Archive for the organized crime Category

Joe Bruno’s “Crazy Joe Gallo – The Mafia’s Greatest Hits – Volume 2” is a Best Seller on Amazon.com

Posted in Cosa Nostra, crime, criminal, criminals, crooked cops, crooks, FBI, FBI, Gangs, gangsters, lower east side of Manhattan, mafia, mobs, Mobsters, New York City, New York City murder, organized crime, police, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on November 25, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

Crazy Joe Gallo cover

 

International Best Selling author Joe Bruno’s “Crazy Joe Gallo – The Mafia’s Greatest Hits – Volume 2” is ranked #6 on Amazon Kindle in the category “True Crime – Hoaxes & Deceptions” and #7 in “Law Enforcement Biographies.”

#6 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Biographies & Memoirs > True Crime > Hoaxes & Deceptions
#7 in Kindle Store > Kindle eBooks > Biographies & Memoirs > Professionals & Academics > Law Enforcement

http://www.amazon.com/Crazy-Joe-Gallo-Mafias-Greatest-ebook/dp/B0139COHW2/ref=zg_bs_10332451011_6

FREE BOOK!!!International Best Selling Author Joe Bruno’s “Mob Rats – Bald Jack Rose” is free today on Amazon.com.

Posted in criminals, crooks, Gangs, gangsters, mobs, Mobsters, New York City, organized crime, police, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , on November 21, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

FREE BOOK!!

To get your FREE book, click the link below.

*****

Product Information:

Degenerate gambler and sportsman, Jacob (Bald Jack) Rose (Rosenzweig), due to a rare disease, had nary a hair on his entire body. But what Rose lacked in hair, he more than made up for with a diabolical criminal brilliance that put him “head and shoulders” (no pun intended) above the competition.

In the early 1900s, one of Rose’s competitors was fellow gambler Herman Rosenthal, a mean and snaky runt who had the reputation of being a stool pigeon, or as they say on the streets – a rat – for the New York City Police Department. Rose and Rosenthal both owned competing gambling joints in the seedy uptown area of Manhattan called the “Tenderloin,” or “Satan’s Circus.”

Rosenthal’s partner of sorts was corrupt New York City Police Lieutenant Charles Becker, who was not adverse to taking money with both hands (graft) from the Tenderloin’s gambling joints and houses of prostitution. Rose and Rosenthal both paid Becker handsomely, but then Rosenthal got the idea he was too big a man to continue to line Becker’s pockets with cash.

Rosenthal, after being rejected as a stoolie by New York’s City’s Police Commissioner Rhinelander Waldo, New York City Mayor William J. Gaynor, and Manhattan District Attorney, Charles S. Whitman, decided to take his story to the press.

Enter New York World columnist, Herbert Bayard Swope.

Swope believed Rosenthal’s claims, and he knew nothing could propel a newspaperman’s career faster than exposing police corruption. Swope wrote a two- part piece for his newspaper outlining Becker’s crimes. The next move was for Rosenthal to sign an affidavit confirming his allegations against Becker for New York District Attorney Whiteman, a grumpy drunk who had his sights set on becoming the next Governor of New York State (amazingly, that actually happened two years later). This affidavit would swear that Becker was a cretin, criminal, and a crook, and would most certainly lead to Becker being fired, arrested and prosecuted, with Herman Rosenthal being the chief witness for the prosecution.

This is where Bald Jack Rose displayed his Machiavellian brilliance.

Not only did Rose want Becker out of his hair (again, no pun intended), but he figured out a way to get rid of both Becker and Rose (who was threatening to rat on Rose, too) in one fell swoop.

To find out what happened next, read “Mob Rats – Bald Jack Rose.”

*****

15 Reviews for Joe Bruno’s “Crazy Joe Gallo – The Mafia’s Greatest Hits – Volume 2,” and the average review is 4.5 out of 5 stars.

Posted in criminals, crooks, Gangs, gangsters, mobs, Mobsters, New York City, organized crime, police, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on November 21, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

Crazy Joe Gallo cover

 

Interesting new review on International Best Selling author Joe Bruno’s “Murder and Mayhem in the Big Apple – From the Black Hand to Murder Incorporated.”

