any podcast. I don't know why I I think that's good for you because I don't I just don't do it I mean I got tweets after tweet this you realize what you know all this stuff, and I'm like okay messages Phone calls all this stuff, but for somebody that's not attached to it right emotionally Did you ever listen to the recording? You know, the recording that they say where your father is... I have them. I have the original tapes.
Starting point is 01:13:47 I have the original tapes. It's he talking to Frankie Lacazio and saying, Frankie, he's looking... Frankie was an older man. Frankie was one of the classiest operators in that world. Was probably one of the youngest guys in history to get the job, to go into that world, to go into that life. I think he was about 23 when he got the job, Frankie. into that world, to go into that life, I think it was about 23 when he got the job, Frankie.
Starting point is 01:14:06 Frankie was a, and my father trusted Frankie. He was an elder statesman, a man of very limited words. Very limited words. In fact, the only time I really ever had him have, he had a open conversation, really spoke, was at his sentencing. Is when he told Judge Glass that I'm innocent, you're giving me a life sentence.
Starting point is 01:14:25 However, it's an honor to be John Gotti's friend. If there were more men like John Gotti in this world, this world would be a better place. And he praised my father to the high heavens because Frankie was a traditional loyalist. He adored my father. My father adored him right back. OK, right back.
Starting point is 01:14:42 So this is John Gotti, who has, who does he talk to? He says, there's no complaint department, he isn't. The buck stops with John Gotti, right? So he's talking to his number two guy, Frankie, very close to him, he's talking to Frankie, saying, Frankie, what do you want me to do here? He says, I've got all skippers coming in, this one's coming, this one's coming,
Starting point is 01:15:02 his names, they're coming in. He keeps opening up businesses all over the place. We're not supposed to open up businesses. Paul did that. We're not supposed to open up businesses. We're supposed to let the men open the businesses. They got to earn. Okay, the men have to earn.
Starting point is 01:15:16 They'll take care of us. But we can't be robbing contracts, and we can't be doing this, that, or the other thing. We can't be doing these things. Sammy was killing people and then taking over their companies or going into a particular business. Whereas that Drywall there was a company that operated and sold and did drywall. Okay Now they would do their business They would comply with the bids and they would grease the right skids keep things moving along. Mm-hmm But then Sammy you're an administrator
Starting point is 01:15:43 You're not supposed to have a crew You're not supposed to have being in business where you can compete with the men and take business away from them. It's a no-brainer then, because you're the guy who's assigning the jobs, so you're going to assign all the jobs to yourself. This is what he was doing, and John was at wit's end, and he was looking for a little guidance from Frankie, someone he knew for many, many years, and he trusted. How do I react to this guy?
Starting point is 01:16:06 I'm gonna pull his card, I'm gonna pull him in and address him on this, but Frankie, what's the right approach? And it wasn't just one visit, it wasn't just one wiretap, it was two different separate occasions. There were two different dates, two different wiretaps, where he's talking to Frankie,
Starting point is 01:16:19 and then there's a third one, Sammy doesn't talk about, where John is addressing Sammy, okay, and he's telling Sammy basically, okay, this't talk about, where John is addressing Sammy, okay? And he's telling Sammy basically, okay, this is at the end of all of this, he comes to terms with it, not in that wiretap, not in any of those wiretaps, he pulls, Frankie goes and gets Sammy, brings him to the chief, late at night, and my father reads him the riot act. And he basically tells him, enough now, enough.
Starting point is 01:16:42 You got, we got men coming in complaining about you, you got skippers coming in, so on and so forth, complaining about you. You wanna be a captain? I'll reduce you back to a captain. You wanna be a soldier? I'll reduce you back to a soldier. No, no, okay, then enough now, back off.
Starting point is 01:16:56 You can't be doing these things. And that was it, there was an understanding. And that's why you hear that tape afterwards of John saying, I'm getting pinched soon, okay? I'm going away, okay? And I know what I got to do once I go away. I got a life sentence, I know what I got to do. But what are you comfortable being?
Starting point is 01:17:13 And he's trying to ask him what kind of position you would want to be in. So obviously, you know, John came to terms. Sammy had the understanding, what John's expectations were of him, and everybody was gonna move forward. Now, you heard those tapes at bail hearings. He did, Sammy did.
Starting point is 01:17:34 You were John's cellmate, you were my father's cellmate. Why don't you take care of your business? Why don't you take care of your business? He said nothing, he said nothing, okay? He understood, my father was angry at him. Wait, what do you mean by that? Why don't you take care of business? He should have killed John.
Starting point is 01:17:48 You were his cellmate, kill him. That door locks, it's you and the man. Well, he said he wanted to. He did, and I want to fly a space shuttle, but it just, I don't know how to, okay? Sammy never did a tough guy thing other than scheme, and he said he pulled the trigger one time. You believe the story that he pulled the trigger one time.
Starting point is 01:18:05 You believe the story that he got the nickname because he was a good fighter, The Bull? Do you believe that? He told you that, right? Did he tell you that on your show? Did he say that he got the, my nickname, The Bull, came from, because some old timers say,
Starting point is 01:18:16 oh, look at the little bull. No. He got the nickname, The Bull, because he's from Bull's Head, Staten Island. There were three different individuals that were in that group. So to identify, Sammy from Bull became Sammy Bull. That's what he became.
Starting point is 01:18:31 Because back then, Sammy was, according to the psychological report, they have him here at 5'6", but I'm 5'9", I could eat an apple off of his head. So I know he's not 5'6", he's probably closer to 5'4", 5'5", and I remember him back then. He went to beautician school. He was a very thin guy. an apple over his head. So I know he's not 5'6", he's probably closer to 5'4", 5'5". And I remember him back then, he went to beautician school.
Starting point is 01:18:48 He was a very thin guy. He wasn't no bull. He became a bull years later when he thought he was going to prison, and he began taking steroids. He became a bull. When he was working out in the gym with Frankie Fabiano and other individuals, and Nate told me he was taking the needles in his ass, and they blew up to go to prison because he was so afraid of going to jail, so he wanted to put some muscle on.
Starting point is 01:19:05 That's when he became a bull. But before that, he was just little Sammy from Bull's Head, which became Sammy Bull. So the nickname was a lie, okay? And again, look, I didn't want to come on the air and I'm not here, I don't give a second thought to Sammy Gravano, I really don't. I don't watch podcasts, I don't, I don't, I'm not here. I don't give a second thought to Sammy Gravano. I really don't. I don't watch
Starting point is 01:19:25 podcasts. I don't. I'm just not. I'm not computer literate. I don't go online and do it. But he doesn't have the right. He doesn't have the right when a man, a guy that you knew was a man's man. You saw that man, how he comported himself, how John Gotti comported himself. I've never seen anybody like him. And I've seen them all. And I'm not saying it because he's my father. Would I defend him regardless? Always. Of course. Always. But I'm going to take some time not to interrupt you.
Starting point is 01:19:49 Please, go for it. But just to tell you this much, there's limits in how far I can go in my defense of my father. But when people, when I have an opportunity to observe this man, and when people who did time in the most violent prisons in the country, if not the world, okay, in the most secure places in the world and saw how he comported himself, if they're the ones who are further filling my head, if they're further filling my balloon, my head, to keep preaching the gospel, preaching John Gotti, okay, The attributes of John Gotti. Look, he was the real deal.
Starting point is 01:20:27 If he wasn't, you say, he's my father, I loved him. And you can rest on that note and go on to something else. So you know what it does? Like in life, I get judged for who I befriend. I get judged for who I marry. We get judged for choices we make, investments, all this other stuff. But then you also get judged for choices we make, investments, all this other stuff. But then you also get judged for who you make
Starting point is 01:20:48 your right hand guy. Your dad made him the under boss. Made a mistake. So if he is who you say he is, say him, that means your dad's a bad judge of character because the under boss is like, I mean it's who John, wasn't John that too, who was the under boss with Paul Castellano before?
Starting point is 01:21:07 You know, he was taken out at state remember Pat to answer that question remember Frankie de Chico, right? The guy Frankie got blown up right here killed great man a tough guy and again the picture There's a picture of my father Frankie his kids in their 20s Frankie was think four or five years older than my dad My father's 28 years old and Frankie's kids in their 20s. Frankie was I think four or five years older than my dad. My father's 28 years old and Frankie's maybe 32, 33 in Lewisburg Penitentiary with Mickey Boy, Paradis and other individuals.
Starting point is 01:21:32 These guys cut their teeth in the maximum security penitentiary together. They put work in together. This goes back to the MCC visit where my father says, punk couldn't do any time. My father violated his own belief. His belief is if you didn't do time with John Gotti, he couldn't do any time. My father violated his own belief. His belief is if you didn't do time with John Gotti, he ain't making you nobody.
Starting point is 01:21:49 You ain't going nowhere with John Gotti. Everybody in John's circle did time with John Gotti. Everybody. Frankie DeCicco was very close to my father because he did time with my father. He did time in Lewisburg Penitentiary, okay, in the unit, walked the yard with my father, went to wars with my father.
Starting point is 01:22:06 Say, Frankie, that was Frankie's position. When Frankie got killed, John, being the diplomat, did what he believed, he didn't do the right thing, but he did what he believed to be the right thing. Took a Brooklyn guy, Frankie's close friend was Sammy Gravano, he already took Frankie's old position and now he moved him along and put him in that position in Frankie, in a somewhat quasi-acting position for Frankie. In Frankie's stead, Frankie being dead. He moved him along and cultivated
Starting point is 01:22:34 him along. And you have to understand something, okay? The Sammy Gravano that you see today, the Sammy Gravano that did time the way he did the time, was not the Sammy Gravano that did time the way he did the time was not the Sammy Gravano on the streets. Sammy's not a stupid guy. Sammy knows how to say the right things and do the right things. Sammy was an earner. Sammy went out. He knew. He knew how to turn the rocks over. He knew how to go find the money. He knew how to do things. He knew how to talk to people. Okay? And he knew how to get things done. He was a schemer. He was a plotter. He was one of those guys. It takes a unique character to lure your best friend into a place and fully knowing,
Starting point is 01:23:10 and you're having a cup of coffee and you can kill him right there on the spot. I'm not sure I'm qualified to do that. In fact, I believe I'm not. So that just goes to tell you the depth of his character. So if he can do something like that, what else could he do? There's different people, you know. I used to say this, not to interrupt you, please.
Starting point is 01:23:27 I used to say this. I brought home a lot of good men from prison with me and helped get them jobs. As long as they're civilians, we're friends, okay? I walked away from my former life, my former existence, and I tell them the same thing. If you're going to revert back and go back to the former gang, your crew, whatever have you, please, just leave me out of this.
Starting point is 01:23:50 I've been through enough. I've been through enough. My family's been through enough. But if you're going to do the right thing, okay, you're going to be a true blue brother in every sense of the word. Take care of your family. We'll be there for each other, but that's as far as it goes. I got your back. There'll be there for each other, but that's as far as it goes. I got your back.
Starting point is 01:24:05 There's no problems at all. But I know these people and I brought them over and I sponsor, I bring these people to meet my family. I bring these people to my son's fights. I brought 500 people to my son's fight in Florida when he fought Floyd Mayweather. 60 were convicts. 60 of them were convicts at the time,
Starting point is 01:24:19 either my father or I. Three of them were marrying or with my dad. And you wanna know what? You can't hide in prison. If you wanna see someone's flaws, you wanna see their character, you wanna see if they're real men or not, you can't hide in prison because I'm with you 24 seven,
Starting point is 01:24:35 I can see everything about you. I can tell you when you brush your teeth. I can tell you when you wash your ass. You can't hide in prison. In the streets you can hide. You can hide. You see me four times a week for two hours each time or an hour, and you say the right things.
Starting point is 01:24:49 You comport yourself. You open the umbrella when you have to open the umbrella. You open the door when you have to open the door. You walk like a gentleman. You talk like a gentleman. You know exactly when you should speak, okay? When the boss is in pre... When the boss walks in the room,
Starting point is 01:25:01 when the chief walks in the room in his presence, you know when you're supposed to speak and when you're not supposed to speak. Sammy knew those things. You see him in the pictures holding the umbrella for my father. You see him. You see him opening the door. You see him. You see him pushing John Miller and the reporters back out of the way when John is walking down
Starting point is 01:25:17 the street. You see him. He did his job. Did a pretty good job. Okay? But again, it goes back to come full circle what John said. You can't put a guy in that position unless you know if he's capable of doing time. My father used to say this and he said this in Marion, Illinois and he was a
Starting point is 01:25:34 hypocrite in this respect. He said, John, looking back, to be a street guy and to live this life the right way, you should never get married, you should never have kids. Never get married, never have kids. You have to devote yourself to this. And every guy would have to qualify, should do one year in Marion, Illinois, in a lockdown, maximum level six prison. This is the worst of the worst.
Starting point is 01:25:59 Show me you could do this, you could do anything. Okay, that's, now I know you ain't gonna flip, you ain't gonna turn on your brotherhood, you ain't gonna flip, you ain't gonna turn on your brotherhood, you ain't gonna turn, you're gonna be a man because your honor's gonna keep you intact. Sammy wasn't capable of doing any of that. He fell apart the moment he went to jail. I mean, we've interviewed a guy
Starting point is 01:26:15 who was the leader of the Ghost Shadows, kid named Brian. The Ghost Shadows was a Chinatown gang, and he ended up somehow locked with Sammy. And he was sending messages and kites back to us, this guy's not comporting himself right, he's not doing time right. And my father began to have reservations
Starting point is 01:26:30 about the choice that he made. And then shortly thereafter, several months later, sure enough, in the middle of the night, they walked him out, and we found out the next day. And my father was dead. That was him sitting there in the visiting room and questioning what he did. He didn't put the blame on anybody else.
Starting point is 01:26:50 He put the blame on himself because he made up and to that point, he made all the right calls, I believe he did. I mean, as now an outsider looking in, I believe John made the right calls. I did. I think he put the right people in place. He had tremendous amount of loyalty.
Starting point is 01:27:06 Take into consideration the impact of Sammy Gravano flipping. He's the guy who supposedly the top, right? The boss is here. He knows all the secrets. He certainly was a greedy guy. He knew all the money was. That's for damn sure. Now as a result of Sammy flipping, minimum 57 guys get indicted.
Starting point is 01:27:25 57 guys, many of them high level, okay, due to his cooperation. He's a tremendous asset for the government, but he is a tsunami to the streets. There's an enormous panic going on now. People are running and hiding and whispering now, okay? And yet we had one, that time, all those cases, that barrel of cases that came our way, there was one rat. Sammy Gravano. Wasn't anybody else. You know how many guys got life without parole?
Starting point is 01:27:57 You know how many guys got 50 year bids? My Uncle Gene just came home with the 29 straight years, okay? You know how many guys are just coming home now, they're just now coming out old men, they're drifting out of prison? That was all the guys that were around John Gotti, that grew up around John Gotti. The Bergen Hunt and Fish Club crew around John Gotti. The guys East New York around John Gotti. The Fatiko boys around John Gotti.
Starting point is 01:28:20 All those guys that grew up with John. You had a confidential informant named Willie Boy Johnson, and you had... that was it. That's all you had. And even he did better time than Gravano. When it came time to testify, they put him 22 months in solitary confinement, refused to flip, stood up, went to trial, and they won the trial.
Starting point is 01:28:39 Ultimately, in the end, he was killed. But the point I'm trying to make is that, up until that point, when John became that person, not that low, he became that guy, that administrator, okay? I believe, for the most part, he made the right decisions. Now, as an observer, and the outside looking in, looking back, fancying myself a historian, and replaying the whole scenario in my head,
Starting point is 01:29:03 and now as an older, wiser head, looking. Not a young warrior that's full of testosterone, it's ready to jump into the battle. Now as an older guy with lower testosterone, that would probably make a better general today than he was then, okay? That's me today. And now observing and replaying John's moves,
Starting point is 01:29:19 my father's moves. And other than him being a degenerate gambler and the Gravano decision that he made, I don't know of many things that you could have redone differently, because John did it from the perspective of what he... how he was raised and taught by his elders, the way they taught him.
Starting point is 01:29:37 And I think, for the most part, those guys did hard time, did it all. Now, was he right going to the Ravenite and the clubs and all that? No, I don't agree with that. But he wasn't gonna back down. Those guys did hard time, did it all. Now, was he right going to the Ravenite and the clubs and all that? No, I don't agree with that, but he wasn't gonna back down. That was the problem.
Starting point is 01:29:51 It's like a fighter that's tailor-made. Mike Tyson's a knockout puncher, and you don't put, you're not gonna put, say, like, in my time, a little older than you are, a Jerry Quarry-esque fighter who didn't know how to do anything else. A tough guy that's gonna come forward and you gotta knock him out know how to do anything else. Other tough guy that gonna come forward and you gotta knock him out.
