The Agony Of Ecstasy: The Fall Of Sammy Gravano And Peter GatienBy
James Ridgway de Szigethyhttp://www.americanmafia.com/Feature_Articles_237.html Fall, 2002. New York City. Salvatore Gravano, also known as Sammy
"The Bull", former Underboss of the Gambino Mafia Family, is
languishing in a Federal prison cell. Peter Gatien, the impresario of
several successful New York nightclubs, is also languishing in a
Federal prison cell.
Both men came from very different upbringings; Sal Gravano grew
up in Brooklyn, where his parents operated a profitable business that
sold women's dresses. Peter Gatien grew up in a poor family in Canada,
where he excelled in the national obsession of hockey. Sammy Gravano
put in a stint with the United States Army, after which he returned to
his native Brooklyn where he enrolled in a local school, intent on
becoming a hairdresser. Peter Gatien's ambitions were narrowed by an
accident in a hockey game, during which a hockey puck destroyed one of
his eyes. Gatien utilized the insurance settlement from this accident
to bankroll a succession of nightclubs; first in Canada, later in the
South, and later, most successfully, in New York City.
Both men were on a course that would make them millionaires at a
young age. Then came their fall, as both would become the targets of
Prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Brooklyn and the New York
office of the Drug Enforcement Administration. The ammunition that
brought both men down was a tiny little pill called Ecstasy.
A HAIR-DRESSER NAMED SAL The city that Salvatore Gravano returned to after his Army tour
in the 1960s was a metropolis becoming increasingly violent. In an
event that stunned the world, young Kitty Genovese was slowly stabbed
to death on the streets of New York while scores of witnesses ignored
her cries for help. Such conditions of resignation and indifference
provided fertile ground for the Mafia, which had long held sway in New
York, to dramatically expand it's operations and influence. The Mafia
even moved into a new line of money making – the kidnapping for ransom
of members of rival Mafia Families.
Such was the lawlessness in New York City that spurred on two men
who needed little encouragement in breaking the law; young John Gotti
and the man who would later become his Underboss, Sammy Gravano. By
the early 70s a series of incarcerations and murders had elevated
Gotti to a position of power within his crew which brought him into
direct contact with Carlo Gambino, Godfather of the Family. In 1973
Gotti was indicted for the murder of Jimmy McBratney, who allegedly
was involved in the botched kidnapping of Carlo Gambino's nephew.
Gotti hired to represent him criminal attorney Roy Cohn, arguably one
of the most corrupt lawyers in U. S. history. Cohn had achieved fame
as a Prosecutor in the case of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who were
convicted in the 1950s of espionage and later executed. Cohn then
became a household name as an aide, along with Bobby Kennedy, to
Senator Joseph McCarthy during his televised hearings exposing
Communist infiltration of the U. S. government. Cohn later became an
attorney for the Mob, representing a succession of America's most
notorious and violent criminals. The relationship between Cohn and the
Mafia was a marriage of convenience that would last until Cohn's death
in 1986 due to AIDS; Cohn provide the Mafia with some of the best
legal – and illegal – assistance available, and the Mob in return
provided Cohn with the drugs and male prostitutes he used on a daily
basis.
Cohn's power as a criminal attorney stemmed from his association
with criminals, not just those who belonged to organized crime
families, but those corrupted by such families, including cops,
prosecutors, and Judges. With such contacts and, some would say,
"leverage," Cohn was able to cop pleas and procure reduced sentences
as few others in his field could. In Gotti's case Cohn was able to
convince the authorities to allow Gotti to plead guilty to the lesser
charge of attempted manslaughter. Gotti received a sentence of only 4
years in prison, of which he served less than half.
Although Gotti had only been away from New York a short time,
much had changed during his absence. A new culture had erupted upon
the scene in New York which would quickly spread across America. The
phenomenon was called "Disco." Nightclubs began to spring up across
New York City as venues for this new dance music and the mob saw in
such clubs new potential for money-making ventures; one as a
'legitimate' business and another as an opportunity to launder money
from illegal activities, including the burgeoning drug business. Drug
abuse, notably the new 'in' drug cocaine, was a commodity demanded by
many of those who sought escape in the Discos. Young toughs in the
Mafia families began to ignore the Mafia's traditional edict that
prohibited drug dealing, among them associates of John Gotti,
including his brother Gene, who developed a lucrative drug trafficking
operation.
During those years Sammy Gravano had turned himself from a
hairdresser to an up-and-coming wannabe gangster aligned with the
Colombo Mafia Family. As a child, Gravano had received ridicule from
his classmates because of his dyslexia condition, which made him a
'slow learner.' His diminutive size also prompted bullies to taunt
him, and once Gravano enrolled in a Beauticians School, it seemed to
many that Gravano would suffer the ridicule heaped upon those
considered by some elements of society as 'sissies.' At some point,
Gravano began to fight back, determined to 'prove his manhood' to the
petty hoods that ruled the streets of his native Bensonhurst. Gravano
soon discovered an ally in his fight to be treated with respect;
anabolic steroids, drugs that, combined with a special diet and
vigorous weight training program, can turn small 'sissies' into
hulking 'macho' men. As in all drugs, however, steroids produce side
effects, including an increased blood pressure and heart beat and the
eruption of violent fits of anger, the so-called 'roid rages.' As to
how many of the 19 murders Gravano has admitted to were fueled by his
steroids use, the number cannot ever be known but nevertheless will be
the subject of debate of criminologists and mental health
professionals for many years to come.