Posted in criminals, crooks, Gangs, gangsters, mobs, Mobsters, New York City, organized crime, police, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 10, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

*****

Murder and Mayhem final Cover-mike maturo

New! September 7, 2015

Cap’n Lloydie reviewed Murder and Mayhem in the Big Apple – From the Black Hand to Murder Incorporated

Well done, nobody does a better job making rotten criminal scumbags seem interesting than Joe Bruno, support him so he can keep it coming.

Interview With Best-Selling Amazon Author Joe Bruno

Posted in criminals, crooks, Gangs, gangsters, mafia, mobs, Mobsters, murder, New York City, organized crime, police, Uncategorized on September 7, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

http://newlondonwriters.com/2015/09/07/interview-with-best-selling-amazon-author-joe-bruno/

 

By Alice Wickham

Posted on September 7, 2015

newlondonwriters.com/

 

Interview With Best-Selling Amazon Author Joe Bruno

Posted on September 7, 2015

Tell us about growing up in NYC. Were you familiar with the kinds of characters you write about? Is that fair to say?

Interview With Best-Selling Amazon Author Joe Bruno

I grew up in New York City’s Lower East Side in the Little Italy/Chinatown area, where it’s been said there are more Mafia members per square inch than anywhere in the world, including Sicily. Some were friends, some were family, but the overwhelming majority was neither. I tried to stay away from any undue contact with the so-called gangsters, but since I owned Bruno’s Parking Lot in the heart of the Lower East Side from 1969-1996, and since most mobsters have cars, that was hardly possible. But whenever possible, I let them start their own cars.

In the 1820’s through the first decade of the 20th Century, the area I grew up in was known as the “Five Points.” It consisted primarily of poor Irish immigrants, but the neighborhood gradually transformed into Italian/Chinese. Now it’s 95 % Chinese – even Little Italy. Have you ever tried Egg Foo Yung Parmigiana?

My book “The Five Points – The Most Dangerous and Decadent Neighborhood Ever!” fills in the details.

In this book, I also write about my uncle (through marriage – he married my mother’s older sister, my Aunt Mary) Johnny Keyes, who was a boxer, boxing manager and promoter, restaurant owner, degenerate drinker and gambler, and the elected Mayor of Chinatown in the early-mid 1920’s. It was rumored he slightly stuffed the ballot boxes, but that rumor had never been confirmed. His close friend was writer/screenwriter Damon Runyon, and when Runyon wrote the screenplay for “Guys and Dolls,” he said he based the character “Harry the Horse” on Johnny Keyes.

In 1927, Johnny Keyes bet $10,000 (twice) on his friend, the heavyweight champion, Jack Dempsey, when Dempsey fought and lost to (twice) heavyweight champion Gene Tunney. Dempsey made millions for the two fights, and as a consolation prize, he bought Johnny Keyes a new Cadillac, which Keyes promptly sold to pay his gambling debts. He took a lot of cabs after that.

When I was born in 1947, Johnny Keyes was long gone, having divorced my Aunt Mary, and he moved to several cities in California (he owned tons of money to New York City Mafia bookies), where he opened several mob-controlled restaurants including “Spaghetti Joe’s,” Damon Runyon’s nickname for Keyes. Keyes also promoted boxing matches (also for the mob) and for a time he was actress Mae West’s bodyguard, which is slightly ridiculous since Keyes was maybe 5 feet 2 inches, and at the time he had ballooned to 230 pounds.

Keyes’s gambling problem continued, and he died in 1967 owing money to everyone including the undertaker. He had remarried at least three times, and whenever he lost a bundle at the track or at the fights, his motto was “It’s not your life, it’s not your wife; it’s only money.”

Yeah, mostly other people’s money

You spent some time working as a journalist, can you tell us about that?

I started out in the mid-1970’s as a sports columnist for the East Villager, an Alphabet City weekly newspaper owned by the Village Voice. In 1980, I was offered a full-time job as a sports columnist at the News World (later the New York Tribune, and then transformed into the Washington Times, which is presently the second largest newspaper in Washington D.C.) The News World was an NY City daily newspaper owned by the Unification Church headed by Reverend Sun Yun Moon. Half the staff were Moonies, and the other half were legitimate newspapermen like me.

