Podcast appearances and mentions of tony salerno

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Best podcasts about tony salerno

Latest podcast episodes about tony salerno

Gangland Wire
Carmine Galante Bonus

Gangland Wire

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2026 15:25


Retired Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit detective Gary Jenkins reports his previous contributor, Matt, who he interviewed on a new theory on the Carmine Galante hit, answers questions we have seen on various social media outlets. Matt claims the U.S. attorney and the FBI got it wrong when they alleged and convicted Bruno Indelicato for this murder. Challenging the official story, Matt reveals new theories, missing evidence, and the role of younger mobsters in one of the Mafia's most infamous assassinations. In this bonus episode, I had Matt record his answers to the doubters of his theory. click here to see the book Made on Long Island.   [0:00] Well, hey, all you wiretappers out there, this is Gary Jenkins, as a lot of you know, retired Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit detective [0:06] and now podcast host and producer and all that. And I was contacted by my guest I had on recently, who was only known as Matt. He’s a guy who supplied all the information to the author of Brantley Scarbrough, who wrote Made in Long Island. That was just out a couple of weeks ago. And I’ve never met Scarborough, and I don’t know any more about him. and I’ve never met Matt in person. I’ve had some emails and some Zoom calls with Matt, but I’ve never actually seen him either. But I recognize his accent, and he does come from the Long Island, New York area. And he does have some interesting stories about growing up with younger mobsters and the Bonanno and Gambino families and doing the fireworks business with Gotti and some of the other horse racing fixing business and that kind of thing, but he made quite a claim that the accepted suspects and the hit on the banana wannabe boss, Carmine the Cigar Galante. [1:11] Was not who the government claims it is. [1:14] And the government only claims one guy, and that’s Bruno or Anthony Bruno Indelicato. He claims it was some young guys who had a grudge against Galante, and they heard that this hit was approved by the commission, and they jumped in there and did it before Joe Massino got his crew set and were all ready to go and carry out this approved hit. Now, there’s no dispute that the commission approved this hit, I don’t think. There may be some disagreement about who actually carried it out. I think there’s no doubt that the two Zips, who were bodyguards, Cesare Bonaventure and Baldassario Amato, did not resist the hit. They took no action and just walked out and left, and then were interviewed by the government later on. Of course, they wouldn’t say anything. They probably knew he was scheduled to be hit, and they knew this was coming. And both were promoted in the Bonanno family right after, so that tells you something. Now, in the commission trial, that’s where Anthony Delicato got convicted for the hit on Carmine Galante. And in the commission trial, the government did convict Tony Salerno, boss of the Genovese family. [2:26] Anthony Tony Dux Corralo, boss of the Lucchese family, Gennaro Jerry Lang Langella, the Colombo family acting boss and regular underboss, Salvatore Tom Mix Santoro, who was a Lucchese family underboss. Christopher Christie Tick Funari, Lucchese family consigliere. [2:45] Ralph, little Ralphie Scopo, the Colombo family soldier. Carmine Junior Persico, who was the boss of the Colombo crime family at that time. [2:55] Stefano Canone, Bonanno family consigliere. [3:00] Anthony Bruno Indelicato, Bonanno family capo. Paul Castellano and Mr. Neal, Neal Delacroche, were not in the trial because they died. They were charged, but they died just before the trial. Now, on the YouTube show we did, we got a lot of comments and Matt’s got a lot of questions. And he wants to address and clarify why he doesn’t believe that the government’s claim that Anthony Delacato and two unknown men killed Galante. So I said, you know, I don’t know what to tell you. I said, you know, record and clarify your claim and see if you can address any of these questions that people have had in the comments section. Now, this may end up like all the competing theories on Jimmy Hoffa’s death and where his body by body might be. I don’t know. But at least Frank Sheeran, the Irishman, did not claim the Galante hit as best I can remember. So anyhow, here’s Matt’s story. I just want to say thank you so much for the interest we’ve generated from Gary’s Gangland podcast. [4:03] A lot of learning goes on here, and that’s where I’m going to start off. One item keeps coming up, and believe me, I’m not being the slightest bit condescending. If you don’t study this stuff and look at it, you have no way of knowing this. If you were to punch in right now, because we’ve done it, like Google searches, what evidence was used against Bruno and Delicato? Well, one thing that comes up, and a couple people referenced in the emails and on the posts, was ballistics. [4:27] They had ballistic evidence against Bruno Indelicato. Boy, that’s pretty strong. I mean, ballistic evidence is very, very strong. So let’s go through the ballistic evidence. Let