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Tag: Gay Mafia

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Judge Lets Mafia Hitman Go Free After He Comes Out Of The Closet

gay_mafiaA former hitman renounced his membership of the Mafia in a New York courtroom on Monday - and chose the moment to tell the shocked presiding judge he was gay. Robert Mormando, a divorced father of two sons, was being sentenced for his part in the shooting of shop owner Angelo Mugnolo in a botched hit in 2003. According to an unidentified mobster cooperating with the FBI, Vincent Gotti - younger brother of the Mafia godfather John Gotti - had ordered the murder because he thought Mugnolo was having an affair with his wife. Mugnolo says he was targeted because he had refused to go into business with Gotti. Either way, Mugnolo survived the hit after driving himself to hospital. According to Mormando's lawyer, Nancy Ennis, her client was handed the contract to kill Mugnolo only a month after being inducted into the Cosa Nostra in 2002 and quickly realised the error of his ways. "He was summoned to perform an act that he found totally unacceptable afterwards," she said. "He found the incident to be so disagreeable that he started having strong thoughts about leaving the Mob." Since then, she said, he had been living in hiding "not from law enforcement, but from La Cosa Nostra". Another reason for going into hiding was that he came out as gay soon after the botched hit on Mugnalo. Homosexuality is frowned upon in the Mafia: John D'Amato, a former acting boss of the DeCavalcante crime family, was murdered in 1992 because he was gay. However, it is debatable whether Mormando has most to fear because of his homosexuality or the fact that he became an FBI informant shortly after the botched hit. Yesterday, Judge Jack Weinstein allowed Mormando to walk free after he publicly renounced his Mafia blood oath before the court. "That's the first time I've heard this in court," said Weinstein who has been on the bench for 42 years. Depending on what becomes of Mormando and his gay partner in the coming days, it could well be the last.
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NY Gay-Bar Mafioso Released from Prison

Trash ProbeAn underworld figure with ties to New York gay night spots has been released from prison after serving two years on racketeering charges. Matty "Horse" Ianniello--the nickname comes either from his having once been charged for possession of over twenty pounds of heroin, or due to his imposing physical build; accounts vary--finished a jail term last spring, reported the Web site Bitter Queen. Of Ianniello, 89, the story noted, "one queries whether the... reputed Genovese capo ever intends on retiring." The article noted that Ianniello had been said to have some stake in "dozens of gay bars and discos" in New York over three decades, "including the hustler bar Haymarket, the tranny bar Gilded Grape, and the circus-like disco GG Barnum’s Room. "Indeed, no man had more of an instrumental role in gay nightlife in New York City than Ianniello, and although straight he probably should receive an honorary plaque recognizing his achievements from the city’s Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce," the article quipped. Wikipedia article, the Stonewall Inn, the site of the watershed Stonewall Riots forty years ago. The Wikipedia article noted that the Stonewall Inn "catered to an assortment of patrons, but it was known to be popular with the poorest and most marginalized people in the gay community: drag queens, and representatives of a newly self-aware transgender community, effeminate young men, hustlers, and homeless youth."
On Release From Prison

On Release From Prison

The article excerpted content referencing Ianniello and a bar called the Ha Market from R. Thomas Collins Jr.’s book NewsWalker. The excerpt read, in part, "In 1960 [Ianniello] formed a partnership with one of the [so-called] Sultans [of New York’s mid-town], Edward L. DeCurtis, a k a ’Eddie Dee,’ financier of afterhours gay joints in the Village. "Such after-hours spots were a specialty of the rackets because their patrons were homosexuals who drank like fish," the excerpt continued. "You could serve liquor in private clubs without a license, and nobody watched the cash. Besides, such customers sometimes were involved in legitimate business one might wish to ’invest’ in." A separate Bitter Queen article on the history of New York’s gay clubs posted Dec. 23, 2007, excerpted another publication, an Aug. 1, 1977 story titled, "Crime Group Leader Said to Rule Many Bar Businesses in Midtown," written by Selwyn Raab and Nathaniel Sheppard Jr. That excerpt also mentioned Ianniello. Read the article excerpt, in part, "A confidential 1975 report prepared by intelligence officers in the Police Department’s Organized Crime Control Bureau found that Mr. Ianniello’s primary source of income at the time appeared to have been derived from a string of more than 80 New York bars and restaurants, many of which, the report said, were ’connected with prostitution, narcotics and homosexuals.’" The article quoted an unnamed police detective who specialized in organized crime. Said the detective, "If you want to open a bar and grill or sex establishment in midtown Manhattan but don’t have the cash or have some other problem, you go see Matty Ianniello." Added the detective, "You don’t run a bar and grill or sex establishment between 34th and 59th Streets from Fifth Avenue to the Hudson River without Matty having a piece of the action." Indeed, the Mafia had a stake in many gay establishments, including, it is reported at a Story Via Edge News Wire  
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