Google
 
Web GangLandNews.com
The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia and More

September 29, 2005
By Jerry Capeci
Junior Eyed Deal On Day Of Verdict

A Gang Land Exclusive

Junior Gotti At The Bergin Hunt & Fish ClubFearing conviction and up to 30 more years behind bars, John A. (Junior) Gotti sought a plea deal a few hours before a jury acquitted him of securities fraud and deadlocked on kidnapping and other charges, Gang Land has learned. 

On the morning of September 20, before jurors began what would be their last day of deliberations in the racketeering trial, lawyer Jeffrey Lichtman inquired about reopening negotiations for a guilty plea that would dispose of all the charges in the case, sources said. 

Before trial, Gotti had rejected a plea deal of 15 to 18 years.

With the jury still debating the charges after seven full days, sources said, Lichtman hoped for an offer of less than 10 years, a sentence that the Junior Don had indicated he might accept during tape-recorded jailhouse talks with friends last year.

Released under strict house arrest provisions yesterday on a $7 million bond signed by relatives and friends, Junior faces a February 13 re-trial on

Jeffrey Lichtman

racketeering conspiracy charges that include Sliwa’s kidnapping, extortion and loansharking. 

Lichtman (left) broached the subject of a plea bargain to assistant U.S. attorney Victor Hou in an effort to lessen the likelihood of a long prison stretch that would accompany a guilty verdict that included the violent crimes of extortion and the 1992 kidnap-shooting of radio talk show host Curtis Sliwa.

After seven days of deliberations and numerous readbacks of direct testimony of prosecution witnesses, “the mood in the defense camp was pretty gloomy,” said one lawyer.

The previous day, after the anonymous jury had first said it was deadlocked, Manhattan Federal Judge Shira Scheindlin had read the jurors an instruction called an “Allen charge” and urged the panel to try harder to reach a verdict, a procedure that often causes holdouts to cave in and go along with the majority. 

“Both sides were reading the same tea leaves and the prevailing wisdom at that Curtis Sliwatime was that the jury was leaning towards conviction,” said a second participant in the case.

Sources say it was that “prevailing wisdom” that led Lichtman to raise the subject of a plea deal with Hou, and that caused Hou and co-prosecutors Michael McGovern and Joon Kim to reject Lichtman’s idea and ignore his last minute offer. 

Lichtman, whose grueling cross-examination hurt Sliwa’s

credibility with jurors by highlighting his decades-old phony crime-busting claims, told Gang Land that the jury’s ultimate decision was a total vindication for the defense and that what remains of the prosecution’s case was a “limping wreck.”

He said whatever conversations he had with prosecutors were routine and should not be construed as worry or fear over the outcome, adding: “There were discussions throughout the trial but nothing concrete was ever entertained. No numbers were bandied about, either by me, or to me.” 

Michael (Mikey Y) YannottiGotti wasn’t the only defendant to think he was going down for the count, only to learn that the jury had acquitted him of some charges.  

Michael (Mikey Y) Yannotti, (left) the Gambino soldier who allegedly shot the motormouth Sliwa three times, also looked to make a last minute deal, sources say. Yannotti offered to plead guilty and accept up to 25 years in prison for two murders, the Sliwa kidnapping and other crimes, sources said.

In the biggest surprise of the trial, the jury acquitted him of both murders and an unrelated murder conspiracy, and couldn’t reach a verdict on his alleged role in the Sliwa kidnapping. He was found guilty of racketeering conspiracy however, and faces up to 20 years. He also faces an additional 20 years if convicted at his re-trial for racketeering.

Lawyer Diurmuid White declined to comment about the case.

 
A Jury Box View Of Junior's Trial

Junior GottiCurious about how the Junior Gotti case looked from the jury box, Gang Land knocked on the door of a juror the other day. The retired actress had lots of chores to catch up with but she agreed to chat a bit if Gang Land would give her a hand with several loads of laundry that had built up while she wasn’t paying attention 

So, as she separated clothes into two washing machines in a Laundromat a block from her Upper West Side apartment, she used one of her favorite sayings to describe why she and the other anonymous jurors gave up trying to crack the pigheadedness of a holdout who believed that Gotti had renounced his membership in the Mafia.

“Never try to teach a pig to sing. It’s a waste of your time and it annoys the pig,” she said with a twinkle.

“She was intransigent. No matter what anyone said, she said, ‘I made up my mind and I won’t change it.’”

The former actress – her credits include a featured role in “Play It Again Sam,” a 1969 Broadway play that was written by Woody Allen and starred him and

Diane Keaton – has known a few real wiseguys in her day. She was married for 10 years to a well known TV and movie star, but at her request, Gang Land is withholding his and her name.

Johnny RosselliShe got her start in show business in the 1950s, she said, as a Las Vegas showgirl at the Tropicana Hotel when it was owned by Chicago mobster Johnny Rosselli (left) and frequented by many gangsters. “They were always very protective of me back then, but I know what they were all about.”

She didn’t like Curtis Sliwa – “arrogant, a fraud” – and had absolutely no use for the turncoat gangsters that the prosecutors called as witnesses to try and prove their case. 

“They’re criminals, and what’s worse, they will disappear into the Witness Protection Program and still be criminals. They will lie, cheat and steal, not here in New York, but wherever they are,” she said.

But the transplanted “hayseed from Washington” – along with almost all the other jurors, she said – didn’t believe that the “rats” were making up stories

about Junior being a high ranked mobster who was involved in loansharking and extortion. And except for the lone holdout, they didn’t believe that he had “quit the mob.

“The irony is that for once in their lives they were telling the truth. They fessed up, Judge Shira Scheindlinand it was all for naught. That is the ultimate irony,” she said, as she emptied liquid blue detergent from a plastic container into the second machine, and started the wash with a pre-paid laundry card.

All in all, she had good things to say about the defense lawyers and the prosecutors. “They just didn’t have enough evidence to convince everybody,” she said. But she did have one gripe about trial Judge Scheindlin. (right)

“She asked me too many questions (during the jury selection process.) And you were able to figure out who I am,” she said, putting her finger to her lips: “Shhh.”

The New York Sun
Gang Land appears each week in The New York Sun.

contact Gang Land

Jerry Capeci
P.O. Box 863
Long Beach, NY 11561

Copyright, 2005- All Rights Reserved