WHAT was it REALLY like INSIDE Neil DELLACROCE’s RAVENITE Social club?

 

What was life really like inside the   Gambino Crime family’s infamous Ravenite   Social Club? Let’s check it out. I’m   James Gladwish and welcome to OC Shorts,   bringing you detailed historical   snapshots of the American Mafia and   other organized crime. Feel free to   subscribe if you like that sort of   thing.

 

 Social clubs were a staple part   of mafia life for decades.   I sat down with former Gambino crime   family associate Anthony Vigano Jr., son   of legendary mob figure Fat Andy Vigano   to discuss his memories of visiting mob   social clubs around New York City. Um,   so Anthony, throughout obviously your   your time with the mob, you obviously   frequented um quite a few of the of the   famous social clubs in obviously the   Ravenite and things like that.

 

 I mean,   starting with the Raven Night, what was   your memories memories of going in there   like for the first time?    Well, the first time I went in there, I   was a teenager. I mean, you know, it was   my The Ravenite   changed when John became the boss and I   always liked the Ravenite when Neil was   the underbos. It was very old.

 

 It was   very um it was   it had a soul like when you walked in   it, you know, there was guys in suits   playing cards and there was a bar and it   was old. The ceiling, you know, was a   tin ceiling and and there was a table in   the back where people were playing card,   you know, Neil used to play pinole in   the back.    Yeah.

 

 Did it still have the glass front   at the time? It hadn’t been bricked up   at that point or    it had it had glass windows, big glass   windows. had when you walked in. So when   you walked in the bar was on the left   and then there was tables along the wall   like two chairs, you know, where people   play jin. And then in the back there was   a big table, a card table that Neil   stood at.

 

 And there was a bathroom and   then there was the door that went into   the hallway that led up to the stairs   that went upstairs that later on became   famous when John was going up into that   apartment. Yes.    And it was really old    on s it was on Saturdays. It was very   crowded. Um, but it was always, you   know, it was always homey.

 

 It was always   uh comfortable. You know, you walk   there, hey, what’s going on? You have a   cup of espresso, play a number, your   [ __ ] you know. Uh, it was always um   it was like a club, you know, like a   home like, you know, it was always I   always felt comfortable there. They had   a going away party for me there in 78   when I went to prison.

 

 Neil gave me a   going away party like I was going off to   college. They had a buffet of food and,   you know, was really crowded. So I   always liked it there. I hung out with   Buddy there and the old son. He lived   across the street.    Later on when John became the boss, it   totally changed. He modernized it. He   bricked up the front.

 You couldn’t get   in the door. It was like wallto-wall. We   stopped going there. Me and Tony Lee, we   used to go if we wanted to see John, we   go, you know, to the Bergen because it   was just got ridiculous. You couldn’t   even get in the door. It was like   sardines because everybody wanted to be   up John’s ass.

 

 You know what I mean?   Guys that we never that I never even saw   was showing up there, you know? But uh   when when Neil had it, it was really   nice. I liked it. And around the corner,   Charlie West had a club that was another   nice little club with a bar. There was a   club around the corner that Charlie West   had that was nice on M Street. Yeah.

 

   What did Well, did they have a name or    You know, I don’t I don’t If you did, I   don’t remember it, but it was right   around the corner on M Street. I mean,   you walked out of the you walked out of   the Raven, you made a left, you made a   right, you went to M Street, you made a   left, and it was right off the corner.

 

  He had a club there because we used to   walk back and forth. He had a club   there. Um there was another club up the   street that Black Phil had. He was a   Genevese guy. He had a club up the   street. I mean there was so many clubs   on Mobile Street. There was another club   that had a big saint in the window.

 

 I   forgot whose club that was, but that was   another club. Um my father had a club in   East New York that was on top of a beer   distributor with a pigeon coupe. Um he   had a pigeon coupe up there. That was   the first club I went to that he had.    It was in Brooklyn. and I used to park   where it was on top of a beer   distributor.

 

 We had a poker game in   there and then from that club we moved   to Cafe Liberty. Charlie Wagons was the   first guy to go to Ozone Park.    Yes.    He left East New York and he went to the   Bergen and everybody follow. So East New   York was right on the borderline and   then we went over to East New York.    We went from East New York to Ozone   Park.

