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{{Infobox Person
<!-- FAIR USE of Scenes Fronticepiece.JPG: see image description page at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Scenes_Frontispiece.JPG for rationale -->
|name=Tommy DeSimone
{{infobox Book | <!-- See [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Novels]] or [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Books]] -->
|image=Thomasdesimone1.JPG|right|Tommy DeSimone|frame|
| name = Scenes of Clerical Life
|caption=
| title_orig =
|birth_date= {{birth date|1950|5|24|mf=y}}
| translator =
|birth_place=[[Brooklyn]], [[New York]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| image = [[Image:Scenes Frontispiece.JPG|200px|Frontispiece of 1906 MacMillan edition of ''Scenes of Clerical Life'' drawn by Hugh Thomson]]<!--prefer 1st edition-->
|death_date={{death date and age|1979|1|14|1950|5|24|mf=y}} <ref name="missing">[http://www.freeinfosociety.com/site.php?postnum=105 Reported missing], [[January 14]], [[1979]].</ref>
| image_caption = Frontispiece of 1906 MacMillan edition of ''Scenes of Clerical Life'' drawn by Hugh Thomson
|death_place=[[Howard Beach]], [[Queens]], [[New York]], [[United States|U.S.]]
| author = [[George Eliot]]
| illustrator = [[Hugh Thomson]]
| cover_artist =
| country = [[United Kingdom]]
| language = [[English language|English]]
| series =
| genre = [[Short story]] compilation
| publisher = [[William Blackwood]] & Sons
| release_date = 1857
| english_release_date =
| media_type = Print ([[Hardcover|Hardback]] & [[Paperback]])
| pages =
| isbn = NA
| preceded_by =
| followed_by = [[Adam Bede]]
}}
}}
'''Thomas Anthony "Two-Gun Tommy" DeSimone''' ([[May 24]], [[1950]] – [[January 14]], [[1979]]<ref name="missing"/>) was a [[gangster]] and associate of the [[Lucchese crime family]] in [[New York]]. Also known as "Tommy D", he was a nephew of [[Los Angeles]] mob boss [[Frank DeSimone]]. He was married to Angelica "Cookie" Spione, but was a constant womanizer whose mistresses included [[Theresa Ferrara]].
==Family tree==


Thomas DeSimone's [[paternal]] [[great uncle]] [[Rosario DeSimone]] was the boss over [[Los Angeles]], [[San Diego]] and [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]] from 1931 until his death in 1946. Thomas' paternal uncle, [[Frank DeSimone]], was a criminal attorney-turned-mobster; "Uncle Frank" (as he was known) replaced [[Jack Dragna]] in 1957 after the latter's death, becoming the second DeSimone family member to become [[Los Angeles crime family]] boss. Thomas is the cousin of Salvatore DeSimone, who would later become a [[Los Angeles, California]] [[Catholic]] [[priest]]. Thomas' sister was [[Dolores DeSimone|Dolores]] and his two brothers were [[Gambino crime family]] associate [[Robert DeSimone]] (imprisoned for life) and Gambino associate [[Anthony DeSimone]], murdered by mobster [[Thomas Agro]] in early 1970s. Thomas was also related to mobsters [[James DeSimone|James]], [[Joseph DeSimone|Joseph]], [[Ralph DeSimone|Ralph]], Phil and [[Franky DeSimone]]. Thomas was the [[brother-in-law]] of mobster Joseph "The Barber" Spione. His sister Phyllis was [[James Burke (gangster)|Jimmy Burke]]'s mistress since she had been sixteen years old. He is the ex-father-in-law of [[Gambino crime family]] associate Salvatore DeVita and uncle-in-law to [[Sivio P. DeVita]].
'''''Scenes of Clerical Life''''' is [[George Eliot]]'s first published fictional work. The book consists of three stories set in and around the fictional town of Milby in the [[English Midlands]]. The stories were first published in [[Blackwood's Magazine]] over the course of the year [[1857]], before being released as a two-volume set by Blackwood and Sons in January 1858 <ref>Uglow, Nathan. "Scenes of Clerical Life". ''The Literary Encyclopedia''. 30 October 2002.[http://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=2231, accessed 10 October 2008.]</ref> Each of the stories examines an aspect of religious reform and the impacts that change and differing beliefs have on the residents of Milby.<ref>Eliot, George, and Jennifer Gribble. ''Scenes of Clerical Life''. New York: Penguin, 1985.[http://books.google.com/books?id=CAWyCb9FCXcC]</ref>