Starting point is 01:30:07 And John was one of those guys who's gonna come forward. He's not gonna dodge and duck. He doesn't know how to. He didn't have that kind of finesse. He was what he was and he wasn't gonna hide it. So he was tailor-made to be knocked out by the government. Do you think the situation where he put a hit on Paul Castellano,
Starting point is 01:30:23 you think that was the right move? You said two bad moves, right? Gambling and you said Sammy. But how about the hit on Paul? I don't know, again, that's above my pay grade, okay? I do know this much. Sammy's interpretation of those events differ from the reality of what took place there, okay?
Starting point is 01:30:42 And at a later date, we have, we put together a compilation, we put together pieces together, including visits between my father and I. It's not quite what Sammy says. In fact, I shot, when they were supposed to shoot the movie, the Gotti movie, they screwed up. The budget changed dramatically. First one or second one?
Starting point is 01:31:00 Second one. First one was pretty good. Second one, John Travolta did an amazing job, however, the budget was nothing the budget was not there. They took a screenplay, they took my book, and they basically, they went someplace else with it. But the ending was supposed to be shot where you saw the ending of the movie?
Starting point is 01:31:16 I've seen both movies. Okay, see the ending, Gravano's behind the driver's seat, John's in the passenger seat, okay. Then the actual ending, that's how it ends, and then the actual ending comes back and there's a reflection, understand, and headlights pass into the car, and it's Bobby Borello driving the car,
Starting point is 01:31:35 and John's in the passenger seat. Sammy wasn't even there. Sammy wasn't even there. Now, again, the truth comes from the teller of the story. So the truth is in the telling. Sammy's the only one that's telling the story. Nobody else is telling the story but Sammy Gravano. Wait, you're saying now that your father didn't tell Sammy to go do the job to take out...
Starting point is 01:32:02 I'm saying my father in a wiretapped visiting room in Marion, Illinois, talking to me, had said to me, when he's reading the story about how this thing and the conviction, he looked at me and he says, John, he says, I don't know what happened to that Paul, nor do I care. I don't care what happened to him, he says. But if Sammy Gravano was within 10 miles
Starting point is 01:32:26 of Paul getting hurt, your brother should rot in hell. He would never say that because he adored my brother. So that was John Gotti's words. Again, me, this was above my pay grade. I was a kid then. This wasn't my game. Now that's a very interesting twist right there because for me, you know, this stuff,
Starting point is 01:32:50 I understand the emotional stuff that when it's blood, it's blood. I mean, and not just blood, admiration for father. You're not gonna be able to, you know. I adore my father. That's exactly the point. So there's no winning there, but at the same time, you get judged for hiring him.
Starting point is 01:33:07 You get judged for promoting him. And I would assume when it comes later on, like let's just say if you got the job of being a boss, by taking out your boss, let's just say if that's the story that we see in the world. I mean, I world. And again, I can't verify that. I totally get it. But it's about my pay grade. What I'm saying is, you know, for what's been documented and the people you sit down and
Starting point is 01:33:32 talk to who were maybe in that world where they were that age. I've sat with a lot of different people who are older, would come to me, you know, Ralph Natale and Philly and Nettie and Francis and I had a chance to one time, I had three visits with Sonny Francis, Michael's father, who did I think 55 years in jail. I think he died at 103, 104. No, he had a 55 year sentence. He did a lot less, but he was a good man. He was a stand up guy.
Starting point is 01:33:55 Certainly was a man's man and a legend on the streets. That's what everybody says. Like he was a guy that was, Omerta was like the face of Omerta. He would not break for. Sonny was a solid guy and I had the pleasure, the honor and pleasure of meeting him at a wedding. A real gentleman.
Starting point is 01:34:09 I took him to an Italian restaurant. And John, I gotta tell you, I'm trying to get him to say Sonny. I'm his driver. I'm driving him to his Italian, his favorite Italian restaurant. I came and got him from the old, I think it's like an old folks home and Michael's there
Starting point is 01:34:22 and we're going out, his lawyer's there. But you got a Belmontese? I don't know what we went to I can figure out the name to see where it was, right? But we went there for three hours Nothing, I'm not telling you nothing John. He say anything. No, he spoke. Okay, but I told him tell me about Meyer Good guy. Yeah, tell me about Bugsy. You would never call him that to his face. Sorry. He's been he's mr Siegel to you. Yeah, tell me about this. Tell me about that, right? Yeah, but in the world if you come up fast and limelight and
Starting point is 01:34:57 showmanship and all this stuff, you know like the movie American gangster, which is a Story of Frank Lucas where, you know, Denzel is like, hey, why'd you give me that jacket? I don't want to be seen. I don't want to have this, right? And sometimes, you know, the criticism is the fact that he was seen all the time. So he was in my mind when I'm asking Sammy, was he at a point that he's worried that Sammy's about to take him out to do to him what he may have done to Paul?
Starting point is 01:35:24 That was my understanding. Listen to me, please. And this I have to say. Please. John Gotti would never start a fire he could not put out. What that means is very simply this. And just like when John Gotti went to marry in Illinois, anything that may have happened or could have, anything that anybody was put in place or anything was done, those are fires that could have been put out at any time they need to be put out.
Starting point is 01:35:47 So let's understand this. Sammy was whoever he was and he had a large crew around them and then John had the Bergen crew had a very large crew around them. What about the ones you've never seen? What about the people you've never seen? We saw everybody around Sammy. We knew them all. That roster had to come in.
Starting point is 01:36:03 They had to be vetted all those guys. Okay? John had individuals you'd never seen, you'd never met. My father had individuals. They weren't allowed to come in. They weren't allowed to go to weddings. They weren't allowed to be seen. Their job was to stay away, and if something's got to be done, they'll do it. They'll take care of it. So that's a fire that John could have put that fire out any time he wanted to put that fire out. So that's, let's make no mistake about that. That's a fire that John could have put that fire out any time he wanted to put that fire out. So, let's make no mistake about that. That's a fire that could have been put out any time that John would want to put that fire out.
Starting point is 01:36:31 And not just with Sammy. Moving forward, while he was in Marion, what did people think this guy was? His whole life, this was a true blue hoodlum. His whole life, this is what he aspired to be. Super intelligent individual. You think there was never, there was a plan a and never a plan B there was never a situation where John would say what if what if this went wrong what do we do this is gonna happen what if I do this how do I undo this this
Starting point is 01:36:59 is how you undo it okay he always had a solution to the problem and he and I would talk and we were talking Marion we would talk just by looking at each other. We understood, we understood each other. I understood what he wanted, his likes and dislikes, okay? And you think that he couldn't, that he would ever put himself in a position? In fact, he got caught in an unguarded moment on a wiretap.
Starting point is 01:37:18 He said, you think somebody, anybody's capable of rocking me to sleep like Paul got rocked to sleep? I think he said that on a wiretap. I'm not mistaken, right? You're not gonna rocking me to sleep, like Paul got rocked to sleep? I think he said that on a wiretap. I'm not mistaken, right? You're not gonna rock John to sleep. He knew exactly what he was doing at all times.
Starting point is 01:37:32 If you wanted him, he would be easy to get him, but he had a plan. He always knew what he had to do. My father, every Saturday, same routine, drove to the cemetery to go see my brother, stood there alone. He insisted, nobody's allowed to take him. I wasn't allowed to go in the there alone, he insisted. Nobody's allowed to take him. I wasn't allowed to go in the car with him.
Starting point is 01:37:46 Nobody's allowed to follow him. He'd go there because he wanted to mourn. If you had a problem with him, here he was, okay? But he knew exactly what he was doing at all points in his life. He knew exactly what he needed to do. Do you think, I remember one time, Sammy and I are speaking,
Starting point is 01:38:02 and the story was about the fact that, you know, when, let's just say you're running a business. And, you know, I'm the guy that's not golfing six days a week, and I'm not even saying, that's just an analogy. So I'm a guy that, I started a company, I'm rich now, I'm worth 50 million, I'm golfing six days a week, I'm going to the spa.
Starting point is 01:38:22 Maybe I'll come and check out the office and all this stuff. But my right-hand guy is the one that goes and checks on everybody. He's there every day. And he's at the office six days a week. Now the crew, the field, the customers, the clients, are closer to him than they're closer to the one at the top that's the famous guy.
Starting point is 01:38:39 Do you think something like that happened with Sammy and your father? You know what I'm saying? The shaking hands? Again, he's a legend in his own mind. Sammy was very popular in Brooklyn. In Queens, he was nobody to us. Nobody, nobody. In fact, people could care less one way or the other about him.
Starting point is 01:38:56 He was very popular with individuals in Brooklyn. Anywhere else, nobody cared about Sammy. We didn't quite understand him and it. That being said, he was no legend to us. He was a cultivation that John moved along. But to even think that he can take on the persona of who John Gotti was? Come on. Look, there was something to him.
Starting point is 01:39:15 My father was that guy I got in the car. He went to the Bronx. He stood in the clubs in the Bronx with Frankie Lacazio and the fellas in the Bronx. He went to Brooklyn. He showed up in Brooklyn. He showed up in Queens. He showed up in Staten Island. He showed up in Manhattan all the time. I bought my father a house in the Poconos, and I bought him that house for a reason.
Starting point is 01:39:34 I said, Dad, I've got this house now. He bought it from a friend of ours named Louis Dudo. What the house? Dad, go stay there. And if anybody needs to see you, we'll bring them to see you, okay? He said, what the house, that, go stay there. And if anybody needs to see you, we'll bring them to see you, okay? He's a look and say, that's not who I am, John. That's not who I am.
Starting point is 01:39:51 He was out five days a week, and even when he wasn't out, he was out. Because he was out in the city five days a week, and hitting the boroughs five days a week, being seen and touched. Shouldn't have, shouldn't have. Nobody else did that. But he had everybody see him and touch him, and know he was real. He did have, shouldn't have. Nobody else did that. But he had everybody see him and touch him
Starting point is 01:40:06 and know he was real. He did that five days a week. And then on the sixth day, and even the seventh day, Sunday, which belongs to us, okay, should belong to his family, after dinner, what did he do? He drove to the Burger Hunt and Fish Club and played poker. And everybody knew to find him there. Another 20 guys would come in on Sunday night
Starting point is 01:40:25 and mill around the table and hang out and watch him play cards and go in the back and eat a veal cutlet sandwich. He was always available. The only time he wasn't available was Saturday night. He was with my mother, dinner in a restaurant or home, and Sunday afternoon, dinner at home. Other than that, he was available.
Starting point is 01:40:44 In essence, seven days a week Was he a good poker player? He's a good card player. He wasn't he wasn't his preference wasn't poker his preference was continental He loved to get continental you were saying yeah. Yeah, I Adapted that off my father that was his preference and he used to play a high-stake game him and a lot of the old-timers Was it risky beating him or no? No. Like if you beat him, he'd pay you and he wouldn't be upset.
Starting point is 01:41:09 My father paid all his debts and I used to see him, I used to watch him gamble and play cards and he used to play a high-stake game. Petey Castellano and Jimmy Brown Fiela, these guys had money. These were money guys. And he put up a couple of guys in the game, like Jackie. Jackie the actor didn't have much money. He was a hardworking grinder. My father told him, Jackie, get in the game, like Jackie. Jackie the actor didn't have much money. You know, he was a hardworking grinder.
Starting point is 01:41:26 My father told him, Jackie, get in the game. And he put him up. And at the end, like if my father won, he would tell Jackie, say, how'd you do? And Jackie would always overestimate his loss. Instead of saying, I lost 10,000, he'd say, I lost 15,000. He says, you cock suck, you think I ain't fuckin' paying attention,
Starting point is 01:41:42 you lost 12,000. And he'd give it right back to him. And he'd throw it right back to him. He'd it right back to him. He give back to him. He just wanted the thrill Because maybe when he was younger, you know, it was that he had to be in that hunt He had to be in that hunt and sure winning that money was something special But as he got older, let's go post 85 86 87 He had plenty of money. He wasn't gambling for the money anymore. It was just for the thrill. He needed to be in it. And when he won, he just...
Starting point is 01:42:06 How'd you do, Jack? Okay. Well, he bet numbers. I'll give you an interesting story, a gambling story. Joe Messina, a guy named Joe Messina. He was accused of being the shot caller for the Bonanno Group. They were partners in a crap game. They had a crap game together, okay?
Starting point is 01:42:24 And they went and they... They were partners in a crap game. They had a crap game together, okay? And they went, my father's job was, you know, he used to go there, they were partners, and my father used to like to get into the game. Joe really didn't gamble. Joe was a money guy, and my father gets in the game and he winds up winning $90,000 in their own game. He wins $90,000, okay? And then what he does is, afterwards, because Joe was pretty tight.
Starting point is 01:42:45 So my father takes 10,000 off of it. Joe gets 40, he gets 40, and he gets 10,000, and he gives it all the numbers. He calls all the numbers guys and the tips. He gives out tips, and gives the number guys action. Okay? Gives them all action. And Joe's looking at them like, it's our money. He put 10,000 back in the game.
Starting point is 01:43:01 Okay? Back in the room. They hit the number, the next day, my brother Frankie Boy's birthday, 015. They hit it for $375,000. Yeah, true story. This is in 1983. It's a lot of money. It's a lot of money, okay?
Starting point is 01:43:15 This is before he became John Gotti. He said, a lot of money. Now, Joe's a smart guy. Joe took his end, and he bought some modular homes in the old side of Howard Beach. John Gotti got down on the Jets and anybody else. He threw it right back into the action, Joe took his end and he bought some modular homes in the old side of Howard Beach John Gotti got down on the Jets and everybody else he threw it right back into the action right back into the game It's the kind of guy he was that's the kind of guy he was he was a guy He had a look at him because it did money meant very little to him
Starting point is 01:43:37 It should have meant a lot more because it gives more stability to your family when you know You're not going to be there, but to him it didn't mean it didn't matter much 315 83 is 1.1 million today, that's a lot of money. Think about that. That's a lot of money. Think about that. So going back to New York City, you've been there since 64,
Starting point is 01:43:54 that's the only place you've ever lived is New York, minus being out, right? Yeah, I was born in Brooklyn. Born in Brooklyn, from South Brooklyn, moved to Canarsie at five years old, 10 years old Howard Beach, Howard Beach, out to Long Island I moved. How much has New York changed and is it, in your opinion,
Starting point is 01:44:12 safer today or is it safer back in the days? Much safer, well, wait, wait. From what perspective are we talking about? Meaning, was it safer to be a street guy back then? No, no. Is it safer to be a street guy back then? No, no. Is it safer to be a street guy today? Yeah, I think so. You have to understand in both aspects of that, okay?
Starting point is 01:44:31 It's a tricky question, but both aspects of it, because then if you just ran afoul, or you did something wrong, or someone thought you did something wrong, you ended up with two in your hat and in a dumpster. Today, that doesn't happen anymore. Just doesn't happen anymore. It's a kind of gentler street, okay, in that respect.
Starting point is 01:44:50 And also now on the other side of that as well, back then, there were 400 FBI agents that were employed against the streetlight. In the tri-state area, there were 400 FBI agents. Today there's less than 40. Why? I don't know. I don't give them the budget. I don't approve the budget. There's less than 40. Why? I don't know. I don't give them the budget.
Starting point is 01:45:05 I don't approve the budget. There's less than 40, I guess, because the technological advances that they can track you through computers. I guess they have maybe a higher count of informants in that life maybe. Maybe the information moves differently. Look, I could tell you it was far more difficult back in John's time to be a street guy than it is today. Today, it ain't quite the same.
Starting point is 01:45:29 It's just not, it's not, you're not living the life the way John lived it, to be perfectly frank. Is it even, is it non-existent or is it still out there, people are talking, you know, they're doing their thing. And again, I'm 26 years removed. So I, you know, there's still somewhat of a fascination, even for me. There's a lot of endearing individuals that I knew, I called uncle, still call him today.
Starting point is 01:45:59 I did time with a lot of these gentlemen as well. They're special people, they're special guys that they could have been successful in a whole host of things in their lives that they really chose to be, especially John, especially my father. Again, that wasn't an exaggeration, that was an accurate, that was an accurate statement that he had a 140 IQ. That's wild.
