StandUpGuy wrote: ↑Sun Jan 12, 2020 2:17 pm
Sorry for asking, but is that really the Chins house from those 90’s pictures with the red doors? It looks nothing like it..
Looking at the address on Google Maps, maybe the building got a new paint job at some point? Same tree out front and Chinese place on the left.
StandUpGuy wrote: ↑Sun Jan 12, 2020 2:17 pm
Sorry for asking, but is that really the Chins house from those 90’s pictures with the red doors? It looks nothing like it..
The one you are referring to with the red doors is on the upper east side.
The picture posted above is the one on Sullivan St in Greenwich village.
Nice rug ya got here kid...it’d be great for a craps game
StandUpGuy wrote: ↑Sun Jan 12, 2020 2:17 pm
Sorry for asking, but is that really the Chins house from those 90’s pictures with the red doors? It looks nothing like it..
Thanks guys.
Thanks for the remark StandUpGuy, it was in fact his mother's (Yolanda Gigante) apartment :
Even when not under indictment, he prepared for inevitable charges (knowing the FBI was watching him). Almost every day he would return from his residence to his mother's apartment at 225 Sullivan Street in Greenwich Village and emerge dressed in a bathrobe and pajamas or a windbreaker and shabby trousers. Accompanied by one or two bodyguards, he crossed the street to the Triangle Civic Improvement Association — a dingy storefront club that served as his headquarters—where he played pinochle and held whispered conversations with his associates.
Here is Chin's house in Old Tappan, New Jersey :
By the 1980s, Chin grew even more eccentric. He had two separate families, and a wife and a mistress both named Olympia. One family lived in Old Tappan New Jersey and the other in a posh Upper East Side townhouse, just off Park Avenue, located at 67 East 77th Street. The luxurious white bricked home was purchased by record executive Morris Levy in 1983 for $490,000 and gifted to Gigante’s mistress for a mere $16,000.
Here is Chin's residence in the Upper East Side of Manhattan :
Here is also the location of his famous social club (Triangle Civic Improvement Association) in Greenwich Village, Manhattan :