One of the more popular New York clubs of the era was Max's
Kansas City, which was presided over by the 'Andy Warhol' crowd.
Warhol had years earlier invented a new art form, 'Pop Art,' which
relied on everyday, commonplace subjects, such as his famous painting
of a Campbell's Soup can. Max's Kansas City was a place where stars
and wannabes of the art, fashion, and music world gathered to interact
off each other's creativity. Unknown musicians such as Billy Joel,
Aerosmith, Bruce Springsteen, and Patty Smith first plied their craft
inside the walls of the infamous club. Patty Smith's boyfriend, artist
Robert Mapplethorpe, also got his start at Max's Kansas City.
Within a few years Smith was a star of the new 'punk rock' genre
and Mapplethorpe was a rising star in Manhattan's hot art scene. Along
the way, Mappelthorpe descended into a subculture of New York
nightlife which dealt with drugs, sado-masochistic sex rituals, and
involvement in the Occult. Already a denizen of this scene was an art
dealer named Andrew Crispo, who found a lucrative business in
procuring art objects for rich and/or famous clients worldwide.
DEATH OF A GODFATHER With the dawn of the 1980s new opportunities arose for members of
organized crime, most notably the arrival on the scene of an
inexpensive, highly addictive form of cocaine known as 'crack.' The
crack cocaine epidemic that swept America in a relatively short period
of time was in part the result of events that occurred in the final
months of the Administration of U. S. President Jimmy Carter. In 1979
the Soviet Union invaded neighboring Afghanistan. The response of
President Carter was his threat that if the Communists did not
withdraw from Afghanistan, the United States would not send it's
athletes to compete in the 1980 Olympic games to be held in Moscow.
Also during this time, Islamic militants seized the U. S. Embassy in
Tehran, Iran, holding hostage 52 U. S. citizens. Also, exploiting
President Carter's weakness, Cuban dictator Fidel Castro dumped onto
the shores of the United States thousands of his convicted criminals,
mentally ill, and drug addicts in the infamous 'Mariel boat lift.' The
Mariellitos were a nightmare for law enforcement nationwide, bringing
with them the practice of cocaine trafficking.
Carter's weakness prompted both the Soviet Union and it's ally
Cuba to sponsor Communist revolutions in several countries in Central
and South America. Most of the Communist insurgents were poor peasants
eaking out a living in the remote rain forests of their country, but
one commodity, which could be locally grown, was readily available as
a means of achieving arms to further the Communist cause; that
commodity was the coca plant, which produced a substance that could be
refined into cocaine, and, more deadly for the youth of America,
'crack.' As the Western World and the Communists fought it out over
the control of the hearts and minds of those in Central and South
America, tons of crack made it's way into the communities of America.
Members of John Gotti's crew in the Gambino Family were among
those to capitalize on the new flood of drugs into America. There were
several obstacles standing in their way; one was the Feds, who were
struggling to respond to the new tide of drug trafficking. The other
was the Godfather of the Gambino Family, Paul Castellano, part of the
old school of Mafia leaders who prohibited the dealing of drugs.
Something had to go; either the millions of dollars in drug profits
being earned by associates of John Gotti, or Godfather Castellano.
In December 1985, John Gotti and his associates awaited Paul
Castellano's planned visit to Spark's Steak House in mid-Manhattan.
The murder gang, which included drug addicts Sammy Gravano and Eddie
Lino, pulled off one of the great assassinations in Mafia history. The
murder of a Godfather was not permitted under Mafia rules, but this
was just one of many of the old rules that John Gotti would break
during his lifetime of crime.
THE KING OF CLUBS In late 1983 Peter Gatien opened The Limelight in New York City.
This was actually the third incarnation of Gatien's club by this name,
the prior two having been hits in Florida and Georgia. The setting for
the nightclub was an abandoned Episcopal Church in the heart of
Chelsea, home to many of Manhattans artists, models, gays, and drug
dealers. The theme of the club was 'post-Disco' decadence, with a
deliberate sacrilegious scorn and disdain for the religious symbols
that flanked the walls and stained glass windows of the former house
of worship.
Everything from celebrities to the scum of the earth were
attracted to the Limelight, which in many ways recalled the glory
years of Studio 54, which had been at its peak just a few years
earlier. So many celebrities, in fact, came to the Limelight that
Peter Gatien hired a person whose sole function was to entertain them.
Performing this duty was a young man named Fred Rothbell-Mista. Young
Fred was one of several Gatien employees who would go on to bigger and
better things; in Fred's case, he would, years later, become "Rocco
Primavera," a character that satirized the 'lounge lizards' that
entertain in small venues nationwide, whose repertoire always include
the song "I Did it My Way!" Limelight Doorman Chazz Palminteri would
become a star after Gatien put up the money to produce Palminteri's
anti-Mafia motion picture "A Bronx Tale," starring Robert DeNiro.
