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Gangland Wire

The Plot to Kill Sammy the Bull

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6623 Ratings

🗓️ 27 June 2022

⏱️ 22 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Retired Kansas City Police Intelligence Detective Gary Jenkins examines the Gotti plot to kill Sammy the Bull Gravano. After Gravano served his time from his plea arrangement, 5 years for a lifetime of murder, assault, extortion, and racketeering. He was relocated to Tempe Arizona in the Witness protection program but left after a few years because he did not like the constraints. In 1995, he relocated to Scottsdale Arizona, started a construction company, and lived an open life. he even gave interviews to Diane Sawyer on 60 minutes and to the Arizona Republic newspaper. This enraged the Gotti family, especially after they learned he was collaborating on a book about his life in the Gambino family and his rise to underboss for John Gotti Sr. He even hired a publicist to get more press attention, the exact thing he claimed he did not like about John Gotti. TO GET THE MAGIC MIND DISCOUNT CLICK ON THIS LINK – MAGIC MIND – PUT GANGLAND20 IN THE CODE BOX AT CHECKOUT Gary tells the story of how Peter Gotti ordered two Gambino soldiers, Thomas “Huck” Carbonaro and Eddie Garafola, to murder Gravano. Salvatore “Fat Sal” Mangiavillano gave an interview to Ed Scarpo of www.cosanostranews.com in which he described the story of how he helped a New York hit team further a plot to kill Sammy the Bull Gravano on the orders of Gambino boss, Peter Gotti. Sammy the Bull Gravano described this attempt on his life in his podcast episode titled, A Hit Team From New York Came To Arizona To Kill Me. Fat Sal Mangiavillano was born in Italy and came to the US as a child. He never got his citizenship and lost his first green card after a criminal conviction. As an adult, Fat Sal worked with a sophisticated crew of New York thieves who perfected the art of breaking open bank night deposit boxes and then graduated to bank burglaries and invasion-type bank robberies. In other words, he was an upper-echelon professional criminal worthy of a whole podcast himself. Sal was known for his resourcefulness. For example, he made a homemade gaff with three-pronged spears to pull money out of night deposit boxes. During one Queens, New York, heist, he rigged a remote-controlled drill to cut through concrete and steel. His organized crime pals dubbed his capers “Fat Sallie Productions.” Fat Sal told Ed Scarpo that when he was a 16-year-old car thief, he first met a guy named Thomas Huck Carbonaro at a Gravano-connected chop shop. This was in the early 1980s. Huck was a little older and a member of Sammy the Bull Gravano’s crew. He got friendly with Huck when he saw him working as a doorman at an after-hours bar owned by Sammy the Bull Gravano. By 1988, Fat Sal has a crew chopping and tagging stolen cars. This means he would either chop the stolen car into body parts to be sold as used parts to auto-body repair shops or -re-tag a stolen car with another VIN number and title from a salvaged car. of interest, Chris Paciello was one of the guys bringing him stolen cars. Through these connections, he met a young smash and grab thief named Tommy Dono. He claims he and Tommy got arrested in a case of mistaken identity for mugging an off-duty cop. The cops handcuffed them to a radiator at the police station and beat them for several hours off and on. In the end, the cops brought in their fellow officer who exclaimed, “These aren’t the guys they were Puerto Rican.” He said he and Tommy Dono bonded over this incident and started working together. During this time, Fat Sal learned about alarm systems and other technical skills needed to do the more lucrative scores. He was retagging stolen cars and sending them to Atlanta at his own body shop by this time. In 1993, he claimed a guy from a Colombo crew included him on a bank score if he could shut down the ADT alarm system for New York so they could hit a bank safety deposit vault in Brooklyn. He said that since Tommy was “on record” or associates with Huck and the Gravano crew, they included Huck on this score.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Well, hey, all you wiretappers out there, welcome back to the Gangland Wire Studio.

0:04.8

Another story on Tap for you.

0:06.7

And an interesting one about Sammy the Bull Gravano.

0:09.8

But before I get started, I got to tell you about something.

0:12.3

I tried something called Magic Mind.

0:15.4

I got them to send me some to see if I wanted to mention it to you.

0:20.3

And, you know, as you guys know,

0:24.0

maybe you don't know, some of my friends and relatives know, I work harder in retirement

0:29.6

than I think I ever did on the job. Certainly this researching and recording and editing

0:36.1

every day is, I mean, I i like it it's a labor of

0:40.2

love i enjoy doing it don't get me wrong but uh sometimes by the end of the day i'm worn out but i need

0:47.4

to be worn out now this stuff called magic mind has helped me with my energy level and maybe a little

0:54.0

more importantly with my

0:55.1

ability to stay focused on the story because boy it's hard easy to lose your focus when you

0:59.6

you can get all you know look at this look at that and got to maintain focus uh i check the

1:06.0

ingredients and i see nothing addictive or potentially harmful or something called machi and it has a little

1:12.2

caffeine, but I've kind of replaced a couple of my usually five to six cups of coffee,

1:16.8

maybe seven or eight some days, with this magic mind stuff.

1:23.2

You know, I could drink it straight.

1:25.1

It comes in a little two-ounce bottle.

1:27.0

The taste isn't bad.

1:28.6

It isn't like real sweet or anything in sweet at all. It's been described as earthy when I started

...

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