==Association with Vario and Burke==
== Plot summary ==
DeSimone worked under Mafia [[Capo (Mafia)|capo]] [[Paul Vario]] with his friends [[James Burke (gangster)|Jimmy Burke]] and [[Henry Hill (mobster)|Henry Hill]]; DeSimone and Hill had known one another since they were young men, when Burke took them on as his [[protégé]]s. DeSimone was involved in truck [[Carjacking|hijacking]], dealing stolen property, [[extortion]], [[fraud]], and [[murder]].
{{Expand-section|date=March 2008}}
=== "The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton" ===
The first story in ''Scenes of Clerical Life'' is titled "The Sad Fortunes of the Reverend Amos Barton". The titular character is the new curate of the local church in Shepperton. A pious man, but "sadly unsuited to the practice of his profession" <ref>[http://www.victorianweb.org/religion/type/ch3a.html]</ref>, Barton attempts to ensure that his congregation remains firmly within the care of the [[Church of England]]. His stipend is inadequate, and he relies on the hard work of Milly, his wife, to help keep the family. Since Barton is new, and not all of the congregation accept him, he feels that it is especially important to serve the community. Barton's charity is strained when he meets Countess Czerlaski, who is beautiful and in need of a home. Barton and his wife accept the Countess, until Milly becomes ill and the nanny convinces the Countess to leave. Milly dies of her illness and Barton is plunged into sadness at the loss. Just as Barton reconciles himself to Milly's death, he get more bad news: the vicar in the region, Mr. Carpe, wants to be the pastor of the church in Shepperton, so Barton is given six-months notice to leave. Barton accepts the transfer but is disheartened because he had improved the church and had won the sympathies of the parishioners. Barton believes that the transfer was unfair because the vicar's brother-in-law is in search of a new parish in which to work. The story concludes twenty years later with Barton at his wife's grave with one of his daughters: Patty. Barton laments how things have changed, and that he is especially proud of his son Richard.<ref>[http://www.princeton.edu/~batke/eliot/scenes/ Scenes from Clerical Life<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


DeSimone's violent temper was well known. While playing [[pinochle]] with [[Joseph Iannuzzi]] and Agro, he started throwing darts at the other players when he started losing. Hill described DeSimone and Burke by saying, "It didn't take anything for these guys to kill you. They liked it. They would sit around drinking booze and talk about their favorite hits. They enjoyed talking about them." Hill later described DeSimone as a "pure [[psychopath]]". Hill suggested that DeSimone had something to prove because his older brother Anthony had become an informant and was allegedly murdered by the Gambino family.
=== "Mr. Gilfil's Love Story" ===
The second work in ''Scenes of Clerical Life'' is titled "Mr. Gilfil's Love-Story" and concerns the life of a clergyman named Maynard Gilfil who died 30-years before the events of the previous story. Gilfil, later the incumbent of Shepperton, is chaplain at Cheverel Manor. The plot begins as Gilfil falls in love with a talented singer, Caterina Sarti, known as Tina. Tina is the ward of Sir Christopher Cheverel. Gilfil's love for Tina is not reciprocated because she desires the carefree Captain Anthony Wybrow, who only teases her with flirtation. Wybrow's uncle plans that Wybrow will marry a Miss Assher, a wealthy friend of his. Both Tina and Miss Assher end up living together with Wybrow. When Wybrow dies, Tina becomes terribly distraught. Gilfil seeks her out, helps her recover and marries her. Unfortunately, her spirit is so broken that she dies soon afterwards, leaving the pastor to die a lonely man.<ref>[http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/web/corporate/pages.nsf/Links/52D61A0D7C6CB7C8802572670041A8FF George Eliot: Review of Scenes of Clerical Life - Warwickshire Web<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>[http://www.shvoong.com/books/folk-tale/1770979-scenes-clerical-life/ Scenes of Clerical Life Book Review<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