Starting point is 01:46:16 He could have done anything he wanted in his life. He'll tell you, he says it, and he says it on wiretap. He says it, he says it in Marion, Illinois, visits between he and I. He says, John, there weren't many doors open to me. The only door was open was the one I went through, which brought me to where I am today. And I would look at him, and, you know,
Starting point is 01:46:32 because he's my father, and I would always be respectful and say, I know, Dad, I understand. But that's not what I thought in my mind. I would say, that's not true. It's not true. Yes, it was. And yes, I guess back then, and the glamour and everything else that goes with it. And again, maybe most kids growing up, their idol was Mickey Mantle,
Starting point is 01:46:49 my father's idol was Albert Anastasia, okay? But the point is that you possessed the intelligence. Now, you didn't possess the opportunity like I did. You know, my father struggled, you know, and he moved the money, but he made sure that he put me in military school. He gave me a, he gave me the same education Donald Trump's father gave him so there's no excuse I have no excuse. He wanted you to get out He didn't want you to pursue the life that he had my father wanted me to go to military school and do something
Starting point is 01:47:17 Spectacular with my life and I wanted not quite what my father wanted I wanted to go on to an ROTC-oriented college and pursue a career in the military. That's what I wanted. And it took a wrong turn at some point, and I ended up where I was. Now, if you're gonna, if you ask me, well, John, if your next question is,
Starting point is 01:47:36 do you have any regrets? We all do at some point, if we live long enough. If we're old enough, we have regrets. Sure. But I don't regret being around my father. I don't. I cherish those moments. Look, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 01:47:50 But do I miss that life? No, no. Do I miss John Gotti? You bet. He was something special to be around. That was it. I can't even, it's unfair to me to describe it to you because everybody's gonna watch and say,
Starting point is 01:48:06 well, that's your father, that's your father, that's your father. It's not right because I'm doing a show, I'm working on a show right now and I'm interviewing people that were labeled by the government as shot callers in Marion, Illinois and other institutions that did time with John Gotti. And I'll let them tell you what kind of a man he was, okay?
Starting point is 01:48:24 He was the complete package. Listen, I have two idols in my life, two, only two. John Gotti, Nelson Mandela. That's it, that's where it ends. Nobody else impressed me. I'm not impressed. You can't impress me too easily. They impressed me. They impressed me. And for me to have my father, not only because he's my father, but to be my idol tells you what a special man he was, but for that life, and my view should be the best view, and I'm gonna tell you why.
Starting point is 01:48:59 I'm not hardcore. There's hardcore guys that don't know any better. They say, this is what we know. Okay? My political view is I'm a true blue independent. That's what I am. I was a Bill Clinton Democrat, and I can jump right over. I can like Donald Trump.
Starting point is 01:49:16 I'm a true blue independent that stays in the middle, and I evaluate a situation, not the politics. I evaluate the situation, I evaluate the person, and I can make a choice where I believe it's my best interest, my children's best interest, where we should be. I can make that evaluation, okay? Not where maybe, like, my father being a hardcore guy says, it's cut and dry.
Starting point is 01:49:35 This is who we are. Or his statement that he had made to me when I visited him, that last visit we ever had together was, when a man chooses a path, and he walks down that path, to be a man, you have to see that walk to the end. You have to stay on that path all the way to the end. I don't agree with that. I don't agree with that.
Starting point is 01:49:54 Circumstances change. Everything changes. So me being a true blue independent, my perspectives go, I could evaluate. And I'm telling you from the outside looking in, okay, now I'm on the outside now looking in. What kind of a man my father was, I know his flaws and I know his qualities. His qualities outweigh the flaws and his qualities are regarded as being a hoodlum, they're through
Starting point is 01:50:22 the roof. You're going to think I'm crazy when I tell you this, but the last 13 and a half years I've been working on my first fiction book to write ever. Fiction book to write. And while I finished this book, a year ago I got the strangest phone call about one of the characters in the book where the guy wanted to meet with me and he read the book. And afterwards it's like, wait a minute, am I the villain in the book? This is a story about a character named Asher who who is half Armenian, half Assyrian, whose
Starting point is 01:50:49 father was involved in the Iranian revolution, linked to Savak, working with the Shah, that they escape and he gets recruited to a secret society. When you go to the secret society, it's been around for a couple thousand years, they've developed some of the craziest leaders of all time, and they test you. There's unique tests that they have at this society where they test to see your emotional mental toughness. One of the tests that they have is very rigorous. It's purely mental.
Starting point is 01:51:16 Of course, there's a physical one, but one is mental and emotional. If you're Armenian, if you're Syrian, if you're Persian, this is a book you're going to be reading and saying, holy moly, this is the kind of stuff you talk about in here? Yes. If you're somebody that's fascinated by history, this is a book for you. Characters. There's a technology that this society, secret society builds where you go into a vault. I won't spoil it for you.
Starting point is 01:51:38 When you go down, they have a technology where you get to sit down and watch and have a three, four hour conversation with Tupac. You can set up a debate between Karl Marx and Ayn Rand. Karl Marx is in the book who wrote Communist Manifesto. Ayn Rand who wrote Atlas Shrugged is in the book. Marilyn Monroe explains the concept of seduction and sex in the book. When you read the book, it's about development of the next leaders in the world and how they
Starting point is 01:52:04 do it and how they've been doing it for many years. And it's also about how to prevent the end of civilization and how this organization goes about doing it. So I've never written a parenting book before, but if I ever wrote a parenting book, this is the closest thing to it because it's all mindset, a lot of crazy stories. Again, 13 and a half years. Trust me, I told myself I will not publish this book until I sell my insurance company and I'm fully disconnected from it, where it's no
Starting point is 01:52:30 longer my responsibility 100%. When you read this, if you're a creative person, if you like fiction books, if you enjoyed Atlas Shrugged, if you enjoy Divergent, if you like books like that, I think you can enjoy reading this book it's the creative side business books is very easy here's how you do it here's another this how it works this is very creative if you haven't placed your order yet now you can order it on simon and schuster amazon i'm going to put the link up below somewhere here maybe even in my profile go order the book and read it i sincerely i've never written a book where I can't wait to read your reviews
Starting point is 01:53:07 to do see what you think about this book. So I'm going on this wild journey and we have some plans with this book here. If you support the things that I work on, I would appreciate you going on reading the book, order the book on Amazon, and then post a review. When was the last time you hugged him? February 5th, 1999.
Starting point is 01:53:27 I was granted a visit, which wasn't supposed to be a visit. It was supposed to be a phone call, because I refused to take a plea on a case. And I took the plea on the case. Well, I wanted to see my father. And I wanted to be declared a civilian. I wanted to be put on a shelf for the rest of my life.
Starting point is 01:53:45 And I sent him a message up earlier, and he evaluated that message. And when I walked into that visit, he came right at me. I gave him a hug first. Well, it's really interesting to tell you, because you'll enjoy this story. Because, again, it goes to the persona of John Ghani, okay?
Starting point is 01:54:04 Not me, I wouldn't have done it this way, but he did. I'm there, and a marshal escorts me, okay, to visit my father now. And at first, the prosecution, Southern District in White Plains, they refuse to have me and my father in the same room. Prosecutor gets up and says that we communicate in a code that the CIA would have a hard time cracking.
Starting point is 01:54:24 They can't be in the same room. She's telling Barenton Parker, Judge Barenton Parker this, and he says nonsense. Under the same provisions that you see him in Marion, Illinois, he could see his father. Now the problem was USP Springfield wasn't qualified to create those provisions, to create that booth, the glass, everything else. So they had to put us in a conference room. And we had to sit across the table, a white table, and there was a tripod set up that videotaped the whole thing.
Starting point is 01:54:50 Okay, the whole thing. And I get there, and the marshal walks me in and excuses himself. And the lieutenant and captain of the prison come in and greet me, and I shake their hand. How are you? Your father's being brought down right now, and he's dying of cancer. This is February 5th, 1999, as I had said. He had the surgeries, his jaw's missing, half his tongue is missing, half his peck is gone. He's down to maybe 160 pounds, 165 pounds.
Starting point is 01:55:12 He comes down, his belly chains are in all shackled, and I hear the chains moving in the hall. He's coming down. He's doing the stutter step dance, because the only way he can walk with the ankle chains on. And there's about eight or nine guards around him. They're bringing coming down. He's doing the stutter step dance, because the only way he can walk with the ankle chains on. And there's about eight or nine guards around him. They're bringing him, they're transporting him.
Starting point is 01:55:31 But right before he comes into the room, two FBI agents dip into the room. And I'm looking at them in their dress suits, comes over and they identify themselves. They're from the Springfield Mass Office, and they hold their hand out. I shake their hands, I shake their hands. And he says, Mr. Gatti, we're gonna be sitting in
Starting point is 01:55:47 on the visit between you and your father. And I says, I don't think so. And they says, well, I said, look, I don't have a problem with you sitting in and listening. My father won't sit in the room with your people. I'm just telling you ahead of time. I'm a gentleman in this respect, but he's not gonna be in this respect.
Starting point is 01:56:01 I'm just telling you right now. He says, well, we're gonna have to. And all of a sudden, they're going cute. Now, I hear the chains coming, and he comes in. And he sees me, and he smiles. He's all shackled up, and I'm heartbroken. I'm crushed. I see him now. It was the first time I saw him.
Starting point is 01:56:16 I have his face is missing, and, you know, I'm crushed. And I'm looking at him. I'm just staring at him. And he's belly-chained, taking the chains off his feet. And staring at him, and he's belly chained, taking the chains off his feet, and he looks over and he goes, he gives me a smile and he goes, what are these two gentlemen?
Starting point is 01:56:33 And the fellow walks over, how are you doing? Special agent, such and such, my father says, pull your hand back. He said, what do you want? He says, we're gonna sit in. Take me out of here, take me out of here. He's backing out, he says, John, it's great seeing you, these men can never sit in. Take me out of here. Take me out of here. He's backing out. He says, John, it's great seeing you.
Starting point is 01:56:47 These men can never sit in the room with me. He backs out. And then the captain jumps up and says, no, no, no, no, no. We have an order, we have a court order. Courts, federal judge, Baratheon Parker. Nowhere in this order does it say you're to be in this room. You have to leave. This visit has to proceed.
Starting point is 01:57:03 It's a 90 minute visit. It's allowed, authorized by a federal judge. you have to leave. This visit has to proceed, it's a 90 minute visit, it's allowed, authorized by a federal judge, you have to leave. And they left. And he wouldn't even sit in the room. He wouldn't even sit in the room with these individuals. He wouldn't sit in the room. And at that visit, that's when I had the opportunity
Starting point is 01:57:19 to hug him. So at that moment, they left the room, they unchained my father, a lieutenant stood in the room with the tripod for the camera, because he had to operate the camera. And I was allowed to walk around the table, and I was allowed to give him one hug, which I didn't want to let go. And then I went to my side of the table,
Starting point is 01:57:36 and I had to sit, and we had our visit. We had our 90-minute visit, which was memorialized by that tape, which the government refused to acknowledge that it even existed, until I was about to by that tape, which the government refused to acknowledge that it even existed, until I was about to have a... be granted a hearing. And then they started turning over evidence that I knew they had, stuff that they had.
Starting point is 01:57:54 Which, what made that visit so important was the fact that he opens the conversation, some niceties, and I'm telling him, you know, he's talking about a surgery, and then, you look great, John, and I'm telling him, you know, but he's talking about a surgery, and then you look great, John, and I'm saying, dad, but why this, why that? And you could see I'm a bit emotional. And then he goes on to tell me about
Starting point is 01:58:13 how he feels a man should comport himself and so on. Then he goes and says, well, Joseph says John wants closure. Now Joseph was an attorney who came to see my father and basically gave my father my message. Now, if I tell you I want closure, Pat, what would you take that to mean? Would you take it to mean that I want closure,
Starting point is 01:58:35 I want to move on with my life, I want to do something different with my life? Different with your life? What you thought I was, what you thought it was, that reality is no more a reality. So I wanted to move on. And it was my way of telling my father, if I win my case, I'm going home, I want to be a civilian.
Starting point is 01:58:53 If I lose my case, I'll do my 20-some odd years, and I'm going home to be a civilian. That's it. You are my cause. You are my cause. Maybe that was your cause, but you are my cause. Okay? You're dying. I hope and pray you live.
Starting point is 01:59:09 I hope you pray and live 20, 30 more years. And if that's the case, you know what? I would have been in that world still today. I'd be in that life today. You told him this? Or you're thinking this? I'm thinking and the message that was brought to him was of such. How did you give it to him though?
Starting point is 01:59:23 It was sent. It was sent to him. So before he's had that 90 minute visit with you that the federal, so before, he knew you're coming in to have that conversation with you. He knew I was having that conversation. Was he disappointed? Was he, was he?
Starting point is 01:59:34 A bit, but he opens the conversation by saying, Joseph said John wants closure. And he said, that word is not in my son's vocabulary. It goes on to talk about it. And then he's telling me, and then we're having our conversation, and we communicate in the way we know how to communicate, my father and I, we can feed off each other, okay? And, you know, at that point, he's letting me know his feelings, and I'm sort of letting him know my feelings.
Starting point is 01:59:59 I tell him about my son, John Gotti, and I'm telling him about his other grandson, John Gotti. And I'm saying, what's your hope and expectations for them? This is me now, and I'm expend, you know, I'm expendable. But are they expendable? Are your grandkids expendable? So when do we stop this? At what point do you think, you're my cause.
Starting point is 02:00:21 If you're gonna be here forever, then I'm here with you. I'm with you. I said I'd follow you off a cliff, and I're gonna be here forever, then I'm here with you. I'm with you. I said I'd follow you off a cliff, and I'm gonna die with you, okay? But if you're dying, I see it. You're telling him this. He understands where I'm going with this, and my body language is telling him,
Starting point is 02:00:37 and he's like, you know, he's opening up his jumpsuit, and he's going like this, and I'm looking. And I remember when they said, it first gave him 120 days to live. He had stage four of squamous head and neck cancer, very aggressively moving, and they gave him 120 days to live. He ultimately lived almost four years.
Starting point is 02:00:54 But we knew what they were gonna do. We knew how the cancer materialized. We knew how it matured. We know how it got there. The government did it. They did it. He had infections in his mouth from his implants. He took away his commissary,
Starting point is 02:01:08 where he was able to drink bottled water. He took it away from him. And they made him drink and brush his teeth in water from Marion, Illinois, which you can pull up. There's a... Amnesty International had done a report on Crab Orchard Lake. The prison was built on this Crab Orchard lake, on this old abandoned coal mines.
Starting point is 02:01:26 The waters are highly carcinogenic, and they used to tell us when we'd come in, drink from the filtered fountains, and the inmates would recommend to drink bottled water. Well, because John owed a fine of $250,000 and refused to pay not one nickel to them, not even $25 a month, but he'd give them, okay, they took his commissary.
Starting point is 02:01:44 So he could no longer use the bottled water,000 and refused to pay not one nickel to them. Not even $25 a month, but he gave them. They took his commissary. So he could no longer use the bottled water. So now he's forced with loose implants. Because remember, you develop gum disease from lack of vitamin D. You're in solitary confinement at that point six years. Six years in solitary confinement, no son. No son.
Starting point is 02:02:04 So his implants became weakened. He had gum disease, infections, open wounds. Now you're making him drink that water from the sink in his cell, highly carcinogenic, okay, within a year. One bump appears, then the second bump appears, then the third bump appears. Now, the physician's assistant,
Starting point is 02:02:25 they don't even have a doctor see you. A doctor doesn't even see you. They send the physician's assistant to see you in Marion and you gotta check you through the bars. Can't leave your cell, they're taking you through the bars. Physician's assistant's name is Zuko, he's out of Indiana. I have his reports, he issued his reports that he's suspicious, they ignored it.
Starting point is 02:02:44 A month goes by. He issues another report. New tumor growing, very suspicious. They ignore it. Finally, he makes a formal complaint. He was a really good guy, a solid guy. His physician's assistant, Marion Zuko. And they fired him.
Starting point is 02:03:00 He said, something's wrong with this guy. He doesn't have a throat infection. He's got tumors growing all over his neck, all growing out of his neck. They told him, you know what? You're taking too much of a personal interest with John Gotti, and they fired him. And ultimately, in the end,
Starting point is 02:03:13 we got an attorney to force them to bring him out, and then that's when they diagnosed him. Stage four, head and neck, aggressive squamous cell cancer. And they said it was too late. He had 120 days to live. They did a radical surgery, 36 radiations, which is the maximum allotted, took part of his jaw,
Starting point is 02:03:32 took part of his tongue, everything out. And basically, and this is the beauty part, after doing all of that, I had that visit with my father, and a short time later, they took him right back to Marion, Illinois, and dumped him right back in solitary confinement to die. Why? Because he's John my father, and a short time later, I took him right back to Marion, Illinois, and dumped him right back in solitary confinement to die. Why? Because he's John Gotti, and they could.
Starting point is 02:03:50 For no reason? No reason. Listen, John's, my father never committed one infr... You go to Marion, Illinois for one reason and one reason only. You commit an infraction in the Bureau of Prison's meaning. There's a step program here. The lowest...
Starting point is 02:04:04 There's camps in the federal system, then ones twos threes. I was in most of my bid and disciplinary fours Five is a penitentiary Okay, and then after penitentiary that's the maximum security in America There's only one level six in the country that was marrying at that time. Okay John was a court committed straight from, straight from the courts, right to Marion, Illinois, right to a level six, without committing one single infraction, only because of his popularity with other inmates. They felt he'd be a threat to security, okay?
Starting point is 02:04:35 And I guess, you know, try to break him. They brought him to Marion, locked him in solitary confinement for years, left him like that, just like that, okay? So them in solitary confinement for years, left them like that, just like that. So that in itself should tell you, that in itself that this is a direct court committal. You only go to Marion, Illinois if you stab somebody when you're in a penitentiary. Take hostages. You escape.
