Mob Boss Of Gambino Crime Family Found Fatally Shot In His Home

FBI perp walk members of the Gambino crime family. Frank Cali & 61 other Costa Nostra associates were arrested and charged with federal racketeering charges as part of Operation Old Bridge. Prosecutors claimed th... FBI perp walk members of the Gambino crime family. Frank Cali & 61 other Costa Nostra associates were arrested and charged with federal racketeering charges as part of Operation Old Bridge. Prosecutors claimed that Cali acted as the Gambino ambassador to the Sicilian mobsters and as a liaison between D'Amico and teh Sicilian connections to the Inzerillo family. Cali was charged with racketeering, extortion, and conspiracy along with D'Amica and DiMaria.(Photo By: Egan-Chin, Debbie/NY Daily News via Getty Images) MORE LESS
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NEW YORK (AP) — A man said by federal prosecutors to have been a top leader of New York’s notorious Gambino crime family was shot and killed Wednesday on Staten Island.

Francesco “Franky Boy” Cali, 53, was found with multiple gunshot wounds to his body at his home in the borough’s Todt Hill section just after 9 p.m.

Cali was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. There have been no arrests.

No other information was provided by police.

Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn had referred to Cali in court filings in recent years as the underboss of the Gambino organization, related through marriage to the Inzerillo clan in the Sicilian Mafia.

Multiple press accounts since 2015 said Cali had ascended to the top spot in the gang, although he never faced a criminal charge saying so.

His only mob-related criminal conviction came a decade ago, when Cali pleaded guilty in an extortion conspiracy involving a failed attempt to build a NASCAR track on Staten Island. He was sentenced to 16 months in federal prison and was released in 2009.

The last crime family boss to be shot in New York City was Paul Castellano. The Gambino crime boss was assassinated outside Sparks Steakhouse in Manhattan in 1985.

The Gambino Family was once among the most powerful criminal organizations in the U.S., but federal prosecutions in the 1980s and 1990s sent its top leaders to prison and diminished its reach.

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