==Gangland slayings==
=== "Janet's Repentance" ===
''Janet's Repentance'' is the only story set in the town of Milby (based on the Warwickshire town of [[Nuneaton]])<ref>[http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/web/corporate/pages.nsf/Links/37880A62B28BAF4880257273004ADF0B/]</ref>. It details the experiences of Janet Dempster and her brutish, bully, lawyer-husband, Robert Dempster. Janet is rescued from her dependence on alcohol by Edgar Tryan, an evangelical clergyman who guides Janet toward redemption and self-sufficiency.<ref>[http://www.princeton.edu/~batke/eliot/scenes/ Scenes from Clerical Life<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


DeSimone committed his first murder on [[March 15]], [[1968]]. He was walking down the street with Hill and Burke when DeSimone spotted Howard Goldstein, unknown to either gangster. Hill recalls DeSimone turning to him and saying, "Hey Henry, watch this." DeSimone yelled, "Hey cocksucker!", pulled out a .38 caliber pistol, and shot and killed Goldstein. Hill exclaimed, "That was cold-blooded, Tommy!" DeSimone replied, "Well, I'm a mean cat."
== Criticism ==
''Scenes of Clerical Life'' was met with critical acclaim. In 1858 [[Charles Dickens]] wrote the following to Eliot to express his approval of the book. The letter is also noteworthy because Dickens was the first to suggest that because of the emotional appeal of the characters in ''Scenes of Clerical Life'' it was written by a female.<ref>Crompton, Margaret. ''George Eliot, the Woman''. New York: T. Yoseloff, 1960. Page 17.[http://books.google.com/books?id=bC0IAAAAIAAJ]</ref><blockquote>I have been so strongly affected by the two first tales in the book you have had the kindness to send me, through Messrs. Blackwood, that I hope you will excuse my writing to you to express my admiration of their extraordinary merit. The exquisite truth and delicacy both of the humor<!--Spelling?--> and the pathos of these stories, I have never seen the like of; and they have impressed me in a manner that I should find it very difficult to describe to you. if I had the impertinence to try. In addressing these few words of thankfulness to the creator of the Sad Fortunes of the Rev. Amos Barton, and the sad love-story of Mr. Gilfil, I am (I presume) bound to adopt the name that it pleases that excellent writer to assume. I can suggest no better one: but I should have been strongly disposed, if I had been left to my own devices, to address the said writer as a woman. I have observed what seemed to me such womanly touches in those moving fictions, that the assurance on the title-page is insufficient to satisfy me even now. If they originated with no woman, I believe that no man ever before had the art of making himself mentally so like a woman since the world began.<ref>Moulton, Charles Wells. ''The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors''. Buffalo New York: Moulton, 1904. vol. 7, page. 181.[http://books.google.com/books?id=59YcAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA181]</ref></blockquote>


He then killed [[William Devino|William "Billy Batts" Devino]], a [[made man]] who was part of the Gambino family. He worked with rising mobster [[John Gotti]]. Batts had just gotten out of prison after serving a six-year term for drug possession. While incarcerated, Burke had taken over Batts' businesses, and now that Batts was out of prison, he needed to have Batts out of the way. One night while Batts and Burke were having drinks in The Suite, DeSimone showed up. Recalling the days when DeSimone had shined shoes, Batts began taunting DeSimone by calling him “spit-shine Tommy.” DeSimone left and later returned with a .38 revolver and a plastic mattress cover. Burke held Batts in a headlock while DeSimone beat his skull with the revolver (according to Hill in ''[[The Real GoodFella]]''). DeSimone, Burke, and an unwitting Hill loaded Batts into the trunk of Hill's [[Buick Riviera]], and were on their way to bury him when Batts woke up. He was beaten and stabbed until he eventually died.
== References ==
<references/>


DeSimone's third murder is described by Hill in his book ''[[Wiseguy]]''. A young man named [[Michael "Spider" Gianco]] was acting as bartender at a card game where DeSimone took out a handgun, and demanded that Gianco dance for him. DeSimone shot him in the foot when Gianco refused. A week later, Gianco was again serving drinks; DeSimone started to [[bullying|bully]] him about his wounded foot, spurring Gianco to reply "Why don't you go fuck yourself, Tommy?" DeSimone lost his temper and shot Gianco three times in the chest, killing him. Burke and Hill were furious, and made him bury Gianco's body in the cellar.
==External links==
{{Wikisource}}