Another Gatien employee to hit it big was Mark Vincent, a bouncer at
the Tunnel who would later become action star Vin Diesel.
Before Rothbell-Mista became a celebrity on MTV and other TV
programs, he made certain that those Celebes who popped into the
Limelight had a full glass of the drink of their choice (compliments
of the house), and that the gossip columnists got their daily fix of
'who was doing what and with whom.' On February 22, 1985, Fred
welcomed celebrity art dealer Andrew Crispo and two of his associates
into the VIP room at the Limelight. Crispo and his associates
repeatedly tried to convince Fred to join them in a 'party' some
distance away. Rothbell-Mista politely refused, as there were several
other VIPs on hand at the Limelight that night.
Crispo's young employee Bernard LeGeros would later claim that
Crispo was trying to lure Fred to a house upstate where he was to be
murdered. Failing that, Crispo and LeGeros left the Limelight and
headed downtown, where they hooked up with a young model from Sweden,
Eigel Vesti. The three then drove to Rockland County, where Vesti had
his face covered with a leather S&M mask. Vesti was tortued and
sexually assaulted for a lengthy period of time and then shot to death
with a rifle. The body was then thrown into a ditch and set on fire
with gasoline. By the time authorities found the body, all that was
left was the flesh on Vesti's face, protected by the leather 'Death
Mask.'
LeGeros was charged with the murder and convicted. Crispo,
however, was never charged in the kidnapping, torture, and murder of
the young model. Crispo had hired as his criminal attorney Roy Cohn.
The Limelight received a lot of negative publicity as the
investigation into the murder of Eigel Vesti revealed the earlier plot
at Peter Gatien's club. Partly as a result of this event, the
nightclub began to lose its popularity. As the decade was coming to an
end, Peter Gatien knew personnel changes were in order if his clubs
the Limelight and the Tunnel were going to regain their former
stature. Gatien decided to hire two young men as party promoters, the
'two Michaels;' 'Lord Michael' Caruso, a pathological criminal and con
artist who hailed from Brooklyn, and Michael Alig, a slight,
effeminate kid from the Midwest.
JOHN GOTTI SUPERSTAR Pop icon Andy Warhol's most famous quip was "In the near future,
everyone will be famous for 15 minutes!" By the 1980s many Americans
had taken the quote to heart, believing it was their birthright as U.
S. citizens to become famous, if only temporarily. From the moment he
took over as Godfather of the Gambino Family, John Gotti appeared to
fit into this category. Most Godfathers of Mafia Families maintain a
low profile so as not to unnecessarily attract the attention of law
enforcement. Genovese Family Godfather Vinny "The Chin" Gigante had
taken this to another level, wandering the streets of Little Italy in
Manhattan wearing his bathrobe, mumbling incoherently to himself.
John Gotti decided not to hide from the Media nor law
enforcement. The new Godfather quickly became a conspicuous figure in
New York, walking the streets openly with his entourage while decked
out in $2,000 suits. First the tabloids, then the 'mainstream Media'
took the bait, turning Gotti into one of the most recognizable
'celebrities' in the city. Gotti even began to host a block party
outside his headquarters in the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone
Park. The event was held each Fourth of July, with plenty of rides for
the kids and hot, free meals for whoever chose to attend. Enough
members of non-Italian ethnic groups were on hand to advertise that
the 'new' Mafia was an equal opportunity employer. Capping the event
was a huge – and illegal – fireworks display. Standing guard each year
at the event were dozens of impotent cops, on hand to ensure that no
one tried to interfere with the Godfather's right to violate the law.
The rank-and-file cops fumed silently, their anger directed more
towards the Mayor than at the Godfather.
Perhaps more angry and embarrassed were agents of the FBI;
Gotti's flaunting of his position as Godfather was nothing less than a
slap in the face of every FBI agent in New York. The Administration of
President Ronald Reagan decided to take action. The number three
person in the Reagan Justice Department was an aggressive attorney
from New York named Rudolph Giuliani, who was in charge of all of the
U. S. Attorneys thoughout the country. Giuliani grew up in New York
and hated the Mafia; many years later his anger would be revealed to
have familial roots.
Giuliani then resigned his high-ranking position in the Justice
Department to take the subordinate position as U. S. Attorney for the
Southern District of New York. From that office Giuliani launched an
unprecedented attack on the five Mafia families that had an iron grip
on the labor Unions, the garment industry, the waste management
industry, the Fulton Fish Market, and other viable moneymaking
industries. One of Giuliani's best achievements was his successful
prosecution of the "Commission case," in which the leaders of all five
families were indicted. One of those indicted, Paul Castellano, would
not live to face trial.
Rudolph Giuliani, however, would not get a crack at putting John
Gotti away. In 1986 Gotti was placed on federal racketeering and
murder charges by the U. S. Attorney's office for the Eastern District
of New York, the location of Gotti's headquarters. One of the jurors
selected, George Pape, was a friend of a man with alleged ties to
organized crime, Bosko Radonjich. Sammy the Bull was thus allegedly
able to bribe the juror and guarantee at least a hung jury. Gotti also
beat two other trials, neither of which involved extensive use of the
resources of the FBI.