 

 My father opened up the the Cafe   Liberty. Sierra Peron    uh from the Genevese family. He opened   up a club there. He had a really nice   club, Sierra Baron. I mean, he had a   really nice club. He had he was a   tinkerer and he used to um    he collected memorabilia and stuff,   right?    Excuse me. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But he used   to refurbish it like he would like re,   you know, like bring it back to life and   he had a basement with all machines in   it, you know, where he would go tinker   with the stuff and shine it up and he   and he had he had a lot of baseball   memorabilia. He had a beautiful kitchen.   He did a lot of cooking in there. That   was his club. He had a club there. Jojo   opened up a club down on 77th Street and   101st Avenue. Um   that was like a that was nice. He had   another little poker game on top of it.   That was good. That was a nice little   club. Um Fine Sara had a club over there   on 101st, you know. I mean, there was   clubs. There was so many clubs. Um

 

  Johnny Green, the guy from the Banana   family, he had a club in Brooklyn I used   to go to with Mikey Gal was good friends   with him. I used to go to that club that   was a very old club that was really old.   But they all had the same kind of feel,   you know, like um they all basically did   the same thing, acted the same way, you   know what I mean? It was all the same.

 

  Card games, meetings, number runners   were in there always taking numbers. Um   guys walking in and out, you know, no   strangers, never no strangers. Um, but   that it was like that it was like   people on Wall Street go to the office.   Those were our offices, the clubs.   That’s that’s where we went.    So, in our previous discussion, you   mentioned um a time on Sullivan Street   where you went to the Triangle Club.

 

  What was the feel of that place? I know   you had an incident in there. So, that   you remember that?    Well, that you know that place was   pretty wide open. You walked it when   when when well I was only there twice   inside. The time I had to beef with Dom   and the time we had to sit down. Other   than that the the other times I was   there actually I was outside.

 

 I never   really went in because my father would   go meet they had to meet there. A lot of   times they were standing outside when we   pulled up. So I was only inside it   twice. But when you walked when you   opened up the door, it was wide open and   there was just a table, a big card table   right in the middle of the floor and   that’s where Don was sitting with his   back against the wall and he was had all   receipts on the table from I guess his   number business or whatever.

 

 He had   receipts on the t but it was kind of   wide open. Um it was old. It was in an   old building, you know, but it was   nothing special. It wasn’t uh it was   just like a regular like sort of like a   Ravenite type club.    But there was there was never was there   any clubs you felt uncomfortable going   in at all or not? Was it never that kind   of feel?    Was there any ever clubs I felt   uncomfortable in? Not really. No. Um no.

 

  I I I never felt uncomfortable going to   any clubs. No, because most of the time   when I went to the club, I knew the   people that were in it. I mean, there   was this guy uh Louis Metropolitan. He   was with the uh Banano family. Um he was   a captain. He had a club on Metropolitan   Avenue and a guy around him owed us   sports money.

 

 So we got permission from   Joe Msina. Actually, he was the boss   that we could go there, me and Mikey Gal   could go there and sit down with Louisie   without having Pete with us, a captain   with us. And we went there. I wasn’t   uncomfortable, but it was um it was the   first time I went there. I never was   there before. didn’t know him.

 

 So, it it   was maybe a little it was a little   uncomfortable, but you know, when I   walked in, it was the same kind of setup   as any other club. So, you know, it was   just that was about the only time that I   went somewhere that um I was thinking   ahead about it, you know.    Yeah.    Just because you didn’t know the guy and   things like that, right?    Right.

 

 And it was a sit down over money   and and you know and and all that and   and you know I didn’t know the outcome   was going to be but he already knew that   Joe Msina okayed us to go there. So he   already knew that we had a relationship   with his boss. And then when I went   there,   the kid owed us money, but his father   was his father was actually with Louie.

  And the kid owed us 16,000 and I made a   deal with the father for 8,000 in cash   and the kid could never bet with us   again because it was all sports betting   was all on paper. You know what I mean?   It wasn’t like we gave the kid6,000 in   cash or and he he was all on paper. So   we made a deal with the father through   Louisie and we got half of the money   back which was fine but that was about   the only time really that I could think   of that um   any kind of little uncomfortability or   any kind of thinking ahead.    So going back to the raven knight   obviously um you know was delicious kind   of operate pace to base operations and   then goi kind of inherited it but   obviously famously the building the   actual building was owned by Joe the cat   lord right? Yeah, he bought it later on.   I think Jody the Cap bought it in the   70s. Actually, the original owner I’m   going up to New York at the end of April   and I think the original owner is going   to meet us because we have a copy of the   He sent us a copy of the original floor

 

  plans. Pascal has the copy of the   original. Yeah. So, this other family   owned it and Jody Cap bought it. Bought   that building and the building next to   it. He bought basically almost half the   block. He bought    I know how much money he had.    Neil made Neil made Joe the cat buy the   building.

 

 Neil made Joe the cat buy the   building.    Yeah. Oh yeah. Joe the cat had millions.   That’s why I don’t understand what’s   going on now with his grandson.   They’re all in jail. Where’s all the   money? Listen, I worked for Joe the Cat   for years. I know what he was making   just with the number of business alone.   The guy was taking down 20 25,000 a week   back in the 70s.

