5 Mafia Hitmen You’ve Never Heard Of, But Should Have – HT
In the mafia, the deadliest men were never the ones on magazine covers. They were the ghosts, the specialists working in quiet rooms and empty streets. Tommy Peter, the martial artist who turned killing into precision. Joseph Mad Dog Sullivan, the only man to escape Attica and keep working as a hitter.
Anthony Bruno in Delicato, born into power and shaped by betrayal. Samuel Red Lavine, the red-head Phantom of Murder, Inc. and Willie Two Knife Aliieri, a blade man whose name traveled farther than his face ever did. Five mob killers you’ve never heard of. But once you meet them, you won’t forget them.
[music] Let’s get into it. Willie Two Knife Aliieri moved through New York in the 1920s like a shadow with a pulse. Men spoke his name in back rooms and alleys, usually in lowered voices, because Willie worked as the chief enforcer for Frankie Yale, the Brooklyn rakateeer whose Italian-American blackhand outfit controlled neighborhoods the way a storm controls a coastline.
Yale had soldiers, hustlers, and collectors. But [music] Aliieri was the one he trusted when something needed to be settled for good. The strange thing about Willie is how little the world kept on paper about him. No clear date of birth, no family history that traveled through official files, no confirmed [music] place or manner of death.
He stepped in and out of the record like a man who understood the advantage of not leaving footprints. What survives are fragments, a description of a compact man about 5’7, around 170 lb, with blonde hair, blue eyes, and a quiet, unsettling way of keeping his hands clean. Those hands were smooth enough that people compared them to a woman’s.
Yet, they carried two knives in the leather scabbards strapped to his waist. He cleaned his nails with those blades, and he slept with them on his body as if the weapons were part of his bloodstream. Stories from the street said Willie handled killings in only a few ways. He strangled, he stabbed, or he used a cult close enough that powders marked the victim’s skin.
The bodies ended up across the river in New Jersey, buried in places where the only witnesses were trees and silent ground. That pattern stayed the same for years. By 1919, Yale was dealing with an informer inside his own circle. Trust mattered in his world, and betrayal didn’t get second chances. He sent Aliieri to handle the problem.
Willie went in with both knives, drove them into the man’s torso, and snapped the blades off in the body. When he walked back out, he carried only the handles. Yale mounted those handles on a plaque and hung it in the office where he did his business. It was a message about loyalty, discipline, and the cost of breaking either.
Willie had enemies of his own. The White Hand Gang, an Irish outfit based along the Brooklyn waterfront, believed he had a hand in killing one of their men, Pety [music] Bayon. They came after him with gunmen led by Pegle Lonigan. Willie escaped by crashing through a window, half diving and half falling his way out of the kill zone.
The Whiteand shooters hit the wrong target. They killed Angelo Jabaldi, father of Vincenzo Jabaldi. The son would later find criminal fame under a different name, Jack Machine Gun Jack McGurn, a Capone gunman who helped shape the St. Valentine’s Day massacre. In the aftermath and with Frankie Yale’s approval, McGurn hunted down the three men responsible for his father’s murder and left them [music] dead.
It was one of the rare moments when two different worlds of gangland violence cross paths in blood. Everything changed on July 1st, 1928. Frankie Yale was driving through Brooklyn when shotgun blasts tore into his car. The official story pointed toward Chicago. Al Capone had once worked under Yale unloading trucks in New York.
The relationship later soured and by the time Yale died in a hail of buckshot, the rumor was that Capone had ordered it. The moment Yale was gone, the structure around him began to collapse. His crews scattered, his rackets changed hands, and the men who once lived by his word drifted into the fog of the underworld. Willie two knife Aliieri was one of them.
After that day, he left almost no trace, no confirmed arrest, no death certificate, no newspaper clipping tying him to a final job or a last address. In a city full of men trying to be remembered, Willie became someone who vanished. only his reputation stayed behind, tucked into old police files and the dim recollections of the era when knives flashed in alleyways and the Black Hand ruled parts of Brooklyn like an empire built on fear.