Starting point is 02:04:58 There's levels. You have to graduate to those levels. So a four, if I was to hurt somebody in the four, I'm going to the penitentiary to five. If the five is the maximum, that's the end of the road. How do we discipline you now? If you're in a five, they have their own solitary confinement, because I did time I was in Lewisburg and the whole day and in Atlanta, but that's there. That's the buck stops there. Next thing is this, oh, that's not going to phase you. Well, now we're taking you to Marion now. That keeps you in check. That's where all the hardest of the hardcore end up in Marion, Illinois.
Starting point is 02:05:29 All the shot callers for all the major organizations, the jailhouse prison gangs, whatever, that's where they end up. Marion, Illinois is the end of the road. That's where it is. The most violent of the violent. Or the escape risks. Did anybody try to go after your father just for street credo or no? Someone sucker punched him in chains.
Starting point is 02:05:46 And that's, I don't know how much time we have, believe me, we can talk about this forever. Some sucker punched him? Yeah. And what happened to the guy that did? He got what he wanted, and here's what he wanted, okay? He was a sick individual, this guy's name is Walter, Walter Johnson was his name, Walter Johnson,
Starting point is 02:06:04 and he was from the Philadelphia area. He was a black gangbanger. And he was on the same floor, the tier, with the D.C. blacks. The D.C. blacks are known throughout the federal system. A lot of them are Muslims. DC blacks. Yeah, known as the D.C. blacks. A lot of them are Muslims. DC blacks. Yeah, known as the DC blacks. A lot of them are known throughout the federal system, very popular, very large prison organization.
Starting point is 02:06:29 A lot of them are Muslims. What they did was he was in with the DC blacks and they began to pull his card. He was basically making statements that he was with the DC group, he was affiliated throughout the federal system, and they were now in the process of checking him out, and they were about to pull his card, so he wanted to get off that floor before they kill him. So who was the highest, most notorious guy in the prison at that time was John Gotti.
Starting point is 02:06:54 So for you to be moved to get a little bit of rec, okay, the only move, you get chained up, and you move to a rec area, and then you get unchained in that rec area, and you're allowed to be with a certain amount of inmates at one time. This is later on. When my father first got there, he was in K-Dorm,
Starting point is 02:07:11 which is deadlocked by yourself for several years, and you have to evolve to be able to even go into the yard. But you're not leaving Marion unless you sign that paper. So he was never leaving Marion, but now he's evolved to D unit, D block, then C block. Little bit more room you have there, little bit more social, other shot calls could be with you. While they were uncuffing him,
Starting point is 02:07:32 Walter's already in the yard, he uncuffing, and he nails my folly, steals the punch, and they come right down, they drop them immediately, and he got boated out of the prison immediately what he wanted. So he got his life saved. He got boated out, because he knew the DC blacks were gonna pull his card and they were gonna kill him.
Starting point is 02:07:47 And they boated him right out of it. Did he ever kill him somewhere else or no? No, he ended up in the hole, never came out, never hit population, got released from prison. This is a great story. Can't make this up. Got released from prison a couple of years later,
Starting point is 02:08:00 and as soon as he gets out, he goes and gets himself a shotgun. That wouldn't be right. Gets a shotgun, he's going to kill a girl that he believed testified against him. He jumps over a turnstile on the subway. A Transit Authority cop stops him, he pulls out the gun, kills the cop.
Starting point is 02:08:17 And he ended up someplace else digging in a system, I don't know where, and I'm not sure if he's even alive today. What a story. Yeah, yeah. Walter Johnson, Walter Johnson and we had there were there there were players in the Aryan Brotherhood There were players in Lambay that wanted to hit him. They couldn't get it. It's kind of like one of those things where it's like Hey, but I thought it would be more from the standpoint of I'm the new tough guy. Let me tell you what I did It wasn't for that. It was for a different reason. He checked himself, that's the honorable way
Starting point is 02:08:46 of checking yourself into the hole. You know when someone calls you, they call you a rat, or they pull your card, and they tell you, listen, you can go up there right now and knock on that door and check yourself into the hole, because they want you removed from the compound, or we're gonna kill you. Or they let you do that.
Starting point is 02:08:59 Well, we were in Raybrook, if a guy was no good, had bad paperwork, we would tell the guy, look, come here, here's what you're gonna do. Go go get your stuff go up and knock on the CEO's door and tell him take you off the compound now Otherwise, you know, you're gonna get taken out it so you remove us up in the compound. So what he did was this is Marion Marion just where the buck stops. This is where the most dangerous dangerous. This is the guy that's him That's him right there. He's about six, four, six, five, 26 years old, hitting a guy with cancer, 57 years old. He sucker punched him with cups on. And I got the actual report. Okay, we're doing a show on this and we're going to publish all the
Starting point is 02:09:37 reports and the eyewitness statements that were taken and whatnot. Wow. You don't know if he's alive or not. You don't know where he's at. No, I don't know where he is today. I don't know where he is today, but it's an interesting story. So by doing know if he's alive or not. You don't know where he's at. No, I don't know where he is today. I don't know where he is today, but it's an interesting story. So by doing that, he saved his own life. The DC blacks couldn't get to him, and he got moved off the compound. He got moved someplace else, and that's it.
Starting point is 02:09:54 Wow. So question, that last meeting, February 5th, 99, okay, he passes, your father passes away three years later, which is what, June 10th of 02, 02 I think, right? 02. 02, right. 61 years old, June 10th of 02. Right, June 10th of 02.
Starting point is 02:10:11 Have you ever seen that recording? Because I know it was being recorded. Yeah, I have it. I have it, and we used it as evidence in our trial in my last case. So you have to, you ever sit there and watch a conversation between you and your dad? It's emotional to watch it now. I can only imagine.
Starting point is 02:10:26 On my own time, on my own time, look, when I'm missing him, I'll have a couple of scotches by myself. I'll pop that DVD in. And I love seeing John Gotti be John Gotti. I love seeing him be John Gotti. That's it. I love him.
Starting point is 02:10:44 And from here up, from here up, he's the old John Gotti. You can see it in his eyes. This... He came to life on that visit. Like, he's lecturing me a bit. And then all of a sudden, he looks at me, and he says, you know something, John? He says, what I wouldn't do, one more time, one more time,
Starting point is 02:11:01 and all of a sudden, his eyes get wide like a lion about to pounce on prey, one more time to and all of a sudden his eyes get wide like a lion about to pounce on prey. One more time to go in that courtroom and teach these fucking punks what a man is all about. To show them what a man is all about. What I wouldn't do, John, one more time, one more time, he says. And show these fucking guys what this means. He says, you show them, John.
Starting point is 02:11:18 You got to show them. I didn't agree with him. I didn't want to become Teflon Don. I didn't want to. I wanted to take the plea. I didn't want to become Teflon Don. I didn't want to. I wanted to take the plea. I forfeited many millions of dollars. They destroyed every business I had. And I figured, and I trusted, and I thought,
Starting point is 02:11:34 and again, this conversation is gonna almost make us roll into another conversation, just so you know, just so you know, because there's so much, you need 10 hours to complete this story. I'm just explaining something to you. So that, his words were, you beat them, you send them packing, they'll never come back. They'll never come back.
Starting point is 02:11:56 And I said, Dad, I don't agree with you. He says, nonsense, they'll never come back, John. Tighten their asses up, they'll never come back. These mutts will never come back, he said. And maybe he was right, but I believe this. He was right in the respect that I said, if I take the plea, I'm not you, Dad, they don't want me. I'm not you, I'll forfeit whatever they need.
Starting point is 02:12:20 I'll be home in seven years, I can raise my children and we can move on. He says, John, these are his words and they're prophetic. In this respect, he was right. He says, John, once they get you in, they're not letting you go. I says, no dad, they don't want me. I'm nobody. I'm not a threat to them. You're John Gotti. I'm not. I'm just John Gotti. That's it. I'm the guy who opened the door, who held the door open for John Gotti. And no, he said, once they get you in, John, they're never letting you go. He was right. They got me in, I took that plea, and I said, I fought a couple of subpoenas while I was in prison,
Starting point is 02:12:55 I fought a couple of subpoenas, because remember, what led us to that point, I had two indictments. I beat one from the bench, and I'm pleading on this one. I'm using this one to take all the guns away from my head. And I had both US attorneys. When did you ever see that? The representative shot caller for the Eastern District, representative shot caller for the Southern District in the same courtroom, and both stood up. Now here's my legal team. Jerry Chargel, one of the greatest trial attorneys in New York history.
Starting point is 02:13:25 Bruce Cutler, he's my third seat. My second seat is Charlie Ogletree, Nelson Mandela's attorney here in the States, who helped rewrite the Constitution of South Africa. Now, I have a dream team. I got power. I've got personality. Okay? I'm ready to go to war.
Starting point is 02:13:41 Okay? That being said, he recently passed away, bless his heart. But I'm ready and my father war. Okay, that being said he recently passed away bless his heart But i'm ready and my father knew I just beat them We just beat one case They got caught in wrongdoing. They got caught A special prosecutor got fired For creating leaks on my cases a special agent got fired and rezoned
Starting point is 02:14:04 Maybe to juno Alaska, for destroying evidence because his witness was a pedophile, destroying evidence, shredding notes and destroying evidence. And a special state prosecutor got fired for leaking and destroying evidence. Now, when'd you ever see that in one case? Three different elements all got fired for misconduct in my first case.
Starting point is 02:14:24 So I beat the first case, this for misconduct in my first case. So I beat the first case, this is spilling into the second case. So my father believed that I had them. He said, John, you got them. This is it. You caught them in misconduct. You did everything you're supposed to do. I'm proud of you.
Starting point is 02:14:37 Now finish it. Take them to trial and break their holes and send them packing. And I didn't see it that way. I said, I'm going to be, and I knew I could beat the case. I knew I could beat that case. And I said to myself, I says, but to what end? If I win, I can't move on with my life. I have to remain who I am. And I become, in their words, their eyes, the Teflon Don. I become it. I just beat them to, and I beat them in 87. So I'm on a roll. I beat them in 87. I beat them in 89. I just beat them two, and I beat them in 87. So I'm on a roll. I beat them in 87, I beat them in 89, I just beat them a case now in 98.
Starting point is 02:15:08 Now if I beat this fourth case in a row, I said I'm the Teflon Don. I can't get out anymore, I'm trapped. And I didn't agree with my father, and I left that prison misrepresenting to him. I said, I'm gonna fight. You're right, Dad, you're right, you're right. That's right, that's right.
Starting point is 02:15:24 And then when I went home fight. You're right, Dad, you're right, you're right. That's right, that's right. And then when I went home and I saw my daughter, and I got a little emotional talking to my daughter, and she says, you know, she was at that time, she was about eight or nine years old, and I looked at her and I says, these kids are lost. I had spoke to my oldest boy, and I says,
Starting point is 02:15:43 if I fall and get life, they're done. They're done. If I give them seven more years, my wife could hold it down for seven more years. She'll hold it down for me. And I'll... my brother, my immediate family, hold it down for me. I'll get home, and I'll get things on track here.
Starting point is 02:15:59 Not just for my family, because remember, my father put his whole family on my shoulders. My mother in essence, who's my mother, I adore her, but since she became my wife, I've gotta hear her complaints. I've gotta make sure everything's okay for my mother. My sisters became my daughters. Okay, my brother became my son. My father's grandkids became mine. I mean, everything fell on I had to deal with all these different problems
Starting point is 02:16:29 So I think I thought we had it under control. I thought it was gonna be a great thing and I said, you know what? He's got this wrong I'm gonna take this plea. I had a forfeit two and a half million dollars You know what two and a half million dollars you put that number up two and a half million dollars in 1999 what is that in today's US dollars today? Seven million. Okay, I forfeited two and a half million dollars plus property, 50 acres upstate, 90 acres in Pennsylvania,
Starting point is 02:16:53 a building, they destroyed my business. Five million today. Okay, five million. It's like you're writing a check for five million today. I forfeited all of that, they destroyed my phone business, I had Penn Station on lockdown, they took my whole business, destroyed all my companies. My brokerage company took everything apart. They dismantled it.
Starting point is 02:17:10 I gave it all up, and I said, you know what? Fortune's the one I lost every day. I'll come home, I'll rebuild. I still got enough. I could be okay. I'll give him another seven, seven years, and I'll be home, and I'll rebuild. No problem at all. But I'll rebuild completely and totally as a civilian.
Starting point is 02:17:25 That's what I thought. And I was only several weeks from being released from prison, and John Gotti's prophetic words came to fruition. Because, remember, we had both U.S. attorneys saying that it's no longer in the interest of us, with this plea, the resolution of the case, we're done with him, basically, in essence. They promised me.
Starting point is 02:17:45 And then James Comey, Donald Trump's tormentor, indicted me. He indicted me. James Comey. James Comey indicted me. James Comey's office indicted me. Right before I was about to be released, they charged me with the Curtis Lee with kidnapping and attempted murder.
Starting point is 02:18:01 And now I was facing 110 years. So only weeks. Think about the psychological impact of this, okay? I'm weeks from being released. I gave away my stuff. My fan, all my, you know, I'm a guy with a few dollars. So I had some nice things in prison that I've accumulated. So I gave it all away.
Starting point is 02:18:18 I gave nice things away. My sweatsuits, things that I've accumulated over time. That's my life day. Prison becomes your life. I've given it all away. I'm about to go home. And I have a name, list of all the names of my dear brothers in there who don't have anything. So when I get home, I'm gonna start sending them money
Starting point is 02:18:32 on their commissary. I'm ready to go home. But I was guarded. I talked to my wife. My wife would tell me, when you come home, I said, don't speak like that. Don't speak that in front of the kids. When I'm home, I'm home. If I make... When I walk in that door, that the kids. When I'm home, I'm home. When I walk in that door, that's when I know I'm home.
Starting point is 02:18:47 But until then, these lowlife, these bastards can come in any time, any moment. And sure enough, they did. Several weeks before my release, they came in, they indicted me on that case. And that started from the end of that case to the last case in 37 months. I got indicted five times. And the last one I was facing the death penalty, I was housed in the death unit in 37 months, I got indicted five times. Wow. And the last one I was facing the death penalty, I was housed in the death unit in Pinellas County for six months until I won the motion, I was moved over.
Starting point is 02:19:12 I spent 17 months in solitary confinement. What was it for? For nothing, to torture me. They put me in there to break me, try to break me. Okay, listen, the things they did, the tactic they employed against me is so unethical. But then again, knowing the adversary, and knowing how the adversary presents itself,
Starting point is 02:19:31 it certainly is ethical for them, because they're hypocrites. They'll tell you, look at the mob guy, and look at how bad the mob guy is, and so on and so forth. But I got to tell you, I've never seen treachery in any street guy or any mob element that I saw in the United States government. I've never seen that kind of treachery in any street guy or any mob element that I saw in the United States government. I've never seen that kind of treachery.
Starting point is 02:19:47 I've never seen it. You see a guy showing up for trial every single day. You see a guy hocking and selling his diamond watches off his wrist, selling homes and businesses, getting hard money loans on his home. My home had no mortgage when I went to prison. My building that I owned had no mortgage on that. Those are assets left to my wife and my kids. By the second trial, I had a $1.3 million mortgage
Starting point is 02:20:10 on my home, and the building was already sold off. It's paid for the third and fourth trials, okay? My assets were gone. I came home busted and broke after the fifth case. 15 years ago, last week I came home, broke, broke. I got myself right. Broke. How did you make money money John? What'd you do? What a book I wrote a 600 page book on my own nobody wrote it for me
Starting point is 02:20:32 No ghostwriter had written the book myself. I had a lawyer friend of mine who did the editing and typing for me I don't know how to type I Did everything by longhand I gave him all the pads and he an editor for me, and I wrote the book by myself. That was a start. Sold those rights to create the Gotti movie, which I made some money on that, and used those monies and invested and moved it along the right way.
Starting point is 02:20:54 Helped out on some projects. I'm doing several projects of my own right now, but I got myself right. But to watch the government sit there and take a position, you see what I'm going through. You went to banks, had them throw me out, had my wife ostracized from lending institutions. Nobody would give me a loan. Even after the hard money guys, they were calling the subpoena and the hard money guys,
Starting point is 02:21:15 they started subpoenaing all my banks, all the lending institutions, so everybody threw us out. We were homeless. Basically, we had no banks to go to. The agent, special agent on my case, would follow my wife into the supermarket and tell her, tell your husband to flip, because if he doesn't flip, what's gonna happen is your kids are gonna be homeless.
