GangsterBB.NET


Funko Pop! Movies:
The Godfather 50th Anniversary Collectors Set -
3 Figure Set: Michael, Vito, Sonny

Who's Online Now
1 registered members (Irishman12), 343 guests, and 2 spiders.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Shout Box
Site Links
>Help Page
>More Smilies
>GBB on Facebook
>Job Saver

>Godfather Website
>Scarface Website
>Mario Puzo Website
NEW!
Active Member Birthdays
No birthdays today
Newest Members
TheGhost, Pumpkin, RussianCriminalWorld, JohnnyTheBat, Havana
10349 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
Irishman12 67,451
DE NIRO 44,945
J Geoff 31,285
Hollander 23,854
pizzaboy 23,296
SC 22,902
Turnbull 19,509
Mignon 19,066
Don Cardi 18,238
Sicilian Babe 17,300
plawrence 15,058
Forum Statistics
Forums21
Topics42,313
Posts1,058,416
Members10,349
Most Online796
Jan 21st, 2020
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
The Manny Gambino Kidnapping #640412
03/17/12 07:02 AM
03/17/12 07:02 AM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
HairyKnuckles Offline OP
Underboss
HairyKnuckles  Offline OP
Underboss
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
From The Utica Press Dec 5, 1972:

"2 HELD IN "HOAX" SNATCH OF MAFIA CHIEF´S NEPHEW"

"Two men surrendered Monday in what they described as a hoax kidnaping of Emanuel "Manny" Gambino, nephew of ranking Cosa Nostra chieftain Carlo "Don Carlo" Gambino. But the government said the abduction was for real, and that the victim was believed dead. One of the pair, Henry Sentner 37, claimed the younger Gambino, a married man, arranged a phony kidnaping to get away from a girl friend, Nancy Masone.
However, Denis Dillon, head of Brooklyn's organized crime task force, said Gambino remains missing after six months, that his bloodstained automobile was found at Newark Airport in New
Jersey shortly after he vanished, and that he was believed to have been slain despite payment of a $31,500 ransom.
Sentner, of Sea Girt, N.J., was held with John Kilcullen of Brooklyn, in bail of$100,000 each. Two other men sought in the
case were identified as John Harrington and William Solin.

Sentner's lawyer protested to IS Magistrate Vincent Caloggio that the government had broken a promise by charging his client with kidnaping. The attorney said Sentner had agreed only to
testify that the abduction was a hoax.

Gambino disappeared May 18, less than two weeks before his 29th birthday, leaving behind a wife, Diane. There were published reports at the time that the kidnaping could have been a hoax, carried out at Gambino´s own request by Sentner, who
was said to be $40,000 in hock to the victim in gambling losses.
But the government said Sentner hatched the kidnap scheme early last May, secure in the belief that Gambino's powerful relatives would pay off rather than take authorities into their confidence.
Carlo Gambino has been described by federal authorities as boss of bosses in the Mafia, and head of one of New York City's
five organized crime families.

The FBI quoted Sentner as saying that he "knew Emanuel Gambino personally and had worked for him about six months as a runner in Emanuel Gamoino's gambling operation".
An FBI complaint also quoted Sentner as saying he met Gambino the day he disappeared, engineered ransom calls to the family, wrote a threatening letter to the victim's wife, and was present when the ransom eventually was picked up. Sentner's admissions came, the FBI added, after his handwriting was
"positively identified as the handwriting on the letter".
In addition, Dillon told the court Sentner's fingerprints were found on Gambino's car, when it was located June 2 in the Newark Airport parking lot. Its interior splotched with a large volume of human blood."

2nd article, from Heralds Statesman (in courtesy of Pizzaboy), now called the Journal News, Jan 27, 1973:

"AUTOPSY PLANNED ON GAMBINO KIN FOUND IN JERSEY"

"An autopsy will be performed today on Emanuel "Manny" Gambino, whose badly decomposed body was found in a shallow grave eight months after he was kidnapped.
Gambino, 29 was a nephew of underworld czar of Carlo Gambino, whose gunmen at one point were searching for the kidnappers. Two men surrendered to the FBI last month and two others are being sought. A 60 000 dollar ransom was paid at a clandestine rendezvous on the Palisades Parkway."