One day a Moonie could be washing floors, and the next day he could be the editor. For six years, I stood out of the Moonies’ way, did my job, and collected my salary (including a padded expense account) In 1986, I moved to the Middletown Record in Middletown, New York until 1988. I was also an associate editor of Boxing Illustrated from 1980-87, and a frequent contributor to Ring Magazine, which were both owned by the legendary boxing historian and my close friend, Bert Randolph Sugar.

I was elected Vice President of the Boxing Writers of America from 1982-86, and the Vice President of the International Boxing Writers from 1981-88. I won several Best Boxing Writer Awards from several entities, most of which no longer exist, not even in my memory. One was Ring 8 (still around), and another was the National Association for the Improvement of Boxing (long gone).

I also wrote several boxing articles for Penthouse Magazine, and when I visited their offices on the West Side of Manhattan, all the women I met were over 50, and thankfully, they all kept their clothes on. The pay was crazy good – $1.50 a word in the early 1990’s. But written filibusters were not tolerated.

Your knowledge of your subject, American mobsters, is impressive. Tell us more.

This I cannot do. They all know where I live.

You have had amazing success on Amazon, do you have any writing/marketing tips for other writers?

The hardest part of writing is sitting down, or standing up, and performing your writing routine. You have to get into a daily routine, and you have to be disciplined. Talent is not all that necessary. Persistence is. You don’t have to be published to call yourself a writer. If you write, you’re a writer – period.

Amazon makes it easy for anyone, with even a rudimentary understanding of the written word, to become a published writer. But that doesn’t mean you can cut corners. Always hire a proofreader, and if you can afford it, hire a professional editor. Multiple typos are the kiss of death for a writer.

I used to pay for my covers, but now with Amazon Cover Creator, I create all my own covers. Of course, I need photos to do so. Some are public domain photos I get for free on the Internet, and others I purchased cheaply from several Internet photo sites.

AMAZON KINDLE COUNTDOWN DEAL!! International Best Selling author Joe Bruno’s “Crazy Joe Gallo – The Mafia’s Greatest Hits – Volume 2” is on a special KINDLE COUNTDOWN Sale!!

Posted in crime, criminal, criminals, crooks, Gangs, gangsters, mafia, mobs, Mobsters, New York City, New York City murder, organized crime, police, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , on September 4, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

For a limited time only, the price for the best selling book is 99 cents. That’s right, folks, less than a buck for a book that is ranked #2 on Amazon/USA in the category “”Law Enforcement Biographies,” and #6 in “Organized Crime (The rankings change every hour).

To grab your copy, click the link below!

*****

AMAZON KINDLE COUNTDOWN DEAL!! International Best Selling author Joe Bruno’s “Crazy Joe Gallo – The Mafia’s Greatest Hits – Volume 2” is on a special KINDLE COUNTDOWN Sale!!

Posted in criminals, crooks, famous trials, FBI, Gangs, gangsters, killers, mafia, mobs, Mobsters, murder, New York City, organized crime, police, Uncategorized with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 4, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

For a limited time only, the price for the best selling book is 99 cents. That’s right, folks, less than a buck for a book that is ranked #4 on Amazon/USA in the category “”Law Enforcement Biographies,” and #8 in “Organized Crime (The rankings change every hour).

To grab your copy, click the link below!

*****

FREE BOOK!!! International Best Selling author Joe Bruno’s “Mob Rats – Danny Greene – He Turned Cleveland into the ‘Bomb Capital of the USA'” is FREE today on Amazon Kindle. To get your FREE copy, click the appropriate link below.

Posted in criminals, crooks, Gangs, gangsters, mobs, Mobsters, organized crime with tags , , , , , , , , , , , on August 27, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

****

Production information:

Cleveland mobster Danny Greene’s love for his Irish heritage, and his hatred for Italian dagos, as he called them, propelled him into a battle with Cleveland’s Italian Mayfield Road Mob for control of illegal activities in Cleveland and the surrounding area. After the death of Cleveland don, John Scalish, Greene joined forces with disgruntled Italian mobster, John Nardi. The two gangsters and their minions waged a savage street war against the Mayfield Road Mob for control of organized crime in the area.

Bombs were the weapons of choice, and soon there were so many bombings in the Cleveland area perpetrated by the warring factions that the local press dubbed Cleveland, “The Bomb Capital of the USA.”