Starting point is 02:21:32 And she would tell him, you know, fuck off and whatever have you, and that would be that, okay? But this is the tactic they employed against me. Supported my sister, subpoenaed my brother, subpoenaed all my witnesses, harassed them, sent a rat with a wire on
Starting point is 02:21:46 to my mother who's lying in a hospital bed after brain surgery, wired up on my mother to try to get incriminating information against me. This is the tactic that they employed. And then, you can space it all out and first to sit here and walk it through process by process, date by date, would be, you won't make it home tonight for dinner,
Starting point is 02:22:08 I can promise you you won't, but I can tell you this much. That was the beginning where I told you, which culminated in the end, the fifth trial, which the result was the same, okay, on that trial. But to watch what these guys did along that way, they played very fair the first trial. Held me without bail, held me in 10 South,
Starting point is 02:22:30 the terrorist unit that was built for Ramzi Yousef and Sheikh Khalid, the guy who bombed the World Trade Center in 1993. Okay, it was built for them, only six cells in 10 South. That's where they housed me for that first trial. Then when the judge got the opportunity to see the evidence and see all the particulars, we won her over. She released me on bail.
Starting point is 02:22:51 She then released me on bail. And then she began to turn on the government, and she started seeing the case for the reality of what it was. And we started winning motions, tapes, wiretaps that they didn't want in, that they made of me in prison and legal visits, they violated out my rights and wiretapped my legal visits. These recordings were now all coming into play. All this stuff is now being allowed in.
Starting point is 02:23:14 And I knew after that they would never be able to beat me again because these tapes exonerated me. They made them, spent millions to make them, and then yet went to suppress them by changing the indictment, dropping the indictment, superseding it and indicting me two years earlier, so not to use tapes that they made in 2004. Okay? This is the tactic they employed against me. They're brilliant. The way...
Starting point is 02:23:35 Brilliant, manipulative, deceptive. They're the ultimate gangsters, if you think about it, like what they do. I got two last things I want to talk to you about before we wrap up. One is, story comes out this last week. Like what they do I got two last things I want to talk to you about before we wrap up one is Story comes out this last week It could have been two weeks ago about a story of
Starting point is 02:23:57 OJ Simpson a guy named John Danton. I don't know if he saw this enough police witness He says a key witness claims OJ hired Gambino family to kill wife. Do you know anything about the story or not? That's absurd. Okay, so this one you don't know about. Any real legitimate guy would have been amused by that. Oh, God. And the other story. John Alite, John A. Light, what's your relationship with him? I haven't seen John A. Light since 1991.
Starting point is 02:24:21 I haven't seen that guy since 1991. I haven't seen him. Okay? He professed to be my right-hand man. I don't want to tell you the reality of who he is and what he is. I don't want to do that because he lost a daughter recently. And to me, I know even he, I knew his wife.
Starting point is 02:24:36 I knew his wife's got to be someplace mourning right now. I know she has to be. I know that. She was a pretty good person. And I know even he has to be mourning someplace right now. So I'm not gonna tell you the reality. Maybe at some other point, maybe at some other date. But to me, to sit here now, one thing I will never do, I never kick somebody when they're hurting.
Starting point is 02:24:56 I won't do that. I won't do that. And I know... I saw what happened to my mother. I saw what happened to my father when they lost Frankie Boy, my brother. I saw. And I know they have to be feeling the same way. So I will not kick them. I won't do that.
Starting point is 02:25:12 I will never kick her. I won't kick him. I won't address it. And I won't elaborate. I won't go any further on that. But, you know, just now, to get off that subject onto a different subject, again, the tactic employed by the United States government and the things subject onto a different subject, again, the tactic employed
Starting point is 02:25:25 by the United States government and the things they've done to me, okay? Look, I'm bitter. I hate them. I don't hate any of the cooperators that went against me. I don't hate any of them. I won. I won. They got to look in the mirror.
Starting point is 02:25:40 They know what they did. And it was a futile attempt. You hate them? You hate the US government? I'm going to get there. It was a futile attempt on their part. I won, I'm home. Christmas, I'll be home tomorrow putting up my tree with my wife, okay?
Starting point is 02:25:52 I'll be home, okay? They got to look in the mirror knowing what they did. I survived them. I'm not mad at them. I'm mad at the United States government for the absolution and the deals that they've made with these lowlifes, knowing exactly what they were, what they were going to do they
Starting point is 02:26:08 knew it they knew the ramifications of their actions what were going to happen and still brought these people against me freed these individuals to go on to commit a whole host of more crimes thereafter and the whole time doing what they did to my family tormentinging my mother, tormenting my wife, my siblings, subpoenaing my best friends, economically destroyed me, destroyed me completely and totally. They had the balls, the balls because of a meeting that we had had with the United States government in 2005, a 40-minute meeting. They knew the tact I employed there. They knew exactly.
Starting point is 02:26:46 I'm gonna ask you a question. You interviewed Gravano, right? Okay, when you interviewed Gravano, did Gravano tell you how he became a rat? No. Well, one thing I know he definitely didn't tell you. He didn't say that when he decided to become a rat. That next day, he met with John Gotti,
Starting point is 02:27:06 he met with Frank Licazio, and some other powerful figures in organized crime. And he told them that, look, guys, I'm gonna go in tomorrow and do a proffer, and I want to become a government cooperator. Wish me luck. And they all hit him on the back and told him, good luck, good luck, I hope it works out for you.
Starting point is 02:27:25 I don't think that happened, right? You don't think that happened, right? No. Okay. But I also don't think he thinks he was a rat, in his eyes. Oh, God, well... In his eyes.
Starting point is 02:27:35 I guess... Because of the recording. I guess the 70 families destroyed, 57 people he put in jail, 70 people he destroyed. I guess the children that... Women that were widowed, basically in essence, for life at empty beds and their children on Christmas and holidays with no father and so on.
Starting point is 02:27:51 He didn't do any of that stuff. But here's my point that I'm getting at. It's interesting for you, Pat, because the government called me a rat. Government called me a rat. The most tried man in the history of America. No man, no accused organized crime member was ever tried more than me.
Starting point is 02:28:07 Look it up, find those statistics. Got a great technology guy right here, technologist right here. Look it up, see, I've been indicted in my life nine times. I went to trial eight times, never lost a trial. I went to prison one time because I pled guilty. But in 37 months from start to start, I was indicted five times.
Starting point is 02:28:28 Five federal proceedings. From the beginning to the end, culminating with me facing the debt penalty, which the government, when I won the motion and we moved from Pinellas County, Florida to New York, they opted not to charge me. And I dared them to pursue the debt charge because they had to give me a free defense. They would have had to give me a $2 million budget to defend myself.
Starting point is 02:28:47 I dared them to charge me with a debt penalty. They dropped it. And I was broke at that point, so my lawyers had to work on oil and gas. I had to keep things moving, and I had to pay those bills eventually. But still, we remedied the case, but yet they had the audacityacity because of a 40-minute meeting that I had with them that according to their cooperators, now think about this for a second, I told you, Sammy Gravano never went to all these different personalities
Starting point is 02:29:14 and told these personalities that I'm thinking about going to become a cooperator and tomorrow morning I'm gonna be debriefed tomorrow. Wish me luck, guys, right? Well, according, I did that meeting. I did a meeting for 40 minutes. Took two attorneys with me, two attorneys. When you met with the Fed.
Starting point is 02:29:30 Fed. And that's where? An agent. Right. An agent and a prosecutor and an assistant prosecutor at the courthouse. I went to that meeting. I called for that meeting.
Starting point is 02:29:38 I did it. I orchestrated it. Not my lawyers, not them. I did it. I said, I wanna meet with them. My lawyer said to me, what do you want to do? You just make the meeting. You just make the meeting. They said, no, no, John, please, you just make, I pay you, you don't pay me. Make the meeting. I know
Starting point is 02:29:52 what I'm doing here. I got this. Don't worry about it. I said, John, if you're going to become a rat, please let me know. I can get out of here. Just make the meeting. I got this. Okay. Now, according to Three different cooperators two mainly testified against me and a third cooperator that never testified against me But he was the most powerful of all the cooperators. Okay. They all said that This is what happened before I went in They said I had a meeting clandestine meeting in prison with Vinny gorgeous basciano They accused him of being the acting boss of the Bonanno family.
Starting point is 02:30:27 Really good man, solid guy. Never knew him on the streets, never met him on the streets, but I met him in prison. And they said while we were in the bullpen together, he and I, that I, he followed my lead, I hatched a plan that I was gonna go in and do what's called an innocence proffer,
Starting point is 02:30:43 an innocence proffer, an innocence proffer, and go in to establish an alibi, and I was going to testify on my own behalf in my trials, and I was, and he suggested that he would do it as well. He said to me, I'm going to follow your lead. This is not according to me, this is according to the government cooperators. He referred to me, says, John, I'm going to follow your lead. What you do, I'm going to do. Okay? Now, they also went on to say that, before I went in, this was cleared with Vinny Basciano. They said it, not me.
Starting point is 02:31:11 Steve Vitabali. Steve Vitabali is accused of being, for 30 years, the number three guy in the de Cava-Canthi family in New Jersey. Joe Alcuri, elder statesman, wonderful man, who they claim was on the panel ruling the Gambino crime family. Alphonse Siska, who they accused him
Starting point is 02:31:31 of being a high-ranking captain in the Gambino family. Arnold Scuteri, who the government accused of being the acting boss of the Gambino family. And Joe Messina. Now, Joe Messina verified it. Joe Messina, again, he was, he was confessed boss of the, of the Bonanno family, ultimately flipped. I loved Joe like an uncle. He made my cake when I went away to military school
Starting point is 02:31:55 when I was 14 years old for me. He owned a bakery. His family, I knew his family very well. His wife, wonderful person. I knew his daughters. They were a beautiful family. But yet, this is the, this is the government cooperator saying, I sent these messages, and they all had different input, Patablis supported it, Alcuria supported it, Bassiano was on board and doing it with me, according to government cooperators.
Starting point is 02:32:20 Arnold Scuteri did not support it. Alfonsiska did not support it. Joe Messina at first had a reservation, sent a message back to me, which he did. He sent a lawyer to see me. And the lawyer would verify it. The lawyer was, tell him I love him. He's gonna be perceived as a rat. My response back was, go back and tell Joe
Starting point is 02:32:41 I love him right back. I'm a civilian. I had my father put me on the shelf, okay. I'm a civilian. I had my father put me on the shelf, okay? I'm a civilian. I don't... I can... I march to the beat of my own drum. I'm showing respect for my father's life. I'm showing respect for people that I adore, that I love. I'm giving them that respect, but I don't have to.
Starting point is 02:33:00 I could fight as a civilian. As long as nobody gets hurt, as long as not one person gets a subpoena as a result of anything I do hurt, long as not one person gets a subpoena as a result of anything I do, long as not one person, if a person got indicted for something I said in my life, I would kill myself. I would rather do a hundred years in prison if I destroyed a family like these rats destroyed my family or tried to destroy my family, okay? I would do a hundred years in prison for that would happen. So I told him, my answer to Joe Messina was this, Joe, he was like an uncle to me, Joe, I'm a civilian. I'm not sure if Pete, my uncle Pete clued you in or anybody else, but the chief put me on the shelf for life as per my request
Starting point is 02:33:35 in 1999. As per my request, my chief put me on the shelf for life. I could defend myself any way I see fit, long as nobody gets hurt by anything I say or do inside or outside of the courtroom, okay? But there's more to this, I said. But understand this. I will never, ever embarrass my father. I know I'll beat these people. I know how to beat these people.
Starting point is 02:33:57 I just want... I'm gonna fight this my way and only my way. So, as a result of that meeting, here's what happens. They crafted a 302, and I'm sure Gravano told you, he has 302s, right? Any other cooperative, you craft 302s. In Gravano's case, there's hundreds and hundreds of them, okay, and any of these cooperatives, there's hundreds and hundreds of them, okay?
Starting point is 02:34:20 In mine, I think there's four pages. I memorialize it for you. You guys have an Elmo? Oh, no, we don't. I'm dating myself. We'll take a picture and show it. I know what an Elmo is. We like Elmos.
Starting point is 02:34:31 An Elmo is something that you haven't caught in a given exhibit, okay? This is the lead page of that 302. So this should dictate... You read a book. The start better be very good, or you're not gonna read the rest of it, and the ending better finish really well.
Starting point is 02:34:49 Or you're gonna reflect back and say, I didn't really enjoy that book at all, okay? Right? Okay. So let's just go with the start of the book, and any other questions you could ask me in between, I can answer them right now, I'm prepared to answer them on the spot. Because I did tell David Gillard to make sure,
Starting point is 02:35:04 tell Patrick, please, I know he's a very thorough interviewer, research me carefully, ask me any question. I've got nothing to hide. As long as there's a question he's going to ask me, doesn't affect anybody else but me, doesn't hurt anybody else but me, ask me anything you want to ask me, I will answer it, and I will answer to the best of my ability, okay?
Starting point is 02:35:24 And this is something that, to me, is nearest and dearest into my heart, because what the government to ask me, I will answer it, and I will answer to the best of my ability, okay? And this is something that to me is nearest and dearest into my heart. Because what the government did to me, you mentioned Sonny Francis earlier, right? They had a wiretap of Sonny Francis conspiring to kill me. Why? Because he just said on this wiretap, his driver's wired up, and the driver says,
Starting point is 02:35:43 he's talking to the driver and said, I just left the meeting With this violent crew from Queens Okay, and they want to make a move on the kid because you're not supposed to leave the life They don't like the way he's fighting the case and you ain't supposed to leave the life Not that I'm a rat that he's they don't like when fighting the case ain't supposed to leave the life So they want to make a move on him and I'm giving them my support Michael's father is Michael's fatherny, who's a man's man.
Starting point is 02:36:08 I have the utmost respect for him, but this is on a wiretap. The government had this wiretap. What year is this John? This is in, this took place in 2006. 2006. I have the actual dates. A man in his 80s is getting, is- Well watch, it gets better. I'm going to tell you A man in his 80s is getting...
Starting point is 02:36:25 Well, watch. It gets better. I'm gonna tell you the whole story, and then please, double back to that and come back at me. I'm gonna show you something, okay? So they have this wiretap. They call my lawyer and say, we have a credible death threat
Starting point is 02:36:36 against your client, John Gotti. Charlie says, well, he happens to be in the office right now. Hold on. He puts it on speakerphone. June Kim is the prosecutor. He says, you want to repeat that? John's in the room. He says, well, we have a credible death threat.
Starting point is 02:36:49 Do you want to come in and cooperate? He says, I'm going to have Charlie tell you to go fuck your mother. How does that sound? And Charlie said, you heard him, right? And he hung up the phone, and that was the end of it. That was the end of the conversation, right? Now, I think it's them already just pulling on it
Starting point is 02:37:03 and pulling on it. Short time later, they know there's a credible death threat, because Sonny being the gangster that he is, and he was a true blue hoodlum, good guy, hoodlum, giving support because you can't leave the life. But the truth of the matter is, okay, and Michael, Michael Francis was going to answer a subpoena. See, Michael, to his credit, Michael Francis, we subpoenaed him. He was going to come to our trial and testify that you can leave the life.
Starting point is 02:37:31 If John wants to leave the life, he can leave the life, but he leaves the life fully known what the ramifications of his actions are. It's his choice. He could leave and they could act if they want to act as upon him leaving. Makes sense. And Michael was clear to do this. The FBI went to Michael Francis. They told him, we're going to do a case against you.
Starting point is 02:37:49 We're going to investigate you. Don't go help that kid out. He's our public enemy number one. Michael still sent word to his credit, sent word to Charlie Kenece, if you just need me, I'm coming. And that's why I respected him. He took that position. he's a stand-up guy in that respect, he took that position and I admire that, okay? They didn't intimidate
Starting point is 02:38:11 him, okay? That being said, they knew all these particulars. They knew Sonny Francis got caught on wiretap, they're looking to kill me, and his response back is basically that this can get messy because there's a lot of guys loyal to me, a lot of guys loyal to the guardies. This can trigger a war. Did the FBI give a shit? No, they didn't care. So this is what they did.
Starting point is 02:38:33 They made it worse. They one-upped it. They asked me to become a rat, and I refused. So they one-upped it. They put a short time later, after giving me this death threat, they put on the front page of the New York Post that I'm a rat, that I wanted to be a rat. So they tried to get me killed. So you couldn't convict me.
Starting point is 02:38:52 And this all happened after I beat them the first case. They played fair in the first trial. The second trial and now the gloves came off and they got dirtier and dirtier and dirtier. And this is what they did. They couldn't convict me. They couldn't flip me. So they tried to get me killed. But most of the people that mattered never believed it. And still today don't believe it.
Starting point is 02:39:11 The ones who are insignificant do believe it. So that being said, they tried so hard. This was the report that they said was a rat report. OK? Not a human being got hurt, not one ever got a subpoena, not one ever got a case, ever, not a human being got hurt at one ever got a subpoena not one ever got a case ever ever In fact so much so to double back and not to be all over the place because we have a limited amount of time to talk No one went to jail because your 40-minute meeting never with the feds never never I would have taken a hundred years I would have taken life. I would have taken life
Starting point is 02:39:40 I was a civilian and I would have taken life before that ever happened, before I ever embarrassed my dead father or my sons. Never would have happened. Here's what happened. This is the reality. This is the reality, okay? This was the report right here. And you got to read this report. I'm going to read it to you, okay?