And here´s a third article, published in North Tonawanda Evening News Dec 9, 1974:

"WAS CONVICT TARGET OF POISONING ATTEMPT?"

"The convicted killer of an underworld crime boss may have drunk poisoned cocoa in his cell last month, authorities reported. Warden Louis Gengler said Sunday that Henry Robert Sentner, 38, was drinking cocoa on Nov. 22 in a cell he shared with seven other men in the Federal House of Detention "when he
complained about the bitterness of the chocolate drink."
Sentner was examined in the prison hospital facility and then taken to St. Vincent's Hospital where a physician said a "substance found in his (Sentner's) stomach could possibly be
strychnine," Gengler said. Sentner was retuned to the prison the next day.

Gengler added that a sampling of the stomach contents was sent to the FBI lab in Washngton and the "irregularity" was referred to the FBI for investigation.
The FBI lab report has not yet been returned, Gengler said. An FBI spokesman said the incident was still under investigation.
Sentner and three other men were arrested in December, 1972 and
charged with the May, 1972 kidnaping of Manny Gambino, 29.
In January, 1973 Gambino's body was unearthed from a grave in Colts Neck Township, N.J. with one gunshot wound to the
head. In June, 1973 Sentner pleaded guility to manslaughter in Gambino's death and was sentenced to three years in jail and 12 years on extortion charge after he admitted demanding a 35 000 dollar ransom."


///Robert Sentner was an uncle of Anthony Senter, later member of Roy DeMeo´s crew. But his last name seems to have been misspelled in these articles.

I failed to find any article linking James McBratney to this kidnapping gang. In your opinion, is it possible that McBratney was not involved with the kidnapping and murder of Manny?

And also, does anyone know which Carlo Gambino brother was the father of Manny?







[Linked Image]
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #640417
03/17/12 08:53 AM
03/17/12 08:53 AM
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
C
Chopper2012 Offline
Capo
Chopper2012  Offline
C
Capo
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
Great stuff Hairy. Where did you find this?

Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: Chopper2012] #640421
03/17/12 10:02 AM
03/17/12 10:02 AM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
HairyKnuckles Offline OP
Underboss
HairyKnuckles  Offline OP
Underboss
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
Originally Posted By: Chopper2012
Great stuff Hairy. Where did you find this?


On the net!

This free site provides newspaper clippings from mostly Brooklyn based newspapers, dating back as far as 120 years!
I love it!

http://www.fultonhistory.com/


[Linked Image]
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #640422
03/17/12 10:07 AM
03/17/12 10:07 AM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 343
Mooney Offline
Capo
Mooney  Offline
Capo
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 343
I've always believed that McBratney fell just so Gambino could prove a point...that this couldn't happen to his nephew without the Killer being sought out and murdered in return. Perhaps Mcbratney was innocent or simply ran with the real killers and was sacrificed.

Even if he was innocent Gambino would want people to believe he was guilty and justice was served.

It's also speculated that Mcbratney was simply a part of orchestrating the kidnapping and was the only one left on the street who could take the fall.

Originally Posted By: HairyKnuckles

And also, does anyone know which Carlo Gambino brother was the father of Manny?


I believe Manny was Jospeh Gambino's son.

Last edited by Mooney; 03/17/12 10:12 AM.

"Thank God for the American Jury System" - Nicky Scarfo
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: Mooney] #640423
03/17/12 10:30 AM
03/17/12 10:30 AM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
HairyKnuckles Offline OP
Underboss
HairyKnuckles  Offline OP
Underboss
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
Originally Posted By: Mooney
I've always believed that McBratney fell just so Gambino could prove a point...that this couldn't happen to his nephew without the Killer being sought out and murdered in return. Perhaps Mcbratney was innocent or simply ran with the real killers and was sacrificed.

Even if he was innocent Gambino would want people to believe he was guilty and justice was served.

It's also speculated that Mcbratney was simply a part of orchestrating the kidnapping and was the only one left on the street who could take the fall.

Originally Posted By: HairyKnuckles

And also, does anyone know which Carlo Gambino brother was the father of Manny?


I believe Manny was Jospeh Gambino's son.