 

 And he had he had a lot   of property in on Staten Island as well   as well.    Listen, you couldn’t write a number on   Staten Island without him being the   controller. He originated the they used   to bring the numbers across in the ferry   before they built the Fabitano Bridge.   That’s how far back Jordy Cat goes. So   he had crazy he had his own plane at one   time.

 

 He had a compound in Lake George   that was worth millions of dollars.   There’s a famous picture of Neil on his   boat. That’s Lake George. There’s a   picture. Oh, on the speedboat with the   wife and the wives. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.   Right. That was late with Joe the cat   driving the boat. That was in Lake   George.

 

 He had a big compound that was   worth millions in Lake George. He had   one of the biggest travel agencies in in   New York. Joe the Cat. He when I got   married in 77, Neil was in Gio. He made   Joe the Cat. His wedding present to me   through Joe the Cat was they sent me to   Vegas to Caesar’s Palace. I had a suite.   I had a $2,000 credit limit in the   casino. I mean, it was crazy.

 

 I was only   23 years old. And the under boss of the   Gambino family sent me to Caesar’s   palace through Joe the cat. So, when I   read about his grandkids that out there,   where’s the money?    I don’t, you know, I don’t know. It’s   crazy.    I mean, I think I read a wiretap um   where there was a bit of tension between   Joe the Cat and and Goty, I think, after   Goty got kind of elevated.

 

 Um, I think   it got to kind of think quite   disparaging about about Joe the Cat. I   mean, did you did you ever know anything   much about that at all?    Yes. Yeah, I knew a lot about that. John   did not like Joe the Cat and I I I Joe   the Cat was a good guy. I mean, he he,   you know, he he was very close to Tony   Lee and my father. Very close.

 

 I mean, I   worked for the guy for years. John   didn’t like him. I think John felt that   he short changed the family. He had so   much money and he was earning so much   money that he wasn’t kicking up what he   should have been kicking up.    And John used to abuse him bad. I mean,   I saw John abuse him at the Bergen.

 

 Like   I saw John like throw him out of his   office like get the [ __ ] out of here. I   I And so there was a I was there one   day. So John next to the Bergen. John   had an office   right next to the Bergen. I you know   about that. He had an office next to the   Bergen. Yeah.    Right.   So he told Junior, “Don’t let anybody in   the club the office.

 

” And he went into   the back room and when he came out of   the back room, Joe the Cat was in the   office   and he went, “What the [ __ ] are you   doing here? Get the [ __ ] out.” He threw   Joe the cat out of the office and then   he started yelling at his son, “Didn’t I   tell you not to let anybody in here?”   And and he says, “Yeah, but it’s Joe.

 

”   and and and he just bered both of them   to the point where Sammy the Bull talks   about and I discussed it with Sammy the   Bull. Joe the Cat went to Sammy’s house   and said, “Listen, you got to talk to   this guy. He’s abusing me. He don’t want   to leave me alone.” He said, “Carlo   Gambino didn’t treat me like this guy’s   treating me    and Sammy said, “What do you want me to   tell you? You know, what do you want me   to do? You know, he’s the boss.” Yeah.

 

  But yeah, he did not like Joe the Cat.   And I think he lost a lot of respect for   Joe the Cat through that beef Joe the   Cat had with his son Buddy    because the guy wanted to have his son   killed. I mean, you know, that’s that’s   crazy, you know, over money over   $120,000. You want to have your son   killed, you know, and I knew Buddy.

 

  Buddy, I I I knew Buddy good. Um I knew   his other son, Eddie good. I knew, you   know, I knew the whole family. But uh   yeah, so I think John didn’t like that   whole scenario between Buddy and him.   and John abused the [ __ ] out of him.    Well, interestingly, we we touched on   this before and I think I made a video   on it.

 

 You said that Buddy always had an   this go back to the Raven Night. Buddy   had an uneasy feeling about Goty at one   point whether it was paranoia. You said   in our interview said you never sensed   that, but you’d say Buddy talking about   Buddy, not not Buddy. Back to Buddy   Delro now. Yeah. Not    Oh, yeah. I was I was very tight with   Buddy. Very tight with Buddy.

 

 Uh, and we   would be in the Ravenite and John would   be sitting in the back at the table with   with Neil and everybody and he would   lean over and tell me when my father   dies this guy’s going to kill me. And I   told him, “What are you crazy?” Cuz I’m   telling you, I get I said he said, “I’m   telling you, this guy’s going to hurt me   when my father dies.

 

” And I said, “I   don’t understand, buddy. I don’t I never   got that feeling. I never heard John say   anything bad about him. I never, you   know, um I mean there was always   I mean I was in I mean his father was   under the bus but there was and but my   father was fat Andy and there was always   a level of jealousy between   like guys like John and Nikki with me   and John with Buddy.

