Santo Trafficante Jr.’s Deathbed Confession Exposed – HT

 

 

 

November 17th, 1987, 3:42 in the afternoon, a hospital bed at Mi Hospital in Duneden, Florida. Santo Trafocanti Jr., 72 years old, closed his eyes for the last time. No bullets, no indictments pending, no handcuffs on the bed rail, just heart failure, a wife holding his hand, and a son-in-law who would later claim the old man whispered a confession about John F.

 Kennedy in his final hours. The most dangerous mob boss in American history died the way almost none of them ever do. In bed on his own terms, a free man. You have to understand who this was. Santo Trafocante Jr. ran Tampa, Florida for nearly four decades. He owned Havana before Castro. He sat in the same room with CIA officers plotting to kill a head of state.

 He survived the Kaf hearings, the Appalachin raid, the Mlullen Committee, the Church Committee, and half a dozen federal grand juries. The FBI opened file after file on him. Agents spent careers trying to put him away. And not one of them, not a single one, ever made a charge stick. Zero convictions. 72 years on Earth. 50 of them in organized crime.

 A perfect record. This is the story of the quietest godfather America ever produced. The man who turned a cigar city into a money printing machine, who partnered with the United States government to assassinate Fidel Castro, who may have known exactly who killed a president, and who walked through every trap the Justice Department laid for him like the floor wasn’t even there.

 This is Santo Trefante Jr., Tampa’s silent boss. The one nobody talks about until now. Here’s the hook. Every other famous mafia story ends in handcuffs or a body bag in a Brooklyn alley. Trafficanti didn’t. He outlived Meer Lansky. He outlived Carlos Marello’s freedom. He outlasted Sam Gianana who was shot frying sausage in his basement.

 And when he finally died, he took secrets with him that three presidential commissions couldn’t pry loose. The question isn’t how he got away with it. The question is why nobody has ever really told you about him. Santo Trafocanti Jr. was born November 15th, 1914 in Tampa, Florida. His father, Santo Trafocante, Senior, had come from Sansiana, Sicily, a town so small you could walk across it in 10 minutes.

 The old man landed in Tampa around the turn of the century and found his way into the Bolita rackets. Bolita is Spanish for little ball. It was a numbers game run out of Eore City, the Cuban Italian Spanish neighborhood where cigar workers bet pennies on which ball got pulled from a sack. Pennies multiplied by thousands of players. Thousands of players multiplied by 365 days. The old man got rich on pennies.

Young Sento grew up in a two-story woodframe house on 12th Avenue in Eore City. He was quiet, serious. He read books. While other mob kids were punching each other in the schoolyard, Santo was studying his father’s ledgers. He finished Hillsboro High School. That alone made him unusual. Most Tampa wise guys in the 30s didn’t finish 8th grade.

He wore glasses. He dressed like a bank clerk. He didn’t swear. He didn’t raise his voice. Agents who surveiled him for decades would write the same thing in their reports over and over again. Subject appears nondescript. Subject blends into background. Subject could be mistaken for an accountant. That was the point.

By 1940, Santo Jr. was running numbers for his father. By 1946, he was his father’s chief lieutenant. The Trafocanti organization controlled every Bolita wheel in Tampa, every bookmaking operation, every after hours club, and most of the local politicians. The family’s revenue at that point, according to later Treasury Department estimates, ran close to $25 million a year in 1946.

That’s over 400 million in today’s money, coming out of a midsized Florida city. But Tampa was a starter home. The real prize was 90 mi south across the Florida straits. Havana. In 1946, Santo Jr. traveled to Cuba for the first time. He met with Meer Lansky at the Hotel Nasanel.

 Lansky had a vision, a tropical Las Vegas, legal casinos, no state lines. A dictator named Fgencio Batista who would take a cut and let the mob run everything else. Lansky needed partners. He needed families who could move cash, run games honestly enough to keep the whales coming back and handle security without making a mess.