That changed in December 1990 when the FBI arrested John Gotti
and Sammy Gravano on charges including gambling, tax evasion, and
murder. The indictments were the result of secretly taped recordings
made in a building in lower Manhattan where Gotti and his associates
frequently gathered to conduct business. Gotti and Gravano were each
held without bail while awaiting trial. Gravano hired as his lawyer
criminal attorney Benjamin Brafman, a career Mafia defender. Before
going to trial, Sammy the Bull made the stunning decision to plead
guilty and testify against Gotti in exchange for a reduced sentence.
Also sealing Gotti's fate was the decision by the Judge in the case
barring Gotti's use of his attorneys Bruce Cutler and Gerald Shargel,
citing their being mentioned by Gotti on secret tapes.
During Sammy's testimony at trial, Gotti at one point made a
motion with his right hand as if he was injecting a drug into his left
arm. The point of this gesture was to allude to Sammy's expensive
anabolic steroids habit. The anonymous, sequestered jury found Gotti
guilty on all charges and he was sentenced to life in prison without
parole. Outside the Courthouse, hundreds of what Gotti referred to as
"my public" rioted, chanting "Free John Gotti!"
The Gambino Godfather was sent to the Federal Penitentiary in
Marion, Illinois, where he was kept in solitary confinement. Sammy The
Bull, however, would soon be a free man, receiving a prison sentence
of only 5 years for the life of crime he confessed to, which included
19 murders. Conventional wisdom held that the Mafia would track
Gravano down wherever he was living in the world and assassinate him.
THE CLUB KIDS In March, 1998 the 'Club Kids' were born at a now-legendary party
at Peter Gatien's The Tunnel nightclub. Among the founding members
were performance artist Joey Arias, the Lady Bunny, Phoebe Legere,
Lypsinka, RuPaul, Michael Alig, Keoki, Allison Wonderland, and Larry
Tee. The invitation to the party, entitled "Changing of the Guard,"
even listed Andy Warhol as a sponsor of the party, although Warhol had
died the year before.
Perhaps prophetically, the event was a huge success, and each of
the participants did in fact soon attain their '15 minutes' – and then
some. Keoki and Larry Tee would become famous DJ's, with Tee producing
a hit record, 'Supermodel' with transvestite model RuPaul. The Lady
Bunny and Lypsinka would also attain fame in the world of men dressed
as beautiful women. Pulling this all together as the "King of the Club
Kids" was Michael Alig, a young gay from the Heartland of America who
was attaining the ultimate revenge against those schoolyard bullies
who had taunted him in his youth for being 'different;' Michael Alig
had turned his 'difference' into fame, becoming within just a few
years of his move to the New York one of the most successful party
promoters in America.
The Club Kids wanted everything 'new' and they got it; their
costumes were futuristic, as were many of their names, they danced to
futuristic music, notably Techno, a computer-driven version of House
Music, and to get high, they turned to a new 'designer drug' named
Ecstasy. On one segment of the Geraldo Show Michael Alig had actually
bragged of having turned his own mother on to the new 'feel good' drug
of the 1990s.
"House Music," which would become identified with the Club Kid
scene, was invented in the mid 1980s in Chicago by music pioneers
Frankie Knuckles, pop duo Clivelles and Cole, Liz Torres, and the
"Queen of House Music," 'Screaming Rachel.' House music soon became
popular worldwide on the nightclub scene and the hit records recorded
by Screaming Rachel soon took her to the clubs of New York City. Just
years before the Internet explosion would provide everyone with their
own website, Screaming Rachel was among those in the early 1990s who
communicated their agenda through their own Public Access Cable TV
show. These programs, mostly of poor quality and with a narcissistic
tone, were a national trend at the time, satirized memorably in the
Saturday Night Live skit 'Wayne's World.'
By 1993 Screaming Rachel and the Club Kids were at the height of
their popularity; Michael Alig ruled as King every Wednesday night at
his popular Limelight event 'Disco 2000.' Screaming Rachel packed them
in during her Monday Night Live performances at the nightclub Tatou,
then run by former owners of Studio 54. Emcee of the Monday night
performances was Rocco Primavera.
The fall of the Club Kids scene began in 1994, when former
Prosecutor Rudolph Giuliani took over as Mayor of New York City. By
this time New York City had experienced unprecedented crime levels and
the residents demanded change. The previous Mayor, David Dinkins, had
not set a good example for New York City residents, having 'forgotten'
to pay his income taxes for 5 years. Openly hostile to the police,
Dinkins had raised taxes to unprecedented levels during the midst of a
Recession. Soon 100,000 jobs quickly vanished from the New York
economy, one of many disturbing facts TIME Magazine reported in it's
cover story 'The Rotting of the Big Apple.'
Giuliani was determined to clean up New York and his
Administration began a crackdown on crime, taking on everything from
the Mafia's control of the Fulton Fish Market to the "crime" of
jaywalking, considered by many New Yorkers a birthright. Even the sex
shops in Times Square, which provided a backdrop for the movie
'Midnight Cowboy,' filmed a generation earlier, were shut down. The
Giuliani Administration refused to issue the permit the Gambino's
needed to hold their annual block party, and scores of cops were sent
in to prevent so much as a sparkler from being ignited. Such
aggressive law enforcement tactics by the Giuliani Administration
would soon produce results most residents believed unattainable;
within a few years, New York City had become the "safest large city in
America!"
