Fear City: New York vs the Mafia (2020) s01e01 Episode Script

Mob Rule

1
[phone line ringing on tape]
[line rings, clicks]
[reporter]
People once called New York "Fun City."
Now the police and firemen's unions
in New York are calling it "Fear City."
[man 4] There was a dispute over here,
and he gets shot in the head.
-[radio squawks]
-[indistinct chatter]
-[man 5] take that cocksucker out.
-[siren droning]
[man 6] This is a story about New York.
[woman] There's been a lot of muggings,
killings.
[man 7] Seven people have been murdered,
their throats cut with a foot-long knife.
[man 6] It's a story
about horrible acts of violence.
It seems organized crime may have turned
an abandoned railroad tunnel
into a graveyard for as many as 60 people.
[man 8]
Twenty-seven people have been eliminated.
[man 6] And then it's a story about greed
for money and power and dominance.
[man 8] Federal officials
say the Mob's income
could total
60 to 100 billion dollars a year.
[indistinct chatter]
[man 9] Ninety-seven-04.
[man 6] New York was held
in the grip of the Mafia.
as I've tried to tell the president,
the vice president, to Congress,
what's going on here,
they're not listening. This is a war.
[man 10] The director of the FBI said,
"What are we going to do about this?"
[overlapping chatter]
[man 11] This was billed as the biggest
organized crime investigation ever.
[man 12] We were gonna bug the Mafia.
-[man 13] Is Jimmy there?
-[man 14] He left about five minutes ago.
[man 12] We were gonna hear them
on the tapes, with our very own ears.
[indistinct chatter]
["Hard Times" by Baby Huey
and the Baby Sitters plays]
Cold, cold eyes upon me they stare ♪
People all around me
And they're all in fear ♪
So I play the part
I feel they want of me ♪
And I pull the shades
So I won't see them seein' me ♪
Havin' hard times in this crazy town ♪
Havin' hard times
There's no love to be found ♪
Havin' hard times in this crazy town ♪
Havin' hard times
There's no love to be found ♪
[song ends]
[man] In the '70s, the city of New York
was owned by the Mob.
I had seen what Italian organized crime
had done in the neighborhood
I grew up in in Brooklyn.
A few summers, I worked for my uncle,
Jimmy Schiavone, in a butcher shop.
My uncle, he owed money to the Mob.
The poor guy worked six days
a week to pay it back.
Meantime, I'd see these wiseguys
come in from the Bonanno crime family
bulls.
And my my uncle was in the back.
And he would be schvitzing.
He would be sweating,
because they'd be threatening him.
They'd threaten his son, Joey, Jr.
They'd threaten my aunt, Aunt Lucy.
And actually they'd look at me
and say, "Who's the kid, right?"
And he'd say, "No, no he's just
the delivery boy."
But, man, that was frightening days.
You knew when you
borrowed money from them.
They-- If you didn't pay on time,
they'd bend your leg
and stuff it in your pocket.
[man] My boxing trainer,
my baseball coach,
my barber were all involved with the Mob.
And I started getting an education,
really understanding the street
by the time I'm 14, 15.
By the time I'm the time I'm 17, 18,
I'm already collecting money.
And I'm told when to talk,
when not to talk,
or when to just hurt somebody.
[Velcro scratching]
[Alite] You wanna motivate 'em.
"Better have that money this fucking week.
If you don't have that money,
I'm gonna come see you in a different way.
Have that fucking money."
Now, when a guy comes to see me
and he insults me with $1,000,
yeah, I hurt him.
After I hurt him, I tell him to go get me
the rest of my fucking money.
Now there's no patience.
He doesn't have the money
a week before then, I baseball bat him.
[man 2] I liked lending money out
to people. It was good business.
If somebody couldn't pay,
then the idea is we become their partner.
I acquired a Chevrolet agency that way.
Then I started making a lot of money
and started to use that life
to benefit me.
[man 3] The gasoline scheme
was the biggest thing
that certainly I ever had.
There was a guy that had
a small gas operation out in Long Island.