He came into the world on March the 31st, 1939 in Queens, New York, the son of a city detective named Joseph Sullivan, Senior, and one of six children in a home that tried to hold itself together. When his father died, he was only 13. Grief hit the family like a slow collapse. His mother turned to alcohol, and the house that once had rules and routines became unpredictable.
Relatives tried taking him in for a while, but the arrangement fell apart. And soon he was back in a place that didn’t feel like home anymore. By 1953, he ran. Reform school in Warrick took him in, and he pushed back against its walls every chance he had. He kept escaping, [music] kept getting caught, kept winding up in new institutions with new guards and new rules.
The years blurred until he aged out at 19. [music] with no money and nowhere steady to go. He enlisted in the US Army. Even that didn’t hold him. He walked off base without [music] permission, was sent to Governor’s Island and then pulled off another escape by swimming back to Manhattan.
The army found him again, but he feigned mental illness and avoided a court marshal. They sent him to Valley Forge Army Hospital instead. A brief pause before he drifted back into the life he knew best. His first crimes had started long before. small robberies at 12, a climb into increasingly dangerous jobs, and then a killing during a bar fight that led to a manslaughter conviction.
[music] In 1967, he was given a sentence of 20 to 30 years. [music] They sent him to Attica, a prison everyone considered escape proof. Inmates there gave him the name Mad Dog, not for any violent outbursts, but for a salivary gland disorder he’d had since childhood. It was a cruel nickname in a place built on cruelty.
He stayed inside those walls for 4 years, planning and watching, moving through the routines of the facility with a kind of studied patience. Then came April 7th, 1971. Sullivan found a way past the perimeter, made it outside, and crossed into the parking lot. A driver waited there. Sullivan climbed in, got dropped near a bus station, and vanished into the world. [music] Attica had been breached.
For the first time anyone could remember, someone had beaten it. The [music] escape didn’t last. Weeks later, NYPD officers spotted him walking through Greenwich Village with a swordoff rifle. The moment ended with handcuffs and another trip back behind bars. A few years passed. His lawyer at the time was former US Attorney General Ramsay Clark.
And Clark helped him win parole in December 1975. Freedom didn’t soften him. [music] He drifted back into the criminal world and worked with the Genevese crime family. In the summer of 1976, he carried out a contract on two members of an Irish gang loyal to Mickey Spellain. Trouble between the Italian and Irish crews was rising, [music] and Sullivan became a weapon for the Genevese side.
In 1977, he married a woman named Gail. They had two sons, Ramsay and Kelly. And for a moment he looked like a man who might have wanted to hold on to something normal, but he never stepped away from the life. That same year, Spellelain was murdered. And though police treated Sullivan as a suspect, he was never charged.
He was also tied to the killing of Tom the Greek Capatos. Another target he pursued was Banano boss Carmine Cigar Galante. Sullivan spent much of the summer of 1978 trying to complete that contract, waiting for the right moment, but the opportunity never lined up. A year later, a separate team of gunmen walked into a Bushwick restaurant and shot Galante dead in broad daylight.
By then, Sullivan had a reputation as a disciplined hitman. He spoke openly years later about how he prepared for a job, running in a park, clearing his mind, rehearsing the steps in his head until the killing felt like something inevitable. Investigators believed he had taken the lives of 20 to 30 people.
His final contract came in 1981. The target was John Fiorino, a Teamsters vice president with reported mafia ties. Sullivan waited outside a restaurant near Rochester with a shotgun. When Fiorino appeared, Sullivan fired. The blast tore through the quiet street. He and his associate tried to escape, but their car lodged in a snowbank.
[music] The driver was caught. Sullivan burrowed into the snow and hid for nearly 8 hours before slipping away. Eventually, the police caught up with him and once he was in custody, they tied him to two other Long Island murders. In 1982, he stood trial for the Fiorino killing and the additional homicides. He was convicted and handed three life sentences.

