The Goodfellas Rat: What Happened to Henry Hill’s Children? HT

May 1980, a split level house on a quiet   suburban street in Rockville Center,   Long Island. Federal agents pull up to   the curb. Inside, Henry Hill is packing.   Not for a trip, for the rest of his   life. The man who spent 20 years as a   Lucasi crime family associate who helped   pull off the $5,875,000   Lufansza heist at JFK airport, who ran a   narcotics empire that stretched from   Long Island to Pittsburgh to Tampa.

 

 That   man has just agreed to become a   government informant. His testimony will   eventually put 50 people behind bars.   His wife Karen is in the kitchen. His   13-year-old son, Greg, and 11-year-old   daughter, Gina, are upstairs. They are   given 1 hour to pack. Not suitcases,   garbage bags. Everything they own,   everything they know, every friend they   have gone.

 

 Within hours, the Hill family   goes from the Copa Cabana to a   government safe house. From ringside   tables and envelopes of cash to aliases   and fake social security numbers. From   the most connected crew in Brooklyn to a   rented house in Omaha, Nebraska with   $1,500 a month and a new last name   nobody can pronounce without laughing.   But the moment Henry Hill decided to   save himself, he sentenced his family to   something far worse than anything the   mob had planned for him.

 

  Because   his children didn’t choose this life.   They didn’t choose witness protection.   and they didn’t choose to have a father   who couldn’t stop breaking the rules,   even when those rules were the only   thing keeping them alive. Karen Hill,   the mob wife who flushed $60,000 in   cocaine down the toilet during the raid,   would eventually vanish so completely   that no journalist has located her   since.

 

 Greg Hill, the son who walked   away from his father at 19 and never   came back, would become a lawyer under a   name nobody recognizes. Anggina Hill,   the daughter who had every reason to cut   her father out of her life forever,   would fly across the country to rescue   his abandoned third child from foster   care.

 

 This is what happened to Henry   Hill’s children and how the sins of the   father followed them into lives they   never asked for. Subscribe if you want   more stories about the families left   behind by organized crime. Henry Hill   Jr. was born on June 11th, 1943 in   Brooklyn, New York. His father, Henry   Senior, was an Irish-American   electrician who worked long hours and   drank longer ones.

 

 His mother, Carmela   Costa, was a Sicilian immigrant who kept   the house running for eight children in   a cramped apartment in Brownsville,      one of the roughest neighborhoods in the   burrow. Across the street from the Hill   apartment sat a cab stand and social   club that belonged to Paul Vario, a capo   in the Lucazi crime family.

 

 Vario’s crew   ran the neighborhood. They controlled   the taxi dispatch.  They ran loan   sharking, bookmaking, hijacking, and   labor rackets out of a storefront that   looked like a pizzeria from the outside.   By the time Henry was 11 years old, he   was running errands for Vario’s men,   parking their Cadillacs, carrying   messages, lighting their cigarettes, and   watching how they moved through   Brownsville like they owned every block.

 

  He loved it. He never went back to   school. By his late teens, Henry had met   the two men who would define his   criminal career. The first was James   Burke, known on the streets as Jimmy the   Gent, a legendary hijacker who worked   the cargo routes at John F. Kennedy   International Airport, and who had a   reputation for two things.

 

 Splitting the   score generously with his crew and   killing anyone who became a problem. The   second was Tommy D. Simone, a compact,   volatile enforcer with a temper that   made him dangerous to everyone,   including the people who were supposed   to be on his side. Together with Henry,   the three of them formed the core   earning crew under Vario’s protection.

 

  Henry’s career escalated fast. On April   7th, 1967, he helped Burke and his crew   robbed the Air France cargo building at   John F. Kennedy International Airport,   walking away with $420,000   in cash. On June 11th, 1970, Henry’s own   birthday, he participated in the murder   of William Billy Batsbentvina,  a   Gambino family associate.

 

 Bats was   beaten nearly to death in a bar, loaded   into the trunk of a car,  and   buried in a shallow grave. When the body   was discovered still breathing, Burke   and Dimone finished the job. In 1972,    an extortion conviction sent   Henry to Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary   in Pennsylvania, where he served 4   years.

