Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
Moderator: Capos
Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
SUBSCRIBE NOW
QUEENS BARBER SHOT TO DEATH BY 3 IN MASKS
By Selwyn Raab
Sept. 11, 1987
Credit...The New York Times Archives
See the article in its original context from
September 11, 1987, Section B, Page 1Buy Reprints
New York Times subscribers* enjoy full access to TimesMachine—view over 150 years of New York Times journalism, as it originally appeared.
SUBSCRIBE
*Does not include Crossword-only or Cooking-only subscribers.
About the Archive
This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s print archive, before the start of online publication in 1996. To preserve these articles as they originally appeared, The Times does not alter, edit or update them.
Occasionally the digitization process introduces transcription errors or other problems. Please send reports of such problems to archive_feedback@nytimes.com.
Three masked men walked into an Ozone Park, Queens, barbershop yesterday and, in a barrage of gunfire, killed a barber as he reclined in a chair watching television.
Although detectives said that at least 10 shots were fired and that the gunfire must have been heard in the residential neighborhood, the police were not called for 30 minutes.
Law-enforcement officials said the victim, Vito Scaglione, 36 years old, had ties to organized-crime figures and was suspected of being involved in narcotics trafficking.
In the early 1980's, John Gotti, whom law-enforcement officials have identified as the head of the Gambino organized-crime group, frequently was a customer at the scene of the slaying, the Father & Sons Haircutters, at 83-01 101st Avenue, according to Lieut. Remo Franceschini of the police. 'They're Hits,' the Police Say
Police officials said, however, Mr. Gotti was not linked to the shooting.
The slaying was the fourth gangland-style death in the city in a week. But police officials said they had no evidence the shootings were connected.
''They're hits,'' the deputy commissioner for public information, Alice T. McGillion, said. ''But as far as we know, they are not related,''
You have 4 free articles remaining.
Subscribe to The Times
Police officials also said they had no information linking the murder to the shooting and wounding of another barber, Amedeo Azzaro, in his home in Astoria on Tuesday.
The slaying of Mr. Scaglione was similar to one of the most notorious Mafia murders in the city, the assassination of the head of the Gambino crime family, Albert Anastasia, on Oct. 25, 1957, as he was having his hair cut at the old Park Sheraton Hotel on Seventh Avenue and 55th Street. Convictions in Weapons Case
Mr. Scaglione, who, the police said, lived at 1070 Frances Drive in Valley Stream, L.I., was convicted in 1981 in Federal District Court in Brooklyn on a charge of providing an unlicensed 9-millimeter semiautomatic pistol and a silencer to an undercover Federal informer.
Mr. Scaglione's brother-in-law, Dominick Cataldo, who, the authorities described as an important figure in the Colombo crime family, was also convicted in the case.
After pleading guilty, Mr. Scaglione was placed on probation. Mr. Cataldo was sentenced to eight years in a Federal prison.
''He did not look like a typical wise guy, or a tough guy,'' said Laura A. Brevetti, who, as a lawyer with the Federal Organized Crime Strike Force in the Eastern District, prosecuted Mr. Scaglione on a gun charge in 1981. ''He was a mild, almost meek-looking person.''
Deputy Chief Joseph R. Borrelli, commander of Queens detectives, said Mr. Scaglione was alone in the shop at 10 A.M. when the gunmen entered. They shot him at close range in the face, neck and chest, detectives said. Spent .380-caliber cartridges were scattered on the floor.
Chief Borrelli said Mr. Scaglione's body was found 30 minutes after the shooting by his brother Nino.
Later, several witnesses told detectives they had heard the gunfire and saw two men wearing ski masks and a third in a stocking mask drive away in a green and white 1983 or 1984 Chevrolet.
Police officials said detectives did not press the witnesses for their reasons for failing to call the police. Ties to Crime Groups
Mr. Scaglione, the police said, was a partner in the shop with his father, Salvatore, who was said to be in Italy.
A law-enforcement official said that in addition to his connections to the Colombo group, Mr. Scaglione had been observed with associates of the Gambino crime family.
Lieutenant Franceschini, the head of detectives in the Queens District Attorney's office, said that in the early 80's, Mr. Scaglione's brother, known as ''Frank the Barber,'' was occasionally called to cut the hair of Mr. Gotti, at Mr. Gotti's hangout, the Bergen Hunt and Fish Club, in South Ozone Park, Queens.
Lieutenant Franceschini said that Mr. Gotti had been observed at the Scagliones' shop in the early 80's, before he became the purported head of the Gambino group, but that he had not been seen there in recent years.
The police said Frank Scaglione has been missing since July 17, 1982. On that day, ''Frank the Barber,'' accompanied by two other men - John Cavallo, 37, of 101-12 101st Avenue, and Eugene Gotti, 40, the brother of John Gotti - had an argument with Raymond Mareno, a bartender, at the 101 Bar, on the corner of 101st Street and 101st Avenue in Ozone Park.
The police said the argument spilled out onto the street, where Frank Scaglione quarreled with Mr. Mareno and shot and killed him. Frank Scaglione has not been seen since the shooting and no one was charged in the case, the police said.
QUEENS BARBER SHOT TO DEATH BY 3 IN MASKS
By Selwyn Raab
Sept. 11, 1987
Credit...The New York Times Archives
See the article in its original context from
September 11, 1987, Section B, Page 1Buy Reprints
New York Times subscribers* enjoy full access to TimesMachine—view over 150 years of New York Times journalism, as it originally appeared.
SUBSCRIBE
*Does not include Crossword-only or Cooking-only subscribers.
About the Archive
This is a digitized version of an article from The Times’s print archive, before the start of online publication in 1996. To preserve these articles as they originally appeared, The Times does not alter, edit or update them.