Fsburg, New York is where he ended up inside Sullivan Correctional Facility, a maximum security prison built for men who aren’t meant to walk free again. His next chance at parole will come in, long after his time on this earth is expected to run out. >> [music] >> That’s the life of Joseph Mad Dog Sullivan.
The man who once slipped out of Attica, worked the streets as a professional killer, built a family, and stayed loyal to a world that never gave him peace. He was born on March 4th, 1947 into a world where loyalty could be the difference between power and a bullet, where a handshake could launch a fortune or end a life.
His name was Anthony Indelicato, son of Alons Sunny Red Indelicato, one of the Banano family’s heavyweight capos. In the neighborhoods that fed the mob, that lineage opened doors and created expectations. Anthony carried both. His world widened even more when he married Katherine Burke, the daughter of Jimmy Burke from the Lucesy family’s orbit.
It was the kind of union that tied two criminal bloodlines together the way old families in Europe once married for territory and influence. By the late 1970s, Anthony was already moving in the shadows of Banano politics. Philip Rastelli, the official boss, was in prison. Carmine Galante had seized control on the street, taking over rackets and pushing men aside with a confidence that frightened even other bosses.
Galante had created more enemies than allies, and the commission eventually gave its approval for him to be removed. On July 12th, 1979, Galante walked into Joe and Mary’s Italian-American restaurant in Bushwick for lunch. Unaware that the next hour of his life had already been decided, three gunmen entered the patio and opened fire.
Galante died where he sat, still wearing the cigar that had become his trademark. Two men at the table with him were killed as well. Anthony in Delicato played a role in that hit and [music] afterward he was rewarded with a promotion to Kappo. For a young man raised in the world of the Bananos, it was the kind of advancement that defined a career.
The years that followed were marked by violence inside the family. A split formed between two factions. One loyal to Rastelli under the guidance of Dominic Napoleitano and Joseph Msino and another consisting of three powerful captains Alons Sunny Red Indelicato, Philip Giaona and Dominic Tranchera. These men wanted the top seat for themselves.
When word reached Msino, he went to the commission and received permission to eliminate them before they could strike first. On May 5th, 1981, the three captains walked into a meeting in Brooklyn. None of them walked out. Sunny Red, Jacone, and Trinera were shot to death. The only man who survived that setup was Frank Leno, who had been brought there by Anony’s father and immediately shifted allegiance once the shooting stopped.
Anthony was meant to be killed as well, but he didn’t attend the meeting. His absence saved his life. Not long after, Napoleano turned to a man he believed was ready to earn his bones, Donnie Brasco, to take out Anthony. What Napoleano didn’t know was that Brasow was actually FBI Agent Joseph Piston. When the bureau pulled Piston from undercover duty, Napoleano was told his world collapsed and the attempt on Antony’s life faded into the files of an operation that would become one of the most [music] famous infiltrations in FBI history. In November 1986, federal
prosecutors put the Mafia Commission on trial. Anthony Indelicato stood among the defendants charged with the Galante murder. On November 19th, he was convicted. 2 months later, on January 13th, 1987, he was sentenced to 40 years in federal prison and fined $50,000. Lewisburg Penitentiary became his new address.
Prison has a way of creating unlikely meetings. During a visit to Lewisburg, a woman named Katherine Burke came to see another inmate, John Carglia. That meeting sparked something between her and Anthony. In 1992, inside the federal penitentiary in Teroot, Indiana, they were married. In 1998, he walked out of prison on parole, older, quieter, and still part of the Banano orbit.
But the life never lets go easily. In February 2001, a Banano associate named Frank Santoro threatened to kidnap the child of rising Cappo Vincent Vinnie Gorgeous Basiano. Within that world, a threat like that sealed a man’s fate. Indelicato took part in the murder that followed. Investigators were watching.
In July 2001, they caught him on videotape with Basiano and other mob figures and he was arrested for violating parole. The murder case came later. In February 2006, he was charged with raketeering and the killing of Santoro. 2 years later, in August 2008, he pleaded guilty. On December 16th, 2008, he was sentenced to 20 years. Danry Federal Correctional Institution became the backdrop of his next chapter.