 The Trafocantes were perfect. Tampa was the nearest American port to Havana. They already had the shipping connections. They already had the political contacts. And young Santo, with his quiet manner and his decent Spanish, was the kind of man Batista’s people could sit across a table from. By 1953, Santo Jr. was running point on four Havana casinos, the Sanusi, the Commodoro, the Capri, and a piece of the Hotel Nasanal itself.

The skim, that’s the money pulled off the top before anything gets reported, ran an estimated $1 million a week across the American families by the late 1950s. Trafocanti’s personal cut made him one of the wealthiest mob figures in the country, and almost nobody outside the life knew his name.

 Here’s how the Havana operation actually worked. You have to picture it. A tourist from Chicago flies into Havana on a Panama flight. He checks into the Capri. He goes to the casino floor. He buys $500 in chips. He plays blackjack. He loses. The 500 goes into the dropbox. At the end of the night, the countroom opens that box.

 Before anything is counted for the Cuban government, for taxes, for the house records, a designated man, always a Trafocante man in Trafocante houses pulls a percentage off the top. That money goes into a separate bag. That bag goes into a courier’s suitcase. The courier flies to Tampa, Miami, or New Orleans.

 The cash gets washed through legitimate businesses, restaurants, vending companies, linen services, and emerges clean on the other side. Millions of dollars every week for years. His father died in August 1954. Santo Senior had been grooming Santo Jr. for a decade and the transition was seamless. No war, no bodies. Santo Jr. simply took the seat.

 He became the boss of the Trafocanti crime family at 39 years old. His first order of business was to tighten Havana. By 1957, he was effectively the American mob’s top man on the island. Then came New Year’s Eve, 1958. Fulgensio Batista fled Cuba at 3:00 in the morning on January 1st, 1959. Fidel Castro’s rebels came down from the Sierra Maestra.

 Within weeks, Castro nationalized the casinos. He rounded up American gangsters and on June 8th, 1959, Santo Trafocante Jr. was arrested in Havana and sent to Trescornneia, a detention camp outside the city. He spent months there. Some accounts say 75 days. Others say longer. What’s documented is that he was released under circumstances that have puzzled investigators ever since.

 Most American mobsters who got caught in Cuba lost everything. Trafocante walked out, flew home, and kept operating. Some say he bought his way out. Others have always claimed something stranger happened inside that camp. that Trafocanti had a visitor, a man who represented American interests who wanted to know if the Tampa boss would be open to a certain arrangement down the road.

 Which brings us to the moment this story stops being a mafia story and becomes something else entirely. 1960, the Central Intelligence Agency, operating under instructions from the Eisenhower administration and later the Kennedy administration decided to kill Fidel Castro. They needed deniability. They needed operators.

 They needed men with existing networks inside Cuba. So they did something that on paper should have been impossible. They reached out to the American mafia. The contact was made through Robert Mahu, a former FBI agent working as a private investigator for Howard Hughes. Mahu approached John Rosselli, a Chicago outfit man in Las Vegas.

 Roseli brought in Sam Gian Kana and Gian Kana brought in Santo Traficanti Jr. Traficanti had something the others didn’t. He had people still on the ground in Havana, former casino workers, bartenders, restaurant owners, a network of Cubans who had worked for him and still owed him. The plan was called Operation Mongoose. Poison pills, exploding cigars, contaminated diving suits.

 Some of it reads like a bad spy novel. What’s documented is that between 1960 and 1963, the CIA funneled money and resources to Trafocanti’s organization for the purpose of assassinating Fidel Castro. The Church Committee confirmed this in 1975. It’s on the record. The United States government paid Santo Trafocante Jr. to commit murder for the state.

 It never worked. the pills never got delivered or they got delivered and never used or they got delivered and the contact backed out. Accounts vary. There’s a theory, and it’s only a theory, but it’s a compelling one, that Trafocanti never intended to kill Castro at all, that he took the money, provided just enough cooperation to keep the checks coming, and may have even tipped off Castro’s intelligence service.

 Because think about it, a dead Castro brings a new Cuban government that might not welcome the mob back. A live Castro keeps American attention on the island, keeps pressure on the communists, and keeps Trafocanti’s enemies, the Cuban exiles, useful to the United States government. Some say Trafocanti played the CIA the way a casino plays a drunk.