me start off by saying there’s none. What you’re reading on that, and if you read the fine print closely and go back to the source, that is AI-generated garbage. That’s why we don’t like AI. The definition of ballistic evidence would be something like this. We pulled a slug out of a wall. We pulled a slug out of a victim. We locked a guy up. The guy had that gun on him. We matched that slug to that gun. That is ballistic evidence. There was absolutely none of that presented against Bruno Indelicato, despite what AI says. Again, if you take away one thing, please take away the fact that don’t ever use AI as a source. Now, I know one other thing people asked about was the progression on all this. And again, the book details it with so many stories, so many different John Gotti stories in there that people never heard about. But here’s a brief summary of the progression. [5:28] Our friends were young. We were crazy. We dealt fireworks. We dealt so much, they had to bring in the boss. The boss at that time for that area was John Gotti. To us, it was the same as John Smith. We never heard of the guy. He was great to us. We sold a ton of fireworks. He gave us more and more locations, more and more responsibility. Our friends made a fortune. One of our friends, we thought, had a car accident. Two of the bodyguards who helped our friends kill Galante, Baldo and Chesaree, they approached us at a wake and said, look, your friend was not the victim of an accident. Your friend was the victim of a homicide authorized by Galante. We verified there was bulletholes in his car from the impound yard, from the police sources we had. Kept it under wraps for two years. One of the card games, Angelo got word to our friend Tommy that the commission, in fact, did authorize a hit on Galante. The hit was to be done conjunctively with the Gambinos and the Bananos. Our friend Tommy jumped the gate. He said, we’re going to avenge our friend’s death, put together the team that did it. The details are shocking about what our team did to get the hit done. I mean, details you’re shocked about an alibi jumping off of a boat to create an alibi. I want people to read about this. Having police sources helping the hit, Including holding the spaces on July 12th When the hit went down Holding two different parking spaces at that location I hope this helps people Now I want to get back to another one that keeps coming up People keep saying Oh well they’re on tape celebrating. [6:57] People, please, we’ve made some videos on this at YouTube. Go look at them. You can pull them up. They’re online. You can find them. [7:05] There’s a bunch of sources that have them. Watch the raw video. That is not a celebration. That is a beef being put in. Sonny Red Indelicato is furious. He’s going at it with his consigliere, Stefano Canaan, Stevie Beefs. And you can see in his face, you can see his body language and mannerisms. He walks away from him and then he rushes back quickly and goes to his face. That is not a celebration. That’s anger. Stefano Canone actually points in back of him, pointing at the Ravenite. And he’s basically telling him, look, we’ve registered the beef. Neil is inside. Neil is trying to decipher all of this also, because, again, the whole conflict was this. The commission ordered this hit. People say, oh, they approved that. I’m telling you, the commission, the ones who ordered the hit, they gave the work to Joe Massino, who was going to oversee the job. However, the commission specified that it had to be done jointly between the Gambino family and the Bonanno family. Sonny Red and Indelicato was furious that he was left out of the hit. Simultaneously, John Gotti over in Ozone Park, Queens, was furious that he was let out of the hit. [8:19] You just have to understand, in Cosa Nostra, you do not go out and celebrate a hit after it’s done. You don’t even show your face. Everything in a hit like this is meticulously planned and organized. You know exactly where the getaway cars are going to go and who’s going to chop them up. There is no shot in the world that an expert like Sonny Redd is going to leave a getaway car from a triple homicide out in the middle of the street. That does not happen. Let me tell you something. That’s called botching a hit, both of those acts. If you botch a hit in Cosa Nostra, you’re the next one on the other end of the next hit. You’re going to get hit. There’s plenty of cases where people screwed up hits and didn’t dispose of vehicles properly, and they’re the next ones to get hit. So anyone who thinks it’s a celebration and thinks that that’s Cosa Nostra protocol to go out and celebrate is sadly mistaken. That’s why right away the FBI and Cosa Nostra members knew, obviously, Sonny Red Indelicato, his brother JB, Phil Lucky, Bruno and Delicato, all those guys had nothing to do with the hit. If they did, they would have been buried in a safe house. They would not be out in front of what we call the FBI screen test at Mr. Neal’s Club, the Ravenite in Manhattan. Now, people also say another phrase or two that I really love, the smell test. Okay, the smell test. Let’s talk about that. You had two trials going on simultaneously in 1985. [9:48] Same building, Brooklyn, Pizza Connection case and the commission case. The FBI had been broken down into five different squads, one for each