Greene, after being approached by a smooth-talking FBI agent, decided it was in his best interest to become a canary. As a result, he sang a sweet tune to the Feds, informing them of the illegal activities of Cleveland’s Mayfield Road Mob and the Italian gangsters who ran the operation.

In the end, Danny Greene, feared Irish mobster, became what his Irish ancestors hated most – a rat.

“Mob Rats – Danny Greene” will fill you in on the gory details.

*****

Amazon/United States:
http://www.amazon.com/Mob-Rats-Greene-Cleveland-Capital-ebook/dp/B00ONYNFXS/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1440700642&sr=1-1&keywords=danny+greene

Amazon/United Kingdom:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Mob-Rats-Greene-Cleveland-Capital-ebook/dp/B00ONYNFXS/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1440700709&sr=1-1&keywords=danny+greene

International Best Selling author Joe Bruno’s “Whitey Bulger – The Biggest Rat” is FREE today on Amazon Kindle.

Posted in gangsters, mafia, Mobsters, murder, organized crime on April 22, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

To get your free copy, click the appropriate ling below.

*****

Product Description:

“Whitey Bulger – The Biggest Rat is the story of James “Whitey” Bulger, the Boston mob boss, from his early days of crime, to his heyday running Boston’s underworld, to his escape and capture after 16 years on the run.

This book also includes Bulger’s trial and the jury verdict that found Bulger guilty of 31 of the 32 counts in the federal racketeering indictment. Bulger was also found guilty of 11 of the 19 murders included in one of the indictments.

It’s fair to say Whitey Bulger will die in jail. Bulger’s lucky he didn’t get the death penalty, which would have been a more fitting punishment for one of the most vile individuals to ever roam the face of the earth.

*****

On July 9, 2013, Whitey Bulger’s former protégé, Kevin Weeks, hate and contempt in his eyes, took the witness stand against his former boss. The 57-year-old Weeks and Bulger were once so tight, they spoke nearly every day for more than a decade. Bulger, 83-years-old, was facing life in prison for committing more than 19 murders.

Since Weeks served only five years in prison for aiding and abetting five of Bulger’s murders, Bulger’s lawyer, J.W. Carney, tried to portray Weeks as a con artist who knew how to manipulate the justice system.
“You won against the system,” Carney told Weeks

“What did I win? What did I win?” Weeks said. “Five people are dead.”

Carney asked Weeks if the killings bothered him.

Weeks shot back, “We killed people that were rats. And I had THE BIGGEST RAT right next to me.”

Whitey Bulger, unlike Genovese turncoat, Joe Valachi; Bonanno boss, Joe Massino; and Gambino consiglieri, Salvatore “Sammy the Bull” Gravano, willingly became an FBI informant while he was still active on the streets as Boston’s mob boss. Bulger remained an FBI informant for more than 20 years.

Kevin Weeks was right. Whitey Bulger was THE BIGGEST RAT of them all.:

*****

Amazon United States link:

Amazon/United Kingdom link:

First Chapter – The Mobs Greatest Hits

Posted in criminals, crooks, gangsters, gangsters. mobsters, mafia, Mobsters, murder incorporated, organized crime with tags , , , , , , , on April 15, 2015 by Joe Bruno's Blogs

 

Anastasia, Albert – (The Lord High Executioner)

 

He was a violent killer, and along with Louis “Lepke” Buchalter, the co-head of Murder Incorporated. The way he lived his life, Albert Anastasia must have thought he was bulletproof, which he may have been, until he made one trip too many to his barbershop.

Albert Anastasia was born Umberto Anastasio on September 26, 1902 in Calabria, located in the southern part of Italy. When he was 15, Albert and his brother Tony hopped on an Italian ship and snuck off illegally onto the docks of Brooklyn, New York. It was said that Albert was so poor, he arrived in America with no shoes. Albert lived with a relative in Brooklyn until he finally found work on the Brooklyn docks as a longshoreman, alongside his brother “Tough Tony.”

Anastasia had a violent temper, and it was manifested in 1920 when he was arrested for killing fellow longshoreman Joe Torino. Anastasia strangled and stabbed Torino to death, over whom had the right to unload ships with the most precious cargo. Anastasia was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death in the Sing Sing electric chair. It was at this time that he changed his last name from Anastasio to Anastasia, he said, “not to sully his family’s name.” His brother Tony, who later ruled the Brooklyn docks, kept the last name of Anastasio.