 

 There was always   like a little jealousy because we were   the real sons and they were like very   tight with them, you know? So there was   always like a little jealousy, but I   never felt like I was going to get hurt   like he did. And I would tell him, I   don’t understand. I don’t get that   feeling.

 

 But you know, he he believed it   and and and you know, the proof is in   the pudding. When when Neil died, he was   incarcerated when Neil died. And when   Neil died, he took a plea that he wasn’t   supposed to take just to get out of jail   to just to get out and run away because   he believed that John was going to kill   him.    Yeah.

 

 and he and he went to Staten   Island and he took all his father’s   jewelry. You know, I heard through his   cousin Sally that he took over a million   dollars worth of jewelry and he ran away   never to be found again. And then he   died.    Yeah.    Cuz he was an you know, he bec, you   know,    he died in the Poconos, wasn’t it? I   think.

 

   Yeah. He was a big cocaine user. He was   a big drinker.    Yeah. He He liked to do his cocaine and   alcohol and it killed him. But he ran   away because he thought John was going   to hurt him. So, back to the other buddy   that we’re talking about, Buddy Lefort,   Joe the Cat’s son. Um, I mean, there was   that interesting thing involving Mike   Thally, wasn’t it? Was that allegedly   Buddy Lefort had pretty much paid Kaiser   to make him the acting captain or next   acting? And I mean, that’s really what   what pretty much [ __ ] Buddy Leford,   right?    Yeah. That was the end. That was the   last straw. I mean, that was it, you   know, when he did that and he went   behind everybody’s back and Mike Tally   took the money. I mean, that was crazy,   you know. He never deserved to be acting   captain. I mean, look at the guys that   were with Mike Tally at that point. I   mean, you know, Nikki, Lenny, the the   John. I mean, you could go on and on.   The names that were    Yeah.    with Mike Tally.    And and the money wasn’t even that. I   mean, it’s a big amount of money, but   it’s not huge amounts of money to be

 

  made. It was like 40,000 or 50,000   something.    That’s just telling you what kind of guy   Mike Thally was.    Yeah.    You know what I mean? I mean, he   realistically Mike Tally and Buddy   should have both got killed. I mean, the   only thing that saved Mike Tally was he   grew up with Neil.    Yeah.    And and and and Buddy, you know, Buddy   got saved, I guess, because Neil was   close to Joe.

 

 I don’t know why Buddy got   saved at that point, but uh they should   have both got killed behind that. I   mean, there were so many better equipped   guys that should have been acting   captain ahead of Buddy. Well, I mean,   what the people have been killed for far   less than what they did.    Without a doubt. Without a doubt.   Without a doubt.

 

 People got killed for   Look at Paul DB. He got killed for not   showing up at an appointment. I mean,   come on. You know what I mean?    So, Anthony, you’ve um you’ve got a book   coming out soon. Um can you tell us a   bit more about that? What’s what’s going   to be involved in that?    Yes. So, so I I sat down with my team   and and you know, and Hollywood   glamorizes the mob and all that, you   know.

 

 So, so I put together a book like   telling my story about my life, the   people that I ran across, the choices I   made, and it’s about not the dark side   of the mob, but it’s about reality. It’s   about what really goes on inside the   mob. What really goes on inside a mob   family and in a media family. Like   there’s your mob family and then there’s   your    children and wife,    right? So, so we put together this book   about, you know, the consequences of   living in that life and the outcome, you   know, and how I got through it and how I   survived it and how now I’m clean and   sober 37 years, you know, about my 14   years in prison. It’s all about it’s all   about my life and my perspective of of   what really goes on in the month, not   Hollywood’s perspective. My, you know,   the a real someone that was in it   perspective.    So, uh, and that’s basically what it is.   It’s going to be it’s going to be coming   out. We’re going to start taking orders   in June. It’s going to be ready in June.

 

  We’re going to have a book launch in   September. So, it’s going to be on my   website like I told you, anthony.com.   So, that’s    You have a confirmed title for it at   this point?    Uh, well, I’m going to tell you what we   do. I’ll show you a picture. Hold on.   Let me I got a picture. Hold on. Where   is it? I have a picture of it here.

 

 If   you could see it. So, this is what it’s   going to be.   Oh, there we go. Fantastic.    Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Perfect.    That’s going to be the cover. Yeah.   Reformed gangsters of the the life   inside the Gambino crime family. Born   into the life. Live to tell it as told   by Anthony Rugiano Jr. son of mafia   legend Fat Andy Rugiano.

 

 So that’s    Are you If I put a link to your website,   you can people can do some pre-orders   there, can they?    Yes. Put go put a link to my website and   everything. They could get everything on   there. My Patreon, my YouTube, my book,   everything’s on there.   In the comments below, let me know your   thoughts on the topic covered in this   video.

 

 I hope you found that   interesting. Thanks for watching.

 

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