14 years later on May 20th, 2022, he walked out once again. The Banano family welcomed him back and sometime around 2023, he was elevated to consigier, a position reserved for the man who advises the boss, settles disputes, and carries the weight of decades of history on his shoulders.
Anthony and Delicato’s life has been shaped by loyalty, bloodshed, and the quiet negotiations that guide a crime family through each passing era. He grew up in the shadow of a powerful father, survived a massacre that rewrote the family’s future and returned from prison, not as a relic, but as a counselor, one of the last men from that earlier generation still standing.
He came into the world as Samuel Lavine, born in either 1902 or 1903, far from the streets where his name would eventually carry weight. Toledo, Ohio was his starting point, but the Lower East Side of Manhattan became the place that shaped him. His family struggled, and by the time he was 8, he was hauling blocks of ice for a few dollars a week, weaving through crowded tenementss and narrow stairwells to keep food on the table. school never took.
He drifted through truent programs until he finally lied about his age and joined the United States Navy at 15. Life aboard ship was a fight in every sense. He said the other sailors taunted him for his red hair and his Jewish background, and more than once he let his fists do the answering.
At some point, he abandoned the uniform entirely, jumping ship in Panama and finding his own way back to New York. When he stepped onto the docks again, he wasn’t the same kid who had left. [music] The underworld of the city in the late 1920s and early 1930s was shifting, violent, and hungry for men who could handle themselves.
Lavine moved into those circles quietly, slipping into the ranks of the killers who became known as Murder Inc., a collection of Jewish and Italian hitmen who took orders from mob bosses with ambitions that stretched beyond the burers. By 1931, the Castellamares War had torn the old mafia apart. At the height of that conflict, Lavine was credited as the gunman who stood alongside Dutch Schultz’s left tenant, Abraham Bo Vineberg, during the murder of Joe the Boss, Maseria, inside a Coney Island restaurant. That killing helped
clear the path for a new order led by Charles Lucky Luchiano. Later that same year, Lavine took part in another strike that would rewrite American organized crime. Luchiano had grown tired of Salvator Maranzano and his plans to crown himself the undisputed king of the mafia. Myansky assembled a team of Jewish gunmen Lavine, Joe Adonis, Albert Anastasia, and Bugsy Seagull to walk into Maranzano’s office in the old Helmsley building.
They posed as government agents, rode the elevator to the ninth floor, disarmed the guards, and then shot and stabbed Maranzano to death. It was the end of the old Sicilian hierarchy and the beginning of the commission system that shaped the mob for generations. Inside Murder, Inc., Lavine wasn’t without problems.
He clashed with Charles the Bug Workman, a hitman whose appetite for contracts rubbed him the wrong way. [music] In later testimony, Abe Railus remembered Lavine complaining that whenever a job came his way, workmen found a way to steal it. Rivalries like that were common in their world, but it showed that even among killers, ego and competition found room.
Then around 1940, Murder Inc. began to fall apart. Detectives and prosecutors driven by RS’s cooperation rounded up scores of hitmen, rakateeers, and middlemen. Many [music] were executed or went to prison. Lavine’s name barely surfaced. He didn’t testify. He wasn’t indicted. And he didn’t wind up in a lineup. He simply stepped out of sight.
For decades, no one could say for certain where he’d gone. Occasional details surfaced later. According to the son of a Lower East Side funeral home owner, Lavine was still alive and on their payroll into the mid 1960s. They gave him a weekly $200 check so he could show legitimate income, a quiet arrangement that kept him off law enforcement’s radar.
He remained one of the few men connected to Murder Inc. who managed to avoid prison and an early grave. Another glimpse came from a Village Voice article in 2001. It placed Lavine in the newspaper and mail deliverers union during the 1970s, well into his 70s, helping manage the delicate balance of mob influence inside the industry.
The union had long been dominated by Irish, Italian, and Jewish crews. And Lavine was known for making sure each of the five families kept a piece of the action. The work included bootleg newspaper sales, gambling among the drivers, and lone sharking. It was the kind of quiet unseen control that brought in money without creating headlines.