He comes to me, and he says,
"Mike, I have a germ of an idea,
where we might be able to defraud
the government
out of tax on a gallon of gasoline."
So he got my attention.
I didn't like the government.
Puts the box on the table. Opens it up.
He said, "This is the first week's take
in the gas business: $320,000."
From that point on,
I grew that operation to between eight
and ten million dollars a week.
We were selling gas to branded,
unbranded stations, everybody,
'cause we were undercutting everybody.
We weren't paying the tax.
The FBI couldn't figure it out.
I'll never forget one day:
I was at my office
at my automobile dealership.
Two FBI agents come in.
They said, "Look, we know you got
something going on with this gas.
Just tell us how you're doing it.
You tell us how you're doing it.
We'll give you a pass."
I said, "I dunno
what you're talking about.
You wanna buy a car?
I'll give you a break.
I like you guys. Don't worry about it."
But that's how frustrated they were
with us.
They knew we were doing it,
but they could never figure it out.
It was the golden era of the Mob.
The FBI couldn't keep up with us.
There was no way.
-[horns honking]
-[officers chatting]
[man] Our relationship with the Mafia
it was a cat and mouse game.
A very serious game, to be sure.
I can't tell you how many times
a wiseguy would say to me,
"You do what you gotta do.
I do what I gotta do."
I used to tell them,
"Hey, you do your job. We'll do ours.
You catch us the right way,
no complaints."
Their job is to lock you up.
Our job is to get away with it.
You see them in a van,
you smile and you wave,
because you're being cocky with them.
They'd either walk away
or tell me fuck off.
If you didn't get told that in Brooklyn,
you'd done something wrong.
[man] There was organized crime
investigations being conducted
in three separate FBI offices,
but each of them had their own idea
about how to approach the problem.
So, there was organized crime,
but very unorganized investigations.
We had no strategy. We had no plan.
[DeVecchio] When we would come across
somebody we didn't know,
the only thing we could do
was take a photograph of them.
Then we could go out to our informants
and say, "Do you know this guy?"
They'd say, "Yeah, I know that guy."
"What's he do?
What's his criminal activity?
Who's he connected with?"
And then we'd put them on a board.
We had a very, very good idea
of who was who
and how the Mafia
was structured in New York.
The five Italian
organized crime families were
Gambino, Genovese, Lucchese,
Colombo, and Bonanno.
The families were very structured.
It started at the top with the boss,
then you had the underboss,
who was really the second in command,
and then you had
your caporegimes, captains,
and then you had the soldiers under them.
The way the families were structured
gave us a very powerful position.
The biggest problem was that you could
never get to an underboss
or the boss himself.
They were too well-insulated
from whatever criminal activity was done.
They had no connection with it whatsoever.
The lower-level guys were out there
committing the criminal acts
and kicking the money
up to the higher-ups.
The average wiseguy,
we knew what he was doing.
We put him in jail for a year,
but it didn't solve the problem.
Whatever their money making scheme was
went right on,
virtually without interruption,
'cause there's a lot of guys waiting
in the wings to take his place.
[Sliwa]
You know how I would spot the wiseguys?
-Well, particularly in the disco era
-Mm-hmm.
they had the polyester
waffle-weave bell bottoms.
They had the open neck, you know?
They had to have the hair.
Then they'd have their toilette water on,
you know, like that Old Spice, Hai Karate.
-Lilac water.
-Ah.
Man, you light a match,
you'd all be blown to kingdom come.
To my surprise
One hundred stories high ♪
[Alite] In the '70s, when we started
moving heroin and cocaine, it was huge.
We were making a million a month.
We partied constantly.
All the gangsters used.
They'll tell you they never did,
but they did.
Say nobody cheated on their wives,
but everybody cheated on their wives.
Nobody drank champagne.
We drank champagne day and night.
-I heard somebody say ♪
-Burn, baby, burn ♪
Disco inferno ♪
Burn, baby, burn ♪
-Burn the mother down ♪
-Burn it ♪
[Sliwa] The wiseguys were collecting
the moola-shmoola.