family. You know them all, Colombo, Gambino, Lucchese, Genovese, and of course, the Bonanno. Now, the Bonanno section of the FBI, the Bonanno squad, had the most to do in these cases. Most, if not all, the pizza connection focused on the Bonannos, and a good chunk, especially 100% of the Gallant they hit, focused on the Bonannos, and that was in the commission case. These guys talk to each other. They live, eat, and breathe with each other. So if you want to talk about a smell test, can somebody tell me why in Richard Martin, he was the prosecutor, by the way, in the Pizza Connection case, they absolutely refused to say who killed Delonte in that case? [10:39] They came out and said in the indictment and in testimony, three unknown males killed Delonte. [10:46] Now, people talk about it’s easy to see. Bruno and Delicato did it. So you want to tell me that five and six years after the hit, FBI agents that were on the Banano squad, they couldn’t come out and say Bruno and Delicato did it. Why? Because they knew he didn’t. They didn’t want to get a perjury rap. Richard Martin didn’t want to blow his case by telling nonsense that Bruno and Delicato did it. If it was common knowledge that Bruno Indelicato did it, and if there was a legitimate shred of evidence that Bruno Delicato did the work, the Pizza Connection case would have also said Bruno Indelicato is one of the shooters. It did not. That’s what doesn’t pass the smell test. But they even went to an appellate court to throw out any testimony about Galante’s murder in the Pizza Connection case. And sure enough, the judge agreed and said, yeah, we’re not putting one stitch of Galante’s murder in the Pizza Connection case. Now, had those FBI agents in the Bonanno Squad had presented legitimate evidence against Bruno and Delicato in the Pizza Connection case, be it ballistic, be it anything, the judge wouldn’t have done that, but he did. Read the transcripts of the case we have. There was nothing like that presented against Bruno in that case. And again, that’s why the FBI in the Pizza Connection case kept saying, we have no idea who killed Carmine Galante. That is critical for people to understand. [12:10] And last note, I want to get on to people wondering about the Joe Messino angle. Yes, Joe Messino, when he flipped right out after his conviction, he gave up murders all the way back from 1969. Now, Joe Mezzino had a motivation. If he left out any crime or any detail and failed to disclose anything, they throw him out of the program. They did the same to gas pipe case, so they threw him out of the program. So Joe Messino, of course, is going to tell the feds every single thing he knew about the Bonanno family’s involvement with the Galante hit. [12:46] Joe Messino, you know, did come out and say, yes, he got the order and he informed Rusty about the hit. But notice that’s when the trail stops. Joe Messina, who was a hands on guy, never came back and said, hey, Sonny Red did the hit with his kid Bruno and his brother JB. He gave them no details why because he didn’t have details thank you so much again for all of your questions and comments so guys that’s matt’s reasoning and that’s his story the government did not charge or convict any of the others for this murder any other people for this murder in that commission trial now those guys who were convicted were convicted for racketeering under rico and the murder of Galante was not a racketeering. That was a criminal predicate offense that proved that there was an organization known as a commission. It existed, and they ordered criminal acts. And this was a criminal act that they ordered. They need a predicate act where they’ve ordered criminal acts. And the Galante hit was one of them, and murder’s the best one to throw out there. And I think they convicted him based on his palm print on the getaway car that they found. [13:55] They never claimed during the trial to know the other two hit men. So I’ll leave it up to you guys to argue this out in the comments section on my YouTube shows with Matt or on this one here. And he’ll be monitoring those and, you know, come back with any questions that you have. So thanks, Matt, for this interesting look at Young Associates of Gotti and the fireworks business and the horse race fixing business and your theory based on information from your friends in the younger element of the New York mob. And you were kind of on the periphery of that yourself and the people that you [14:29] talked to that were really basically were involved in this hit and the setup. I thought it was really slick using cops to block out parking spots and then to pull out if it was all good to go. And leave the area so that’s uh didn’t have ring cameras and all the cameras back then so we’re gonna never know how much all that’s true you know but it’s uh history is is kind of an agreed upon set of facts or lies or whatever because eventually we agree upon it and that’s becomes the history and this is some of the history of the new york mob in the 70s to the 80s and the murder of Lilo or Carmine the Cigar Galante. Thanks, guys, so much for tuning in. And don’t forget to hit on YouTube, like and subscribe. Post this on your own social media pages and let other people know about the show. We like to get a lot of people watching or listening and watching to the show.  