Thanx Mooney.
I have always "felt" that there was something "strange" (in lack of a better word) the way McBratney was pinned for the crime. But I can´t put a finger on what´s wrong about it.

Thanx for your input!


[Linked Image]
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #640427
03/17/12 11:29 AM
03/17/12 11:29 AM
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
C
Chopper2012 Offline
Capo
Chopper2012  Offline
C
Capo
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 357
Amsterdam
Great site Hairy, thanks!

Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: Chopper2012] #640451
03/17/12 01:39 PM
03/17/12 01:39 PM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
HairyKnuckles Offline OP
Underboss
HairyKnuckles  Offline OP
Underboss
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
Originally Posted By: Chopper2012
Great site Hairy, thanks!


You´re welcome Chopps!

I have noticed that the search engine (on the Fulton site) works extremely slow recently. Don´t know why that is. Perhaps the site needs some kind of maintenance. But if you´re patient enough, you will be able to read the articles.


[Linked Image]
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: Mooney] #640540
03/17/12 05:33 PM
03/17/12 05:33 PM
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
HairyKnuckles Offline OP
Underboss
HairyKnuckles  Offline OP
Underboss
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
Originally Posted By: Mooney


I believe Manny was Jospeh Gambino's son.


Yes, you´re right!

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6507882


[Linked Image]
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695203
02/08/13 02:38 AM
02/08/13 02:38 AM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
Vigil Offline
Capo
Vigil  Offline
Capo
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
Good job! Very interesting thread men!


*** il capo di tutti capi ***

"You'll never meet another guy like me if you live to be 5, 000." -John Gotti
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695206
02/08/13 04:41 AM
02/08/13 04:41 AM
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 2,809
Scotland
Camarel Offline
Underboss
Camarel  Offline
Underboss
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 2,809
Scotland
Thanks for the links Hairy even though they were posted nearly a year ago lol.

Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695235
02/08/13 11:34 AM
02/08/13 11:34 AM
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,021
Massachusetts
southend Offline
Underboss
southend  Offline
Underboss
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,021
Massachusetts
good read fellas and thanks for the fulton link

Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695252
02/08/13 12:47 PM
02/08/13 12:47 PM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 290
ATL
SilentPartnerz Offline
Capo
SilentPartnerz  Offline
Capo
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 290
ATL
Originally Posted By: HairyKnuckles
From The Utica Press Dec 5, 1972:

"2 HELD IN "HOAX" SNATCH OF MAFIA CHIEF´S NEPHEW"

"Two men surrendered Monday in what they described as a hoax kidnaping of Emanuel "Manny" Gambino, nephew of ranking Cosa Nostra chieftain Carlo "Don Carlo" Gambino. But the government said the abduction was for real, and that the victim was believed dead. One of the pair, Henry Sentner 37, claimed the younger Gambino, a married man, arranged a phony kidnaping to get away from a girl friend, Nancy Masone.
However, Denis Dillon, head of Brooklyn's organized crime task force, said Gambino remains missing after six months, that his bloodstained automobile was found at Newark Airport in New
Jersey shortly after he vanished, and that he was believed to have been slain despite payment of a $31,500 ransom.
Sentner, of Sea Girt, N.J., was held with John Kilcullen of Brooklyn, in bail of$100,000 each. Two other men sought in the
case were identified as John Harrington and William Solin.

Sentner's lawyer protested to IS Magistrate Vincent Caloggio that the government had broken a promise by charging his client with kidnaping. The attorney said Sentner had agreed only to
testify that the abduction was a hoax.

Gambino disappeared May 18, less than two weeks before his 29th birthday, leaving behind a wife, Diane. There were published reports at the time that the kidnaping could have been a hoax, carried out at Gambino´s own request by Sentner, who
was said to be $40,000 in hock to the victim in gambling losses.
But the government said Sentner hatched the kidnap scheme early last May, secure in the belief that Gambino's powerful relatives would pay off rather than take authorities into their confidence.
Carlo Gambino has been described by federal authorities as boss of bosses in the Mafia, and head of one of New York City's
five organized crime families.

