National Post (National Edition)

Reputed crime family boss shot dead

- NICK ALLEN

As he strolled out of his redbrick mansion on Staten Island, Francesco “Franky Boy” Cali, the reputed boss of the infamous Gambino crime family, probably felt safe.

After all, it had been 34 years since a Mafia don like him had been murdered on the streets of New York.

But in a stunningly brazen, Godfather-style “hit” Cali, 53, was knocked down by a pickup truck and shot six times in the chest, leaving him dead on the sidewalk.

“I just heard pow-powpow-pow-pow,” one witness in the quiet suburb said. A young man ran out of the house crying “Papa! Papa!” before collapsing on the ground.

Cali had once been described as “the rising star of the American mafia.” He was a captain, a “capo,” before the age of 40. He went on, according to prosecutor­s, to ascend to the summit of one of New York’s “Five Families” of Italian-American mobsters. He was related through marriage to the Inzerillo clan in the Sicilian mafia.

Cali had never been charged with being a mafia boss. His only mob–related conviction came a decade ago when he pleaded guilty in an extortion case involving a failed attempt to build a NASCAR track on Staten Island.

He was among 62 people arrested, and was sentenced to 16 months, being released in 2009.

His assassinat­ion recalled the events surroundin­g the last crime boss to be gunned down in New York, an event that had also centred on the Gambinos.

In December 1985 Gambino family head Pa u l Castellano, known as “Big Paulie,” was shot outside Sparks Steakhouse in Manhattan. The murder was ordered by John Gotti, who took over as boss of the crime operation.

The Gambino family was once among the most powerful criminal organizati­ons in the U..S but prosecutio­ns in the 1980s and ’90s sent its leaders to prison and diminished its reach. Charges included murder, loan sharking, gambling and drug distributi­on.

One of the prosecutor­s then was Rudy Giuliani, whose successful pursuit of crime lords helped propel him to office as mayor of New York.

There is no known motive for the shooting of Cali, who was less flamboyant than Gotti. Described as “old school,” much of his authority stemmed from his connection­s in Italy. He had reportedly been concentrat­ing on profiting from the trade in heroin and illicit prescripti­on drugs.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES ?? Police stand near where reputed mob boss Francesco “Franky Boy” Cali lived and was gunned down on the Staten Island.
SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES Police stand near where reputed mob boss Francesco “Franky Boy” Cali lived and was gunned down on the Staten Island.
 ??  ?? Francesco “Franky Boy” Cali
Francesco “Franky Boy” Cali

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