Happy Business Radio
Tony Salerno: Have a Go: A Lifetime of Lessons in Business, Building & Belief

Happy Business Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2026 43:40


In this heartfelt and insightful episode, Peter Salerno welcomes a very special guest — his brother, Tony Salerno — for a wide-ranging conversation that blends business wisdom with life experience. With more than five decades in the building and construction industry, Tony reflects on a career shaped by curiosity, resilience, and a refusal to stay still. Tony shares his journey through engineering, construction, renovations, steel framing, training, inspections, and specialist services, highlighting how diversification within an industry can create opportunity and longevity. Rather than remaining in one role or trade, Tony explains how learning from others, seeking mentors, and stepping into unfamiliar territory allowed him to grow both professionally and personally. The conversation explores the realities of failure, the value of practical experience over theory, and why “having a go” is often the difference between regret and fulfilment. Peter and Tony discuss mindset, motivation, partnerships, support networks, and why asking for help is a strength — not a weakness. This episode is not just about business or building — it's about life. It encourages listeners to stay curious, keep learning, surround themselves with the right people, and remember that happiness, purpose, and contribution matter just as much as financial success. Host: Peter Salerno Mobile: ‭0408 811 567‬ Email: petersalerno.austalk@gmail.com Guest: Tony Salerno Master Builder | Construction Specialist | Mentor Tony Salerno is a highly experienced master builder with over 50 years in the building and construction industry. Across his career, Tony has worked in multiple facets of construction, including engineering, general building, renovations, steel framing, project management, inspections, training, and specialist services. Known for his practical wisdom, curiosity, and hands-on approach, Tony's journey reflects a lifelong commitment to learning, adaptability, and having the courage to “have a go". Producer: Ron Fiedler, Podcast City

Paper Trails
Paper Trails Season 4 Ep6 President of Mac's Hospitality Group Tony Salerno

Paper Trails

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2025 48:08


In Episode 6 of Season 4 of the Paper Trails Podcast, Nick Kalogeromitros sits down with Tony Salerno, President of Mac's Hospitality Group. Listen as he talks about how he got into the restaurant industry at a young age, his experience working for companies during both expansion and contraction phases, and what makes Mac's Speed Shop so special.

Do You Know The Mob?
"Fat" Tony Salerno

Do You Know The Mob?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 21:35


The front man for some of the biggest crime names and families, he lived the mobster dream for a long time until prison finally caught up to him.

fat tony tony salerno
The Charlotte Ledger Podcast
20 years of beer, bikes & BBQ, with Tony Salerno of Mac's Speed Shop

The Charlotte Ledger Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 25:59


In 2005, a group of friends with a shared love of motorcycles, beer and barbecue opened a restaurant in an industrial area near uptown known as South End. Today, 20 years later, that restaurant — Mac's Speed Shop — has grown into a company with nine such restaurants in North and South Carolina, with more on the way.In this episode of The Charlotte Ledger Podcast, Tony Salerno, president of Mac's Hospitality Group, talks with Ledger editor Tony Mecia about how this well-known fixture in Charlotte's restaurant scene has endured and continues to expand. They talk about challenges in the restaurant industry, how Mac's tries to stand out in a growing city, the importance of building a strong team, changes in technology and more. This episode of The Charlotte Ledger Podcast was produced by Lindsey Banks.You can find out more about The Charlotte Ledger at TheCharlotteLedger.com. Be sure to sign up for our newsletter! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit charlotteledger.substack.com/subscribe