In the mean time,
the city of New York was total anarchy.
The Bronx was burning like every night.
Buildings were being either torched
by the landlord for the insurance
or torched by gangs.
[man] There is a war in progress
on the streets of New York
to see who's gonna control
portions of the illegal drug market.
[DeVecchio] New York was lawless.
[man] One hundred eighty-seven banks
were robbed in this town this month,
and there's still another day left.
[DeVecchio] Bank robberies, hijackings,
drugs, murder, extortion,
loan sharking, gambling, you name it.
Organized crime controlled virtually
everything you can think of.
No matter how much manpower
we put out there,
the Mafia ran virtually
unfettered in New York.
[reporter] The Guardian Angels
is a group of youths who have taken it
upon themselves to fight subway crime.
[Sliwa] We had to take the law
into our own hands.
As Guardian Angels,
trying to maintain law and order
The cops didn't like it, but we said,
"Tough noogies, too bad,
because you guys turned the city over
to organized crime."
[Franzese] Look, I had a jet plane.
I had a Lear 25.
I had a helicopter at that time.
I had a house in Florida,
a house in New York.
I built a 7,000-square-foot house
with a racquetball court.
[Alite]
We were untouchable.
Who's gonna stop us?
You felt like you had the power
to do anything you want.
I didn't have any power to do anything.
We were lucky if we put one or two guys
in jail every year.
[Alite] I didn't feel New York
was mine for the taking.
I thought we already took it.
I'm burning, burning
I'm burning ♪
[Kossler] New York was held
in the grip of the Mafia.
The government
was not controlling much of anything.
That was the worst part about it.
People didn't believe that law enforcement
could do anything about the Mafia.
It was gonna be here forever.
[thunder rumbles]
[Kossler]
We had a meeting in Washington, D.C.,
the Department of Justice.
The director of the FBI said,
"What are we going to do about this?"
[typewriter clacking]
[man] At the time,
the FBI was totally unsuccessful.
But we already had the perfect tools
to bring down the Mafia.
The Racketeer Influenced
and Corrupt Organizations Act
commonly referred to as RICO,
was a law that I wrote in 1970
to dismantle the Mafia, bosses and all.
The FBI had this law for ten years
and didn't know how to use it.
So I figured maybe what we could do
is have a training course
at Cornell, right here.
[Kossler] March of '79,
the boss wanted us to go
to a seminar
at Cornell University Law School
having to do
with organized crime problems.
It was a week of spending time
away from the family.
I wasn't really seeing what benefit
it was to me or to us.
I went kicking and screaming,
but as it turned out,
it would change everything.
[Blakey] Question is, why RICO?
You need to know what we had before RICO.
Before RICO, we could arrest
the foot soldiers in the Mafia family
for things like extortion,
murder, drug-dealing,
but we had no way of tying
the foot soldiers to the bosses.
I was telling them, "What you've gotta do
is take out the organization.
And you're not gonna take out
the organization
unless you focus on the organization."
By defining these people as bosses
and members of this organization,
they're now all joined together.
Using RICO, a person can now be convicted
because they ordered somebody
to commit a crime.
So you could now prosecute
a group of people
who had committed those crimes together.
That way you can go after
the whole organization at one time.
You need to be able to show
that this crime was related 
to an organization
that does crime the whole time.
-The definition of power
-[Kossler] Bob Blakey said,
"You should prosecute
these Mob guys not as individual people,
but as a group of people
committing crimes as a business."
It was like an epiphany for me a rush.
Now I could see
how I could redirect the agents
and make them understand
what we had to do.
Now I knew how we could bring down
the entire New York Mafia.
[clacking]
[Kossler]
The plan was to develop a RICO case
against each of the Five Families.
Organized crime requires
organized investigation.
We would have five Family squads,
and all the information
about that particular Family
would only go that one squad.
[DeVecchio] Kossler brought us
into the conference room one day
and said, "We're not leaving the room
until we have a written document
of how we work organized crime cases
under the RICO statute."
We didn't know anything
about the RICO law, frankly,
because we never used it.
