Background
On March 18, 1980, 12-year-old Frank Gotti, the youngest son of John Gotti, darted into the street on a motorized minibike from behind a dumpster where he was struck by John Favara"s car and killed.
On March 18, 1980, 12-year-old Frank Gotti, the youngest son of John Gotti, darted into the street on a motorized minibike from behind a dumpster where he was struck by John Favara"s car and killed.
Favara, 51, who lived a block behind the Gotti family, worked as a service department manager for a furniture store, Castro Convertibles in New Hyde Park, New New York He had been on his way home from work. While Ettore pursued a life in organized crime, Favara remained in the legitimate world, but the two remained close.
Number charges were ever filed against him.
However, in the months after the accident, the word "Murderer" was spray-painted onto Favara"s car. On May 28, Victoria Gotti, Frank"s mother, attacked Favara with a metal baseball bat, nearly missing him with each swing.
Favara decided not to press charges and planned to move out of Howard Beach. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (Federal Bureau of Investigation), on July 28, 1980, before Favara and his family were able to move, he was shoved into a van by several men near his work.
There were several witnesses to the abduction, and accounts ranged from him being beaten with a baseball bat, shot with a silenced.22 caliber pistol, or both.
Accounts differ on what happened to Favara"s body. One account says that while alive he was dismembered with a chainsaw and stuffed into a barrel filled with concrete and dumped in the ocean or buried on the chop shop lot somewhere. In November 2004, informants led the Federal Bureau of Investigation to excavate a parking lot in New York City suspected to be a mob graveyard and the site of Favara"s body.
While two bodies were found, Favara"s was not.
When questioned by two detectives on Favara"s disappearance, John Gotti said: "I"m not sorry the guy"s missing. He killed my boy."
Previously prosecutors believed Favara"s remains were stuffed in a barrel of concrete and tossed off a Sheepshead Bay pier, but Brooklyn federal court papers filed by federal prosecutors the week of January 5, 2009, contain allegations that mob hitman Charles Carneglia killed Favara and disposed of his body in acid.
Favara"s murder is depicted in the 1996 Home Box Office production Gotti. In the film, John Gotti, portrayed by Armand Assante, is shown pointedly admonishing underboss Salvatore "Sammy the Bulletin" Gravano that his son"s death was an accident and to "leave it alone".
Upon learning of his identity, Gravano is shown beating and shooting Favara in a pedestrian underpass, then fleeing.