The Members Only Podcast: A Mafia History Podcast
#25: Real Attorney Breaks Down Roy Cohn, Vicious Mob & Celebrity Lawyer

The Members Only Podcast: A Mafia History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 38:29


In this episode, we discuss Roy Marcus Cohn (1927-1986) with professional attorney, Tony Taouk of Magna Carta Lawyers in Sydney, Australia. Tony and I walk through Roy Cohn's history, and Tony brings an attorney's perspective to some of Cohn's vicious tactics, personal life, as well as areas where he displayed both pure brilliance and borderline diabolical evil. We cover: Cohn's upbringing and early life Cohn's involvement in the Julius and Ethel Roseberg trial in the early 1950's Cohn's involvement in the McCarthy investigations of the 1950's during the Cold War and Communism scares Cohn's eventual fall from grace after his misconduct was discovered and re-emergence as a private practice attorney Cohn's legal representation of various mobsters including John Gotti, Tony Salerno, and Carmine Galante Cohn's representation of various celebrities including Donald Trump Some of Cohn's brilliant and vicious tactics We debate Cohn's legacy and a top mob lawyer

This Day In The Mob
Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Genovese Aid To Fat Tony Salerno

This Day In The Mob

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2022 34:17


WE.ARE.BACK! On this day in the mob, 8/27/1933 Genovese family mobster Vincent The Fish Cafaro was born in Italy. After immigrating to East Harlem, NY he hooked up with neighborhod boss and future family boss Fat Tony Salerno. Fish would go onto be Salernos top aid for the next quarter century making millions in the process. Listen to the rise and fall of the fish now!

Gangsterpodden
Gratis-episode: Fat Tony Salerno

Gangsterpodden

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 25:14


Hør nye episoder av Gangsterpodden reklamefritt i appen vår Untold: https://untold.app/podcast/3b48c7f8-40cc-4502-91d5-28cbfe1c9c46/gangsterpoddenAnthony Salerno var en mektig og styrtrik underboss i Genovese-familien i New Yorks italienske mafia. Salerno hadde klatret i hierarkiet ved å starte sine egne lukrative gambling-operasjoner, noe som gjorde ham til en betrodd og dyktig mann i Genovese-familien. Og da Vincent ”The Oddfather” Gigante i hemmelighet ble utnevnt til ny familieboss i 1981, fikk Tony Salerno i oppgave å være Gigantes ”front boss”. Mens Gigante holdt seg i bakgrunnen og spilte gal for å lure FBI, var Salerno den offisielle bossen, noe han bestemte seg for å spøke med i et helt spesielt julekort. Vi gir deg historien.

The Sit Down: A Crime History Podcast Presented by Barstool Sports

On the 18th episode of the Sit Down, Jeff and BlackJack delve into one of the greatest earners and leaders in the history of the mob, Fat Tony Salerno. He rose through the ranks of the Genovese Crime Family making hundreds of millions of dollars and is considered to be one of the greatest of all time. We also do a Q/A answering some listener questions.A truly interesting action packed episode. As always thanks for listening and if you enjoy the show, please give us a deserved rating and leave us a comment!

The Sit Down: A Mafia History Podcast
Episode 18: Fat Tony Salerno

The Sit Down: A Mafia History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2021 72:56


On the 18th episode of the Sit Down, Jeff and BlackJack delve into one of the greatest earners and leaders in the history of the mob, Fat Tony Salerno. He rose through the ranks of the Genovese Crime Family making hundreds of millions of dollars and is considered to be one of the greatest of all time. We also do a Q/A answering some listener questions.A truly interesting action packed episode. As always thanks for listening and if you enjoy the show, please give us a deserved rating and leave us a comment!

