The big heist The real story of the Lufthansa heist, the Mafia, and murder

Anthony M. DeStefano

Book - 2017

One of the biggest scores in Mafia history, the Lufthansa Airlines heist of 1978 has become the stuff of Mafia legend--and a decades-long investigation that continues to this day. Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Anthony DeStefano sheds new light on this legendary unsolved case using recent evidence from the 2015 trial of eighty-year-old Mafia don Vincent Asaro, who for the first time speaks out on his role in the fateful Lufthansa heist. This blistering you-are-there account takes you behind the headlines and inside the ranks of America's infamous crime families--with never-before-told stories, late-breaking news, and bombshell revelations: * New details on the heist's planning: who was involved, how they pulled it off, and what r...eally happened to the almost $6 million in cash and jewels they stole from JFK Airport * Why suspected heist participant Vincent Asaro was found NOT GUILTY of all charges--racketeering, theft, and murder--even after being observed by the FBI for more than three decades * The shocking discovery of human bones in a Queens home belonging to a relative of Jimmy Burke, the homicidal Lucchese crime family associate who assembled the Lufthansa heist team--and masterminded the caper, then the biggest cash robbery in American history. * The eye-opening testimony of gangsters-turned-informants Salvatore Vitale and Gaspar Valenti--and what it reveals about the Mafia code of silence known as Omerta * The greed, betrayal, murder, and other frightening insights into the Bonanno and Lucchese crime families * Disturbing claims about how some members of the NYPD leaked information to mobster Jimmy Burke and may have helped hide evidence of a mob murder victim's demise An invaluable addition to any crime library, this is the most complete, thorough, and up-to-date account of the Lufthansa heist currently available. Pulitzer-Prize winner Anthony DeStefano draws from his years of experience reporting on the mob for New York Newsday--as well as his firsthand coverage of the Asaro indictment and attendence at the trial--to expose the all-too-human heart of organized crime in America. The Big Heist is thrilling, shocking, and impossible to put down.

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Subjects
Genres
True crime stories
Published
New York : Citadel Press 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Anthony M. DeStefano (author)
Physical Description
vi, 266 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-249) and index.
ISBN
9780806538303
  • Introduction
  • 1. The Message from the Bones
  • 2. "The Feds Are All Over ..."
  • 3. A Goodfella's Lament
  • 4. "Super Thief"
  • 5. "We Will Get You"
  • 6. Tales of the Gold Bug
  • 7. "I Got a Couple of Million"
  • 8. The Ring
  • 9. "My God, You Lost Millions"
  • 10. The Friends Who Hurt You
  • 11. "See, Big Mouth"
  • 12. Dead Fellas ... and Gals
  • 13. The Shakedown Guy
  • 14. "We're in Trouble"
  • 15. Never Say Never
  • 16. Dead Men Told No Tales
  • 17. "Score of Scores"
  • 18. "Come Dressed"
  • 19. "This Is It"
  • 20. All in the Family
  • 21. "What Is This, Watergate?"
  • 22. "Free!"
  • Epilogue
  • Lufthansa Roll Call
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Veteran Mafia chronicler DeStefano (Gangland New York: The Places and Faces of Mob History) serves up a comprehensive account of the legendary 1978 heist at New York's JFK Airport, including the recent indictment of Vincent Asaro, an elderly member of the Bonanno crime family, who was charged and acquitted in 2015, decades after the theft. DeStefano traces the arc of Asaro's Mafia career before delving into allegations made by his cousin Gaspare Valenti, a fellow organized-crime associate, who testified that Asaro took part in the robbery. Though the book melds an impressive amount of material into a coherent narrative, it's not all that suspenseful, especially for those familiar with the crime, which is documented in other accounts such as Nicholas Pileggi's Wiseguys (1985). DeStefano's insights into the more recent material, such as the trial of Asaro, aren't enough to sustain interest. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Newsday reporter DeStefano (Gangland New York) details the 2015 trial of longtime (and almost 80-year-old) Bonanno crime family captain Vincent Asaro on federal racketeering charges. Asaro joined the family business: his father was a Bonanno captain, his uncle Michael Zaffarano was the Times Square porn/peep show magnate who made a lot of money from the sale of his properties when New York City cleaned up the area, and his son Jerome eventually usurped him in rank and power. Asaro's cousin -Gaspare Valenti, who had been his "partner in crime" for many years, became the star government informant against him. In addition to the usual racketeering charges (robbery, fencing, loan-sharking), the charges against Asaro included the long-unsolved murder of low-level associate Paul Katz and the accusation that Asaro was involved in the 1978 Lufthansa "big heist" when approximately $6 million in cash and jewelry were stolen from the JFK airport. By the time of the trial, most of those involved in the heist had either taken a deal or were long dead. VERDICT While a good coda to Goodfellas, a must-purchase only for extensive true crime collections.-Karen Sandlin -Silverman, Mt. Ararat Middle Sch., Topsham, ME © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A straightforward update to the notorious 1978 Lufthansa Airlines heist.Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter DeStefano (Gangland New York: The Places and Faces of Mob History, 2015, etc.) understands the difficulty of opening new aspects of a crime immortalized in journalism, memoirs, and the film Goodfellas: "Of all the Mafia heists, rip-offs, scores, and plunders, none has been more iconic a part of American popular culture than the brazen [Lufthansa] robbery." The author focuses on the 2015 trial of Vincent Asaro, an aged survivor of the era's Five Families crews. Asaro, whose alleged participation in the crime had not been recognized, was wiretapped over several years for the FBI by his cousin Gaspare Valenti, another low-level mobster. The tapes revealed both men scuffling for years as their influence faded within the mob, itself more constricted in today's New York City, as well as the chilling moment when Asaro realized Valenti's betrayal. DeStefano leads up to Asaro's trial with a narrative re-creation of the crime, its murderous aftermath, and the notorious figures involved, including Lucchese family underboss Paul Vario, robbery mastermind Jimmy Burke, and turncoat Henry Hill, the protagonist of Goodfellas. The author tries to counter the ambiguity surrounding the crime, noting, "while Hill's public statements on the heist excluded Asaro...he had actually claimed to law enforcement as far back as 1983 that Asaro was involved." Following the heist and the murders of many participants, Asaro ran stolen car operations for a Bonanno family crew, finding himself marginalized over time: "Part of the problem was Asaro's volatility and temper." Despite Valenti's testimony, Asaro was acquitted at trial, a startling development. Though Asaro's connection to Lufthansa still seems inconclusive, DeStefano paints him as a poignant if unlikable character, a criminal journeyman who survived a violent life to watch his status, wealth, and cherished lifestyle slip away. The book will please Mafia completists, but the overall arc will feel more familiar than revelatory to most true-crime readers. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.