His fourth murder, according to Hill, occurred when DeSimone got carried away after being asked to "rough up" a witness to a robbery. After a truck heist, a foreman had refused to allow Burke to unload the cargo of a hijacked truck in his warehouse, and made a tremendous fuss because they had no [[labor union|union]] cards. Burke attempted to reason with the man, who stood his ground and refused to be intimidated. Burke later sent DeSimone to the man's house in [[New Jersey]], with instructions to threaten and "rough up" the man to ensure he would cooperate with Burke in the future. DeSimone, angry for having to drive all the way to New Jersey, ended up beating the man to death.
* [http://www.princeton.edu/~batke/eliot/scenes/ ''Scenes of Clerical Life''] – searchable online e-text posted by Peter Batke at [[Princeton University]]
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=z4jFWQmYjoQC&dq ''Scenes of Clerical Life''], Estes and Lauriat, 1894. Scanned illustrated book via [[Google Books]]


DeSimone killed Gotti protégé [[Ronald Jerothe|Ronald "Foxy" Jerothe]] on [[December 18]], [[1974]]. DeSimone had dated Jerothe's sister and then beaten her up, prompting Jerothe to threaten to kill DeSimone. When DeSimone heard about the threat, he went to Jerothe's apartment and knocked on the door. Jerothe opened the door, and punched DeSimone in the face. DeSimone then shot Jerothe between the eyes, killing him.
{{George Eliot works}}


He also [[garotte]]d Burke's close friend, [[Dominick Cersani]], on the former's orders in a [[Cadillac]] outside [[Robert's Lounge]] for being an informant for the police. Cersani was buried in the partially unfinished basement of the [[saloon]].
[[Category:1857 books]]

[[Category:Works by George Eliot]]
==Role in the Lufthansa heist==
DeSimone was alleged to have taken part in the December 1978 [[Lufthansa heist]] from [[JFK International Airport]], the largest robbery in U.S. history at the time. The loot is reputed to have been almost $6,000,000, only a fraction of which was recovered. He was picked out by having very well polished shoes, too well polished for an airport employee. He was the one who suggested recruiting his ex-cell mate [[Angelo Sepe]] for the heist.

Hill claims that during the week after [[Christmas]] 1978, after murdering Lufthansa robber and mob lackey [[Parnell Edwards|Parnell "Stacks" Edwards]] in his home in [[Ozone Park, Queens]], DeSimone was going to become a [[made man|"made"]] member of the Lucchese Family. A few weeks later, DeSimone disappeared.

In ''Gangsters and GoodFellas'', Hill mentioned that DeSimone had killed around four people in [[prison]], bringing the total to around 10. Hill commented that DeSimone would murder someone just because he wanted to try out a new firearm and wouldn't hesitate to use someone as human "target practice".

== Making his Bones ==
DeSimone then murdered Stacks Edwards. DeSimone was a good friend of Stacks' and was disappointed to hear that he had failed to get rid of the truck used in the Lufthansa Heist in New Jersey where the evidence would be destroyed. But when he was told by a ranking mafioso that he could become a [[made]] man off of this hit, he agreed. Once he found out where Stacks was hiding, he visited Stacks and shot him six times in the chest and head using a [[suppressor|silenced]] pistol.

==Disappearance and death==

DeSimone was assassinated as a reprisal for having killed two of [[John Gotti]]'s close friends.[http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,134529,00.html] [http://www.americanmafia.com/Mob_Report/1-14-02_Mob_Report.html]

On [[January 14]], [[1979]],<ref name="missing"/> DeSimone's wife, Angela, reported him missing. Following the Lufthansa heist, [[Theresa Ferrara]], [[Martin Krugman]], [[Robert McMahon]], [[Joe Manri]], [[Parnell Edwards]] and [[Paolo LiCastri]] had all been murdered by Burke, who wanted to avoid paying them their share of the loot. For years, the [[New York Police Department]] and the [[FBI]] believed that DeSimone had either been murdered by Burke, or that he was in hiding to avoid being killed. His brother-in-law, Lucchese family member Joseph "The Barber" Spione, also disappeared shortly afterward.