Starting point is 02:39:59 This was part of a four-page report that the government leaked out. Again, this report, this interview happened in 2005. 13 months later, I talked to you right now for 40 minutes. I asked for a recorder to be in that room. They refused. I came with my own notes. Who does that? I came with notes to the meeting.
Starting point is 02:40:21 My lawyers verified it. I came with my own notes. So I talked about what I wanted to talk about, and so they wouldn't put their own spin on what I wanted to talk about. I asked for a recorder. They denied the recorder because it's not part of policy. In fact, the only U.S. attorney to ever institute a policy where you're allowed to have a recorder when a 302 is being created was a guy named, I think, Paul K. Stern out of Arizona, mid-district of Arizona. And the Justice Department fired him for doing that.
Starting point is 02:40:49 Because they don't want recorders in there. They want to be able to basically script a story that they could have a witness follow along to, okay? So they don't want to have it made solid memorialization to a recording. So Paul K. Stern did that. That's what happened. So they wouldn't record it.
Starting point is 02:41:09 This is the report. Here's where we go. I'm gonna start with it. The date it was made, it was made, the interview took place. If I tell you, if you wanna have a conversation today for 40 minutes, right? And I ask you 13 months later,
Starting point is 02:41:22 for a beta, tell me what I said. Could you? No. I don't think you could, right? No. And I asked you 13 months later for a bet and tell me what I said could you Know I don't think you could right now. Okay, so we had the meeting 13 months later. This is the product 13 months later. They made this report as that 140 minute meeting Okay, a notes that I came in with I came in with those notes Recording that I asked for the data did not provide the recorder. Okay, and here's what comes out of it. It's the first page. So let's go with the first page. It says that John Gotti Jr. and my attorneys, his attorneys' names, Jeff Littman, Mark
Starting point is 02:41:57 Furnage came into a meeting and it says the murder of Danny Silver. That's where it starts. The whole report starts the murder of Danny Silver. In the early morning hours of either March 11th or 12th, 1983, Gotti Jr. along with his friends were present. I'd rather leave their names out of it, the situation, because these are civilian people. And remember, every name that's in here, there was at least 12 witnesses with DD5s, including several people here that were government cooperatives at the time.
Starting point is 02:42:26 They were confidential informants that gave exactly who the players were that were in that bar that night. So they knew exactly who the players were in that bar that night. So it was no secret. There's different DD5s. I have them all.
Starting point is 02:42:37 DD5 is a state police report. I have them. It's 12 different ones, eyewitness accounts, and they wrote down everybody that was in that bar. Okay, so this says who's in the bar, okay? We're present at the Silver Fox bar located on 101st Street and Liberty Avenue in Queens, New York. At some point, Tommy, last name unknown,
Starting point is 02:42:58 okay, aka Elfie, approached Gotti Jr., who was seated. Elfie repeatedly bumped into him, words were exchanged. One thing led to another, and Gotti Jr. ultimately hit Gotti Jr. with a glass, a broken glass bottle. Gotti Jr. then stabbed Gotti Jr. with a knife that Gotti Jr. had, okay? Now, remember, in this whole report,
Starting point is 02:43:19 multiple people were stabbed. I was stabbed twice that night, okay? In my hand and my elbow, through my jacket, I was stabbed. Multiple people were stabbed. I was stabbed twice that night, okay? And my hand and my elbow through my jacket, I was stabbed. Multiple people were stabbed, one guy died. In this whole report, I only put one knife in one person's hand, my own, okay? Nobody else's, okay? Nobody else's.
Starting point is 02:43:38 I go on to say, okay, oh, an Elfie that I said was stabbed, the FBI grabbed him, interviewed him, took his clothes off and everything. He was never stabbed. He was never stabbed. So they knew he was never stabbed. So even my information was even accurate because it was all over the place. So they tried to piece together my notes and they made a mess of my notes. They didn't know what the hell they were doing. What I was telling them, I was doubling back and going all over the place. They didn't even know how to formulate this the right way. Okay, they were all over the place. He was never stabbed.
Starting point is 02:44:07 Okay? According to Gotti Jr., a melee ensued involving approximately 30 to 40 of the bar's patrons. Gotti Jr. recalled that among those involved in the fight, and in fighting with Danny Silver, were Angelo Castelli, Joe Curio, now here's where you're gonna start
Starting point is 02:44:27 having some problems now, right? Here's where the problem is. At the bar in the beginning in the first paragraph, it says I was at the bar with a girl named Donna, she doesn't exist. I said also at the bar was a guy named John Riley. He was involved in the fight. John Riley was the investigative detective
Starting point is 02:44:43 that was investigating me for different crimes, and all of us for crimes. I took the investigator and put him in the fight. John Rowley was the investigative detective that was investigating me for different crimes and all of us for crimes. I took the investigator and put him into the melee. I put him into the fight, okay? Angelo Castelli, who was dead at the time of the fight. Joe Curio, who died three years before the fight. How could they be at the fight if they were dead? Joe Curio died three years before the fight.
Starting point is 02:45:03 How could he be at the fight? How could he be there? Who's writing this? I'm dictating a story. They're shorthand writing a story. 13 months later, you memorialize a report. You have dead people involved in a fight that would die... Joe Curio died in 1980.
Starting point is 02:45:21 He was stamped to death in a fight someplace else. This fight took place in 1983. You have the investigating detective. I have him at the bar in the fight. People who don't exist were there. I mean, you see where I'm going with this? It's... it was absurd. It was completely and totally absurd.
Starting point is 02:45:42 They knew this. Later on, more memorializations on different pages, I talked about my arrest, my case. We had a case called the Oak Point Dump Case. And there was a, uh, a cooperator in the case. His name was John Joe Zingari, right? They put it down that I'm talking about a guy named Joe Zingari. I never met Joe Zingari, right? They put it down that I'm talking about a guy named Joe Zingari.
Starting point is 02:46:06 I never met Joe Zingari in my life. I don't even know who the guy is. If I met him, if I... I wouldn't... I couldn't tell him from a can of paint. So it was a complete nonsense mess, saying something about an individual that someone allowed something to happen. They changed the words that ordered something to happen.
Starting point is 02:46:24 They conveniently... most of the people, the players that you see here in this report, were either government cooperators or dead. So they knew exactly what I did. They knew exactly. They knew it, and again, it starts with that foundation from the very beginning, Pat. You're meeting with people.
Starting point is 02:46:41 Before you go into this meeting, I was not obligated to tell one individual. Gervano told nobody. Any rat that goes to become a rat doesn't tell anybody. They sneak in the middle of the night like the rats that they are. They crawl out of their cell. They leave a note.
Starting point is 02:46:56 Marshals come and get them and bring them over. I told 79 people. My co-defendants knew. Everybody knew I was going in. They knew exactly the tactic that I was gonna employ. They knew ultimately I was gonna go on the stand in my own defense. They knew it.
Starting point is 02:47:11 What happened afterwards? I won the cases, thank God. That's what happened. But still to this day, you do have imbeciles. You have low-lifes. You have has-been, co-cad jockeys, people like that, that wanna blow these reports and think these are real reports. Name one individual one. Here it is today, open. Openly challenge anyone.
Starting point is 02:47:33 Show me a person that went to jail because anything I've ever done in my life was said in my life. Show me. Show me. The guy who spent well over $10 million fighting the United States government. The guy who destroyed all their cooperators. Over a dozen men are home right now because of me. Because I destroyed these cooperators and they never used these cooperators ever again. Ever. Including the one you mentioned, John Alight. I was the last case.
Starting point is 02:47:56 He gave a death penalty charge to a guy named Johnny Burke. Guess what? They used him to indict John Burke on a death penalty case, but never used John Ailey to testify. I've never heard of that before in my life. That is unusual. Why? I retired him. I retired him. I caught them in more wrongdoing. I caught the case agent in more wrongdoing, more misconduct.
Starting point is 02:48:16 I pleaded over and over and over again for hearings on this issue. I could give you dates that I've asked for these hearings. Okay? Wrote letters. Attorney General Ashcroft. We can go on and on and on. I mean you're talking about multiple letters to multiple different players And here, they even had an article leaked to the paper that this was a scheme that I created. It called the Junior's Mob Exists Scheme. They even talked about it.
Starting point is 02:48:59 So they fully knew. Would your father have supported you going in and having a meeting with those guys? No. Absolutely not. absolutely not. What would he have said? My father would have probably disowned me for hallowing them. For sitting in a room with them, absolutely not. But I was civilian, again, I wasn't a hypocrite.
Starting point is 02:49:16 I wasn't a hypocrite. How long had you left before you had that meeting with them? 99, the tape you and I discussed, the meeting that you and I discussed. 26 years when you left the life. The last time I ever saw my father, first time I've with him. 99, the tape you and I discussed, the meeting that you and I discussed. 26 years ago, you left him. The last time I ever saw my father, first time I've touched him in years, last time I ever seen my father.
Starting point is 02:49:29 February 5th, 99. You saw him say, when I walked in the door, he walks in and says, Joseph said John wants closure. That's right. What do you think that meant? We used it at trial, the jurors knew what it meant. I asked my father to be put on a shelf for life. I wanted to be a civilian. And being a civilian,
Starting point is 02:49:45 entitled to fight like a civilian. This world you guys are in, words matter, technicalities, right? Right. So for you, John, is it the fact that you went and met with the feds, because you were civilian and had left the life, you didn't feel guilty for meeting with them.
Starting point is 02:50:07 Is that how you process it? No, I didn't. And my plan was to go to trial. My plan was to help myself and help my co-defendants and beat the case, okay? It was an unorthodox tactic that I employed. But remember, I've involved a lot of people. There was a lot of communication,
Starting point is 02:50:24 not according to me, according to their cooper people. There was a lot of communication, not according to me, according to their cooperators. There was a lot of communication, a lot of knowledge of what was going on here. Okay, different perspectives here. But one thing's for sure, one thing's for sure, Joe Messina at that time did not flip. He was probably one of the most powerful guys in New York at that moment.
Starting point is 02:50:41 And I still showed respect and felt obligated. Okay? I showed respect and felt obligated. I sent word in to Joe. Joe flipped a short time later, but Joe knew the tactic that I was going to employ at some point in the case. He knew it. I think Joe, if I'm not mistaken, I think he flipped somewhere right around that time. But he knew my plan eight, nine months earlier. He knew exactly what I wanted to do is it was told to Joe he knew what I wanted to do He had reservations about it. Okay, and a man of his authority. I showed that respect To I believe to be my elders that in respect to my father's way of life That even as a civilian even from my civilian standpoint, my position in life,
Starting point is 02:51:26 that I still gave them the respect to let them know what I'm doing, and I didn't want it to be misconceived. Is this, is the outcome of this conviction that I'm listening to you the last 30, 40 minutes, is this because it's important to you to clear your rep that maybe some are calling you? It absolutely is.
Starting point is 02:51:52 It's probably one of the most important things to me. Why is that? Because when you went through what I went through, I spent easily, we showed the judge, we turned all, we brought him, the fourth trial was a tax and parole violation case, okay? And I brought in and put a shoe box when they were asking me about turning over records
Starting point is 02:52:12 and I said, you're on it, they're gonna use my records against me, why should I turn them over? And then I put a shoe box, a boot box actually like this. I dumped it over on the table. It was neatly stacked checks totaling over $10 million. What it cost me to defend myself. Does aing over $10 million. What it cost me to defend myself.
Starting point is 02:52:26 Does a rat spend $10 million fighting multiple trials? Does a rat put his house in foreclosure? I came home to my house in foreclosure. I lost every business I had, my business were gone. My house that I live in right now was in foreclosure. I wrote the book, sold the rights to the movie to get that house out of foreclosure. Is that what a rat does? Show me one. Show me one rat.
Starting point is 02:52:47 Show me one rat that went for the money as I went defending the government. Millions of dollars in legal defenses, subpoenaing their cooperators out of the program in hiding, hiring private investigators to do what I did. Show me one. It's important to show you, to share something with you
Starting point is 02:53:12 because here we have, I mean, forget about the misconduct, things that had taken place with us. I mean, it was off the charts, completely off the charts. Let me show you how easy it is also to confuse and doctor up documents, especially these 302s. It's been done multiple times. And you can see how wrong they got it, right?
Starting point is 02:53:33 You're sitting here, you're a civilian, correct? Very educated, I believe. Very articulate individual. I'm impressed by you. I'm impressed by what you built. So I know, appealing to someone like you, you'd be the perfect guy to analyze every single thing that I'm saying right now.
Starting point is 02:53:48 You're the perfect guy. I couldn't find a better forum. I tried to do it with 60 Minutes. They didn't know how to do it. That was when I first came home from prison in 2010. But this was really like nobody even believed that he was garbage. But as we said earlier,
Starting point is 02:54:01 seven years you've been trying to get me here. You tried to get me here for seven years. I said, I wanna have a conversation with Pat. I wanna have a conversation with him. I do wanna have this conversation. Took seven years to get us here, and here we are. And I knew you would do your homework, because I wanna talk about all of these things.
Starting point is 02:54:17 And I want you to tell me, be the devil's advocate and say, this is where I think it's wrong or right or whatever have you. And I always would culminate by saying this. Show me an individual You get you answer you it's me a great question. Would your father approve? No He wouldn't even shake their hand that day on the visit Yeah, you know, I'm obviously
Starting point is 02:54:38 I'm not in this world, but I Got a call from Philly and Leonetti one time you know Phil Leonetti. I've never met him I don't know the guy. But you know the name. Yeah I've heard the name. Right. I don't know the guy. He calls me and we go to a nice Italian restaurant and the next day we do an interview. He asked me to cover his face so it's not shown and we talk about it. Why? What has he covered his face for? What is he ashamed of? Because he you know he did some maybe surgeries that he didn't want his face to be seen is he ashamed of? Because he did some maybe surgeries that he didn't want his face to be seen
Starting point is 02:55:06 or whatever made men. Like a violent did? He had stories that he said about Nicky Scarfor, right? And then we had Ralph Nataliedale there and then he told his stories. Then we had Frank Collada, no longer with us the late, Frank Collada. And he was part of the Spelattra crew, I believe.
Starting point is 02:55:23 Oscar Goodman, great conversation. Great lawyer. Great lawyer. Oscar Goodman's a great lawyer. Yeah, Michael Francis, multiple sit downs. Sammy DeBolt, multiple. And then eventually we did Mafia States of America. And you know what is common like a thread amongst everybody?
Starting point is 02:55:42 And I think this goes credit to the life, you know, which, whatever the orientation is, when you're being indoctrinated in this world, whatever that is, whoever explained the pain of omerta, they did such a great job selling it because it's like at this age, look man, let me say face. Here's why I did it. Here's why I did it to the average person, to the person that's not in this world.
Starting point is 02:56:21 We're not in it. We're just watching and at its interesting stories. But there is this pride to say, this is why I had the meeting with Feds, and what is consistent amongst everybody across the board, none of them like them, they all are not fans of the government, and they all feel like the story
Starting point is 02:56:39 has been told in a different way. But they liked them when they were in the life, right? And they didn't feel the pain of the life when they were in the life, they felt the pain when they feel the pain of a life when they were in the life. They felt the pain when they went to prison, I guess. I guess that nip, that pain hit them when they got to prison, right? Well, what pain should have I felt
Starting point is 02:56:51 when they rolled me onto the death row unit? Should I have felt some pain? What do you think if I would have turned around and said, hey, guys, you got me. That's it. This is it. Uncle, government says organized crime exists, right? They say there's entities in New York that control New York, right? Do you think that would have existed if the son of John Gotti who became a rat?
Starting point is 02:57:12 What damage you think I could have done if I was a rat? What damage? Government said from 1990, my father went to prison until I went to prison in 1998. They said I was the acting boss. What damage in that? Gavanna was of driftwood in and 1998. They said I was the acting boss. What damage in that, Gavanna was of driftwood in and out. They said I was the acting boss. What damage could I have done if that was all true?
Starting point is 02:57:32 And so it is true. I was never any acting boss. I was the guy who held the door open for the boss. John Gotti was the boss always. I'm nobody. Sammy said, once a mafioso, you're a mafioso for life. Where, is he still a mafioso, he thinks? Well, he says it's a lifestyle.
Starting point is 02:57:49 Selling drugs to little kids in Arizona, he's a mafioso. That's the mafia. He'll blame it on his son. Nice, how convenient. Well, guess what? I heard a lot of the wiretaps. Let's see. His son was coming to him and taking money off of him,
Starting point is 02:58:02 and they're talking about a drug deal. That's how you encourage your kid? If you remember correctly, when Sammy Gravano first said he flipped, this was his very first time he said he flipped, he did an interview. He said that he was in prison, he got to ponder the situation, he wanted to change his life, and he wanted to save his kid. He wanted to save his son. He wanted to save him from that lifestyle.
Starting point is 02:58:26 That's what he said, right? I didn't say it, he said this. And yet, you come home after you're rat, you got absolution for 19 murders, you got the deal of the century, you did less than four years, 19 bodies are in the street, two innocent people. Of that 19, two is stone cold innocent. One was a little boy, 16 years old, okay?