It was only a matter of time before law enforcement turned its
attention to the nightclub scene in Manhattan, which, since the days
of Studio 54, had operated under little scrutiny. One tragic event
that helped frame the problems in ClubLand was the death in the Summer
of 1995 of a New Jersey youth, Nicholas Marinella, who died from an
overdose of drugs obtained at The Limelight. The distraught family of
the 18-year-old turned to Mayor Giuliani for help. New York City clubs
came under increased surveillance, and the atmosphere in the clubs
began to chill. Screaming Rachel saw the writing on the wall, and,
sensing the impending death of the 'scene' of which she had been such
an intrical part of, the House Music Queen packed her bags and
returned to her native Chicago.
Also during this time, another member of the New York Club scene,
Michael Papa, decided to relocate to hopefully greener pastures. In
November of 1994, Papa and a friend were arrested for assaulting a
doorman at the Trump Tower on Manhattan's Fifth Avenue. Papa then
decided to move out West, and he brought to his new home in Phoenix,
Arizona first-hand knowledge of the New York Club scene and an
affinity for its drug of choice, Ecstasy.
Another New York City family headed out to Phoenix during this
time, the wife, daughter, and son of Sammy the Bull. Before they left
New York, they denounced Sammy in the Media as a 'rat,' claiming they
never wished to associate with him again. It is now known that this
was all a sham, that the Gravano family left town to set down new
roots in another city, a place where Sammy would join them after his
release from prison. Using the alias "Jimmy Moran," Sammy the Bull
started a new life for himself in the Arizona desert. Soon, his son
Gerard hooked up with Michael Papa, and the two longed for the good
times they had had in the Clubs of New York.
MURDER AND COVER-UP Even though, by mid 1996, Screaming Rachel had been out of the
New York nightlife scene for 2 years, Geraldo Rivera did not hesitate
to invite her onto his program about the Club Kid scene. On May 8th,
the program flew the House Music star into New York, where she joined
the other nightcrawlers on the panel that continued the chronicling of
this social phenomenon.
Rachel and I had become acquainted years earlier when I covered
the nightlife scene as a columnist for a local magazine. Thus, once
Rachel was back in town, the two of us got together, along with a
mutual friend, to catch up with each other over a few drinks. That
night Rachel drank more than usual, and soon she was opening up to
something that was bothering her. Just a few days earlier, her friend
Michael Alig had visited her in Chicago, en route to a drug
rehabilitation facility in Colorado where Michael was being sent to
attempt to beat his addiction to heroin and Ecstasy. Alig had brought
with him videotapes of his favorite movies, which he and Rachel
watched during his visit. One was 'Rosemary's Baby,' the 1968 film
about a group of Devil worshippers in New York City. Also in Alig's
possession were his favorites "Seven," about a psycho who dismembers a
drug dealer, and "Angel Heart," the Mickey Rourke thriller about the
Occult and murder in New York and New Orleans.
At some point while watching these movies, Rachel claimed,
Michael confessed that he and his room mate "Freeze" had murdered a
drug dealer named "Angel," dismembered him, and thrown his body parts
into the Hudson River. Rachel then noted that her friend Michael was a
practical joker and that she wasn't convinced he was telling the
truth. The speed with which Rachel downed her next drink, and then
another, convinced me that she believed Michael had in fact murdered
Angel.
The next day I phoned Al Guart at the New York Post and the two
of us set out to investigate the alleged murder of Angel. First, we
met with Angel's brother and father outside the apartment building
where Angel was believed to have been murdered. The serious tone the
two exhibited towards the missing Angel convinced us that Angel was
probably dead.
Something curious then happened; friends of Michael Alig, aware
Al and I were investigating the disappearance of Angel, began a smear
campaign against me, claiming the story was a hoax I had concocted.
Rachel suddenly developed amnesia over the entire event. Then, on May
15th, Peter Gatien and 23 of his employees were arrested by the Feds
on charges they trafficked the drug Ecstasy in Gatien's nightclubs the
Limelight and the Tunnel. Brooklyn U. S. Attorney Zachary Carter
displayed uncharacteristic humor in noting that some of the DEA agents
in the investigation had to dress "like Dennis Rodman" in order to
gain access to Gatien's drug underworld inside the Clubs.
On May 17th Al Guart ran a story in the Post that gave a chilling
look inside Peter Gatien's empire; the previous September, authorities
had shown up one night at the Limelight to arrest 30 people for drug
trafficking, but only 4 were in residence. The Feds became convinced
that a crooked cop had obtained the list of those expected to be
arrested and that the list was circulated at the Limelight the night
before. Guart noted that because of the information compromise agents
of the Drug Enforcement Administration later refused to co-operate
with the Manhattan District Attorney's office and the NYPD. This
would, in fact, be the beginning of bad blood between the agencies
that would haunt the investigations for many months to come.