When Hill became an [[FBI]] [[informant]] in 1980, he told authorities that DeSimone had been murdered by the [[Gambino crime family]]. The full details were unknown until 1994, when Hill, in his book ''Gangsters and Goodfellas,'' gave the whole story of the events leading up to DeSimone's death. Hill's wife, [[Karen Hill|Karen]], had been having an affair with Hill's boss, [[Mafia]] [[Caporegime]] [[Paul Vario]]. When Hill was sentenced to [[prison]], DeSimone approached Karen for sex. When she turned him down, DeSimone attempted to [[rape]] her. In retaliation for the attempted rape, Vario approached the Gambino crew and revealed that DeSimone had murdered Jerothe and [[William Devino]] without first seeking permission from the Gambino crime family, violating [[Mafia]] protocol. On January 14, 1979, DeSimone was contacted and told that he was going to be "made." Peter Vario and [[Bruno Facciolo]] took him to a house, where he was ''whacked'' by [[Thomas Agro]].

Agro confessed in 1985 that he was the driving force behind the ruse. Agro [[assassination|assassinated]] him on the orders of [[John Gotti]], and also admitted to murdering DeSimone's brother [[Anthony DeSimone|Anthony]] after he turned informant. Agro admitted this to informant "Joe Dog" Ianuzzi. Agro also at times suggested murdering the eldest and last remaining brother, [[Robert DeSimone|Robert]]. According to Ianuzzi, Agro would often laughingly refer to killing the third DeSimone brother, stating that "Maybe it is time to go for the DeSimone trifecta!" Another account, told by Hill in ''Gangsters and GoodFellas'', states that Gotti himself was the assassin. On [[May 17]], [[2007]] on the ''[[Howard Stern Show]]'', Hill reaffirmed that Gotti had killed DeSimone.

DeSimone was declared legally dead by the [[FBI]] in 1990.

He was thought to have been buried at a suspected "Mafia graveyard" on the Brooklyn-Queens border [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/article490845.ece]
near John F. Kennedy International Airport, where the body of Alfonse "Sonny Red" Indelicato was found by children in 1981 and the bodies of Philip "Phil Lucky" Giaccone and Dominick "Big Trin" Trinchera were recovered by police in 2004.[http://www.cnn.com/2004/LAW/12/21/fbi.graves/index.html] However his remains have never been located.

==In popular culture==
DeSimone's infamy rests on the depiction of him given by actor [[Joe Pesci]] in the 1990 movie ''[[Goodfellas]]'' (renamed "Tommy DeVito" in the film), a role for which Pesci won the 1990 [[Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor]]. The movie took some artistic liberties: primarily, DeSimone was much younger than Hill, not the same age (as implied when they first meet), and while depicted in the film as a small man with an attitude, DeSimone was a large, burly enforcer. Also, Pesci's character, Tommy DeVito, is shown ramming an ice pick into [[Martin Krugman]]'s head; Hill claimed that DeSimone was dead by the time Krugman was killed. At various points in the film, Tommy DeSimone is substituted for various individuals not portrayed in the film. For instance, in the double-date scene where Hill meets his future wife, Tommy DeVito is substituted for [[Paul Vario]]'s son, Paul Jr, who actually went on the date.

Hill, nevertheless, calls Pesci's portrayal "between 90 and 95 percent accurate", mentioning only that Pesci did not physically resemble the tall, muscular DeSimone, who was only in his teens and twenties during the events depicted in ''[[Goodfellas]]''. Also, in real life, Vario allowed the Gambinos to kill DeSimone in retaliation for the murder of Batts and Foxy Gerothe, whereas in the film, elder members of the family solely execute Tommy DeVito for killing a "made man" without permission, although Henry's narration makes a reference to the true events, saying Tommy was murdered as "revenge for Billy Batts and a lot of other things." In the film, Tommy is killed by Vinnie (Charles Scorcese), an elder member of the Gambino Crime Family based on [[Thomas Agro]], and Tuddy Cicero. But unlike his real-life counterpart, DeVito's remains are found shortly afterwards and he is given a funeral.