Starting point is 02:58:46 You came home, and you go into the narcotics business and sell drugs to little kids, and you bring your kid along, and your wife, and your daughter? That was your way of saving your son? Interesting. That's like me saying, Dad, put me on the shelf for life.
Starting point is 02:59:02 I don't want to be in the life anymore. The moment I get home, I tell my son, drive the car, I got to go kill somebody. I just told you, my son's grandkids were named John Gotti. What do you want to do, Dad? What do we do at the end here? When do we stop this? Does everybody have to go to jail?
Starting point is 02:59:19 Everybody, all of us have to go to jail? Can we save them at least? So me giving that speech to a dying man, a man I adored, me giving him that speech, and then I go home after all of this, and I take my son John Gotti and his other grandson John Gotti, and I go to commit crimes with them.
Starting point is 02:59:38 I lied right to a dying man's face, did I not? Let me ask you. That's what's akin to what he did, Gravano. Because I think the only thing, and would you ever sit across with Sammy? Never. Tell me why. I received a message from a lawyer from New Jersey. I think the message came from you, and please correct me if it wasn't.
Starting point is 02:59:57 Years back. Was the lawyer's first name James? It was. And he said, I can get you a million dollars, John, if you sit across the table from Gravano, and they're going to give him get you a million dollars, John, if you sit across the table from Gravano, and they're gonna give him a half a million dollars. And I said, not for 10 million dollars, okay? Not for 10 million will I do what I sit with that lowlife in the room.
Starting point is 03:00:13 And again, I never knew him. He could have went home from prison and lived his life and done his thing. But when you try to take down someone like John, who did everything by the rule book, even I, as his son, okay, don't have the right to be angry at any aspect of my father. And believe me, there are some aspects.
Starting point is 03:00:32 I don't have that right because the life that he chose and the life that I chose, that I walked away from, and the life that Gravano chose, the only one of those three in the equation that actually lived it in its totality was John Gotti. So how dare we even say anything negative about John Gotti? Me, I walked away. You, you ratted. You buried people and buried families.
Starting point is 03:00:56 You don't have the right to take any of that, any of John's glory. That's called stolen honor, stolen glory. Stolen valor, they call it in the military. It's called stolen valor. You don't have the right to steal John's glory. That's called stolen honor, stolen glory, stolen valor they call it in the military. It's called stolen valor. You don't have the right to steal John's valor. I don't agree with John Gotti. I don't think John had it all right. I look at it from this perspective, okay? I think the streets, they destroy families and I think most of the guys, many of the guys, not most, many of the guys in the streets, I think are cowards. Why do
Starting point is 03:01:23 I think they're cowards? I'm gonna tell you why. Because when you go to prison, you have to hang on the fact that you were in a group. I think most gang bangers are cowards. They gotta belong to something, okay? Go to prison by yourself. Be a stand-up guy and go to jail by yourself and belong to nobody. Go to a penitentiary or go to a disciplinary floor or some of those joints, and be on your own.
Starting point is 03:01:47 Get my respect, then be a man. I fought the United States government without the entity the government calls the Gambino crime family behind me, or without belonging to the government. I fought them alone, my wife, my children, and my dear brothers that loved me. With no money at the end, no money,
Starting point is 03:02:06 I hawked diamond watches to fight the government, and I fought them, and I beat them, and I'm home, and I retired a lot of their cooperators, and a lot of men are coming home now because of me, okay, because of me. And to answer your question, does that bother me? It certainly does, you have no right. But it doesn't bother me nearly as much,
Starting point is 03:02:24 because the people that matter know who I am, is nearly as much as Gravano taking my father's valour. Like I said, that life to me, I'm 26 years removed. I'm not impressed anymore. I'm not impressed by them. You want to impress me, stand on your own two god damn feet. John Gotti fought the government, but he had an army behind him. He certainly had a loyal son in his corner, and an army behind him. And he was a folk hero throughout.
Starting point is 03:02:53 I fought the United States government with limited reserves, no army behind me. I went to prison by myself. I did my time. I didn't walk around and say, hey, you know, I'm John Gotti. I got the whole Gambino family behind me. I did it my own time. I did my bid. I did my bid.
Starting point is 03:03:09 Okay? I did my time. So to answer your question, that angers me to have someone like a Gravano that you went to, took the punk way out, went to a punk prison, went to a punk unit in ADX Colorado. ADX Colorado is a serious place. It took over for Marion, serious place,
Starting point is 03:03:30 but he didn't do serious time. He went into a rat unit and did time with rats. That's what he did, fellow rats. He wasn't with any men there because he wouldn't have made the bid. They would have ate him up. John, you know, first of all, James, if you're watching this,
Starting point is 03:03:46 I never said a million and a half. Why are you overnegotiating? No, you said one million for me and 500,000 for Gravano. Don't count my money, James. I'm gonna call James. We're gonna have a conversation. But if I may pet-
Starting point is 03:03:57 But this is what I was gonna say to you. Here's what I was gonna say to you. You know, you said something about, you know, you're blue, independent. I've been a registered independent for 17 years. I like Clinton. I voted for him. I like Trump. I voted for him. I fought for him. I defended him. I think he's the right guy right now for America where we are.
Starting point is 03:04:19 Love him or hate him, I don't care where you are. It's my position. I'm not saying you love him or Aiden. I'm talking to the audience You know, but that's that's a part of it why we have something in America, which is fantastic which is called debate and the reason why I bring this up is If I'm watching like the way I watch interviews John It's when a conversation is taking place. I'm saying ask this ask this It's when a conversation is taking place, I'm saying ask this, ask this. This is my question. I'm the audience, ask me the question I wanna ask.
Starting point is 03:04:49 The question I would ask is the following. I think the question fans will wanna ask. If you're willing to meet with the Feds for 40 minutes, why don't you meet with Sammy? By the way, Sammy also doesn't wanna do it. I can't, I must be the worst negotiator in the world. Because I can't get neither side to anything. I should retire from sales and go so he's made some Starbucks or something answer that question. It's this stuff I I was about I was about to go to trial. Yeah, I had co-defendants
Starting point is 03:05:14 We were going to trial going to war against the government Okay, that was part of the tactic that I employed to meet with them to set establish a foundation With me going on the stand and testifying, me. They accused me of being the shot caller. I was the head of the indictment. I was the head of the indictment. I was the father. According to them, I was the father.
Starting point is 03:05:32 This was the family and I was the father of that family. I didn't send a sacrificial lamb to go along there. I didn't tell, I was gonna go on that stand myself. And believe me, it would have been a war. I would have been sparring with the best, the US attorneys would have been coming out with everything. And look, it would have gotten to a point. Charlie, can you see X that question?
Starting point is 03:05:52 You're gonna be asked some sensitive questions about sensitive people. And I'm gonna say, I don't have a rat deal here. I don't have one of those 5K1 letters. See, all these rats have what's called the most magic get out of jail free tickets. It's called a 5K1 letter. A 5K1 letter means you're a rat.
Starting point is 03:06:06 It means you help the government out, they go in front of the judge, and they get you released from prison. Me? I fought the United States government over and over and over again. I even was willing on the last case. I offered to take 20 years. So they stopped subpoenaing my sister. They subpoenaed my sister Victoria.
Starting point is 03:06:23 They subpoenaed all my witnesses, including my brother Peter, harassed my family. I told my lawyer, go in and tell them, I'll take 20 right now. Just let this go, we're done. You know what the FBI agent in charge of the case said? Tell John, that's not gonna happen, we got him. That's what he said.
Starting point is 03:06:39 You know what I did? When the verdict came down, and finally the final letter came down after multiple Allen charges, you never heard of more than one Allen charge in any case, it's an explosion charge to get a verdict. This judge unethically did one unannounced and two announced, which already,
Starting point is 03:06:58 those are all reversible issues right there alone. 23 days of deliberations, 23 days, those people went to war and got me released on December 1. 15 years ago last week, I was released, December 1, okay? I was released from solitary confinement, released home to my family. And when they came over and told me, and the judge says, you have no other choice,
Starting point is 03:07:17 give me bail, it was the fifth case in 37 months. What I did was I got up. First, I had some emotions. I had some tears running down my face. Let's not forget that. It was very emotional. I was going home. Is this really over? Is this finally really over? The wars are over? As Bruce Cutler called them, the Gotti Wars, are they finally over? Okay. Got my composure, got up. The FBI agent was sitting over there. I looked at him, I walked past him, I stopped, I walked back.
Starting point is 03:07:49 I said, how's that 20 years look now, motherfucker? And I walked out. Couldn't help myself. Should have taken the 20, you had me. You had me, I threw the towel in. That was my way of being a punk. My way of being a punk was taking the 20 years and quitting. That's what I, and I was taking 20 years.
Starting point is 03:08:06 Not a rat deal. Not one of those magic 5K one, get out of jail free cards like they all got. No, no, no. I was taking 20 years. Think about it. That case, I'm 60 years old, I'd be getting out in two more years. I'd be getting out. So right now you and I wouldn't be talking.
Starting point is 03:08:21 I'd be getting released in two years from now. Think about that for a second, okay? And I was willing to do that. That's what I was willing to do, to make this all end. To make this pain stop. To make my mother's pain stop. Make my wife's pain stop. Make my sibling's pain stop.
Starting point is 03:08:37 Make my father's grandkids, once and for all, let's end this madness. This is crazy. I mean, the Gottys are the most tried family in history, and I'm the most tried Gotty. There's no Gotty tried more than me. None. You look at it.
Starting point is 03:08:50 Please, while we're here, did we get that stat yet? Because 37 months, stop to start, five federal proceedings, never been done before, ever. Donald Trump. You voted for Donald, right? Okay. How many cases did he get? Some were civil. I think one civil, two criminal, then one state case on top of that right for total like he got a ton of them
Starting point is 03:09:09 I don't know what the number is guess who got more than Donald Trump me guess who has a billion dollars him Guess who now has absolution him guess who had a fight his way out me 34 charges Alright, so I eclipse those 34 charge if you take my indictments you out. Me. 34 charges. I eclipsed those 34 charges. If you take my indictments and stack them all up, 34 charges. John, you may want to run it to me. You got to go into 150, 200 charges for crime law. You're running for office 28, then after that, that's the case.
Starting point is 03:09:33 Listen, I got charged, Pat, I got charged with a murder. I got charged in Pinellas County, Florida. A federal judge sent me back home to New York to be tried because he didn't want nothing to do with the case. He knew I didn't belong there. He said, this man beat his four times and you're gonna dump him on me? Oh, hell no.
Starting point is 03:09:50 He could have dismissed it, he didn't. He sent it back to New York. I got charged with a murder in Tampa, Florida. I'd never been to Tampa in my life. I couldn't find Tampa with a goddamn Mac. First time I ever arrived in Tampa, Florida was in handcuffs. They had a massive press conference.
Starting point is 03:10:07 I believe the US attorney's name was O'Neill. Twenty agents up there. You've never been there? Never been to Tampa. Excuse me. In my life. Never been to Tampa. In my life.
Starting point is 03:10:17 That was the first time in handcuffs and shackles with a helicopter over me, 20 guards around me bringing me into the prison. And I'm saying basically when my lawyer famed Henry Gonzalez, speaking of Rico, he's one of the first lawyers to spar with Robert Blakey who created the Rico law. Henry Gonzalez, the late great Henry Gonzalez, dear friend of mine, and I love the guy, I miss him, he came to see me.
Starting point is 03:10:39 Friend of my dad's, friend of Neil de la Croix. And he says, how are you, John? I says, Henry, what am I doing here? He says, well, you're about the Fado Rico case. I says, I've never been to Tampa in my life. He says, well, they say otherwise. And I was there. But before we forget, Patton,
Starting point is 03:10:58 I know where you want to close with. I want to just read something. I got two things I want to read to you very quickly, okay? And you give me, again, I'm going to ask you for an opinion. And I admire honesty. I truly do. I truly do. Oh, and I think, you see, with the Gravano, I would never meet with Gravano, with the government,
Starting point is 03:11:13 because that was the tactic we were employing to fight a case. I was employing the tactic to fight a case. Everybody knew I was going in. Okay? I was a civilian. So I was able to fight the case different than the next guy. But I want to read something to you. These are the letters that I had sent, me personally, endorsed by my counsel, but I personally had typed them up, had them type them up, I don't have to type, but I had written
Starting point is 03:11:37 myself personally to the following individuals asking for an open hearing on misconduct against me as well as this rat charge against me. Now does this sound like somebody has something to hide? Here I am. Attorney General's of the US Attorney. Okay. I had written Attorney General Michael Mukasey on 310-08. Got no response back. I had written Attorney General Eric Holder on 713-09. I had written Attorney General Eric Holder on 7-13-09, no response back. I had written to US Attorney Preet Bharara twice, one in January 2018 and the other in 2014, no response. And I had written to US Attorney General Jeff Sessions on 4-17-2017, okay?
Starting point is 03:12:21 And I got a letter back saying thank you friend for your letter, and we're gonna consider this Well here. We are seven years later. I still haven't heard back from anybody so is this a guy Who gives you any impression that he's got something to hide now? Remember remind you also letters asking for hearings then I asked my trial judge Shira Shindlin for a hearing on April 2006 I asked for this an open court about this issue and the leaks to the press and everything else and what they were trying to create this aura around me. And basically, I asked for it. We asked for the hearing in April 2006, as well as in
Starting point is 03:12:54 August again in 2006. And both times it was turned down, I asked for the hearing from my trial judge, Kevin Costello, on 11-11-09, and again in the summer of 2009 down, I asked for the hearing from my trial judge, Kevin Costell, on 11-11-09. And again, in the summer of 2009, we asked Eli Honig, the prosecutor. We asked him for the demand for the file on the lead FBI agent there.
Starting point is 03:13:16 Again, nobody's ever complied. Now, I've got a tremendous amount of respect for Eli Honig, who's an amazing prosecutor, and I got to tell you, of all the prosecutors that I faced in my life, I think between state and federal, I know in federal I faced 17 prosecutors, or U.S. attorneys, and I think we have a couple of the state,
Starting point is 03:13:37 I think we go into about 22 or 23. Eli Honig was a very professional prosecutor. He was good at what he did. I don't believe he ever even wanted the case. When we won the motion in Tampa, Florida, that case was dumped on his lap. The team in Tampa, Florida came over to New York. So now I had to fight two different agencies.
Starting point is 03:13:55 I had to fight the Middle District of Tampa, and I had a Middle District of Florida, which is Tampa. I think it's the 11th Circuit. And I had to fight the Southern District of New York, which was Eli Hornick was the AUSA in that case. I had a fight both of them. Eli Honig had written a book, okay, and again, I'm trying to be expeditious here. He had written a book, and in the book that he had written, he talks about the case agent
Starting point is 03:14:22 on my case. And again, I guess this may be a case of how you guys are going to edit this, but again, I'm just trying to get all this content in because it's essential to make my case. Okay? Just goes to show you about the 302, how it works out, how it's dictated, how in my particular case 13 months later, a report was, a garnished report 13 months later, how ridiculous it is, there's dead people in a bar fight that could not have been there.
Starting point is 03:14:50 The investigative detective was in the bar fight. Look, you're the greatest crime-fighting agency in the world, so you say, right? The FBI? They did say that at one time, and I believe, you know, there are some bad apples, but I do believe the technology that they probably are the greatest crime-fighting agency in the world.
Starting point is 03:15:11 You're telling me a select few decided to overlook some of these things or not even bother to research this? Who's Riley? Who's Joe Curio? Dead man at a bar fight? Nobody chose to look at that? Okay. I'll go along with that. But let me show you why I ended up at that point. Here's Eli Honig, and again a respected AUSA, and I have respect for him as a AUSA because he fought the
Starting point is 03:15:38 case I believe as fair as he possibly could with his hands tied to a point, okay? He talks about the agent on my case and when he talks about him he says he was obsessed with a certain particular murder. He was brilliant. He was brilliant. Incorrigible. Relentless. FBI special agent with the Queens-based Gambino squad.
Starting point is 03:16:02 He had investigated and solved plenty of mob cases over his career, often deploying unorthodox techniques. Now pay attention to this one. He once typed up pages of phony transcripts of a wiretap that didn't exist, put them into a binder, and showed them to a Gambino soldier to try to convince him that we had him dead on wiretapping to try to make him into a rat, to flip him. Now, is that ethical? Put false documents out to try to flip somebody to tell them they're going to get killed if they don't? Well, this is the tech, he's, with humor, he's openly talking about this.
Starting point is 03:16:42 I mean, I couldn't help by reading this. I kept... I read it over and over again, and I read it again, and I read it again, and I said to myself, did he say this? Because this ain't funny. This is misconduct. It's everything I've been saying
Starting point is 03:16:56 that this particular agent did. It's misconduct. You're doctoring up documents. It's misconduct. That's not by the rule book. You're the FBI. You are holier than thou. The rules that pertain to you are supposed to be a higher standard. I guess not. I guess not.