The FBI quoted Sentner as saying that he "knew Emanuel Gambino personally and had worked for him about six months as a runner in Emanuel Gamoino's gambling operation".
An FBI complaint also quoted Sentner as saying he met Gambino the day he disappeared, engineered ransom calls to the family, wrote a threatening letter to the victim's wife, and was present when the ransom eventually was picked up. Sentner's admissions came, the FBI added, after his handwriting was
"positively identified as the handwriting on the letter".
In addition, Dillon told the court Sentner's fingerprints were found on Gambino's car, when it was located June 2 in the Newark Airport parking lot. Its interior splotched with a large volume of human blood."

2nd article, from Heralds Statesman (in courtesy of Pizzaboy), now called the Journal News, Jan 27, 1973:

"AUTOPSY PLANNED ON GAMBINO KIN FOUND IN JERSEY"

"An autopsy will be performed today on Emanuel "Manny" Gambino, whose badly decomposed body was found in a shallow grave eight months after he was kidnapped.
Gambino, 29 was a nephew of underworld czar of Carlo Gambino, whose gunmen at one point were searching for the kidnappers. Two men surrendered to the FBI last month and two others are being sought. A 60 000 dollar ransom was paid at a clandestine rendezvous on the Palisades Parkway."

And here´s a third article, published in North Tonawanda Evening News Dec 9, 1974:

"WAS CONVICT TARGET OF POISONING ATTEMPT?"

"The convicted killer of an underworld crime boss may have drunk poisoned cocoa in his cell last month, authorities reported. Warden Louis Gengler said Sunday that Henry Robert Sentner, 38, was drinking cocoa on Nov. 22 in a cell he shared with seven other men in the Federal House of Detention "when he
complained about the bitterness of the chocolate drink."
Sentner was examined in the prison hospital facility and then taken to St. Vincent's Hospital where a physician said a "substance found in his (Sentner's) stomach could possibly be
strychnine," Gengler said. Sentner was retuned to the prison the next day.

Gengler added that a sampling of the stomach contents was sent to the FBI lab in Washngton and the "irregularity" was referred to the FBI for investigation.
The FBI lab report has not yet been returned, Gengler said. An FBI spokesman said the incident was still under investigation.
Sentner and three other men were arrested in December, 1972 and
charged with the May, 1972 kidnaping of Manny Gambino, 29.
In January, 1973 Gambino's body was unearthed from a grave in Colts Neck Township, N.J. with one gunshot wound to the
head. In June, 1973 Sentner pleaded guility to manslaughter in Gambino's death and was sentenced to three years in jail and 12 years on extortion charge after he admitted demanding a 35 000 dollar ransom."


///Robert Sentner was an uncle of Anthony Senter, later member of Roy DeMeo´s crew. But his last name seems to have been misspelled in these articles.

I failed to find any article linking James McBratney to this kidnapping gang. In your opinion, is it possible that McBratney was not involved with the kidnapping and murder of Manny?

And also, does anyone know which Carlo Gambino brother was the father of Manny?




Holy shit! I lived in Colts Neck, NJ for 12 years. I did not know that's where he Manny Gambino was dug up. I wonder where in Colts Neck he was exactly buried. I know every inch of that town. In my teenage years I went everywhere on foot; ten speed; dirt bike. Grew pot all over the place. LOL. Spents entire weekends in the woods camping and shit. Its mostly farms, woods, trails and pasturelands. Lots of mob guys lived/live there. I won't say who, but they're there.


"Three can keep a secret..if two are dead."
Calogero Minacore
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695289
02/08/13 02:50 PM
02/08/13 02:50 PM
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 1,350
A
azguy Offline
Underboss
azguy  Offline
A
Underboss
Joined: Oct 2012
Posts: 1,350
Interesting that this kid knapping allowed Gotti to get his button


"In onore della Famiglia la Famiglia e' aperta"
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695298
02/08/13 03:53 PM
02/08/13 03:53 PM
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 527
tommykarate Offline
Underboss
tommykarate  Offline
Underboss
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 527
I just don't understand why they would do this at the peak if carlos power .did anything ever happen to them besides the poisoning.where does mcbratney come into all this at


One thing about wiseguys...the hustle never ends.-tony soprano
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695373
02/08/13 08:39 PM
02/08/13 08:39 PM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
Vigil Offline
Capo
Vigil  Offline
Capo
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
I think the Westies wanted to make some quick bucks and make Gambino and the family look vulnerable. I also think Don Carlo would have burned down all of Hell's Kitchen and massacred all of the Westies if there wasn't heat on him and the Gambinos already.