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
*Pileggi, Nicholas, ''Wiseguy: Life In A Mafia Family'', Simon & Schuster (1986) ISBN 0671447343
*Hill, Henry, ''Gangsters and Goodfellas: The Mob, Witness Protection, and Life on the Run'', M. Evans and Company, Inc. (December 25, 2007) ISBN 159077129X
*Ianuzzi, Joseph, ''Joe Dogs: The Life and Crimes of a Mobster'', Simon & Schuster (June 1993) ISBN 0671797522
* Hill, Gina; Hill, Gregg, ''On the Run: A Mafia Childhood'', Warner Books (October 2004) ISBN 044652770X

{{DEFAULTSORT:Desimone, Thomas}}
[[Category:1950 births]]
[[Category:1979 deaths]]
[[Category:Murdered Italian-American mobsters]]
[[Category:Lucchese crime family]]
[[Category:Lufthansa heist]]
[[Category:Mafia hitmen]]
[[Category:People from Brooklyn]]
[[Category:Italian-American mobsters]]
[[Category:American mass murderers]]
[[Category:American murderers of children]]

Revision as of 05:04, 11 October 2008

Tommy DeSimone
File:Thomasdesimone1.JPG
Born(1950-05-24)May 24, 1950
DiedJanuary 14, 1979(1979-01-14) (aged 28) [1]

Thomas Anthony "Two-Gun Tommy" DeSimone (May 24, 1950January 14, 1979[1]) was a gangster and associate of the Lucchese crime family in New York. Also known as "Tommy D", he was a nephew of Los Angeles mob boss Frank DeSimone. He was married to Angelica "Cookie" Spione, but was a constant womanizer whose mistresses included Theresa Ferrara.

Family tree

Thomas DeSimone's paternal great uncle Rosario DeSimone was the boss over Los Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas from 1931 until his death in 1946. Thomas' paternal uncle, Frank DeSimone, was a criminal attorney-turned-mobster; "Uncle Frank" (as he was known) replaced Jack Dragna in 1957 after the latter's death, becoming the second DeSimone family member to become Los Angeles crime family boss. Thomas is the cousin of Salvatore DeSimone, who would later become a Los Angeles, California Catholic priest. Thomas' sister was Dolores and his two brothers were Gambino crime family associate Robert DeSimone (imprisoned for life) and Gambino associate Anthony DeSimone, murdered by mobster Thomas Agro in early 1970s. Thomas was also related to mobsters James, Joseph, Ralph, Phil and Franky DeSimone. Thomas was the brother-in-law of mobster Joseph "The Barber" Spione. His sister Phyllis was Jimmy Burke's mistress since she had been sixteen years old. He is the ex-father-in-law of Gambino crime family associate Salvatore DeVita and uncle-in-law to Sivio P. DeVita.

Association with Vario and Burke

DeSimone worked under Mafia capo Paul Vario with his friends Jimmy Burke and Henry Hill; DeSimone and Hill had known one another since they were young men, when Burke took them on as his protégés. DeSimone was involved in truck hijacking, dealing stolen property, extortion, fraud, and murder.

DeSimone's violent temper was well known. While playing pinochle with Joseph Iannuzzi and Agro, he started throwing darts at the other players when he started losing. Hill described DeSimone and Burke by saying, "It didn't take anything for these guys to kill you. They liked it. They would sit around drinking booze and talk about their favorite hits. They enjoyed talking about them." Hill later described DeSimone as a "pure psychopath". Hill suggested that DeSimone had something to prove because his older brother Anthony had become an informant and was allegedly murdered by the Gambino family.

Gangland slayings

DeSimone committed his first murder on March 15, 1968. He was walking down the street with Hill and Burke when DeSimone spotted Howard Goldstein, unknown to either gangster. Hill recalls DeSimone turning to him and saying, "Hey Henry, watch this." DeSimone yelled, "Hey cocksucker!", pulled out a .38 caliber pistol, and shot and killed Goldstein. Hill exclaimed, "That was cold-blooded, Tommy!" DeSimone replied, "Well, I'm a mean cat."