The Post also noted that the Ecstasy pills sold in Gatien's clubs
originated in Europe and were smuggled into the United States by a
group of Israeli citizens. Bail for Peter Gatien was set at $1
million. Gatien was represented in Court by criminal attorney Benjamin
Brafman, Sammy Gravano's former criminal lawyer.
Meanwhile, the investigation into the missing Angel Cruz
continued. Angel's real name, it turned out, was Andre Melendez, but
his name, like many in Clubland, had been changed. In this case, Andre
was rechristened "Angel" by none other than Michael Alig, the
inspiration being Alig's favorite movie "Angel Heart." Melendez took
the moniker literally, wearing two giant feathered wings on his back
as he plowed through the back rooms of the Limelight, selling drugs.
To the parents of kids who would die of the drugs peddled in Peter
Gatien's clubs, "Angel" the drug dealer was nothing more than the
'Angel of Death!'
As the weeks went by and no trace of Angel showed up, reports in
the Media suggested that the drug dealer was in fact dead. By
mid-July, the Federal Prosecutors in Brooklyn who had indicted Peter
Gatien and his employees on drug trafficking charges were reported to
have been investigating the disappearance of Angel. Speculation spread
through the city that the Feds could charge those involved in the
cover-up of the murder of Angel as crimes furthering the interests of
a racketeering enterprise, in this case, the alleged Gatien drug
trafficking ring. In other words, the Feds could use the RICO statutes
normally reserved for Mafia prosecutions to add racketeering charges
against Gatien and his employees that would significantly increase the
jail time such alleged criminals would receive if they were convicted.
While the actions that several Gatien associates had taken were
unmistakable evidence of an attempt to cover-up the murder of Angel,
the Feds were left with one minor little problem; they had yet to come
up with a body – or body part – that would prove Angel had been
murdered.
A few months later, the Feds thought they got a break in the case
when a body part wrapped in duct tape was pulled from the East River
by a hapless angler. The body turned out not to be the missing Angel.
However, two NYPD Detectives who read the story in the New York Post
decided to take a second look at a body part they had found months
earlier washed up on Staten Island. That body part turned out to be
the torso of Angel Cruz, proving at last that the drug dealer had in
fact been murdered.
However, the body showed evidence of more than just murder; the
corpse had been sexually mutilated, suggesting that what happened in
Michael Alig's apartment involved more than just a drug deal gone bad.
BLOODFEAST In 1995 Michael Alig's friends threw a birthday party for
Michael, which Michael produced, called the BLOODFEAST and the
invitation to the event was a huge poster done up to present the party
as if it were a gruesome horror movie. The poster featured Michael
lying on the floor, his brains bashed out by a hammer that lay in
front of him. A Club Kid known as Jenny Talia was depicted eating
Michael's brains with a fork. The poster mentioned "Freeze's" name,
and carried the terms 'buckets of blood' and 'legs cut off.' This was,
of course, exactly what Michael and Freeze would do months later to
Angel Cruz; bash him on the head with a hammer and cut off his legs.
As all the elements of the eventual murder were there in the poster,
the evidence suggested that Angel's murder was in fact pre-meditated.
I decided to investigate further the elements that were used to
put the Bloodfeast poster together. My investigation revealed that the
fonts used in the wording of the invitation were purchased over the
Internet from a business called Brain Eaters Font Company. The fonts
used in Michael's poster were called Blood Feast, taken from a 1960s
horror flick. As Michael had already been revealed to be a pedophile
Ecstasy and heroin addict who drank his own urine at parties, a new
question had to be posed; 'had Michael and/or Freeze cannibalized
Angel's body?'
If the Feds knew the answer to this question, they certainly were
keeping it secret, as it appeared they intended to use Alig as a
Prosecution Witness against Peter Gatien. The Manhattan District
Attorney's office surely knew also, but they have a long history of
hiding from the public information about crimes involving the Occult.
Further investigation proved that Michael Alig and Freeze were
involved with the Occult; Michael being a 'dabbler' whereas Freeze was
heavily involved.
During this time, and continuing to this day, there existed a
sub-culture within the Club Kid scene of people involved in the
Occult. Some were into the 'Goth' scene, in which adherents dress in
Gothic clothing, their skin lightened with cosmetics. Associated with
this culture is the 'Vampire scene,' in which adherents drink each
other's blood. Scores of websites have sprung up over the last decade
devoted to these and related Occult practices, which would seem
humorous were it not for the fact that many of these practitioners
have been involved in murders throughout the country.
One person in this world, who was intimate with both Freeze and
art gallery owner Andrew Crispo was a young man named Ricardo Wiley.
For months, reporters tried to get an interview with Wiley, but the
Clubber indicated he feared for his personal safety if he spoke of
what he knew about his associates. On a warm August night in 1998, the
31-year-old suddenly died. Heart failure was ruled the cause of death.
Gregory Kraemer, a fixture on the Club scene for many years also fell
silent as to his extensive knowledge of crime in Clubland; just days
before Peter Gatien's arrest, Kraemer was found hanging at the end of
a rope secured to a ceiling fan in a suite at the Four Seasons Hotel.
His death was ruled a suicide. The deaths of these two men, like that
of scores of others, were extremely convenient to many.