All of a sudden, people said,
"Wait a minute. I have all these cases
involving all those people down here."
"Close them, because we're only
gonna go after these people up here."
[DeVecchio] You're talking
about a major operation:
one squad per family, going after
the bosses of all Five Families.
When he first broached that to me, I
I had my doubts. How're we gonna do that?
The problem was that
no matter how hard you tried,
it was very, very difficult
to get a cooperating witness.
They were too afraid
to talk on the record.
[typewriter clacking]
[Franzese] We had a strict code.
It was the main reason why the Mob
survived and prospered
for well over a hundred years
in this country.
I took the blood oath
on Halloween Night, 1975.
The boss was seated at the head
of, like, a horseshoe configuration,
and all the captains were
alongside of that.
I held out my hand.
He took a knife, cut my finger.
He took a picture of a saint,
put it on my hands, lit a flame
and he said, "Tonight, Michael Franzese,
you are born again into a new life."
He said, "Betray your brothers
and you will die and burn in hell
like this saint is burning in your hands."
He said, "Do you accept?"
"Yes, I do."
Guys like myself
everybody on the street,
they knew, you become the witness,
you're probably gonna pay
for it with your life.
You feared the boss.
You feared breaking the code.
[man] The Yankess are one game away
from ending the 1980 baseball season
[Kossler] Someone who becomes
a member of the Mafia won't testify.
It was a secret society.
But we had a good solution
to a big problem.
Without cooperating witnesses,
the plan was to start bugging the Mob.
Put bugs in the places
where they operated.
It might be a restaurant he frequents.
It might be a car that he uses.
It might be his house.
The ultimate goal was to record evidence
that's coming directly
from the boss's mouth
as to what criminal activity
he was involved in
and who was in it involved with him.
You can use that to bring
the whole organization down.
That was gonna take a lot of manpower.
I asked headquarters to send us 50 agents.
The director said,
"Give New York whatever it needs."
[typewriter clacking]
[man] We started off on day one.
I had the Gambino family.
It was one of the most powerful families.
There were close to 21 captains,
over three hundred soldiers
thousands of associates.
And the largest target was
Paul Castellano, the boss of the family.
Castellano ran the family
like a Fortune 500 business.
They called him the white-collar don
because he read The Wall Street Journal.
He was very successful financially.
But the most important thing
he understood was,
in order to rule a crime family,
you have to instill fear
in your soldiers and captains.
And he had a bunch
of real tough guys around him
who were like hit men for the Mob.
[Alite] Paul Castellano was a boss.
We knew he was very wealthy.
We knew we was very strong.
He had 20-something guys killed.
So when people say
he was a soft, white-collar criminal,
that's the furthest thing from the truth.
I actually looked up to the guy.
This is a guy who's smart enough
to kill the way had people killed,
but yet not be called a killer.
Because he is a killer.
It's just not by his own hand.
[Mouw] He lived in a big house
on Staten Island.
Our goal was to put a microphone there.
Then when you play the tapes at trial,
your best witnesses are
the criminals themselves, the mobsters.
[Kossler] The problem was you cannot
bug anyone without a court order.
I have got to come up
with enough information,
either from surveillance
or from informants,
that links Paul Castellano
to criminal activity.
So the plan was to work our way up
from the bottom.
We want the gossip in the family.
We want the blabbermouth,
the guy who talks a lot.
[woman] When I started
as an organized crime investigator,
I was assigned to the Gambino squad.
We were focused
on this small group in Queens.
Bergin Hunt and Fish Club
was a Mafia social club
where they hung out
and talked about their crimes.
John Gotti was the captain
of this little den of thieves.
This crew were kind of thuggish,
and they handled a lot of street rackets:
loan sharking primarily,
and gambling, and bookie joints.
And they were hijackers.
That was the more violent crimes.
[Alite] Bergin Hunt and Fish Club
was our Wall Street.
When guys go to work on Wall Street,
they show up to the office,
and we show up
to the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club.
And we wait for our boss, our CEO
John Gotti.