 What’s undeniable is what happened on November 22nd, 1963. Dallas di plaza 12:30 in the afternoon John F. Kennedy was assassinated and Santo Trafocante Jr.’s name shows up in file after file after file. Here’s what’s documented. On September 11th, 1962, according to testimony later given to the House Select Committee on Assassinations, Trafocanti met with a Cuban exile named Joseé Alamman at the Scott Brian Hotel in Miami.

 Alamman later claimed Trafocanti said, and this is the quote in the committee record, Kennedy’s not going to make it to the election. He’s going to be hit. Alamman said he thought Trafocante meant Kennedy would lose the election. Trafocante clarified. He meant hit, killed. Haleman passed a polygraph on this statement.

Trafocante denied ever saying it. Both men are now dead. Then there’s Jack Ruby. Ruby, the Dallas nightclub owner who shot Lee Harvey Oswald 2 days after the assassination, had visited Cuba in 1959. He had visited Trescornia. He had, according to multiple witnesses, met with Santo Trafocante Jr. while Trafocante was being held there.

 The Warren Commission glossed over this. The House Select Committee on Assassinations, reporting in 1979, did not. Their final report concluded that Trafocanti had both the motive and the means to participate in a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy. They stopped short of saying he did, but they named him.

 In a government report on the murder of a sitting president and then decades later, Santo Trafocanti’s own lawyer, Frank Reggano, published a book in 1994. Reggano claimed that in March 1987, 8 months before his death, Trafocante said to him in Italian, quote, “We shouldn’t have killed Giovani. We should have killed Bobby.” Giovani means John.

 Bobby means Robert Kennedy, who was still alive in 1963 and running the Justice Department’s war on organized crime. Was it a confession? Was it an old man rambling? Was Reggano lying to sell books? Accounts vary. What’s documented is that the man who said it was one of the only three mafia figures along with Carlos Marello and Sam Gianana who the House Select Committee formerly named as having the motive means an opportunity to kill a president of the United States.

 But here’s what really makes Trafocanti different. The FBI knew all of this. The FBI had him under surveillance for decades. J. Edgar Hoover personally read reports on him and nothing stuck. Let me break down why. Trafficante never put anything in writing ever. No phone conversations that mattered. Every important meeting happened in person in a restaurant like the Colombia in Eore City or Laterita.

Always with ambient noise, always with his back to the wall, always with a trusted man watching the door. He spoke in fragments. He used Sicilian proverbs. He communicated through nods, through eye contact, through silence. FBI wiretaps on him pulled up almost nothing usable.

 Agents would listen to hours of tape and get weather reports, soccer scores, and complaints about his wife’s cooking. He lived modestly. No flashy cars, no ostentatious houses. He drove a Chevrolet. He lived in a middle-ass house in a middle-class neighborhood on Beayshore Boulevard. He went to mass. He visited his mother.

 He had lunch at the same diner every Tuesday. When agents surveiled him, they saw a retired businessman, not a godfather. His money was buried. Real estate trusts, nominee ownership, offshore accounts through Havana contacts, then through Bahamas contacts, then through Panama and the Caymans. Investigators who tried to trace traffic anti-w wealth in the 1970s gave up. The money was a maze.

 Every road led to another road. He almost never killed anyone directly. And he almost never ordered killings that could be traced. The Trafocanti family had maybe 15 to 20 made members at its peak. A tiny crew compared to the New York families, but it was tight. There were no informants. Nobody flipped. For 30 years, not one Trafocanti soldier cooperated with the government.

 That is statistically unheard of. And when the federal heat came, which it did again and again, Trevocante had the best lawyers money could buy and the patience of a Sicilian winter. He would sit in a federal grand jury room and take the fifth. He would show up at Senate hearings, Estus Kaf in 1951, John Mlen in 1958, the Church Committee in 1975, and say almost nothing.

