John A. Gotti
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John A. Gotti (born 1964) is an American who is the son of John Gotti and is a convicted racketeer and alleged mobster. He is better known as Junior Gotti.
[edit] Career
John Angelo Gotti was born in 1964 to John and Victoria Gotti. He had two brothers, Frankie (killed in an accident in 1980) and Peter. He also has two sisters, Victoria Gotti and Angela. He is normally called Junior Gotti since he has his father's first name even though they have different middle initials.
Junior started bodybuilding in high school and allegedly started hanging out with his father's Mafia connections in the Gambino crime family. He was promoted to Capo in 1990. He also married Kim Albanese in 1990.
He has allegedly been the acting boss at various times between 1992 and 1999, but he does not have the ruthlessness his father had to run the family the way they wanted it run. He has claimed in court to have retired from the Mafia in 1999, in furtherance of a statute of limitations defense.
In 1999, he was sentenced to 6 years for racketeering. In 2004, he claimed that when he was released, he wanted out of the so called Mafia business for good and wanted to take his family to Canada. He has bitter feelings for his uncle Peter Gotti, whom he claims turned his back on him and his father while they were in prison. He has considerable bitterness toward Carmine Agnello for cheating on his sister Victoria too.
On September 20, 2005, another racketeering trial against Gotti was declared a mistrial after the jury announced it was hopelessly deadlocked, with the exception of one charge of stock manipulation, on which Gotti was acquitted[1]. The charges in the case included an allegation of a plot to kidnap Curtis Sliwa, the founder of the Guardian Angels crime-fighting group. Gotti faced up to 30 years in prison if convicted of the multiple racketeering charges. The trial continued on February 13, 2006. On March 10, 2006 a mistrial was declared after the jury announced it was hopelessly deadlocked on the charges.
Gotti refused a plea deal in April that would have seen him serve five years. The deal was turned down because Junior believes that the Federal Government would use the time he was incarcerated to bring further racketeering charges against him.
After the two mistrials, Gotti's third trial on the same charges started in August, 2006 and is ended exactly as two others did. On September 27, 2006, a third mistrial was declared after the jury informed the court that they were hopelessly deadlocked. At that time, he vowed to leave the state of New York permanently if clear of the charges[2].
For the second time, a judge on September 13, 2006 tossed out new racketeering charges filed against John "Junior" Gotti, finding the evidence introduced at his trial insufficient to support a conviction. U.S. District Judge Shira Scheindlin decided the government had not proven its claims that money invested in several of Gotti's properties stemmed from alleged loansharking or construction industry extortion.
In October of 2006, prosecutors decided to drop all criminal charges against Jr. Gotti. He has since claimed that he will soon move his wife and children to the Midwest where he and they can live a quiet life.[3]
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- Mob Star: The Story of John Gotti by Gene Mustain & Jerry Capeci in 2002, ISBN 0-02-864416-6.
- Gotti: The Rise & Fall by Jerry Capeci in 1996, ISBN 0-451-40681-8.