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A More Literal Kind of Gay Mafia

gay Sopranos character.jpgDevotees of “The Sopranos” will surely recall the character of Vito Spatafore, the closeted Mafia member who was killed after colleagues spotted him at a gay bar. As it turns out, the character has real-life counterparts.

A recent sentencing hearing in federal court prompted an exploration of homosexuality and organized crime, in the New York Times:

High among [the rules of the Mafia] — perhaps right at the top — is the ban on being gay.

So when Robert Mormando, a confessed Gambino family gunman, appeared on Monday for a hearing on his sentence for his role in the shooting of a Queens bagel store owner in 2003, he seemed to indicate that La Cosa Nostra’s laws may sometimes be honored less while being practiced than they are while being breached. Mr. Mormando, 44, not only confessed to acting as a government informer, but he also took the extra — and, it should be said, perilous — step of outing himself in court.

So what motivated Mormando’s revelation? An interest in trying out for Project Runway? A burning desire to overshare?

Or a burning desire for a reduced sentence?

The unusual admission was made in a 10th-floor courtroom of Federal District Court in Brooklyn, though it was clearly more an act of self-interest than one of self-expression. He had already pleaded guilty to taking part in the shooting of the bagel store owner, Angelo Mugnolo, and was trying to obtain a lower sentence by persuading Judge Jack B. Weinstein that his cooperation was riskier than most, since he had lived for many years as a closeted homosexual in the mob.

The Times cleverly reached out to Joseph R. Gannascoli, who played Vito Spatafore on “The Sopranos,” for comment:

“Having never been gay or a mobster, I can still tell you that it’s got to be hard,” he said, “almost like a kind of triple life.”

Ah yes — the requisite “I’m not gay, I just play one on TV” statement. We’re glad to know he’s not a real-life mobster either.

“Still, you’d figure even mobsters would be getting with the times. My feeling is it doesn’t really matter if they’re gay. So long as they earn.”

Wise words. And equally true of lawyers, too.

Telling Court He’s Gay, Mob Informer Crosses Line [New York Times]

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