August 29th, 1988, 6:05 in the morning, Flatlands section of Brooklyn. A 52-year-old man walked down the front steps of his red brick rowhouse at 7,233 Royce Place, crossed the street, and headed toward the corner of Roy Street, where his 1988 Black Mercury was parked. Ordinary morning, quiet block.
He never made it to the car. At least two gunmen ambushed him. The moment he stepped off the curb, they fired 19 rounds from a 380 caliber automatic pistol. Investigators found 18 shell casings scattered across the muddy street near a luxury condo project being built between Royce Place and Avenue N.
He was hit once in each thigh, twice in the back, at least six times in the head. He tried to run. He got a few feet. Then he went down on the sidewalk less than 30 ft from his own front door. The man’s wife heard the shots. She ran outside in a panic. She found her husband dying on the street and cradled his head in her lap, screaming for help.
By the time anyone could respond, Wilfred Johnson was dead. You have to understand something about this killing. It was not a random act of street violence. It was a precisely choreographed execution ordered from the very top of the most powerful crime family in America. And the man who ordered it had known the victim for over 30 years.
He had eaten at the same tables, survived the same arrests, built the same empire. The man who sent those gunmen that morning was John Goty. And the man bleeding out on Roy Street was his oldest friend in the world. This is the story of Wilfried Willieboy Johnson, a man who spent his entire life in total devotion to John Goti and the Gambino crime family.
A man who was half Native American and therefore could never be formally made into the organization, but gave everything he had anyway. A man who secretly spent nearly two decades feeding information to the FBI. and a man who, when the moment of truth arrived, and the FBI offered him a way out, refused to take it because he believed that his loyalty to Goty, his decades of service, and the promise Goti made while swearing on his dead son’s grave would protect him.
He was wrong, and his death would reveal something brutal and permanent about how the mob actually works, not the way the movies show it, the real way. But here is what most people who know this story still miss. Willie Boy Johnson was not a simple rat who got what was coming to him.
He was a man shaped by betrayal, ground down by the very institution he dedicated himself to and ultimately destroyed by the one thing that made him dangerous to everyone around him. His loyalty. His loyalty was real. That is what makes this story unlike almost anything else in mob history. Go back to the beginning. 1935, September 29th.
Willie Boy Johnson is born in Cani, Brooklyn. His mother is Italian American. His father, John Johnson, is part Native American, a union iron worker who does structural construction work for a living. The family eventually settles in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Not a soft neighborhood. Not then, not ever. Johnson grows up hard. His father is an abusive alcoholic who drinks through his paycheck and beats his wife and children.
His mother periodically disappears, abandoning the family before always coming back. Willie Boy has four siblings and a home life that is genuinely chaotic. His criminal career begins at 9 years old. He is arrested for stealing money from a cash register at Helen’s Candy Store in East New York.
The Candy Store is a Murder Incorporated hangout. Willie boy is nine and he is already dipping his hands into mob money. At 12, he is involved in a fight on a school rooftop. He either falls or is pushed. He hits the ground hard. The head injuries from that fall give him persistent grinding headaches that plague him for the rest of his life.
As a teenager, Johnson grows into something physically formidable. He is about 5’9 in tall, well over 200 lb, built like a professional wrestler. He has a size 21 neck and a gravel voice that makes people pay attention. Retired NYPD Lieutenant Remo Francheskini, who spent years pursuing Goty, described Johnson this way in his memoir.
You didn’t want to meet Willie Boy on the street. And if you met him, you’d better have backup ammunition in your pocket because six bullets were not going to stop this guy. He was the type of guy who if he got shot, he would almost try to rip the bullets out of his own chest and then get really pissed off.
By 1949, Johnson is 14 years old and already running a gang of street thugs in East New York. Strong arming men who owe debts to mob connected lone sharks. He is not being recruited into the life. He is already in it. Full voluntary enthusiastic immersion. Before things spiral completely, Johnson actually holds down a legitimate job for a time.
He becomes a licensed crane operator, a member of the International Union of Operating Engineers. That detail matters because it tells you that Willie Boy Johnson was not stupid. He had discipline when he chose to apply it. He just chose to apply it to the wrong things.
Then comes 1957, the moment that locks his fate in place. Willie Boy Johnson meets John Goty. Goty is 17 years old, a high school dropout from a big Italian immigrant family. Johnson is already a street fixture, perpetually in trouble, known around the neighborhood. They recognize something in each other immediately.
They become close, real close. The kind of friendship that forms between young men who grow up in the same danger and understand the same rules. When Goty eventually joins the Gambino crew run by Capo Carmine Fatico, a man known on the street as Charlie Wagons, Johnson comes with him. No question, no hesitation.
Where Goty goes, Willyboy goes. Fatiko is operating out of the Bergen Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park, Queens, a social club that becomes one of the most infamous addresses in American organized crime history. Johnson’s role in the crew is clear almost immediately. He is the muscle.
He collects overdue lone shark payments. He runs errands. He breaks up problems before they escalate. The crew calls him the Terminator because of his effectiveness with strong armwork. His reputation on the street is built on the simple fact that nobody wanted to be on the wrong end of a confrontation with Willie Boy Johnson.
There is one permanent ceiling in his career. However, a wall he can never climb no matter how hard he works. Johnson is only half Italian from the wrong side. His father’s blood bars him permanently from ever being formally inducted into the family. He can never be made. He will always be an associate, a soldier in everything but name.
The men he works beside can be elevated and celebrated. Johnson will always be the guy who does the job without getting the title. He knows this. He accepts it, but it eats at him. And here is something Sammy Graano, Goty’s own underboss, later said about the dynamic between Goty and Johnson in Peter Mars’s book underboss.