As to the murder of Angel Melendez, Detectives from the Manhattan
District Attorney's office eventually obtained a Warrant to pick up
Freeze, who immediately gave a hand-written confession. Michael Alig
later pleaded guilty as well, hoping to receive leniency in exchange
for offering testimony against Peter Gatien and others. Alig in fact
claimed what seemed evident all along to those following the case;
that there was a concerted effort to cover-up the murder of Angel the
drug dealer. However, by the time Peter Gatien's drug trafficking case
came to trial in the Federal Courthouse in Brooklyn, Alig had changed
his tune, instead making outrageous allegations against the DEA agents
involved in the investigation. By then, Federal Prosecutors had filed
additional charges against Gatien, including, as expected, a RICO
count. This charge, however, did not pertain to the cover-up of the
murder of Angel, but rather the use of sex and drug parties hosted by
Gatien at the Four Seasons Hotel which the Prosecutors argued were
'company bonuses' to reward those in the drug trafficking ring.
At Gatien's trial the Club Kid known as Jenny Talia suddenly
developed amnesia on the witness stand in regards to what she had
testified about before the Grand Jury. Jenny Talia had extensive
knowledge of Gatien's nightclub empire, as she had had an affair with
Peter Gatien, whom she met through her high school friend, Gatien's
daughter. Once on the Witness stand, Jenny Talia stated: "These
(parties at the Four Seasons Hotel) had nothing to do with the Clubs!"
This declaration echoed the mantra argued repeatedly by criminal
attorney Brafman throughout the trial. The Prosecutors in the case,
who had offered the Club Kid immunity from prosecution in exchange for
her testimony, were clearly fuming over having been 'screwed by Jenny
Talia' on the Witness Stand. "Are you afraid to testify against Peter
Gatien?" Prosecutor Michele Adelman barked. Once Jenny Talia was
excused from further testimony, her criminal attorney, Gerald
Lefcourt, left the Courtroom sporting the same smile he had at the
beginning of the session when he embraced Gatien's attorney Brafman.
When the trial was at last over, none of the reporters seemed
surprised when the jury returned a 'Not Guilty' verdict on all charges
facing Peter Gatien. The one juror who chose to speak to the Media
outside the Courthouse indicated that the jury was so shocked by the
crimes committed by the Prosecution Witnesses that they could not
believe a word that they said against Gatien. Particularly stunning
had been the testimony of "Lord Michael" Caruso, who confessed to
brazen rip-offs of drug dealers, drug trafficking, robberies, and
other crimes and whom attorney Brafman suggested had been involved in
a least one murder.
Peter Gatien mentioned under his breath to the reporters
surrounding him that he was going to "Church," although it was not
clear if the nightclub King had suddenly found religion during his
ordeal or if he was in fact referring to the Limelight, the old Church
that had been temporarily closed by the authorities. For Gatien and
his nightclub empire, however, more troubles lay ahead. Among other
problems, there were still charges of income tax evasion against him
filed by the Manhattan District Attorneys office. Citizens groups fed
up with the crime his clubs brought to the neighborhoods were fighting
to get his liquor license revoked. The issue of the crooked cop on
Gatien's payroll had yet to be resolved, and a Limelight-related
murder and a murder at the Tunnel were yet to unfold.
Also, the Federal trial against Gatien had brought into scrutiny
an unresolved murder with roots in Clubland; the violent death of a
drug dealer named Billy Balanca, an associate of both Lord Michael and
another ClubLand figure who was best known for being a lover of pop
star Madonna. His name was Chris Paciello, and his world – and that of
Sammy Gravano – would soon unravel as the world celebrated the
approach of the New Millenium.
SAMMY'S FALL On New Year's Eve, 1999 a jet airliner was bound from Cancun
Mexico for the Bahamas, carrying onboard Serbian freedom fighter Bosko
Radonjich. The flight landed for a brief stopover in Miami on New
Year's Day and while awaiting the plane's departure, a restless
Radonjich accidentally wandered into an area that was a U. S. Customs
checkpoint. Bosko Radonjich had worked with the CIA for many years in
the fight against Communism in his homeland, but the computer the
Customs agents had access to at the airport had something very
different to say about Bosko; he was, in fact, a wanted fugitive,
having been indicted in 1992 for giving a $60,000 bribe to a juror in
the 1987 racketeering murder trial of John Gotti. The Customs agents
promptly placed Bosko under arrest. Upon learning of this, the Feds in
Brooklyn were ecstatic, knowing that the star witness in Bosko's trial
would be Sammy The Bull Gravano. By that time Sammy had been revealed
to be living a new life in Arizona, no longer hiding in the Witness
Protection Program. Gravano's plea agreement required that he testify
at any future trials in which he had information; Bosko's case fell
under this agreement.
However, a thousand miles away in Cleveland, Ohio, events were
unfolding that would impact on Bosko's trial. A Drug Enforcement
Administration agent and a Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department
Detective spent New Year's Eve intercepting a package sent via Federal
Express from Phoenix, Arizona. Inside the package were over 2,000
Ecstasy pills bound for four Youngstown area residents who were part
of a drug trafficking ring.