Anastasia spent 18 months waiting to be executed, when his lawyer somehow obtained a new trial. At Anastasia’s second trial, several witnesses to Torino’s murder changed their statements as to who the killer was, and four more witnesses disappeared from the face of the earth. With no evidence against Anastasia, the prosecutors had no choice but to drop their case, and Anastasia became a free man. Anastasia would use this tactic of “eliminating witnesses” several more times throughout the years to avoid prosecution for murder.

Upon his release from prison, Anastasia joined the gang of Joe “The Boss” Masseria, considered the top Mafioso in America. As a member of Masseria’s crew, Anastasia became tight with fellow mobsters Charles “Lucky” Luciano and Frank Costello. It became clear during this period that Anastasia was more of a follower than a leader.

In 1930, Luciano formulated a plan to get rid of his boss, Masseria, and then dispose of Masseria’s successor, Salvatore Maranzano. Luciano’s ultimate goal was to unite all the crime families in America: Italian Mafia members, Irish gangsters like Owney Madden, and Jewish gangsters like Meyer Lansky, into one National Crime Commission.

When Luciano told Anastasia about his plans, Anastasia was ecstatic. He told Luciano, “Charlie, I’ve been waiting for this day for at least eight years. You’re going to be on top, if I have to kill everyone for you. With you up there, that’s the only way we can have any peace and make real money.”

With Anastasia’s help, Luciano did what he set out to do. Anastasia, along with Bugsy Siegel, was one of the four gunmen, who in 1931, shot Masseria to death in a Coney Island restaurant. With Masseria out of the way and his successor Salvatore Maranzano also eliminated by Luciano, Luciano formed the remaining Mafia bosses into five separate crime families. As a reward for his good work, Luciano made Anastasia the underboss in the family of Vincent Mangano.

After Luciano’s takeover, things ran smoothly for the National Crime Commission. The Commission made bushels of money running illegal liquor during prohibition and from old mob standards like bookmaking, gambling, hijacking, and the distribution of drugs. Of course, in order to keep the cash flowing in, sometimes people had to be killed. As a result of Anastasia’s loyalty, Luciano, along with Meyer Lansky, put Anastasia and Louie “Lepke” Buchalter in charge of what the press called “Murder Incorporated,” or “Murder Inc.”

With Anastasia being the exception, Murder Inc. was comprised of mostly Jewish killers, which included Abe “Kid Twist” Reles, Allie Tannenbaum, Harry “Pittsburgh Phil” Strauss, and Gurrah Shapiro. It was estimated that under Anastasia and Buchalter’s direction, anywhere from 500-1,000 murders were committed throughout the country and only a handful were ever solved. While bodies were piling up all over America, Anastasia was ostensibly working an honest job. The business card he always carried in his breast pocket said he was a “sales representative” for the Convertible Mattress Corporation in Brooklyn.

In the late 1930’s, Murder Inc. dissolved when its top killers were arrested, tried, and convicted on numerous murder charges. With Reles and Tannenbaum agreeing to testify in exchange for lighter sentences, several Murder Inc. perpetrators were fried in the Sing Sing electric chair, including Buchalter, who was the only crime boss ever executed by the government.

Anastasia avoided prosecution for a while, until it was discovered that Reles was set to testify about Anastasia’s and Bugsy Siegel’s involvement with Murder Inc. Reles was under 24-hour police surveillance at the Half Moon Hotel in Coney Island. Police were stationed inside and outside Reles’s room to guard Reles, even when he was sleeping.

On the night of November 12, 1941, Reles was supposedly under police protection and sleeping in his room, when he inexplicably fell to his death from the 6th-story window. The official report said Reles died while “attempting to escape.” Years later, Luciano said that Frank Costello, in order to save Anastasia’s and Siegel’s hide, paid the police $50,000 to look the other way while Costello’s men flung Reles out the window. Other stories said that the cops did the flinging of Reles themselves. Either way, according to District Attorney William O’Dwyer, “His case (against Anastasia and Siegel) went out the window with Reles.”