*** il capo di tutti capi ***

"You'll never meet another guy like me if you live to be 5, 000." -John Gotti
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #695375
02/08/13 08:45 PM
02/08/13 08:45 PM
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
Vigil Offline
Capo
Vigil  Offline
Capo
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
I just don't see him paying a ransom price, from a position of strength. I think McBratney was linked to Manny G's bloody car the police found at JFK. Word is that he already knew the Gambino's were after him and he never went anywhere without a machine gun. (The Sinatra Club, chapter 29)


*** il capo di tutti capi ***

"You'll never meet another guy like me if you live to be 5, 000." -John Gotti
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: Vigil] #696549
02/14/13 12:12 PM
02/14/13 12:12 PM
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 4,555
Underground
Toodoped Offline
Murder Ink
Toodoped  Offline
Murder Ink
Underboss
Joined: Feb 2012
Posts: 4,555
Underground
Somethin about James McBratney...

After Gotti’s racketeering conviction, McBratney’s son placed a memorial note in the Advance declaring, "Dad, you can rest in peace now. There is a God. Love, your son Joseph."

Although Joseph knows his father fell in with the wrong crowd and committed serious crimes, he holds onto the fact that McBratney never killed anyone. "He was well-liked and would give you the last dollar in his pocket. He taught me how to drive and he loved his kids," states Joseph.

When McBratney was advised to leave town after the word was out that mobsters were looking for him, he refused to run, telling friends he couldn’t desert his family.

Joseph McBratney recalls that his mother hid the newspapers from her children at the time of their father’s murder, but it wasn’t long before they found out from classmates how their father died. "This verdict is a final chapter. This should mark the end of it so my family can go on living," Joseph said.

We’ve been led to believe that McBratney was murdered by Gotti, Angelo Ruggiero, and Ralph Galione as a favor to Carlo Gambino for the killing of his nephew Emmanuel "Manny" Gambino. Please note it was the nephew, not the son, as Ernest Volkman writes in his book, Goombata. In John H. Davis’s Mafia Dynasty, Davis incorrectly states that a $100,000 ransom was paid to McBratney for the Gambino nephew.

In the early 1970s there was a series of kidnappings of wiseguys that took place in New York City. In Tough Guy: The True Story of "Crazy" Eddie Maloney, co-authors William Hoffman and Maloney discuss in detail the kidnappings Maloney and his gang were involved in. Maloney also discusses his friendship with McBratney.

The two men met when both were incarcerated at Greenhaven State Prison in New York. They quickly became close friends. Maloney describes McBratney as a devoted family man who stood six-foot, three-inches tall and weighed in at 250 pounds. A weight lifter, McBratney could bench-press 400 pounds. Maloney continues:

"Jimmy McBratney was locked up for armed robbery. He was quiet, a listener and learner, and soon we were discussing heists we might do together. He knew about guns and wanted to become a collector, but closest to his heart were his wife and two small children and their house on Staten Island, and his goal of saving enough to own a nightclub. I learned Jimmy was very loyal to his wife, and that all the talk in the yard about "broads" upset him. His wife visited regularly and wrote every day."
In October 1972, Maloney became part of a kidnapping ring with McBratney that was the brainchild of two wiseguys from the Gambino Crime Family — Flippo and Ronnie Miano. Claiming they only wanted 10 percent of the ransoms, Flippo told Maloney that his motive for the kidnappings was revenge. "The guys I’m setting up have fucked me and my people on business deals in the past. It’ll give me pleasure to see those greedy fucks suffer."

Convinced that the kidnappings could be pulled off without the victim’s family or fellow mobsters notifying police, the gang believed they could get $100,000 for each wiseguy they snatched. If they got caught, they knew they would have to deal with mob vengeance: the punishment would amount to more than just a bullet in the back of the head.

The kidnapping gang consisted of, in addition to Maloney and McBratney, Tommy Genovese, a distant relative of Vito’s, Warren "Chief" Schurman, and Richie Chaisson. With the home addresses supplied by the Miano brothers, the plan called for a two-team approach. The first team, pretending to be police officers and using a stolen badge, would kidnap the wiseguy victim from his home and hold him in a secure location. The second team would pick up the ransom money.