 

 He used the time to build a drug   distribution network inside the prison.   After his release on July 12th, 1978, he   plunged even deeper into narcotics,   marijuana, cocaine, heroin, and   quaaludes,    trafficking across state lines in direct   violation of the Lucasy family’s   prohibition on drug dealing. That   violation would eventually cost him   everything.

 

 On December 11th, 1978,   Henry helped plan the Lufthanza heist.   $5,875,000    stolen from a cargo terminal at John F.   Kennedy International Airport, the   largest cash robbery in American history    at that time. He also helped   orchestrate the Boston College point   shaving scandal    of 1978 and 1979, paying basketball   players to manipulate scores for   gamblers.

 

  In the middle of all of this, the   robberies,    the murders, the drugs, there was a   family. Karen Freriedman was born on   January 16th, 1946 and raised in   Lawrence, Long Island, part of the   affluent five towns area of Nassau   County.  She came from a   middle-class Jewish family. She worked   as a dental hygienist.

 

 She met Henry   through Paul Vario in 1965    on a double date at a restaurant called   Villa Copra. Henry stood her up for the   second date. Karen showed up at the cab   stand and confronted him about it in   front of his friends. He liked that.   They eloped to North Carolina on August   26th, 1965.

  She was 19 years   old. A traditional Jewish ceremony   followed in New York where Henry agreed   to convert to Judaism. He later admitted   he lied about his religion.  The   money came immediately. ringside tables   at the Copa Cabana where the Mater D   knew Henry’s name.  Closets full   of designer clothes.

 

 Brand new Buick   Rivieras parked in the driveway. Karen   carried a pistol in her purse and   thought nothing of it. The family lived   in a comfortable home on a treelined   block in Rockville Center Long Island.   And for the outside world, they looked   like any other suburban family.    The only difference was that everything   they owned, the house, the cars, the   vacations,    the private school tuition, was paid for   by armed robbery, extortion, hijacking,   and the sale of narcotics that destroyed   entire neighborhoods.    Greg, the older child, was born around   1966 or 1967.   He was the quiet one, the watcher, the   child who noticed that the men who came   to the house with envelopes and    kissed his father on the cheek carried   guns under their jackets. Gina, the   younger, was born around 1968 or 1969.    She was the daddy’s girl, the   one who believed her mother when Karen

 

  said everything was fine. Neither child   would keep believing that for long.   Karen was not a passive wife.   When Henry went to Lewisburg in 1972,   she did not step away from the life. She   stepped deeper in. She smuggled drugs   and contraband into the prison,   strapping packages to her body and   walking past guards.

 

 She developed her   own cocaine habit. She had an affair   with Paul Vario during Henry’s   imprisonment, a detail Good Fellas left   out entirely. Tommy Desimone reportedly   attempted to assault Karen during this   same period. And one theory holds that   Vario had D. Simone killed partly in   retaliation.   The couple’s home became a revolving   door of drugfueled parties.

 

 According to   accounts Greg and Gina gave in their   2004 memoir, guests at these gatherings   snorted cocaine off Gina’s Miss Piggy   Mirror and openly offered drugs to the   children. Both children watched their   father beat their mother. They watched   him come home at 4 in the morning wired    and raging.

 

 They grew up with   cash on the kitchen table and blood on   their father’s shirt. And they learned   early that the two things were   connected. By 1979, Henry’s cocaine   addiction was consuming him. He    was paranoid. He was sloppy. He was   using the product he was supposed to   sell.  The FBI was watching his   every move.

 

 And the men above him, the   men who had protected him since he was   11 years old, decided he was a liability   worth eliminating. This life built on   blood money had a fatal weakness. Henry   Hill could not stop using the drugs he   was selling and the men who once called   him brother decided he was better off   dead.

 

 On April 27th, 1980, federal   agents arrested Henry on narcotics   trafficking charges. They sat him in a   room. They played him a tape. On it,   Jimmy Burke is talking to Paul Vario.   Burke says Henry has to go. He knows too   much. He’s a loose end. Burke is already   cleaning house. Bodies connected to the   Lufansza heist have been turning up   across New York in dumpsters, in freezer   trucks, in the trunks of abandoned cars   on side streets in Brooklyn.

 

 Henry is   next on the list. Arrest. On May 27th,   1980, Henry signed a cooperation   agreement with Edward Macdonald, head of   the Brooklyn Organized Crime Strike   Force. He became a government witness.   Within days, the family is swept into   the United States Marshall’s Witness   Security Program, WITSC.    Greg is 13. Gina is 11. 1 hour to pack.

