The true story of the last of the big-time Mob bosses, now updated and back in print nearly two decades after its initial publication, with a new foreword by retired FBI agent Joe Pistone, author of Donnie Brasco, and a new afterword that catches readers up on Joseph Massino's life in the Witness Protection Program before his passing in 2023-from Anthony M. DeStefano, the Pulitzer Prize and Emmy Award-winning investigative journalist who is one of the foremost Mafia experts writing today.
UPDATED WITH A NEW FOREWORD BY JOE PISTONE AND A NEW AFTERWORD
THE LAST OF THE BIG-TIME MOB BOSSES-AND THE ULTIMATE BETRAYAL
He was the last of his kind-an old-world Mob boss steeped in omertà, the Mafia code of silence. While his arrogant friend John Gotti was being secretly recorded by the FBI, Joseph Massino, head of the Bonanno family, quietly became known as "The Ear" by ordering his men to point to their ear instead of saying his name out loud.
For more than 20 years, Massino ran what was called the largest criminal network in the United States, employing over 250 made men and untold numbers of associates. The Bonanno family was responsible for over 30 murders, even killing a dozen of its own members to settle scores. Massino ran a tight organization, obsessively checking his social club for bugging devices, frustrating FBI surveillance. But in the end, facing the death penalty and the prospect of leaving his family penniless, Massino would be brought down from the inside, by the underboss who was not only his closest and most trusted friend but a member of his blood family. So, he started talking to the FBI-the first Mafia godfather to break the sacred code of omertà-which bought him another two decades of life, the final years of which he spent in the Witness Protection Program before dying a free man.
Based on exclusive interviews with Massino's family and closest associates, as well as law enforcement officials and confidential sources, King of the Godfathers is the epic inside story of this Bonanno family boss who was at one time the most powerful gangster in America.
Autorentext
Anthony M. DeStefano is a Pulitzer Prize and Emmy Award-winning journalist, author, and preeminent Mob historian. He has covered criminal justice and organized crime for more than four decades as a reporter for Newsday and appeared as an expert source on HISTORY's documentary series American Godfathers: The Five Families. His books on the subject include Jimmy the Gent, Broadway Butterfly, The Big Heist, King of the Godfathers, The Deadly Don, Top Hoodlum, and Gotti's Boys, among others. He can be found online at TonyDeStefano.com.
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The Last Of The Old-World Mob Bosses--And The Ultimate Betrayal
For more than twenty years, Joseph "Big Joey" Massino ran what was called the largest criminal network in the U.S., employing over two hundred and fifty made men and untold numbers of associates. The Bonanno family was responsible for over thirty murders, even killing a dozen of its own members to enforce discipline and settle scores. He would be brought down by Salvatore "Good Looking Sal" Vitale, the underboss who was not only Massino's closest and most trusted friend, but also his brother-in-law. In the end, facing the death penalty and the prospect of leaving his family penniless, Massino started talking to the FBI--the first Mafia Godfather to break the sacred code of omerta, and the end of a centuries-old tradition.
Written by Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Anthony DeStefano, who interviewed Massino's family and friends as well as law enforcement officials and confidential sources, King of the Godfathers is the story of the brutal mob war that made Massino head of the Bonanno family and the most powerful gangster in America.
"The best and last word on the subject." --Jerry Capeci, Gangland News.com and bestselling co-author of Murder Machine
With 16 Pages of Revealing Photos!
Anthony Destefano was part of the team of New York Newsday reporters who won the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the August 1991 subway crash in Manhattan. He covers organized crime for Newsday and was the lead reporter on several major criminal trials, including that of subway gunman Bernhard Goetz. He lives in New Jersey.