Sunday Sports Roundup
NSWRL CEO David Trodden joins the show to chat about state competitions

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2020 11:04


The boss of the New South Wales Rugby League gave an update on the Canterbury Cup, Ron Massey Cup, junior footy and regional footy

Sunday Sports Roundup
My Local Sports Bag - West Sydney Wolves

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2020 18:20


Bob Turner is one of the greatest NBL coaches in history and as the General Manager of the WSWBA he wants to use his experience to usher in the next generation of coaches. Bob has donated a free 10-week training program to one of the 'My Local Sports Bag' recipients to save them costs on lessons but also to give his young coaches more exposure at a younger age. Bob feels other associations are currently too skewed to competitions rather than coaching so he wants to breed young coaches so they can develop leadership skills at a younger age and guide their communities.Timestamps0:00 - 2:15 min mark - introduction to club3.00 min mark - why Bob Turner got involved?6.00 min mark - representative teams and coaching programs8.00 min mark - West Sydney Wolves approach to target kids10.00 min mark - club donates 10-week basketball program12.15 min mark - Ben Simmons and the effect of ‘basketball renaissance’ in Australia14.30 min mark - how do we get involved? 15.00 min mark - Meeting with Parra mayor there is no indoor sport facility16.00 min mark - West Sydney Wolves donate to My Local Sports Bag

Sunday Sports Roundup
Dave McDonald Innings - North West Sydney Hurricanes Bushfire Appeal Match

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2020 2:38


Alive 90.5FM's Dave McDonald returned to his old club to raise money for the bushfires - listen to his batting innings

Sunday Sports Roundup
Sunday Sports Round-Up make sports predictions for 2020

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2020 2:05


With a new year upon us Sunday Sports Round-up panellists Rod Staples, Adam Staples, Mike Allen and Tony Salerno predicted what major sport events will happen in 2020.

Bloody Murder - A True Crime Podcast
124. Contract Killer Mad Dog Joe Sullivan - Part 2

Bloody Murder - A True Crime Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2019 68:02


Contract Killer Mad Dog Joe Sullivan - Part 2...In part two of this two-part special, new father, 38-year-old Mad Dog Joe Sullivan soaks up some culture while honeymooning with his wife Gail. He then gets right back into knocking mobsters for "Fat Tony" Salerno and the Genovese family, including Mickey Spillane's top enforcer Tommy “The Greek” Kapatos, and Antonio Caponegro aka “Tony Bananas”. There was also a botched hit on Carmine “Lilo” Galante and a near miss on “Ol' Blue Eyes” himself, Frank Sinatra.In the summer of 1978, Joe met with actor's Jon Voight and Robert Di Niro and directors Hal Ashby and John Hancock to discuss potential film projects.After teaming up with some friends from the disco scene, Joe started sticking up payrolls and jewellery stores for a bit of a lark and some extra cash but ended up committing several murders of accomplices in bungled burglaries, before his last hit on “Johnny Flowers” Fiorino caused his dramatic capture.Become a Bloody Murder Patron (for as little as $1 per month, which you cancel at anytime) and have access to dozens of Patron only episodes (including our whole first season!) with new patron only content added every month! Go to https://www.patreon.com/bloodymurderLevels $5 and over go into our monthly merchandise draws and get FREE stickers and hand-made Barney Badges!See our website! bloodymurderpodcast.com for all our social media links, contact details, a gallery, fabulous merchandise (check out our new Bloody Murder SHOES! and now STICKERS and BACKPACKS and DUFFEL BAGS!!) and much much more.Wanna buy us a drink? Here's a donate link.True Crime Nerd Time, a segment on Bloody Murder, needs your help because it stars you! We want you, our listeners, to submit your recommendations for anything true cime related! It could be books, TV shows, movies, documentaries, exhibitions, graphic novels, art, music etc. So send us your brief story (we’ll read it out) or record your story (it can just be a recording on your phone, and we’ll play it!). We will also publish it on our website. Keep it to about 2 mins please or 200 words. Email here! bloodymurderpodcast@gmail.com. Oh and if you give us your postal address we'll send you some stickers as a reward!Aussie As: A Cairns couple are shocked when two gigantic scrub pythons come crashing through their ceiling mid-coitus.Sources: Mobsters; Mad Dog Sullivan. www.biography.com. Tears and Tiers The Life and Times of Joseph"Mad Dog" Sullivan the only man to escape Attica Prison, the true story of a legend by Gail Sullivan. Paddy Whacked: The Untold Story of the Irish American Gangster by T.J. English. streetlogicblog.com June 16, 2017, Death of a Mad Dog, by T.J. English.Village Voice, Secrets of the Mob by Tom Robbins, May 8, 2007. Notorious Rochester mob hit man 'Mad Dog' Sullivan dies in prison. Gary Craig and Sean Lahman, Democrat and Chronicle Published, June 15, 2017. Salt Lake Tribune, Ex-mob hit man 'Mad Dog' Sullivan dies in NY state prison, June 16, 2017. The Irish Mob, Joseph Sullivan The Only Man To Escape From Attica by Owen Forsyth, February 21, 2019. britannica.com; Attica Correctional Facility by Linda Dailey Paulson. Archive.org; Attica Uprising, Official Report. mafia.wikia.org; Tony Salerno; Edward Cummiskey;Antonio Caponigro; Mickey Featherstone;... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Sunday Sports Roundup
2019 Tarsha Gale Cup Grand Final Highlights