 

  Garbage bags. No goodbyes. No phone   calls. No last look at their bedrooms.   The first stop is Omaha, Nebraska. The   family becomes the Hannes family. They   receive $1,500   a month from the government. They live   in a rented house in a neighborhood   where everybody knows everybody except   them.

 

 Their first meal in witness   protection is at a pizza chain called   Godfather’s Pizza.   Henry, with his thick Brooklyn accent   and gold chains, stood out in Omaha like   a fire alarm. Within 2 months, the FBI   intercepted a conversation. Burke knew   Henry was somewhere in the Midwest. The   family needed emergency relocation. In   Independence, Kentucky, Henry bought a   cowboy hat.

 

 He played Willie Nelson   Records and spent his days at the   racetrack. Then he co-wrote an article   for Sports Illustrated about the Boston   College point shaving scandal under his   own name. The FBI was furious. Private   investigators linked to Burke were   spotted in the area. Another move   followed. Redmond, Washington, east of   Seattle, became the longest stay.

 

 Henry   used the alias Martin Lewis, a   combination of Dean Martin and Jerry   Lewis. Karen went by Kylin. The children   used the last name Scott.  In   Nicholas Pelgi’s 1985 book, Wise Guy,   the children were changed to two   daughters named Judy and Ruth to protect   their real identities. But Henry could   not stop being Henry.

 He dealt cocaine   and marijuana in Washington. He drank   heavily. He racked up DUI arrests. He   contacted former associates back in New   York. In the fall of 1981, while still   legally married to Karen, he drove to   Virginia City, Nevada, and bigously   married a Mormon hairdresser named Sher   Anders.

 

 The marriage license listed his   Washington address, handing Burke’s   lawyers a trail to follow. When Wise Guy   was published in 1985, news helicopters   circled the family’s Redmond home. The   cover was blown. In 1987, Henry    was convicted of cocaine trafficking in   federal court in Seattle. The US   Marshalss formally expelled him from the   witness security program  after 7   years. He did not tell his family.

 

 His   son Greg would discover  that   fact years later, reading FBI files. The   program designed to keep the Hill family   safe had been sabotaged from the inside   by the man it was built to protect.   Karen Freriedman Hill spent 19 years   married to Henry and seven years in   witness protection because of him.

 

 She   spent the rest of her life making sure   no one would ever find her again. In the   old life, Karen had been somebody. She   walked into restaurants and waiters   scrambled. She wore fur coats paid for   with hijacking money and never    questioned where the cash came from. She   once hid a pistol in her underwear and   pointed it at Henry’s face during a   fight. She was not a timid woman.

 

 She   was not someone who sat quietly and   looked away. She had chosen the life as   much as Henry had, maybe more   consciously since she walked into it at   19 and stayed. But witness protection   stripped every piece of that identity   away. No more copa, no more Buick   Rivieras, no more envelopes from men who   treated her husband like royalty.

 

  Instead, she had a rented house in   Nebraska, a fake last name,    and a government check that barely   covered groceries. During the witness   protection program years, Karen was the   one who kept the household standing.      She cooked meals on a budget that would   have been unthinkable during the Long   Island years.

 

  She enrolled the   children in new schools under new names   and coached them on what to say when   classmates asked  questions.   Where they were from, what their father   did for work, why they had moved. She   answered the neighbors curiosity with   rehearsed stories. She managed all of   this while Henry gambled away their   stipend at  racetracks, snorted   cocaine in the bathroom, brought   strangers home at 2:00 in the morning,   and married another woman in Nevada   without telling her.

 

 She had smuggled   drugs into Lewisburg  for this   man. She had flushed $60,000 in cocaine   during the 1980  raid for this   man. She had endured the affair with   Vario and the assault by D. Simone   because of this man. But witness   protection broke something in Karen that   the mob never did.

 

 The belief that Henry   could change. That he could be the   husband and father she kept pretending   he  was. Every new city, the same   cycle. Every new name, the same man   underneath it. Karen filed for divorce   around 1989  or 1990 after the   family’s expulsion from the witness   protection program. The proceedings   dragged on for more than a decade.

 

 The   divorce was not finalized until 2002.   And by then, Karen had already   accomplished what the entire federal   witness protection program never fully   managed. She had disappeared. Not into a   government safe house with a handler and   a monthly check. into genuine self-made   anonymity.