[music] In the last years of his life, he was said to spend time in Little Italy. He visited the Naughty Pine social club run by Genevies Cappo Peter DeFeo and stopped into the Revenite, a building that would later become famous [music] as John Goty’s headquarters. Lavine moved through those rooms like a man who had earned the right to sit in a corner and watch the younger generation hustle for relevance.
He had a son, a kid who eventually found his own way into mob trouble. It was a reminder that the life has a long shadow and that it rarely ends at one generation. Samuel Red Lavine died on April 7th, 1972. In the end, he left behind a career that had been violent, secretive, and strangely durable. He lived through the rise of Lucky Luciano, watched the old world fall, and walked away from Murder Inc.
when almost no one else managed to do the same. He slipped into old age with no headlines, no trials, and no final reckoning. One of the quiet survivors of a bloody era. It started on the streets of Graves End, Brooklyn, [music] where the subway rattled overhead and kids learned early how to defend themselves or disappear into the background.
Thomas Patera was born there on December 2nd, 1954. the son of Joseph Patera, a candy salesman who hauled boxes to neighborhood concession stands, and Katherine Begowski, who came from German and Polish family lines. People who grew up around them would later say the Peteras kept a modest home and kept to themselves.
Even future mob figure John Elite would claim he knew the family. A small detail that shows how tightlyk knit that part of Brooklyn could be. Tommy had a thin voice, a restless imagination, and not much luck with the other kids. Teachers at David Aboody Junior High School remembered him for staring out the window more than anything he said in class.
He wanted to play baseball, but the bullying kept him off the team. One night, fueled by anger and embarrassment, he broke back into the school and stole the team’s equipment, selling it to fences in the neighborhood. He was arrested, charged as a juvenile, and the record was sealed. The incident hung over him anyway, a reminder of how badly he wanted to rewrite his place in the world.
Around that time, he walked into a dojo in Sheep’s Head Bay. The quiet of the mats and the discipline of the training pulled at him in a way nothing else had. He lifted weights, studied Kyokushin strategy, watched kung fu films late into the night, [music] and treated martial arts like a blueprint for becoming someone new. By then, he had already soaked up every frame of the Green Hornet and the charisma of Bruce Lee. The fascination took over his life.

He grew his hair long, read eastern philosophy, and adopted the food, the movement, and the attitude of the fighters he admired. His talent became hard to ignore. After winning a Kumite tournament, he earned a chance to train in Tokyo under Shihan Hiroshi Masumi. He spent 27 months there, learning the ways of Koryu ninjutsu, practicing with tonfur, nunchucks, and katanas, and shaping his body and mind to match the image he’d carried since childhood.
His mother and aunt Angelina flew across the world to see him, and they hardly recognized the calm, disciplined young man who greeted them. When his scholarship ended, he took a job in a chopsticks factory to keep himself afloat. Friends back home eventually settled on a nickname for him. They called him Tommy Karate, even though his real specialty was something far older and far more obscure.
When he returned to Brooklyn, the discipline and the training had hardened into something else. He was drawn into the Banano crime family, a world that rewarded precision, loyalty, and the ability to handle violence without flinching. He attached himself to a faction led by Alons, Sunny Red, Indelicato, Frank Lino, Dominic Trencher, and Philip Jacone.
These men were at odds with the official leadership of the family, and the streets felt on the edge of a storm. In 1981, the storm arrived. Joseph Msino and Dominic Napolitano arranged the murders of Indelicato, Trinera and Jacone inside a club partly owned by Sammy Graano. When the shooting stopped, the [music] balance of power shifted.
Msino extended a kind of peace to the remaining members of the faction and Peter settled into Leno’s crew under the watch of Consiliary Anthony Sparrow. During the 1980s, he was formally inducted, becoming a maidman. By then he had gained a reputation for being effective, [music] quiet, and utterly committed. On August 29th, 1988, law enforcement later alleged that Peter and Vincent Kjak Jatino had carried out an ambush on Wilfred Willy Boy Johnson, a driver and longtime associate of John Goty.