Occasionally the digitization process introduces transcription errors or other problems. Please send reports of such problems to archive_feedback@nytimes.com.
Three masked men walked into an Ozone Park, Queens, barbershop yesterday and, in a barrage of gunfire, killed a barber as he reclined in a chair watching television.
Although detectives said that at least 10 shots were fired and that the gunfire must have been heard in the residential neighborhood, the police were not called for 30 minutes.
Law-enforcement officials said the victim, Vito Scaglione, 36 years old, had ties to organized-crime figures and was suspected of being involved in narcotics trafficking.
In the early 1980's, John Gotti, whom law-enforcement officials have identified as the head of the Gambino organized-crime group, frequently was a customer at the scene of the slaying, the Father & Sons Haircutters, at 83-01 101st Avenue, according to Lieut. Remo Franceschini of the police. 'They're Hits,' the Police Say
Police officials said, however, Mr. Gotti was not linked to the shooting.
The slaying was the fourth gangland-style death in the city in a week. But police officials said they had no evidence the shootings were connected.
''They're hits,'' the deputy commissioner for public information, Alice T. McGillion, said. ''But as far as we know, they are not related,''
You have 4 free articles remaining.
Subscribe to The Times
Police officials also said they had no information linking the murder to the shooting and wounding of another barber, Amedeo Azzaro, in his home in Astoria on Tuesday.
The slaying of Mr. Scaglione was similar to one of the most notorious Mafia murders in the city, the assassination of the head of the Gambino crime family, Albert Anastasia, on Oct. 25, 1957, as he was having his hair cut at the old Park Sheraton Hotel on Seventh Avenue and 55th Street. Convictions in Weapons Case
Mr. Scaglione, who, the police said, lived at 1070 Frances Drive in Valley Stream, L.I., was convicted in 1981 in Federal District Court in Brooklyn on a charge of providing an unlicensed 9-millimeter semiautomatic pistol and a silencer to an undercover Federal informer.
Mr. Scaglione's brother-in-law, Dominick Cataldo, who, the authorities described as an important figure in the Colombo crime family, was also convicted in the case.
After pleading guilty, Mr. Scaglione was placed on probation. Mr. Cataldo was sentenced to eight years in a Federal prison.
''He did not look like a typical wise guy, or a tough guy,'' said Laura A. Brevetti, who, as a lawyer with the Federal Organized Crime Strike Force in the Eastern District, prosecuted Mr. Scaglione on a gun charge in 1981. ''He was a mild, almost meek-looking person.''
Deputy Chief Joseph R. Borrelli, commander of Queens detectives, said Mr. Scaglione was alone in the shop at 10 A.M. when the gunmen entered. They shot him at close range in the face, neck and chest, detectives said. Spent .380-caliber cartridges were scattered on the floor.
Chief Borrelli said Mr. Scaglione's body was found 30 minutes after the shooting by his brother Nino.
Later, several witnesses told detectives they had heard the gunfire and saw two men wearing ski masks and a third in a stocking mask drive away in a green and white 1983 or 1984 Chevrolet.
Police officials said detectives did not press the witnesses for their reasons for failing to call the police. Ties to Crime Groups
Mr. Scaglione, the police said, was a partner in the shop with his father, Salvatore, who was said to be in Italy.
A law-enforcement official said that in addition to his connections to the Colombo group, Mr. Scaglione had been observed with associates of the Gambino crime family.
Lieutenant Franceschini, the head of detectives in the Queens District Attorney's office, said that in the early 80's, Mr. Scaglione's brother, known as ''Frank the Barber,'' was occasionally called to cut the hair of Mr. Gotti, at Mr. Gotti's hangout, the Bergen Hunt and Fish Club, in South Ozone Park, Queens.
Lieutenant Franceschini said that Mr. Gotti had been observed at the Scagliones' shop in the early 80's, before he became the purported head of the Gambino group, but that he had not been seen there in recent years.
The police said Frank Scaglione has been missing since July 17, 1982. On that day, ''Frank the Barber,'' accompanied by two other men - John Cavallo, 37, of 101-12 101st Avenue, and Eugene Gotti, 40, the brother of John Gotti - had an argument with Raymond Mareno, a bartender, at the 101 Bar, on the corner of 101st Street and 101st Avenue in Ozone Park.
The police said the argument spilled out onto the street, where Frank Scaglione quarreled with Mr. Mareno and shot and killed him. Frank Scaglione has not been seen since the shooting and no one was charged in the case, the police said.
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
-
- Full Patched
- Posts: 1989
- Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 12:41 pm
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
I thought it was Anastasia the first few seconds looking at it
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
Went on google maps and moved about two doors down grab this screen capture at 83-09 101st ave. Looks like an old italian business of some kind with the red/white/green awning. Ghosts of the past. The passerby have no idea it was an italian area.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
That's still there ? If that's the place I'm thinking of they've been there for decades selling bibles and rosary's , Candles etc.. All types of religious materials
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
JoJo Corrozzo's old club was about 5 or 6 blocks away and Ronnie oneArm Trucchio old place was on 77th st a few blocks away Steve's fireside Inn
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
Lotsa Gambino's!Bklyn21 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 24, 2019 10:00 pmJoJo Corrozzo's old club was about 5 or 6 blocks away and Ronnie oneArm Trucchio old place was on 77th st a few blocks away Steve's fireside Inn
Re: Queens Barber shot to death 1987 article
Yea lolBklyn21 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 24, 2019 10:00 pmJoJo Corrozzo's old club was about 5 or 6 blocks away and Ronnie oneArm Trucchio old place was on 77th st a few blocks away Steve's fireside Inn