I'm there 24 hours a day,
seven days a week,
on call for when that man wanted me.
We're running numbers.
We're running drugs. We're running girls.
Anything that's illegal.
[Mouw] I tasked all the agents:
"Let's find out what these guys are doing,
who's making all the money,
and try to look for a weak link."
[Alite] The FBI had an office very close
to the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club.
We were taught, especially by Gotti:
"If they're around, they're around.
We know they're around,
so, 'Hello, how are you?' Be cordial."
That's about it.
[Mouw] We developed several
high-level informants in Gotti's crew
through a variety of means.
Some were arrested, some we paid a lot.
These guys provided a lot of information
about who the weak links were
in that crew.
[Alite] John's personal pit bull bodyguard
was a tough guy known to be very violent.
He would do anything,
from making him tons of money
to killing for him, to protecting him.
His name was Angelo Ruggiero.
[Mouw] Informants told us
that he was a big gossip.
They called him "Quack Quack."
Not to his face.
He ate a great deal.
And he talked a great deal.
[chuckles]
So his mouth was always in motion.
Angelo was our blabbermouth.
[Kossler] This was great.
We went to the Attorney General
of the United States and got approval
to put a bug in Angelo Ruggiero's house.
We were off and running.
[typewriter clacking]
[man] A "black bag man"
was an agent who had a skill set
for planting a concealed microphone
or getting through a locked door.
And that's basically
what was in the black bag of tricks.
Many people don't operate
in a covert world effectively.
They don't blend.
The most successful agents
fit sort of my profile.
Maybe I was a bad kid growing up.
Maybe I learned how to hide and learned
how to blend and so on and so forth.
My blending technique would
depend on the neighborhood.
And generally speaking,
I'm just a local guy doing his job.
In the Ruggiero case,
the house was always occupied.
The neighborhood was too close
and there was never an opportunity
that we could guarantee
the security of the entry team.
So we came up with alternative options.
Ruggiero's residence
had problematic wiring.
His telephone service
would be out from time to time.
We were just going to see
if we could stretch that
into an opportunity to get in the house.
The complaint goes in because he has
absolute legitimate trouble on his phone.
We would ask the phone company
to not dispatch and I would show up.
[Cantamessa] Ruggiero's a little hostile.
We were always concerned
that they didn't trust
my undercover identity.
But failure
honestly was not an option.
I'm winging it.
I'm making this up as I'm going along,
trying to read the pulse
of who I'm dealing with.
Now I had an opportunity.
We ran the wire to the back,
and we're out of there.
[Lucht] I was assigned to listen in
on Angelo Ruggiero's home.
When you were assigned a shift,
you listened live.
And you would listen to see
who his colleagues are
and who he's in charge of
and who he reports to.
He tried to be a little cryptic.
So you were kind of trying to capture
the gist of what was being talked about.
[Lucht] It was a total immersion
into the life of a Mafia household.
So, I never heard so many creative uses
of the f-word in my life.
[distorted speech on tape]
[Lucht] If there were
some hot, pertinent conversations,
then those things were immediately
turned over to the steno pool
who did their best to transcribe them.
It was like some kind of soap opera.
I got this impression that Angelo was
this kind of cranky, over-verbal guy
who loved his kids.
The kids were, um
shall we say, a handful.
He ran around and did a lot
of meat-handed management
of all these crew members
in his Mafia crew and his family.
[typewriter clacking]
[Lucht] It was harder to understand
certain sections.
So all the agents tended to get assigned
to reviewing these conversations
in order to make the transcripts sensible.
And so you listened again
and again and again.
[indistinct speech]
[indistinct speech]
You were kind of trying
to put the puzzle together.
I mean, it was a real slow-going art.
[garbled speech]
[garbled speech]
[garbled speech]
People on the squad had different input,
and they'd say, "Wait, I hear this,"
and then you'd say, "Yeah, that's the key.
That's what's going on in here."
He would make reference to it.
Did he get it? You know, did he get it?
[tape deck clicks, rewinds]
[garbled speech]
We're sitting there like, "Well,
what is he talking about, you know?"