Goty had learned Johnson had been informing since the mid 1960s. Johnson was shot dead on his way to a car. Prosecutors charged Peter with the murder, but the jury acquitted him. [music] His circle tightened around Anthony Sparrow’s Bath Beach crew, a group involved in extortion, drugs, lone sharking, and robberies of dealers who wouldn’t be able to report the crime.
Two of Patera’s associates, Lloyd Mell and Frank Martini, killed a pair of Colombian traffickers and grabbed 16 kilos of cocaine. Their getaway car, a stick shift neither man could drive, ended up abandoned in a parking garage with the bodies still in the trunk. Martini fled to Sicily. The pattern of violence continued.
Investigators would later say that Peter murdered a Middle Eastern drug dealer named Tala Sixik inside a Brooklyn apartment. They accused him of shooting Six four times in the back, dismembering the remains, and burying the parts in a hidden dumping ground. Years later, police found six of Patera’s alleged victims in a Staten Island graveyard near the William T. Davis Wildlife Refuge.
The bodies had been decapitated [music] and the heads placed in separate graves. Detectives believed he did that to slow down any attempt to identify the dead through dental records. The stories that emerged about his methods painted a portrait of a man who approached killing like a kind of grizzly craft.
He studied decomposition, chose Staten Island’s damp soil because he believed it would break down remains faster, and buried his victims deep [music] to defeat police dogs. He wrapped remains in plastic or packed them inside suitcases. What he couldn’t resist were the trophies, small items of jewelry or belongings that connected him to the dead.
On June 4th, 1990, federal authorities indicted him on charges of running a drug crew and carrying out seven murders, including the Johnson case. Investigators believed the real number could be far higher. They said his organization moved more than 220 lb of cocaine a year, multiple kilos of heroin, and large quantities of marijuana. When they searched his apartment in Graves End, they found a stockpile of automatic weapons.
knives, swords, and a small library filled with titles like the hitman’s handbook. A shift came from inside his own crew. Frank Gangi, the nephew of Genevie’s Capo Rosario Gangi, had been arrested for driving under the influence. While sitting in a cell, he began to unravel. One confession led to another and soon he was telling investigators about murders he had committed with Peter, including one in which Peter allegedly stabbed a drug dealer named Marrick Kacharski over and over before cutting his throat.
At trial, prosecutor David W. Shapiro laid out each killing in stark detail. He described torture, slow shootings, and a pattern of barbaric behavior meant to send messages no one could misunderstand. DEA agents testified about digging up the graves. The government sought the death penalty. Defense lawyer David A.
Runa urged the jury to look at Peter’s lack of previous convictions and the deals given to other men who had also taken part in murders. Some of the killings happened before the federal death penalty law had taken effect, which meant life sentences were the maximum. His family members testified about the version of Tommy they knew at home, hoping to pull him back from [music] the brink.
On June 25th, 1992, the jury convicted him of six murders and a major drug conspiracy. [music] They rejected the death sentence. Judge Reena Raji looked directly at him when she sentenced him in October, reminding him of the way his victims had died before handing down life in prison. [music] Peter smiled and gave a thumbs up to reporters, relieved at the outcome.
While he sat in federal custody, he heard that Gangi was trying to shave time off his 10-year sentence. Peter was furious. He told people he believed that if Gangi felt any remorse for the murders, he’d serve his time quietly. Judge Ragi rejected the request. Years passed. In 2012, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals denied Patera’s motion for DNA testing on weapons and evidence connected to three murders.
As of 2017, he was held at the United States Penitentiary McCreary in Kentucky. His Bureau of Prisons number is 29465-053. [music] That’s where Tommy Peter’s story sits now. Far from the streets of Graves End, far from the quiet dojoos he once studied in, and far from the hidden burial grounds that haunted the investigations, the man who built himself through discipline and then reshaped that discipline into violence will spend the rest of his days behind the walls of a federal penitentiary.