 At Appalachian, New York on November 14th, 1957, when 60 mob bosses got caught at a summit meeting at Joseph Barbara’s house, Trafocanti was there. He was detained. He was photographed. He walked. No charges, no conviction. In 1966, he was arrested at Lestella restaurant in Queens, New York, along with Carlo Gambino, Thomas Lucesi, and a dozen others, the so-called little Appalachian.

 Charges dropped in 1986, a year before his death. He was finally indicted on a RICO case involving Bolita operations and kickbacks at McDell Air Force Base. He died before trial. Zero convictions. Zero. For 50 years of organized crime leadership, the last years were quieter. His health failed. He had heart problems dating back to the 1970s. He had multiple bypass surgeries.

He grew thinner. His eyes got hollow. He walked with a cane. He spent more time at his mother’s house, more time at St. Joseph’s Church, less time at the social clubs on 7th Avenue. His wife Josephine had been with him since 1938, 49 years. They had two daughters, Mary and Sarah. The girls were raised without knowing, not really knowing, what their father did.

 Mary would later say her father was the gentlest man she ever knew, that he read to her, that he cooked Sunday dinner, that he never once raised his voice in the house. People who heard her say that and only knew the FBI file did not know how to process both things being true. But both things were true. That’s the hardest part about men like Santo Trafocante.

 The monster and the father were the same man and neither one was a lie. On March 13th, 1987, Trafocante met with his lawyer, Frank Reggano, at a restaurant in Tampa. That was the meeting where he allegedly said the line about Giovani and Bobby. Eight months later, he was dead. His funeral was small, family only.

 He was buried at Laurel Lawn Cemetery in Tampa. The headstone is plain. No angels, no elaborate carvings, just a name, two dates, and the word father. The ripples went out for decades. His nephew, Frank Deedu, tried to hold the family together. He couldn’t. By the 1990s, the Tampa family had fractured into loose crews.

 The Bolita business had collapsed under state lotteryies. The Cuban connection was long dead. The Las Vegas and Atlantic City families had swallowed up the casino side of the business. What Trafocanti built, a shadow empire stretching from Tampa to Havana to Washington and back, didn’t survive him. It couldn’t. He was the only one who knew how all the pieces fit.

 The CIA connection stayed buried until 1975. When the Church Committee revealed the assassination plots, Trafocanti was already old and sick. He refused to testify in detail. He took the fifth. He admitted nothing and denied nothing in specific enough language to matter. The JFK files are still being released decade by decade.

 Every few years, another batch comes out. Trafocanti’s name keeps appearing. Memos, wiretap transcripts, informant reports. The picture that emerges is of a man who sat at the center of a dozen secret rooms at the same time. Mob boss, CIA asset, Cuban exile patron, Florida political fixer. Each role feeding the others. Each role providing cover for the others. Here’s what this story reveals.

The American mafia we think we know, the one from the movies, the one that gets shot in restaurants and dies in prison, is only half the story. That half is the loud half. The half that lost. The other half, the half that won, looks like Santo Trafocante Jr., quiet men in nondescript houses.

 Men who never left a fingerprint, never raised their voice, never made a mistake the FBI could use. men who understood that the greatest power isn’t being feared. It’s being forgotten. It’s being invisible. It’s dying old and rich in a hospital bed with your wife holding your hand while three generations of federal prosecutors try to figure out what you actually did and come up empty. Santo Trafocante Jr.

spent 50 years running one of the most profitable crime families in America. He sat across from CIA officers and agreed to kill a foreign head of state. He may have known the names of the men who killed John F. Kennedy. He died a free man in a country that never once convicted him of a crime. That’s not luck. That’s discipline.

 That’s decades of patience. That’s a man who understood something almost no other mob boss in American history ever figured out. The game is not to win. The game is to not lose. And the way you don’t lose is you never let them see you playing. That’s the real story of Tampa’s silent godfather. Not the bodies, not the millions, not even the secrets he took with him.

 It’s the quiet, the absolute disciplined, unbroken quiet of a man who understood that in the end, history only punishes the ones who make noise. If this story pulled you in, hit that subscribe button. We drop a new Mafia Talks documentary every week. Drop a comment below. What mob figure do you want us to uncover next? Tell us.

 

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