— Jeffrey Markowitz/Sygma/Getty Images
Netflix’s true-crime docuseries Get Gotti charts the “meteoric rise and crashing fall” of John Gotti, who once led America’s most powerful mafia family. Underboss Salvatore “Sammy” Gravano, better known as “Sammy The Bull,” aided the infamous “Teflon Don,” as he was called, in his ascent to power. But he also sealed his downfall by cooperating with the government in a trial that sent Gotti to prison for life.In addition to their status as two of the most powerful men in New York, Gotti and Gravano were among the most surveilled, the Netflix doc contends. The FBI planted bugs inside buildings where they frequently met, and those recordings eventually broke Gravano’s loyalty to Gotti, according to ABC News. Gravano thought Gotti was setting him up to take a fall, and decided to strike a deal with the FBI in November 1991.After 23 years in the mob, Gravano testified against Gotti, leading to guilty verdicts for five murders, including the assassination of previous Gambino “boss of bosses,” Paul Castellano. After receiving a life sentence, Gotti died of cancer in a Missouri prison hospital in June 2002. — Yvonne Hemsey/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Netflix’s true-crime docuseries Get Gotti charts the “meteoric rise and crashing fall” of John Gotti, who once led America’s most powerful mafia family. Underboss Salvatore “Sammy” Gravano, better known as “Sammy The Bull,” aided the infamous “Teflon Don,” as he was called, in his ascent to power. But he also sealed his downfall by cooperating with the government in a trial that sent Gotti to prison for life.In addition to their status as two of the most powerful men in New York, Gotti and Gravano were among the most surveilled, the Netflix doc contends. The FBI planted bugs inside buildings where they frequently met, and those recordings eventually broke Gravano’s loyalty to Gotti, according to ABC News. Gravano thought Gotti was setting him up to take a fall, and decided to strike a deal with the FBI in November 1991.After 23 years in the mob, Gravano testified against Gotti, leading to guilty verdicts for five murders, including the assassination of previous Gambino “boss of bosses,” Paul Castellano. After receiving a life sentence, Gotti died of cancer in a Missouri prison hospital in June 2002. — Yvonne Hemsey/Hulton Archive/Getty Images