The first kidnapping was of a Gambino capo called "Frank the Wop". The escapade went off without a hitch and the gang got away with $150,000. Over the next two months the gang completed three more successful body snatches. However, on Dec. 28, 1972 their luck changed. McBratney outlined the plan to grab a Gambino loanshark named "Junior." Late on this bitter cold afternoon, Maloney stuck a gun in Junior’s stomach and ordered him into a car. When the victim put up a fight, Maloney hit him over the head a couple times with his gun before shoving him into the back seat and taking off. Two young witnesses to the crime followed them for a while before they were scared off, but not before the license number was recorded and turned over to one of the kid’s uncles who had mob connections.

Next, a friend of Maloney’s, whose apartment they were holding Junior in, and through whose mother they had rented the abduction car, spilled his guts to the wiseguys after some hoods showed up at his mother’s house asking questions. McBratney was in a panic when he realized the mob had his name as well as Maloney and Schurman’s. After a relatively small ransom, $21,000, was paid, McBratney arrived at the apartment to pick up Schurman and return the victim. Schurman was supposed to tape Junior’s eyes before covering them with sunglasses, something the slow-witted hood failed to accomplish.

After driving a few blocks McBratney became enraged when he realized Junior’s eyes weren’t taped. He brought the car to a screeching halt. Junior bolted out of the back seat and started running for his life as McBratney fired several shots at him. Meanwhile Schurman jumped out of the car and retreated to Maloney’s automobile, which had been following McBratney. Schurman was sure McBratney would kill him if he ever saw him again, a fact Maloney readily confirmed.

Maloney had suggested to McBratney that he leave the city. McBratney declined the advice and instead kept a machine gun in his car at all times. Just before Maloney was sent back to prison on a parole violation, he and Schurman were drinking in a bar one night when two guys he described as "stone killers" came in looking for the two. The bar manager, a friend of Maloney’s, told the visitors he had not seen Maloney and Schurman in a while. Not long after he was sent to prison, Maloney heard that his friend McBratney had been murdered at Snoope’s, a Staten Island bar on May 22, 1973. Months later Maloney saw a newspaper article about the arrest of McBratney’s killers with the pictures of John Gotti and Angelo Ruggiero in it. He realized that they were the two "stone killers" who had been looking for him that night in the bar. Maloney stated in his book:

McBratney’s death saddened me as nothing else in my life had. He’s been a good friend, and he wasn’t a hardened hoodlum like some of us. He intended to get out of the life – and I believe he would have – soon as he accumulated that nestegg. I felt bad for Jimmy’s wife, also. She had been as loyal to him as he to her. On a personal level, Jimmy would have risked his life for me – and I for him – and a person doesn’t make friends like that."

Maloney confessed that in his own effort to get a "pass" from the underworld for his kidnapping capers that he "decided to lay the weight on McBratney. It didn’t matter to Jimmy anymore, and (it) might save our lives."

In his book, Maloney never mentions the kidnapping and killing of Manny Gambino, the murder McBratney allegedly paid for with his life.

So what really happened to Manny Gambino?

In the book Brick Agent, former FBI agent Anthony Villano talks in detail about the kidnapping. Villano was tipped off that Manny Gambino, the son of Carlo’s brother Joseph, had been kidnapped. The first attempt by the family to deliver a ransom payment failed when family members arrived at the wrong restaurant in New Jersey to make the drop. Villano’s attempts to help the family were at first rebuffed. A few days later, an attorney for the family called him and asked the FBI to get involved.

Villano reports that the kidnappers asked for $200,000 and the Gambino family claimed they could only come up with $50,000. The agent figured either the Joe Gambino side of the family was poor, or that having $200,000 in cash on hand might arouse the attention of the IRS.

After receiving new ransom orders, Tommy Gambino, Manny’s brother, was told where to drive to pick up the next set of instructions. Villano and a business partner of Tommy Gambino went along. Villano lay on the floor of the partner’s Cadillac El Dorado. The first stop was a telephone booth at 82nd and Madison Avenue in Manhattan. From there the instructions were to cross the George Washington Bridge into New Jersey and wait at a well-lit gas station on the Palisades Parkway next to a set of pay phones.