Starting point is 03:17:17 You would have made a great lawyer, John. Yeah, I would have tried. I should have. I'm actually being serious. You would have made a great lawyer. We had some of that IQ passed over to you. I mean, you got to take some credit. I thank you. I'm gonna pimple on my father's ass. I promise you. I'm just telling you, just listening to you make the case. It's very impressive how you communicate. I think there's a few things that's been my takeaway from this. I go home tonight, my wife's gonna say,
Starting point is 03:17:45 babe, how was the conversation with John Gotti, Jr.? I'm gonna say, babe. Actually, I'm John A. John A, right. My father's junior, people don't know that, but he's junior. My father's father's John Gotti, my father's junior. I didn't know that.
Starting point is 03:17:57 My father's siblings all called him junior, nobody called him Johnny. I didn't know that. They all called him junior. I'm the third, technically, and my son John's the fourth, and somehow it got confused. I thought he was the third. It got confused. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 03:18:08 So I'm John A., the third, and my son John is the fourth, but for his boxing promotion, they made him the third. Yeah. And they made me Junior, and I don't even know, the media made me Junior as well. Well, let me. It's had a better ring to it. My wife always asks me, she says,
Starting point is 03:18:22 "'Babe, you know, we were doing election night podcast and I went eight hours straight sitting down with 2,000 people in front of me not once I went to the bathroom. John, I have so much respect for you. I appreciate it. You've not gone to the restroom one time yet. We've been going through this entire conversation for-
Starting point is 03:18:40 I should go another two, three hours if you want. Your fire is incredible. Just listening to these stories. Not being for 60 year old men. But that's why I said, when you first thing I said, when I looked at you, you want another two, three hours. You want. Your fire is incredible. Just listening to these stories. Not bad for 60 year old men. That's why I said when you first, when I looked at you when we walked in, I'm like, Johnny, you look good. I appreciate it, thank you.
Starting point is 03:18:51 I appreciate you coming out, this conversation. I hope we'll do a couple more in the future as well. On your flight back, just consider on if we were to do a sit down together with, pray about it. Because Sammy's from God. When you hear Sammy. I couldn't ever respect my father. I would never even be in the room with the guy.
Starting point is 03:19:11 I couldn't do it. Listen, look, I don't know, but well, I do know. Sammy Gravano can't go back to the old neighborhood. He can't. He can pretend to. He can sneak in like the rest of these rats do. I eat in the restaurants I've always eaten in my whole life. Could I eat in those restaurants and go to those places
Starting point is 03:19:29 if I would sit in a room with someone like a Sam Gravano? No, no. And I still have, again, I'm 26 years removed from that life, I'm a civilian, proud of my position where I am right now, I'm proud of my accomplishments. However, when I watch the movies, I still root for a certain kind of a bad guy.
Starting point is 03:19:49 I always do. It's in my heart. It is in my heart. And there's individuals that I left behind in that life, and there's individuals left in prison that every holiday I get very sentimental about, especially the fellas in prison. Believe me, I always have a drink alone
Starting point is 03:20:05 before I start to do anything on any holiday. I have it alone for them. And then I always have one again at the end of the night for them. Respect for my brothers that I left in prison, my cellmate who was doing Life Plus, and other individuals. I always do.
Starting point is 03:20:21 I always, that's who I am. I could never be in a room with a guy like that who put so many people in prison, destroyed so many families. Look, I wrote a... In my book, I talk about the necessity of certain things in life. And in a civilized society, we need strong law enforcement. We need them.
Starting point is 03:20:38 We need a non-corrupt FBI. We need that. We need it. It's essential to survive. We need it. We need great investigative tools to give us the freedoms that we enjoy in this society. We need all of that. And you want to know something? To make certain cases, I guess you need cooperators. You do.
Starting point is 03:20:56 Donald Trump saying flipping should be illegal? I don't agree. What I disagree... what he should have said, and again, same what you were saying, that certain things, certain questions should be asked. When don't agree. What I disagree, what he should have said, and again, same what you were saying, that certain things, certain questions should be asked. When I watch Donald Trump talk at times, I'm like this, oh, he's gonna answer this just like,
Starting point is 03:21:14 and he frustrates me, he frustrates me. And he's a likable guy, but he frustrates me in some respects. But I say to myself all the time, I said, cooperators, I guess they are somewhat a necessity to a point. Here's the problem. Most federal judges do not know that when they go in front
Starting point is 03:21:38 of them with that magic letter, that 5K letter that's magic, they go with that letter, and they say what great cooper, great assistance he gave to us, and so on and so forth, and they reduce the sentence and release them immediately, they believe that they were releasing this person to the witness protection program under the strict supervision of both the FBI and the US Marshals Service. They believe that's happening, they do. They don't know that at any time, if life gets a little tricky, and the US Marshals Service. They believe that's happening. They do. They don't know that at any time, if life gets a little tricky, and the Marshals Service, they are stringent.
Starting point is 03:22:11 When you're in their program, they want you to work. You're supposed to be gainfully employed. They get you a car. They give you a budget to live, but they want you to get a job, and they want to make sure you're paying your taxes and yada, yada, yada. Most of these witnesses aren't going to adhere to those rules. So what do they do? They just sign themselves out, and they're in the wind.
Starting point is 03:22:27 Now, if a judge knew that you have the ability, at any time, you were dangerous yesterday. You did 19 murders, 20 murders, you held without bail, the U.S. Attorney's Office felt you were so dangerous, you should never be released because this guy, he did a murder, he did this, he did this, then all of a sudden, now he cooperated, he's less dangerous? a new identity that nobody knows who he is
Starting point is 03:22:50 or where he's at. I leave here right now, people know I'm John Gotti, that's who I am. If I go take a rock and break your window, you're going to see me like John Gotti broke that window, there it is. These guys have new identities, new driver's license, new everything. So that's why nobody could police these individuals. You think it's okay to release them into somebody else's community, okay?
Starting point is 03:23:12 Unwatched, unpoliced, and judges don't know this. Most federal judges aren't aware of this. They think that I'm releasing them, and the individual's gonna go into the program, and if he does one thing wrong he comes right back here. No. If he does anything wrong, that's it. There's no more time. He's done. Gravano said, understand, he said, if I lie, if I tell a lie, I'll do the rest of my life in jail. I'll tear up my agreement. Okay? That's what he
Starting point is 03:23:40 said. He said it over and over again. Well, he got caught selling narcotics to kids, right? And the only reason why the federal government gave him a 20-year sentence is because Arizona already gave him that sentence. And that's like you're turning around and saying that, yeah, we're going to do it too. He's not going to do any more time. He's going to do the time. Only the difference is he's going to do it in a federal protected unit, not in some state unit in Arizona where maybe he'd be more vulnerable. It'd be a little tougher that time for him.
Starting point is 03:24:10 Instead, he went to a federal protected unit, okay, and the judge, the federal government mirrored the sentence. He got no additional time, none at all. Now what happened to the life without parole? What happened to you being made accountable for 19 murders? What happened to all of that? What happened to it? You just now violated people arriving in jail.
Starting point is 03:24:36 People died in prison. Most of those guys you testified against already died in prison. They died in prison already, including my father. My father died a horrible death, handcuffed to a bed alone in solitary confinement, alone. Read his death certificate, you know what it says? His death certificate says, he choked on his own vomit and blood.
Starting point is 03:24:53 That's how my father died. Everything was rotted and destroyed, he had nothing left. The pain that this man was going through, handcuffed to a fucking bed, was unbearable. And he choked on his own vomit and blood. Never said uncle, never. Walked it all the way to the gate, valour. Whether you respect the choices he made in his life or not,
Starting point is 03:25:12 whether you respect what he was in his life, criminal, whatever he was, he still believed in what he was and he walked it all the way to the gate. Gravano did not do that, he does not have that right. He does not have that right. And getting back to what I said, if a federal judge knew John O. did not do that. He does not have that right. He does not have that right. And getting back to what I said, if a federal judge knew these particulars, I believe, make them accountable.
Starting point is 03:25:32 Yeah, let them become a rat. Let them go into the program. Do whatever you're going to do. And once your time, if you commit any violations, you have to go back in front of that judge. And that judge can now bring it all home. He can give you all that time. He could send it right up your backside. John, I'm going to get a lot of weird phone calls when this thing goes live.
Starting point is 03:25:47 And they're going to be interesting phone calls. But regardless of it, I really enjoyed speaking with you. I appreciate you for coming out. And I wish you had five more hours to sit down and talk to me. As do I. You really enjoy this. Thank you. I'm just getting started.
Starting point is 03:26:02 But I appreciate you for coming up, man. This was fantastic. Thank you. Thank you for having me. Thank you so much for this. Absolutely. I'm just getting started, but I appreciate you for coming up in this was fantastic. Thank you for this Absolutely, I'm sure you're hospitality anytime anytime and At the end of the day, you know who wins with these types of conversations the audience wins Well, the audience hears it and for you you get to tell your work because you don't do a lot of this stuff I don't see a lot of stuff. I'm not into it. Look look at nothing to rupture again I thought the opportunity was here and I I know how you, I know you're pretty astute at what you do.
Starting point is 03:26:31 That being said, I figured, you know what? I would like him to police me. I want someone to police me. If I'm saying, if I'm misrepresenting anything, police me and say, show me I'm wrong. I've got fact checkers right here. Show me I'm wrong. Put me, take me to task and let me explain it if I'm me I'm wrong. Take me to task and let me explain it if I'm not expressing it properly.
Starting point is 03:26:47 Take me to task, let me express myself properly. If I'm not, take me to task and let me explain that situation. And one more thing, again, gracious host, you offered to fly me out here, right? First class. Food, per deem, hotel rooms, the whole nine yards, right? Sure. I refused it, I refused it the whole nine yards, right? Sure.
Starting point is 03:27:05 I refused it. I refused it. I told you, donate it to cancer. Donate it to Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. I'll get here on my own. I'm sure Gravano didn't make the same expression to you. I'm sure he didn't do that. I'm sure Gravano didn't do that.
Starting point is 03:27:19 I'm sure. I'm sure. Because everything is about money to people like him. Everything is about money to him, okay? Let's see how many of his victims he's gonna return some of that money back to. Let's see, let's just see. Let's take a shot.
Starting point is 03:27:32 He's working on a lot of stuff going on right now, right? I'm sure. Maybe they can infiltrate his bank account in England. That bank account he has in England. Your birthday is your Valentine's Day? Yeah, 2-14-64 is my birthday. Very interesting. Very interesting. Very interesting.
Starting point is 03:27:48 And you had no aspirations of wanting to be a lawyer? Like that never crossed your mind? I wanted to be a soldier. I wanted to go to, I graduated military academy. You wanted to be a soldier. I was captain of the boxing team. I played football. Did you always communicate this well?
Starting point is 03:28:02 No, no. One of the guardsmen is truth. I'm very shy, number one. Number two, my father was a tremendous orator in a room with individuals he could hold court. Me, I'd love to defer. I just never really had that ability, number one. Number two, for the most part, especially around women, I'm very shy. I'm a very shy guy. So my comfort level is my wife. My comfort level is people that I'm comfortable with. I'm a very shy guy. So, my comfort level is my wife, my comfort level is people that I'm comfortable with, it's my comfort level. But if I have something, if I have a point that I believe that I need to articulate, okay, you could overcome certain
Starting point is 03:28:37 things, certain anxieties you could overcome in the process of articulating those views when you feel a necessity that they have to come out and especially screw me, I'm here. Tonight, I'm going to eat in a wonderful restaurant down here, 388, dear friend of mine, I raised the kids, a wonderful guy. I'm going to have an amazing meal and I'm just me. I'm a regular guy. That's my father's son. I'm not special.
Starting point is 03:29:03 My father was special. You don't have to agree, nobody has to agree, but if they knew my father, they'd understand because everybody cements that portion of history. Donald Trump, for what he's accomplished, the cases and what was going on back and forth there and then to become the president of the United States, I mean, look, I'm not a doubting Thomas, I'm really not. But if you would have told me a year ago,
Starting point is 03:29:26 he's going to win, I told you, you done lost your mind. They've made it where he cannot win. And I was expecting him at some point, and I underestimated his character. I thought he was going to throw the towel at some point. I thought there were going to be back-channel conversations going on with the Biden regime, and what they were going to do, is my belief,
Starting point is 03:29:44 I thought that what they were going to do, is my belief, I thought that what they were going to do was this. Look, if I do win, I'm going to pardon your kid and anybody else in your family. If I don't, you know, you win, pardon me. Let's have a back-channel negotiation here. I believe that was going to be put in place. And I believed it right up until six weeks ago. I believed it. I truly did. But I still didn't believe he had any shot of winning. And I seen the enormous amount of money
Starting point is 03:30:10 that Team Harris had put out there, I think over... well, over a billion dollars. I know that. I says, wow. And the way they're saturating the media and the way the mainstream media, 93% of them, are basically against Trump, I said, I don't think he has any possibility,
Starting point is 03:30:24 because... and not to be insulted,, I don't think he has any possibility, because not to be insulting to anyone, I'm not trying to be insulting, or demeaning in any way, shape, or form, but the vast majority of people are sheep. They really need to be led. They really do. They look for someone as a father figure,
Starting point is 03:30:40 or they look for a voice to tell them, to advise them, to guide them. They do. And I believe that all the stuff you're incorporating or they look for a voice to tell them, to advise them, to guide them. They do. And I believe that all the stuff, you're incorporating the Oprah Winfrey's and the Beyoncé's and all that stuff, and I'm saying they're gonna win over people...
Starting point is 03:30:54 in a nice way, a sheep are gonna be a vovo, and they're gonna be won over and just led along. Donald Trump's the boogeyman, and all these other things that's gonna go on. And I believe he had no shot of winning this election. So that being said, I look at it and say, and just let along Donald Trump's the boogeyman and all these other things that's gonna go on. And I believe he had no shot of winning this election. So that being said, I look at it and say, he cemented his place in history.
Starting point is 03:31:11 Like him or not, doesn't even really matter, okay? Whether I like him or not, doesn't even matter. It means that he cemented his place in history because he overcame insurmountable odds and even the assassination attempt to turn at that perfect moment. I mean, look, call it God's guiding hand, whatever you want. He cemented his place in history, I believe, Nelson Mandela, he cemented his place in history
Starting point is 03:31:36 forever and ever. And again, every, what I'm explaining to you, take it in different ways. Don't take it, because I'm about to say the name John Gotti. Don't say, hey, how dare to say the name John Gotti. Don't say, hey, how dare you put the name John Gotti with Nelson Mandela. Look, Nelson Mandela had a curiosity about John Gotti as well. Nelson Mandela asked Charles Ogletree when he went to go see My Father multiple times in Marion, Illinois, what's he like?
Starting point is 03:32:00 How is his mannerisms? How is it over there in Marion, Illinois? So he had a curiosity about John Gotti. Nelson Mandela, the most recognizable face and name in the world at his time, had curiosities about John Gotti as well. So John Gotti cemented his self in history. Al Capone today?
Starting point is 03:32:16 Well, John Gotti 100 years from now is gonna surpass it all. He's never gonna drop. He's always gonna be synonymous. Unfortunately, maybe, with organized crime. It's always gonna drop. He's always gonna be synonymous Unfortunately, maybe would organize crime. It's always gonna be so it's one of those situations. You know every father Praise and hopes Their son admire them and love them as much as you love your father, and that's great to watch Sincerely, that's great to watch. I do, I do.
Starting point is 03:32:46 And you know what, Pat, in closing, I said this to my son. My son was the fighter, my son John. And before he was gonna fight, he was fighting Floyd Mayweather, he fought Floyd Mayweather in August in Mexico. And I said, John, look, this is your time. You can do amazing things. even though it was an exhibition. Even though it was an exhibition,
Starting point is 03:33:07 I said, you could do amazing things, John. I said, you could do amazing things here. I says, nobody's saying go out there and be reckless and try to hurt him. It's an exhibition, but you could do amazing things. And just think about this. When this was all said and done, you get to sit here and share this moment with me,
Starting point is 03:33:23 and I get to share this moment with you. I hope you cherish it, because I cherish it. Because you know something, John? If someone right now gave me a scissor and told me to cut off my pinky finger right now so I could have one hour of unguarded, unguarded, no wiretaps, nobody listening, nobody watching, and have a conversation with my father, one hour,
Starting point is 03:33:43 have a cigar and a martini. One hour, the old John, the healthy John Gotti, free, one hour, just leave us be. Leave us be. Let us say what a father and son would want to say. Let us get emotional. Let me cry. He won't, he's too tough, I'm not.
Starting point is 03:34:01 Let us embrace and then go back to the way it was. I would take my finger off tomorrow morning. Tomorrow morning I would do it. And let me tell you, that love is felt. It's like so amazing watching your loyalty and love for your pops. Thank you. That's great to see.
Starting point is 03:34:17 John. I appreciate it. Thank you. Thank you for your words. Thank you for your audience. Anytime, Thank you.

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