He then killed William "Billy Batts" Devino, a made man who was part of the Gambino family. He worked with rising mobster John Gotti. Batts had just gotten out of prison after serving a six-year term for drug possession. While incarcerated, Burke had taken over Batts' businesses, and now that Batts was out of prison, he needed to have Batts out of the way. One night while Batts and Burke were having drinks in The Suite, DeSimone showed up. Recalling the days when DeSimone had shined shoes, Batts began taunting DeSimone by calling him “spit-shine Tommy.” DeSimone left and later returned with a .38 revolver and a plastic mattress cover. Burke held Batts in a headlock while DeSimone beat his skull with the revolver (according to Hill in The Real GoodFella). DeSimone, Burke, and an unwitting Hill loaded Batts into the trunk of Hill's Buick Riviera, and were on their way to bury him when Batts woke up. He was beaten and stabbed until he eventually died.

DeSimone's third murder is described by Hill in his book Wiseguy. A young man named Michael "Spider" Gianco was acting as bartender at a card game where DeSimone took out a handgun, and demanded that Gianco dance for him. DeSimone shot him in the foot when Gianco refused. A week later, Gianco was again serving drinks; DeSimone started to bully him about his wounded foot, spurring Gianco to reply "Why don't you go fuck yourself, Tommy?" DeSimone lost his temper and shot Gianco three times in the chest, killing him. Burke and Hill were furious, and made him bury Gianco's body in the cellar.

His fourth murder, according to Hill, occurred when DeSimone got carried away after being asked to "rough up" a witness to a robbery. After a truck heist, a foreman had refused to allow Burke to unload the cargo of a hijacked truck in his warehouse, and made a tremendous fuss because they had no union cards. Burke attempted to reason with the man, who stood his ground and refused to be intimidated. Burke later sent DeSimone to the man's house in New Jersey, with instructions to threaten and "rough up" the man to ensure he would cooperate with Burke in the future. DeSimone, angry for having to drive all the way to New Jersey, ended up beating the man to death.

DeSimone killed Gotti protégé Ronald "Foxy" Jerothe on December 18, 1974. DeSimone had dated Jerothe's sister and then beaten her up, prompting Jerothe to threaten to kill DeSimone. When DeSimone heard about the threat, he went to Jerothe's apartment and knocked on the door. Jerothe opened the door, and punched DeSimone in the face. DeSimone then shot Jerothe between the eyes, killing him.

He also garotted Burke's close friend, Dominick Cersani, on the former's orders in a Cadillac outside Robert's Lounge for being an informant for the police. Cersani was buried in the partially unfinished basement of the saloon.

Role in the Lufthansa heist

DeSimone was alleged to have taken part in the December 1978 Lufthansa heist from JFK International Airport, the largest robbery in U.S. history at the time. The loot is reputed to have been almost $6,000,000, only a fraction of which was recovered. He was picked out by having very well polished shoes, too well polished for an airport employee. He was the one who suggested recruiting his ex-cell mate Angelo Sepe for the heist.

Hill claims that during the week after Christmas 1978, after murdering Lufthansa robber and mob lackey Parnell "Stacks" Edwards in his home in Ozone Park, Queens, DeSimone was going to become a "made" member of the Lucchese Family. A few weeks later, DeSimone disappeared.

In Gangsters and GoodFellas, Hill mentioned that DeSimone had killed around four people in prison, bringing the total to around 10. Hill commented that DeSimone would murder someone just because he wanted to try out a new firearm and wouldn't hesitate to use someone as human "target practice".

Making his Bones

DeSimone then murdered Stacks Edwards. DeSimone was a good friend of Stacks' and was disappointed to hear that he had failed to get rid of the truck used in the Lufthansa Heist in New Jersey where the evidence would be destroyed. But when he was told by a ranking mafioso that he could become a made man off of this hit, he agreed. Once he found out where Stacks was hiding, he visited Stacks and shot him six times in the chest and head using a silenced pistol.

Disappearance and death

DeSimone was assassinated as a reprisal for having killed two of John Gotti's close friends.[1] [2]

On January 14, 1979,[1] DeSimone's wife, Angela, reported him missing. Following the Lufthansa heist, Theresa Ferrara, Martin Krugman, Robert McMahon, Joe Manri, Parnell Edwards and Paolo LiCastri had all been murdered by Burke, who wanted to avoid paying them their share of the loot. For years, the New York Police Department and the FBI believed that DeSimone had either been murdered by Burke, or that he was in hiding to avoid being killed. His brother-in-law, Lucchese family member Joseph "The Barber" Spione, also disappeared shortly afterward.