 

  She moved somewhere   no one has publicly identified. She   changed her name. She severed contact   with anyone who could connect her to the   Hill name. She never gave a public   interview about Good Fellas. She never   met Lorraine Braco, the actress who   portrayed her and earned an Academy   Award nomination for best supporting   actress for the role.

 

 She never issued a   statement about Henry’s death in 2012.   She never appeared on a talk show. She   never wrote a memoir. She never sold her   story to a tabloid, a publisher, or a   documentary crew. As of early 2025,    Karen Freriedman Hill is   believed to be alive. She would be   approximately 79 years old. She is   living under an assumed name in an   undisclosed location.

 

 A source close to   the family confirmed she was alive at   the time of Henry’s death. Beyond that,    nothing. No photographs, no   social media accounts, no property   records linked to her birth name, no   trace whatsoever. The woman who once   lived the Copa Cabana lifestyle, who   once carried a pistol and confronted her   husband’s mistress on her own doorstep,   who once flushed a small fortune in   narcotics down the toilet rather than   hand it to the FBI.

 

 That woman chose    total silence.   She vanished more effectively than the   federal government ever managed to hide   her, and she has stayed invisible for   over 30 years. Greg Hill knew something   was wrong before anyone told him. He was   the older child, the one who watched and   listened and counted the lies. He   watched his father come home at strange   hours with blood on his clothes.

 

 He saw   Henry grab Karen by the hair and slam   her into a wall. He sat at dinner while   men with thick necks and thicker accents   handed his father envelopes of cash. He   understood that the money came from   somewhere dangerous, but he was too   young to articulate it and too afraid to   ask.

 

 When the family entered the witness   protection program, Greg was 13, old   enough to feel the full weight of losing   everything.  His name, his   school, his friends, his neighborhood,   his identity. In Brownsville, he had   known who he was. Even if the knowledge   was dangerous, he was the son of a   connected man.

 

 People treated him with   respect because of his father’s name. In   Omaha, he was nobody. In Kentucky, he   was nobody again.  In Redmond, he   was still nobody. Every relocation meant   starting from zero. New town, new alias,   new lies to memorize. He could not join   sports teams because coaches needed   paperwork he could not provide.

 

 He could   not make close friends because close   friends asked questions he could not   answer.  Every friendship he   started was built on a foundation of   invented stories. And he was the only   person in his school who knew the   foundation was hollow. The isolation   would have been enough to damage any   teenager.

 

 But inside the house there was   no relief. Henry’s cocaine binges lasted   for days, sometimes weeks. His mood   swung between euphoria and black rage   with no warning.  He would come   home at 3:00 in the morning, dump bags   of groceries on the kitchen counter, as   if that made up for the screaming the   night before, and then disappear again.

 

  Karen tried to manage him. She failed.   Greg became his mother’s protector by   default, a teenager stepping between his   parents during fights, absorbing blows   that were meant for someone else,   carrying a burden that should never have   been placed on a child’s shoulders. At   19, something inside him broke.

    During the family’s time in Redmond,   Washington, Greg got into a violent   physical confrontation with Henry. The   details remained private, but the   outcome was absolute.    Greg walked out of the house that day   and did not come back. He did not tell   Karen. He did not tell Gina. He packed   what he could carry and left behind the   only family he had ever known.

 

 Not   because he did not love them, but   because staying meant becoming his   father. He refused. Greg kept the alias   Scott. He had lived with that name long   enough that it felt more real than the   one on his original birth certificate.   He finished college on his own. He   enrolled in law school and earned his   degree. He passed the bar examination.

 

  He became a practicing attorney. The   specific jurisdiction, firm, and area of   practice have never been made public   because Greg Hill still lives under a   name that no one around him connects to   organized crime. He married.  He   had children of his own. Only his wife   knew the truth about who his father was.

 

  He never told his colleagues. He never   told his neighbors. He built a   legitimate career in a profession   defined by the very rules and statutes   his father spent a lifetime violating.   The son of the most famous mob informant   in America became a man whose entire   livelihood depended on the law. The   irony was not lost on him.