In 1936, Luciano was arrested, tried, and convicted on a trumped-up charge of prostitution and given a 30-year prison sentence. Luciano claimed he had been set up by Special Prosecutor Thomas E. Dewey, and there’s evidence that Luciano may have been right. The witnesses against Luciano were all pimps and prostitutes, who later said they lied on the witness stand rather than being thrown in jail by Dewey.

In 1942, with Luciano languishing in jail, Anastasia, with the help of his brother Tony, devised a scheme to spring Luciano. It was in the middle of World War II, and the plan Anastasia hatched was based on the old mob “protection racket.” With Tony controlling the docks, it was quite easy for his men to sabotage ships on the New York waterfront. And that’s exactly what they did.

After several ships were torched and bombed (the most famous being the French Luxury Liner S.S. Normandie, which was being converted into a troopship when it was sunk in New York Harbor), Anastasia offered assistance to the United States government, to protect the waterfront from saboteurs (from themselves, of course). The payback from the government to Luciano was, when the war ended, Luciano was to be released from prison as payment for waterfront-protection services he supposedly rendered. In 1946, Luciano was released from prison and deported to Italy, where he ran his crime family until his death from a heart attack in 1962.

Anastasia had worked successfully as Vincent Mangano’s underboss for 30 years, when in 1951, Anastasia suddenly got ambitious. Over the years, Mangano had grown resentful of Anastasia’s closeness to Luciano and Frank Costello. Many times, Anastasia bypassed his boss Mangano and had, for one reason or another, gone directly to Luciano or Costello. Several times, Mangano physically attacked Anastasia, which was a foolhardy move, since Anastasia was younger and stronger, leading to Anastasia beating up his own boss in self-defense.

Things in the Mangano family were not going well for Anastasia, when Anastasia asked permission from Costello, now the big boss with Luciano in exile in Italy, to whack Mangano. On April 19, 1951, Mangano’s brother Philip was riddled with bullets and dropped in a swamp in Sheepshead Bay. Later that same day, Vincent Mangano disappeared, and his body was never found. In a few days, after he was sure Mangano was definitely dead, Costello appointed Anastasia as the head of the former Mangano crime family, thereby making Anastasia part of the five-man Commission.

 Costello had his own personal reasons for wanting Anastasia on the Commission. After fleeing to Italy because he was being sought on a murder charge, Vito Genovese had returned to the United States. Genovese was angry because he thought that he and not Costello should be the head of the Commission. (Before escaping to Italy, Genovese was the Commission boss. With Genovese out of the country and Luciano still in jail at the time, Luciano then appointed Costello as top man on the Commission.) Genovese was known as a brutal man, who killed first and asked questions later. With Anastasia on Costello’s side, Costello felt they had someone just as tough as Genovese who could protect Costello’s high ranking.

What Costello did not envision was that Anastasia was a bloodthirsty, homicidal maniac, who would kill anyone, for any reason, real or imagined. Anastasia’s madness manifested itself one day when he was watching television. On the news, a 24-year-old Brooklyn salesman named Arnold Schuster was basking in the limelight as the person who was the main witness in the arrest of legendary bank robber Willie Sutton. Schuster had been riding the subway, when he spotted Sutton. Schuster followed Sutton after Sutton had left the subway, and he tracked Sutton to a nearby garage. After Sutton slipped inside the garage, Schuster called the police, and Sutton was arrested.

Seeing Schuster being treated like a hero by the press, Anastasia freaked out.

“I can’t stand squealers,” Anastasia told one of his killers, Fredrick J. Tenuto. “Hit that guy!”

And Tenuto did just that, gunning down Schuster on a Brooklyn street not far from where Schuster lived.

Realizing that Tenuto was the only person who knew Anastasia had ordered Schuster’s murder, Anastasia took care of Tenuto himself, filling Tenuto with lead before Tenuto could spill the beans about Anastasia’s orders.

However, word was already out that Anastasia, now called “The Mad Hatter,” had gone overboard and had disobeyed one of the Commission’s biggest rules: “We only kill each other.”

As far as Genovese was concerned, Anastasia had made fatal mistake No. 1. From this point on, Genovese began plotting Anastasia’s demise.

