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Dominick Montiglio (born Dominick Anthony Santamaria; July 17, 1947 – June 27, 2021) was an American soldier, mobster and associate of the Gambino crime family who eventually became a government witness. In later years he became an artist and podcaster, through which he chronicled his life story.
Interviews are given by relatives and others, such as Bee Sedway, widow of Moe Sedway, detailing life in a crime family and what the mobsters were like. It also discusses the various illegal businesses the mobsters ran and legal ones it tried to influence, such as politics, government and entertainment.
Acting 1997–1998 – Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo – suffered heart attack and resigned; Acting 1998–2005 – Matthew "Matty the Horse" Ianniello – resigned when indicted in July 2005; Acting 2005–2008 – Daniel "Danny the Lion" Leo [80] – imprisoned 2008–2013; 2010–present – Liborio "Barney" Bellomo
Dominick Montiglio – former associate who testified in 1983. He attended the wake of Gambino underboss Frank Scalise in 1957 with his uncle and future Gambino capo Nino Gaggi. In 1973, he met Roy DeMeo, then an associate in the Gambino family, and Chris Rosenberg. He served as an errand boy for his uncle which required him to collect payments ...
In 1947, Gaggi's sister Marie gave birth to Dominick Montiglio. Her husband, and Montiglio's father, was boxer and deliveryman Anthony Santamaria. However, Gaggi was the dominant personality in the household, eventually leading to Santamaria's estrangement from his family. Gaggi soon became Montiglio's surrogate father.
When Andrew Terry asked his then-6-year-old daughter, Abby, to sit in on a virtual job interview, she happily obliged. Little did Abby know, her dad was playing an epic prank that would go viral.
Netflix's Monsters reexamined Dominique Dunne's brutal murder while exploring her father Dominick Dunne's connection to the Menéndez brothers’ infamous case. During the seventh episode, which ...
Chris Rosenberg grew up in Canarsie on a block dominated by Italian-Americans. He attended Samuel J. Tilden High School in East Flatbush, Brooklyn.Despite the Mafia rule that only full Italians could be "made", or officially inducted into the organization, Rosenberg reportedly believed that his earning abilities and willingness to murder might eventually lead to his becoming a member of Cosa ...