Gotti, No. 358/89 (N.Y.Sup.Ct.1989), Santangelo and Cutler jointly represented John Gotti. In United States v. Gotti , No. 85 CR 178 (EHN) (E.D.N.Y.1985), …
Mar 14, 1987 · Andrew J. Maloney, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, whose office prosecuted the case, said in a statement that “we are obviously disappointed” by the verdict. “We live in a...
"He is a murderer, not a folk hero," replied U.S. Attorney Andrew J. Maloney, who handed down the long-awaited new set of RICO charges in December 1990. Gotti and his top associates Frank Locasio and Salvatore Gravano were arrested and held without bail for multiple felonies ranging from murder to tax evasion. Tide Changes for Prosecutors
Feb 07, 2021 · Assistant United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York – 1985 to 1994 – [Noted for the prosecution of Mafia cases, and most notably the conviction of John Gotti]. District Judge for the Eastern District of NY – 1994-2016. Gleeson was a critic of harsh mandatory sentencing.
When the trial began in Brooklyn, New York on January 21, 1992, Gotti's new lawyer, Albert J. Kreiger, opened the defense by stating that his client's only crime was the lack of a formal education.
When John Gotti was indicted along with members of the Gambino organized crime "family" in New York in March 1985 , law enforcement officials considered him to be a small-time hoodlum who had served short sentences for hijacking and attempted manslaughter.
The corrupt union officer had ordered a Manhattan restaurant wrecked for resisting his bribery demands, unaware that the restaurant had ties to the Gambino crime family. Gotti was accused of ordering O'Connor shot in retaliation.
Gotti's RICO trial began in August 1986. The prosecution case relied heavily on testimony by convicted felons. All were admitted liars who agreed under defense crossexamination that they hoped their testimony was buying them shorter sentences. One informer falsely denied ever working for the FBI. Another openly perjured himself, accusing the prosecution of offering him drugs in prison in return for testimony. After a long and acrimonious trial in which the defense repeatedly fired crude personal insults at the prosecutors and outshouted the judge's orders, Gotti was acquitted in March 1987.
On September 3, 1999, John Gotti, Jr. was sentenced to almost six and a half years in prison, 10 months less than the maximum requested by prosecutors. The sentence also included enormous forfeitures of money and real estate that Gotti was unable to prove were not obtained by noncriminal means.
Had Gotti gambled unsuccessfully on an acquittal at trial, he might have faced 20 years imprisonment. Instead he pleaded guilty to six charges, including loan sharking, bribery, mail fraud, gambling, tax evasion, and conspiracy to commit extortion.
Yet Gotti still faced trial for violating the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act , popularly known as the RICO statute.
A 2003 photo of Judge John Gleeson, the prosecutor responsible for taking down John Gotti, who appears in a 1986 photo leaving a Queens court. AP; Rick Kopstein. The Brooklyn federal judge who as a prosecutor won a conviction against the late Gambino boss John Gotti, ending his run as the “Teflon Don,” is resigning from the bench, ...
The prosecutor who got John Gotti steps down as judge. A 2003 photo of Judge John Gleeson, the prosecutor responsible for taking down John Gotti, who appears in a 1986 photo leaving a Queens court. AP; Rick Kopstein. The Brooklyn federal judge who as a prosecutor won a conviction against the late Gambino boss John Gotti, ...
Gleeson’s longtime career in law was marked by putting the Gotti away for life on murder and racketeering charges in 1992 while a prosecutor with the US Attorney’s Office.
The judge also disqualified three defense lawyers, including Bruce Cutler, who had won the Gotti acquittals, and he disallowed witnesses the defense considered vital. Mr. Maloney led the prosecution, though he had not personally taken a case to court since becoming United States Attorney.
The 1987 racketeering case against Mr. Gotti, inherited by Mr. Maloney from his predecessor, was his first major organized-crime prosecution, and it was flawed. The charges dealt with crimes before Mr. Gotti took over the Gambino family and did not make him the primary focus.
It was during his opening statement, in which he spoke of "a Mafia boss being brought down by his own words, his own right arm, and in the course of it perhaps bringing down his own family.".
Mr. Gleeson's boyish appearance, the dark wavy hair, the horn-rimmed glasses and earnest voice, seemed to enhance the sincere image -- a James Stewart character, perhaps, upholding truth against the mob. Amid his team's decorum, Mr. Maloney gave way only once to an impulse, a Gotti-like gesture of his own.
The eavesdropping went on for 18 months, supplemented by videotapes and photos, and from hundreds of hours of tape the prosecutors selected six hours of the most damaging recordings. The quality of the tapes led to another important break last November. Mr.
It was just a few months before Mr. Maloney's appointment as United States Attorney in July 1986 that state assault charges against Mr. Gotti were dropped in Queens when the victim, after learning who the defendant was, developed amnesia on the witness stand.
After two years with the Organized Crime Strike Force in Brooklyn, he joined the United States Attorney's office in 1989, when the office absorbed the strike force. *James Orenstein, 29, a high-honors graduate of Harvard and the New York University Law School who, after a year as a law clerk and two more years as a litigation associate ...
BROOKLYN, NY – Two indictments were unsealed this morning in federal court in the Eastern District of New York charging seven defendants variously with arson, bank robbery, Hobbs Act robberies and firearms offenses based, in part, on their participation in the criminal affairs of the Bonanno organized crime family of La Cosa Nostra (the Bonanno family).[1] The defendants – Vincent Asaro, John J. Gotti, Michael Guidici, Matthew Rullan, also known as “Fat Matt,” Christopher Boothby, also known as “Bald Chris,” Matthew Hattley, also known as “Mack,” and Darren Elliott – were arrested earlier today.
As further alleged, Associate-1, Gotti and Rullan drove in Gotti’s Jaguar sedan to a service station in the pre-dawn hours of April 4, 2012 where they filled a container with gasoline and proceeded to the residence of the owner of the other vehicle. Associate-1 doused the vehicle with gasoline, and Rullan ignited it.
Jewelry Store Robbery and Attempts. Hattley and Elliott are charged with the gunpoint robbery of a jewelry store in Franklin Square, Long Island , making off with approximately $250,000 in merchandise, and the attempted robberies of two other jewelry stores, also in Franklin Square, between August 17, 2011 and May 5, 2012.