The kidnappers called with instructions for the money to be dropped over a metal railing about a mile down the road. The drop was made before agents tailing Villano could get into position to observe it. However, the license number of a van that was seen in the area was recorded by one of the agents.

The group went back to the Gambino home only to be disappointed when Manny was not returned by the promised hour. Over the next several weeks and months, Villano continued investigating. Through another contact, Villano found out the following:

"Manny had fallen in love with a show-biz blonde. He wanted to leave his family because the girl refused to have anything more to do with him unless he gave up his wife and went full-time with her. Manny was advised by his betters in the clan to grow up and forget the blonde. In his circles it was okay to have a mistress but it was bad form to leave your wife, particularly if you were a nephew of Carlo Gambino."

Villano also found out that Manny had a few financial problems, most likely due to trying to maintain two households. Heavy into loansharking operations, many in the family felt that Manny had too much money on the street during this time. One of the people who was into Manny for a large sum was gambler Robert Sentner. Villano, upon hearing the name, realized that the van that was spotted the night the ransom was paid had been rented to a Robert Senter. Villano then reveals the following:

"It took five interviews with him (Sentner) over a period of months before we finally reconstructed the entire venture. The snatch began as a hoax. Manny Gambino worked out the scenario with his debtor Sentner, a friend of Sentner’s, and two others. Midway through the plot, Gambino’s accomplices began to have their doubts. They could see that if things went sour Manny Gambino would give them up, either on a contract to LCN friends or to the law. There was an argument in Gambino’s Cadillac and Sentner settled the dispute with a bullet in the back of Manny’s head."

Manny Gambino’s car was found at the Newark Airport. Villano reports that before his body could reach the burial site, rigor mortis had set in. His body was found buried in the sitting position in a New Jersey dump near the Earle Naval Ammunition Depot. Robert Sentner was arrested and charged with the murder. On June 1,1973, he pled guilty to manslaughter and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

Despite his detailed account of the incident, Jimmy McBratney’s name is never mentioned in Villano’s book.

Was McBratney involved in the death of Manny Gambino?

According to organized crime expert Jerry Capeci, in his book, Mob Star he reports:

"McBratney…was not part of the Gambino kidnap scheme, though some people may have believed it. He was a large, ruddy man who belonged to another gang…whose members cut across ethnic lines. (They) had recently kidnapped a Staten Island loan shark and gotten $21,000. But some neighborhood kids saw the snatch and passed along a license-plate number to neighborhood Family members."

Jimmy McBratney, in all likelihood, was identified as a member of the kidnapping team when Junior was abducted and was subsequently murdered as a result of that involvement. McBratney was obviously not an innocent law-abiding citizen. He had committed armed robbery, kidnapping, possessed illegal weapons, and – if his aim had been better – may have wounded or killed the Staten Island loan shark. However, it is for certain he did not kidnap and murder the nephew of Carlo Gambino. Thus the fabled notion that Gotti won the favor of the mighty Gambino by taking vengeance on the hood that had killed the don’s nephew is just so much misplaced lore. This event, like so many others involving John Gotti, has been twisted to fit the romanticized image of this popular mob icon.

by Allan May


He who can never endure the bad will never see the good
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: HairyKnuckles] #696578
02/14/13 01:08 PM
02/14/13 01:08 PM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 290
ATL
SilentPartnerz Offline
Capo
SilentPartnerz  Offline
Capo
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 290
ATL
I played baseball at the ballfields at the Earle Naval Station Base as a teenager. Weird coincidence.


"Three can keep a secret..if two are dead."
Calogero Minacore
Re: The Manny Gambino Kidnapping [Re: SilentPartnerz] #696580
02/14/13 01:10 PM
02/14/13 01:10 PM
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
pizzaboy Offline
The Fuckin Doctor
pizzaboy  Offline
The Fuckin Doctor

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
Originally Posted By: SilentPartnerz
I played baseball at the ballfields at the Earle Naval Station Base as a teenager. Weird coincidence.

Hey Silent Partnerz, I sent you a pm yesterday.


"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.

Moderated by  Don Cardi, J Geoff, SC, Turnbull 

Powered by UBB.threads™