When Hill became an FBI informant in 1980, he told authorities that DeSimone had been murdered by the Gambino crime family. The full details were unknown until 1994, when Hill, in his book Gangsters and Goodfellas, gave the whole story of the events leading up to DeSimone's death. Hill's wife, Karen, had been having an affair with Hill's boss, Mafia Caporegime Paul Vario. When Hill was sentenced to prison, DeSimone approached Karen for sex. When she turned him down, DeSimone attempted to rape her. In retaliation for the attempted rape, Vario approached the Gambino crew and revealed that DeSimone had murdered Jerothe and William Devino without first seeking permission from the Gambino crime family, violating Mafia protocol. On January 14, 1979, DeSimone was contacted and told that he was going to be "made." Peter Vario and Bruno Facciolo took him to a house, where he was whacked by Thomas Agro.

Agro confessed in 1985 that he was the driving force behind the ruse. Agro assassinated him on the orders of John Gotti, and also admitted to murdering DeSimone's brother Anthony after he turned informant. Agro admitted this to informant "Joe Dog" Ianuzzi. Agro also at times suggested murdering the eldest and last remaining brother, Robert. According to Ianuzzi, Agro would often laughingly refer to killing the third DeSimone brother, stating that "Maybe it is time to go for the DeSimone trifecta!" Another account, told by Hill in Gangsters and GoodFellas, states that Gotti himself was the assassin. On May 17, 2007 on the Howard Stern Show, Hill reaffirmed that Gotti had killed DeSimone.

DeSimone was declared legally dead by the FBI in 1990.

He was thought to have been buried at a suspected "Mafia graveyard" on the Brooklyn-Queens border [3] near John F. Kennedy International Airport, where the body of Alfonse "Sonny Red" Indelicato was found by children in 1981 and the bodies of Philip "Phil Lucky" Giaccone and Dominick "Big Trin" Trinchera were recovered by police in 2004.[4] However his remains have never been located.

In popular culture

DeSimone's infamy rests on the depiction of him given by actor Joe Pesci in the 1990 movie Goodfellas (renamed "Tommy DeVito" in the film), a role for which Pesci won the 1990 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. The movie took some artistic liberties: primarily, DeSimone was much younger than Hill, not the same age (as implied when they first meet), and while depicted in the film as a small man with an attitude, DeSimone was a large, burly enforcer. Also, Pesci's character, Tommy DeVito, is shown ramming an ice pick into Martin Krugman's head; Hill claimed that DeSimone was dead by the time Krugman was killed. At various points in the film, Tommy DeSimone is substituted for various individuals not portrayed in the film. For instance, in the double-date scene where Hill meets his future wife, Tommy DeVito is substituted for Paul Vario's son, Paul Jr, who actually went on the date.

Hill, nevertheless, calls Pesci's portrayal "between 90 and 95 percent accurate", mentioning only that Pesci did not physically resemble the tall, muscular DeSimone, who was only in his teens and twenties during the events depicted in Goodfellas. Also, in real life, Vario allowed the Gambinos to kill DeSimone in retaliation for the murder of Batts and Foxy Gerothe, whereas in the film, elder members of the family solely execute Tommy DeVito for killing a "made man" without permission, although Henry's narration makes a reference to the true events, saying Tommy was murdered as "revenge for Billy Batts and a lot of other things." In the film, Tommy is killed by Vinnie (Charles Scorcese), an elder member of the Gambino Crime Family based on Thomas Agro, and Tuddy Cicero. But unlike his real-life counterpart, DeVito's remains are found shortly afterwards and he is given a funeral.

Notes

References

  • Pileggi, Nicholas, Wiseguy: Life In A Mafia Family, Simon & Schuster (1986) ISBN 0671447343
  • Hill, Henry, Gangsters and Goodfellas: The Mob, Witness Protection, and Life on the Run, M. Evans and Company, Inc. (December 25, 2007) ISBN 159077129X
  • Ianuzzi, Joseph, Joe Dogs: The Life and Crimes of a Mobster, Simon & Schuster (June 1993) ISBN 0671797522
  • Hill, Gina; Hill, Gregg, On the Run: A Mafia Childhood, Warner Books (October 2004) ISBN 044652770X