 

 For two   decades, Greg said nothing publicly. He   let Henry tell the story on talk shows,   in books, on Howard Stern, in bars. Then   in 2004, Greg and Gina co-authored a   book with journalist Shaun Flynn. It was   called On the Run: A Mafia Childhood. It   was published by Warner Books on   September 14th, 2004.   The book picks up where Goodfellas ends   and tells the story the movie could not.

 

  the terror, the instability, the abuse,   the constant running. Written in   alternating firstperson voices,    it revealed Henry Hill not as the   charismatic wise guy played by Ray   Leotaa, but as a narcissistic,   drugaddicted man whose children lived in   constant fear. Greg appeared on 60   Minutes, the Today Show, and the Jane   Paulie Show during the book’s promotion.

 

  He appeared with his identity disguised   with different lighting and camera   angles. His face never shown clearly. He   told CBS News that for more than 20   years they had lived  with Henry   telling their story with others telling   their story. This book, he said, was   their story on their terms  in   their voice.

 

 He said he did not write it   for revenge. He wrote it because the   world had seen good fellas and thought   they knew what happened. They did not.    They saw the copa and the   Cadillacs. They did not see the garbage   bags and the fake  names. and the   nights when his father came home so high   he could not stand.

 

 The book won the   Crime Writers Association gold dagger   for non-fiction in 2005. Nicholas Pelgi,   who wrote Wise Guy and co-wrote the   Goodfellow’s screenplay with Martin   Scorsesei, said the fact that Henry’s   children survived to tell their story   was a tribute to their resolve. After   the book tour ended, Greg disappeared   back into his life.

 

 no known social   media presence, no criminal record, no   public appearances since the mid 2000s.   He practices law somewhere in the United   States under the name Scott, raising his   children, doing his work, and carrying a   past that no one in his office or his   neighborhood knows about. Gina Hill was   2 years younger than Greg, and that gap   made all the difference in the world.

 

  where Greg watched his father with   suspicion from an early age. Gina held   on longer. She sat on Henry’s lap. She   laughed at his  stories. She   wanted to believe that the man who   brought home toys and told jokes and   made everyone in the room smile    was exactly what he said he was, just a   guy who worked hard.

 

 She was 11 when the   family entered Witsk. young enough that   the first relocation felt more like an   adventure than a disaster,    but old enough that the damage   accumulated.   She remembers guests  at the   house snorting cocaine off her   belongings. She remembers not being able   to tell a single person at school the   truth about her family.

 

 She remembers   watching her mother cry.  Gina   stayed with her parents longer than Greg   did. She was there for more of the wits   years. The moves, the name changes,      the midnight arguments, the mornings   when Karen would smile and make   breakfast  as if nothing had   happened the night before.

 

 She saw Henry   come home wired and paranoid from   cocaine at dawn. She heard the fights   through the walls. She watched her   mother pack boxes again and again    and again. Each new city meant a   new school. Each new  school   meant new lies. Each new friendship   carried an expiration date that only   Gina knew about.

 

  She absorbed   the instability the way her brother did,   but processed it differently. Less   anger, more confusion. She loved the man   who was hurting her family, and the   contradiction tore at her in ways she   would not fully understand until   adulthood. After Karen separated from   Henry, Gina returned to New York. She   enrolled at New York University.

 

    For the first time in her life, she was   choosing where to live, choosing who to   be, choosing a name that she could keep.   She was building something of her own,   an education,  friendships, an   identity that had nothing to do with the   mob or the government or the man who had   dragged  her through 10 cities in   7 years. She married.

 

 She started a   family.  She was by all outward   appearances doing the thing that   children of criminals almost never   manage to do. She was moving forward on   her own terms. Then came the phone call.   Around 1997,   Henry fathered a son named Justin with a   girlfriend named Dawn. Henry was   drinking heavily and using drugs daily.

 

   Dawn was in no better shape.   Their substance abuse spiraled until the   state of Florida removed Justin from   their home and placed him in foster   care. Henry Hill’s third child, an   infant with no say  in who his   parents were, was alone in the system   because his father could not stay sober   long enough to  keep him.

 

 Gina   flew to Florida. She went to court. She   fought for custody of a half    brother she barely knew, fathered by a   man who had spent her entire childhood   failing  her. The legal process   was not simple. She was asking a court   to grant custody of a child to someone   with no biological connection on the   maternal side    based solely on the fact that the   father, a notorious informant with a   drug conviction sheet longer than most   rap sheets, could not care for the boy.