Meanwhile, back in Miami, pop star Madonna and her friend Ingrid
Casares were just a few miles away from Bosko's drama, spending New
Year's Eve at a Miami disco. Ingrid, the daughter of a Cuban Freedom
Fighter, had become a regular in the ClubLand scene, along with
Madonna and her circle of friends. It was in this world that Casares
would meet a New Yorker, Chris Paciello, who would become her lover
and business partner in three Miami nightlife hangouts. However, just
weeks earlier, the Feds had arrested Paciello on racketeering and
murder charges, claiming he was a member of the crew of Anthony Spero
of the Bonnano Mafia Family.
Paciello's rise from an obscure upbringing on Staten Island was
due to his talent for partnering with others. In 1992 Paciello and
'Lord Michael,' along with a few silent partners from the Gambino
Family took over a Florida bar owned by actor Mickey Rourke and turned
it into the nightclub RISK. It was indeed a 'risky business,' as the
club soon burned to the ground under mysterious circumstances.
Paciello then took the insurance money and opened a new nightclub,
LIQUID, which became a huge success, with the help of celebrities he
met along the way, including Madonna, Casares, Daisy Fuentes, Jennifer
Lopez, Naomi Campbell, Liza Minelli, and Nikki Taylor.
When Chris Paciello was hit with his multiple Federal charges, he
first hired as his attorney Roy Black, perhaps best known for his
successful defense of accused rapist William Kennedy Smith. Later,
Paciello switched to Benjamin Brafman. On January 7, 2000 Paciello was
arraigned in Brooklyn Federal Court on various charges, the most
serious being his role in a botched robbery attempt that ended in the
murder of Staten Island housewife Judy Shemtov. Among other
allegations against Paciello was the claim that he had given refuge to
Gambino Family associate Vincent Rizzuto while on the lam for
murdering a Colombo Family associate, and that Paciello had a meeting
with "Allie Boy" Persico, acting head of the Colombo Family.
Federal authorities would later add additional charges, claiming
Paciello torched his club RISK for the insurance money and also tried
to bribe a cop who had information about drug trafficking inside his
club LIQUID. Also, Prosecutors would claim that Paciello conspired
with Colombo Family Underboss "Wild Bill" Cutolo to run a nightclub in
Manhattan that would be a front for the Colombo Family. Cutolo, who
led a rival faction against the Persico faction during the bloody
Colombo Family war and was involved in the DC 37 Union scandal,
disappeared in the Spring of 1999 and is presumed to have been
murdered.
Also among the large volume of evidence the Feds had against
Paciello was a secretly recorded tape on which Paciello conspired with
a member of law enforcement to have a rival nightclub owner framed on
fabricated drug charges. The tapes also reveal Paciello stating that
if he ever got taken down, he wouldn't turn 'rat' as had Sammy the
Bull. However, as Paciello and criminal attorney Benjamin Brafman
weighed all of the evidence against him, Paciello began to think of
the unthinkable: turn government's witness and rat out all of his
associates in the Colombo, Gambino, and Bonnano Families.
In February, 2000 authorities in Arizona indicted Sammy "The
Bull" Gravano, his wife, daughter, son, and several associates on
charges they ran an extensive drug trafficking ring in Arizona, New
Mexico, and Ohio. When arrested, Sammy was found to be in possession
of a handgun and anabolic steroids. Federal Prosecutors in Brooklyn
then had to drop the bribery charges against Bosko Radonjich as their
star Prosecution Witness was now revealed to be someone who used his
own children to peddle drugs to kids.
Cynics publicly hoped that Sammy's son and daughter would pull a
"Sammy the Bull" and testify against their own father in exchange for
leniency. Instead, it was Gerard Gravano's friend Michael Papa who
agreed to testify against the Gravano family in exchange for leniency.
In July 2000 the Feds in Brooklyn indicted several people
involved in the trafficking of Ecstasy into the United States,
including an Israeli named Ilan Zarger. This 'Israeli connection'
turned out to be the same people behind the Ecstasy trafficking that
flourished inside Peter Gatien's nightclubs.
EPILOGUE In May, 2001 Sammy Gravano pleaded guilty to drug trafficking
charges. He was to be sentenced by the Feds in Brooklyn on September
11, 2001, but the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center that day
postponed the sentencing hearing. Then, Sammy's attorney Lynne Stewart
was arrested on charges she illegally aided her client Sheik Omar
Abdel-Rachman, who is in prison for plotting terrorist attacks on New
York City landmarks. In September 2002 Gravano was finally sentenced
at the Federal Courthouse in Brooklyn to 20 years in prison. Although
Peter Gatien faced up to 25 years in prison for income tax evasion,
his criminal attorney Benjamin Brafman was able to secure a plea
bargain that put Gatien in jail for just a few weeks. Under attack by
community leaders and the outraged parents of kids who died because of
the drugs sold in his nightclubs, Gatien sold the Limelight and the
Tunnel nightclubs. In September 2002 agents of the INS threw Gatien
into solitary confinement in a Pennsylvania prison while processing
deportation proceedings. Despite having lived in the United States for
over three decades, Gatien, because of his negative opinion regarding
the U. S. military, had never applied for citizenship.