You know, but then you had to put it
with who he's speaking to.
Who was that
at the other end of that telephone?
[garbled speech]
[overlapping, garbled speech]
[Lucht] And of course,
the FBI had technical abilities
to track the phone, and over time,
you'd figure out who it is.
And then when you put it together,
you'd say, he said, "Did you get it?"
And he's talking to a guy
who is a big drug dealer.
Here we are in the middle of the day.
Angelo is talking
about two- or three-kilo heroin deals,
while his wife and daughter
are a few feet away washing the dishes.
[Lucht] We had gathered evidence
that Angelo was a big-time,
multimillion-dollar heroin dealer.
It was a big deal.
But we still didn't have enough evidence
that links Ruggiero's criminal activity
to Paul Castellano,
the boss of the Gambino family.
[Mouw] For almost 6 months,
we followed him around
so we knew where he went
for different meetings.
We came to find out that he'd go up
to the boss of the family,
Paul Castellano's house
on a regular basis.
And then when the meeting was over,
Ruggiero would come back to his house.
And other Mob guys would come over,
and Ruggiero would tell them all about
what happened at the meeting.
It's a big deal
to meet with the boss of the family.
It's a dream come true.
It's proof that Castellano was meeting
members of his crew at his house
and talking criminal matters.
This was the proof we wanted for approval
for electronic surveillance
of Castellano's house.
[Kossler] It was an unbelievable moment,
because now we could finally bug
the boss's house.
But it was gonna be
a very tricky operation.
[Cantamessa] It was a big house.
It was referred to as the White House.
The surveillance squad,
after many, many hours of surveillance,
had come to the determination
it's impossible
to get in there surreptitiously
because the house was never empty.
Castellano had lots of new things
in the house.
He had the latest telephone equipment,
and he had cable TV,
specifically a CNN channel,
which was new at the time.
[announcer] Get in touch with the world.
Touch it. Get in touch with the news.
Touch it.
Get in touch when you want,
24 hours a day. CNN headline news.
[Cantamessa] We learned
all of his meetings and conversations
took place
in his kitchen, dinning room area.
That was where the TV was
and that looked like a real opportunity.
So we started doing
a little homework on cable TV.
It's daybreak in the east.
It's the 17th of May, good morning.
[Cantamessa] I learned it's very easy
to introduce interference
in cable systems.
-Good morning--
-[static crackles]
[Cantamessa] So, we introduced
a problem into the house
annoying and aggravating enough
that if somebody showed up
to troubleshoot a problem,
they'd be happy to see them.
I'm the cableman now.
[Cantamessa] I ring the doorbell.
Lots of chimes, as I recall.
The gentleman that answers the door
happens to be Tommy Bilotti,
Paul's right-hand guy.
The guy was a killer.
If something goes wrong,
I need to get out of here immediately.
[reporter] residents of New York
chemicals, as an earlier
[Cantamessa] I'm calling into the office,
and they're going to test the line.
I'm actually calling Art,
who is my other agent out there.
And when I go,
"Art, I'm tapping on this."
As I'm tapping, he's making interference.
TV's blinking.
-son, Jesus Christ
-Get ready, Manhattan
[Cantamessa] Preplanned, all orchestrated,
bench tested before I went.
Including my level of uncooperativeness.
I'm acting like
we have to come back.
You have to make an appointment.
They don't like appointments.
So, no appointment.
We're gonna do this.
We're gonna do this right now.
I took a risk.
I said, "If you give me a hand
for just a minute,
I promise I'll be out of here."
"What do you need?"
I go, "Would you just come over here
and hold the flashlight for me?"
So Tommy Bilotti helped me
while I installed the device
that had the microphone in it.
Microphone was active.
They were glad to not have me be there
too long, and I was glad to leave.
You know what it takes to stop a crime?
Your help and your neighbors'.
Take a bite out of crime. [chomps]
Everybody was just thrilled
with the successful installation
of the wire in Paul Castellano's house.
I mean, that was just-- Wow.