 

  She won. She brought Justin home. She   raised him as her own. The daughter of   Henry Hill, a woman who had every reason   to never speak the Hill name again. Who   had watched her father beat her mother.   Who had been shuttled from state to   state like contraband. Who had been   forced to live behind fake names in   cities where she knew nobody.

 

    Chose to rescue the one member of the   family even more powerless than she had   once been. She did for Justin what no   one had ever managed to do for her. She   gave him a home that did not move. She   gave him a name he could keep. She gave   him the one thing Henry Hill was never   capable of providing to any of his    children, stability.

 

  Gina co-authored On the Run with Greg.   Her voice in the book is raw, more   willing to sit with contradictions.   Where Greg’s chapters carry the   controlled precision of a man who   processed his trauma through logic and   distance, Gina’s  carry the   weight of someone still grappling with   how to hold love and fury in the    same sentence.

 

  She wrote about missing her father even   while describing the worst things he   did.  She wrote about the   confusion of watching The Good Fella’s   premiere and seeing her childhood played   for entertainment. She loved Henry Hill.   She hated what he did to her family. The   book allowed her to say both without   choosing one over the other.

 

 Her most   recent public appearance was in 2021 in   an episode of the documentary series   Narco Wars where she was credited as   Henry Hill’s daughter. She has no known   social media presence. She lives under   an alias at an undisclosed location. She   raised Justin. She built a life the   world knows almost nothing about.

 

  Henry Hill spent his final 25 years   selling whatever was left of his name.   He wrote books. Wise Guy earned him   $100,000 from Simon and Schustster. The   Wise Guy cookbook came in 2002. A Good   Fella’s Guide to New York came in 2003.   Gangsters and Good Fellas came in 2004.   He sold mob themed paintings on eBay for   prices that range from a few hundred to   a few thousand.

 

 He marketed a spaghetti   sauce called Sunday gravy. He opened a   restaurant called Wise Guys in West   Haven, Connecticut in October 2007. It   closed a month later after a kitchen   fire. He was paid $480,000   by Martin Scorsesei for the Goodfella’s   film rights alone. He told a reporter he   earned about $550,000   total from the movie.

 

 He spent every   cent. By the end, he had nothing left to   sell except the story itself. And he   told it to anyone who would listen on   podcasts, at mob conventions, at   autograph signings in strip mall parking   lots. His arrest record after witness   protection read like a slow collapse.   Cocaine trafficking in Seattle, 1987.

 

  Narcotics charges under the alias Alex   Canini, 2001.    methamphetamine possession at North Plat   Regional Airport in Nebraska 2004 where   he showed up to a pre-sentencing meeting   with a blood alcohol level of 0.343   more than four times the legal limit. He   served 180 days, two counts of public   intoxication in San Bernardino, 2008,   disorderly conduct and resisting arrest   in Fairview Heights, Illinois, December   2009.

 

  He married Kelly Allore around 1990 and   divorced her in 1996. He became engaged   to Lisa Caserta around 2006 and lived   with her in Topanga Canyon near Malibu.   He appeared on the Howard Stern show so   many times the staff kept a running   count of how drunk he was. On June 12th,   2012, one day after his 69th birthday,   Henry Hill died in a Los Angeles   hospital from cardiac failure.

 

 Lisa   Caserta told CBS News he went out pretty   peacefully  for a good fella. He   was cremated the following day. His   children did not release statements.   They did not appear on television. They   did not write a sequel. Karen did not   break her silence.  The three   people who paid the highest price for   Henry Hill’s choices marked his death   the way they had lived every year since   entering witness protection.

 

 quietly,   privately,    under names the world will never know.   Greg still practices law somewhere under   the name Scott.    Gina still lives under an alias, raising   the half brother she rescued from    foster care because her father   could not be bothered to raise his own   son.

 

 Karen is believed to be alive at   79,    invisible in a way that would make the   US marshals jealous. The man who broke   every rule died famous. The people who   followed the rules chose to become   nobody. And in a world where the hill   name once opened doors, bought silence,   and guaranteed a table at the copa,   being related to the most famous rat in   mafia history meant inheriting his   enemies along with his name.

 

 Greg, Gina,   and Karen all figured out the same thing   independently in their own time. The   only way to survive Henry Hill was to   stop being a hill entirely.

 

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