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2019 2:51


Listen to some of the junior talent on display in the Tarsha Gale Cup between the Newcastle Knights and Illawarra Steelers. Mitchell Farrugia and Tony Salerno your callers

East to West Hunting Podcast
Episode 43: Salerno Brothers Adirondack Deer Hunting

East to West Hunting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2019 61:06


Episode 43: Adirondack Deer Hunting with special guests Pat & Tony Salerno If you're interested in improving your Adirondack big woods hunting, you're going to want to listen to this episode with Pat & Tony Salerno. The Salerno family has a long history of Adirondack deer hunting success and they share some incredible tips with our listeners. They talk about reading buck body language through tracks, trail camera work, understanding topographic maps, hunting aggressively, upcoming seminars, and Adirondack hunting with Gus Congemi of Live the Wild Life TV. Background: The Salerno Brothers from the Adirondack High Peaks region of northern New York are considered some of the most successful, consistent, aggressive big woods deer hunters in the Eastern US. They hunt public land in some of the most rugged and remote Adirondack backcountry available. Pat Jr. and Tony Salerno have been featured on Live the Wild Life TV with Gus Congemi. They teach seminars and workshops throughout the Northeast to help you shorten your learning curve. Websites & Links ADK Bucks: To buy one of their Adirondack Bigwoods Buck Hunting DVDs and check out their website click HERE TopoMaps+ - Get the #1 app recommended by Tony & Pat Salerno Jr. by clicking HERE Live the Wild Life TV: Check out Gus Congemi's Live the Wild Life TV show on the Pursuit Channel by clicking HERE Learn about Todd Waldron's 2018 Adirondack big woods buck on the East to West Hunting Podcast Episode 39: Adirondack Deer Hunting on Snowshoes by clicking HERE    

Sunday Sports Roundup
Interview - Asia Pacific Cup Preview with Softball NSW Manager Cathy Kerr

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2019 6:24


Tony Salerno joined Softball NSW Operations Manager Cathy Kerr to preview the Asia Pacific Cup with Sunday Sports Round Up will be broadcasting live. Japan, Australian Spirit, Stacey Porter and more will be on show on this tournament ahead of the Olympics

Sunday Sports Roundup
Interview - Tennis Australia Tournament Services Leader Patrick Boyle

Sunday Sports Roundup

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2019 4:51


Tournament Services Lead at Tennis Australia Patrick Boyle talked Tony Salerno from Sunday Sports Round-Up through what goes on to putting together the Australian Open.

Annie Jennings PR - Poker Pro Podcast Series
WPT Interview With Tony Salerno Winning Poker Pro On Strategy

Annie Jennings PR - Poker Pro Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2008


WPT Interview With Tony Salerno Winning Poker Pro On Strategy Annie Jennings LIVE & On The Air at the World Poker Tour at The Borgata in Atlantic City. Guest is Tony Salerno. Tony is a Champion Poker Player who advises...