Your expectations are great.
You expect to hear about murder.
Kill this guy and kill that guy.
It was a big day for the FBI.
[indistinct speech]
[Kossler] Paul Castellano, the boss
of the Gambino family, was on tape.
This was really significant,
in that he was the boss of one
of the largest families in the Mafia.
People wouldn't even dream
about this ten years before.
The sound of a Mafia kitchen,
you know what it is?
It's eggs being beaten in a bowl.
I don't recall listening
to any meetings with others.
I just remember
Castellano and Gloria talking.
Gloria was the maid
in this giant mansion that they had.
She cleaned and cooked,
and she'd been there for quite a while.
I got this impression.
She had a certain amount of personality
and they clicked.
You'd listen to this and you'd go,
"What is that?
Alright, stop it here and back it up."
And the reels would go around.
"Let's play it again."
"Oh, God no! Oh, my God!"
Everybody's suddenly realized
he was having a torrid affair
with his maid.
Poor Joe O'Brien had to be all tuned in
to that little soap opera.
[man] My job was
to make a prosecutable case
against Paul Castellano.
I had people talking to me that didn't
even know they were informants,
including Paul Castellano's
maid and lover, Gloria Olarte.
She would we take pictures,
family pictures and pictures of Castellano
meeting his associates.
She gave me those photographs.
But she was an unwitting source.
She didn't know about the bug
in Castellano's house.
[O'Brien] You listen to 600 hours' worth
of tapes, you get to know the guy.
So I did something a little unusual.
I started sending him greeting cards.
Birthday cards.
Get well cards. I heard he was sick.
I sent him a card:
"To a special godfather."
I was messing with him.
This was psychological warfare.
I wanted to see what they were made of.
My partner Andy and I were listening
and had the headsets on.
He talked about the greeting cards.
A lot of profanity and everything.
Kind of funny when you listen to the guy
and he's opening a card
and talking about you.
That's when Gloria revealed
that she'd been meeting with me privately.
And I figured, "Uh-oh."
He scolded her like a little schoolgirl.
"You don't meet with Mr. Joe anymore.
You stay away from O'Brien.
You understand, Gloria."
Castellano's bodyguard
started goading him.
"We can get rid of this guy, O'Brien."
They were goading Castellano
to put a contract out of my life.
Scary people, you know.
They're murders. They're psychopaths.
It was said that Castellano
could order somebody killed
by just lifting an eyebrow.
Didn't have to say a word.
If he had gone silent,
it would have been all over for me.
But Castellano said, "No.
Bring too much heat on the family.
Just be careful, you know.
He's just doing his job."
He defended me,
so I gotta give credit for that.
But it didn't change the fact
that the whole object of my case
was to put Castellano
in a federal prison for life.
I started getting evidence
to implicate him.
Castellano talked about
all kinds of things.
He talked with Tommy Gambino
about dividing up the Garment District.
He spoke with Joe N. Gallo about all
the various rackets they were involved in.
He spoke with Joe Armone
about the restaurant union.
[Kossler] We were hearing more and more
about their involvement
with the labor unions.
That was important information
because it showed the real problem
of organized crime
that the organized crime groups controlled
the major labor unions in this country.
We were hearing how the Mafia controlled
the Teamsters trucking union,
the Laborers' Union,
the longshoremen union,
the hotel employees' union.
There's so many ways
they used the unions to make money.
They could extort companies
to give their friends jobs.
They could give him health benefits.
[Franzese] The Mob had a lot of power,
because we controlled the unions.
We call in a strike with the Teamsters,
two and a half million people
stop working.
That's a lot of power.
Not to mention the pension funds
that you had at your disposal.
You got hundreds of millions of dollars
sitting in the bank
that you can move anywhere you want.
You control bankers that way.
You control insurance companies that way.
And we used that.
-[tape rewinding]
-[man] And he gave me $5,000.
[indistinct chatter]
You control the unions.
You control the Teamsters.
You control the docks.
You control the country.
[overlapping, indistinct chatter]
[intense instrumental music playing]
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