Besides Costello, one of Anastasia’s closest allies was Jewish mobster Meyer Lansky, who for a while, turned a deaf ear to Genovese’s pleas to kill Anastasia. Lansky was big into the gambling industry on the island of Cuba. And as all good mob bosses should, Lansky was cutting in the other Commission bosses for a piece of the pie on what he was making in Cuba.

However, Anastasia wanted more. He approached Lansky about giving him a bigger slice, and when Lansky refused, Anastasia began plotting to open up his own gambling operation in Cuba.

That was a big miscalculation on Anastasia’s part. As Anastasia knew well, Lansky had agreed to the killing of his childhood friend Bugsy Siegel when it was discovered Siegel had been skimming off the top at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas. Money was sacrosanct to Lansky, and Anastasia was threatening to take money out of Lansky’s pocket.

That was fatal mistake No. 2 for Anastasia.

Anastasia’s fatal mistake No. 3 materialized when Genovese found out that Anastasia, in order to induct new made members into his family, was charging proposed members $50,000 apiece for induction into the their honored society. This was a definite no-no in the Mafia. Men had waited years, sometimes even decades, to “get their buttons.” In addition, the rule at the time was that each proposed member had to have been involved in at least one murder to even be considered for induction. Genovese said Anastasia had devalued the entire Mafia organization by taking cash payments from men who were not qualified to be inducted into the “La Cosa Nostra,” as mob informer Joe Valachi later said insiders called their sacred group.

On October 25, 1957, Anastasia’s chauffeur parked Anastasia’s car in the underground garage of the Park Sheridan Hotel in midtown Manhattan. Instead of waiting inside the garage for his boss to return, the chauffeur decided to take a little stroll out of the building. Anastasia took a little stroll of his own, and he wound up sitting in chair No. 4 in the Park Sheridan Hotel barbershop. Sitting next to Anastasia in chair No. 5 was his old friend Vincent “Jimmy Jerome” Squillante. Anastasia sat with his eyes closed, appearing to have nary a care in this world.

Soon he would be right.

Suddenly, two men walked into the barbershop. One was carrying a .38-caliber pistol; the other a .32 caliber pistol. One of the men told barbershop owner Arthur Grasso, “Keep your mouth shut if you don’t want your head blown off.”

Then the two men commenced firing. One bullet lodged in the back of Anastasia’s head and two shots hit him in the left hand. Another bullet hit him in the back and another blasted through the right side of his hip.

Anastasia staggered to his feet, facing the barbershop mirror. Seeing the reflections of his two killers in the mirror, Anastasia mistakenly lurched towards the mirror. The killers kept firing until their guns were empty, and Anastasia fell on his back between two barber chairs, quite dead.

 Squillante didn’t know whether to shit, or go blind. Seeing Anastasia dead on the floor, Squillante screamed to no one in particular, “Let me out of here!” Then he exited stage right into the lobby of the Park Sheridan Hotel, and he disappeared.

According to manicurist Jean Wineberger, one shooter was a white male, around 40-years-old, 5-feet-10-inches, with a slight built and a blond pompadour haircut. The second shooter was also a white male, around 45-years-old, stockily built and about 5-feet-7. Wineberger thought the shooters looked Italian, but she said they could have been Jewish too.

No one was officially charged with Anastasia’s murder, and about a dozen people over the years have claimed they had been involved in Anastasia’s hit. The most likely scenario was that mob boss Joe Profaci was given the hit by the other Commissioner members. Profaci subcontracted the actual shooting to his underling, the unpredictable “Crazy” Joe Gallo, from the Red Hook section of Brooklyn.

Gallo was not shy about taking the credit for the Anastasia hit. Soon after Anastasia was gone, Gallo was talking to crime associate Sidney Slater. Gallo told Slater that he, Sonny Camerone, Ralph Mafrici, Joe “Joe Jelly” Gioelli, and Frank “Punchy” Illiano comprised the Anastasia hit-team.

The buttons on his shirt bursting with pride, Gallo told Slater, “You can call the five of us the barbershop quintet.”

The most telling comment about Anastasia’s murder was uttered by Anastasia’s brother “Tough Tony” Anastasio.

“Tough Tony” told a mob associate, “I ate from the same table as Albert and I came from the same womb. But I know he killed many men and he deserved to die.”