Although on the surface Willie Boy played the obedient tonto to Goty’s lone ranger, he seemed to take special pleasure in reporting what Goty was up to, Goty’s idea of humor left plenty to be desired, and Johnson seethed with resentment as Goty delivered derisive aides about redskins and half breeds, and often treated him as a secondass citizen.
Goty made jokes at Willie Boy’s expense. Called him a half breed, a [ __ ] treated him like a peeon. Willie boy laughed it off, kept showing up, kept working. But that resentment was being cataloged somewhere deep, stored for later. The breaking point comes in 1966. Johnson is convicted of armed robbery and sent to prison. Before he goes, his cappo, Carmine Fatiko, makes a promise.
The family will take care of Johnson’s wife and two infant children while he is away. It is standard mob protocol. When a crew member goes inside, the organization looks after his family. That is the deal. That is supposedly what the life stands for. Fatico breaks the promise. Immediately, Johnson’s wife is forced onto welfare.
She is raising two children on government assistance while her husband is doing time for crimes he committed in service to the organization that has now abandoned her. Johnson hears about this inside and something shifts. The FBI approaches him after his release. They have been watching him. They know his information would be valuable.
They offer to drop counterfeiting charges in exchange for cooperation. Johnson is reluctant. He holds off. He pushes back, but eventually the combination of Fatico’s betrayal and the government’s offer tips the balance. He agrees to cooperate to the FBI. Wilfred Johnson becomes BQ5558 TE. The TE stands for top echelon.
That is the FBI’s highest tier of informant. The BQ stands for Brooklyn, Queens. His code name is Wahoo, a reference to his Native American heritage. His FBI handler is special agent Martin Boland. And here is what makes this arrangement genuinely strange. Johnson does not get paid a salary.
He does not draw weekly checks from the government. He collects the occasional insurance reward when his tips lead to the recovery of hijacked goods. In one case, $30,000 for recovering a large stolen shipment. Other than a $100 emergency personal loan from Boland, which he paid back with the standard Vig refused, Johnson receives almost no direct financial compensation from the FBI.
He is not in this for money. He is in this for revenge against a system that threw him away the moment he was inconvenient. His FBI handler notes something interesting in the case files. Johnson almost never volunteers information. He waits to be asked direct questions. He answers those questions.
He does not actively hunt for things to give the bureau. He has his own red lines. And one of them is John Goty. Johnson is careful. He deflects questions about Goty. He changes the subject. He complains about him sometimes bitterly, but he does not hand him over on principle. At least not at first. In May of 1973, John Goti, Angelo Rugierro, and a man named Ralph Gallioni walk into Snoop’s Bar on Castleton Avenue in Staten Island.
There is a man inside named James McBratney. McBrret is an Irish kidnapper who has been involved in snatching members of mob connected families for ransom, including Emanuel Gambino, a nephew of family boss Carlo Gambino. The hit on McBratney is authorized at the highest level of the Gambino organization. What happens next is fast and ugly.
McBratney is shot dead in the bar. Rugierro and Gallion are quickly identified by a witness, but the identity of the third shooter remains unknown. Police are looking for him. Goty goes into hiding and then Johnson hears Goty bragging about his role in the killing. He picks up the phone. He tells the FBI. The FBI tells the NYPD.
Goty is arrested on June 3rd, 1974, more than a year after the murder. A note is placed in Johnson’s FBI file that reads, “John Johnson was the sole basis for the apprehension of John Goty, for turning in the man he called his closest friend, Willie Boy Johnson, was paid $600. Goty pleads guilty to a reduced charge of attempted manslaughter and goes to prison at Green Haven Correctional Facility in upstate New York.
Johnson, still working through his own armed robbery sentence, ends up in the same institution. They serve time together, eat in the same facility, walk the same yard, and Goti has no idea that the man beside him is the reason he is there. But that is not the crazy part. In December of 1981, NYPD detectives are watching Johnson when they catch him conducting what looks like a drug transaction.
Johnson hands a package to a dealer in exchange for a paper bag, which he then puts in the trunk of his car. Detectives follow him home and confront him when he pops the trunk. Inside the bag is $50,000 in cash. Johnson, still on probation from a prior 10-year sentence for armed robbery, panics.
He literally tells the officers to keep the money because if his parole officer finds out, he is going back inside. He is arrested for attempted bribery. He is indicted and in order to avoid prison, he makes a deal. He becomes an informant for the New York City Police Department. He does not tell the NYPD that he is already secretly informing for the FBI.
He does not tell the FBI that he is now also working for the NYPD. He is simultaneously running two separate government informant arrangements without either agency knowing about the other. The $50,000 is donated to the NYPD pension fund. Johnson’s combined intelligence over these years is staggering. He tips the FBI to Paul Vario’s hijacking operation running out of a junkyard in Brooklyn.
He helps agents draw a detailed layout of Angelo Ruggierro’s home so bugs can be planted. He reveals that Ruggerro is using his own daughter’s telephone line for sensitive calls because he considers it untapped. He reports on the Pleasant Avenue connection, a large narcotics ring involving John Goty and others.
He tells the FBI about the murder of Anthony Plate, a sinister lone shark connected to Gambino underboss Neil Delacross in which Goti Rugiierro and Johnson himself apparently participated during a Florida trip in 1979. Remember that detail because in 1991, a Banano Cappo named Thomas Pitera will tell the DEA that it was Willie Boy Johnson who murdered John Favara, the Queen’s man who accidentally struck and killed Goty’s 12-year-old son, Frank, with his car in 1980.
Johnson could not provide the FBI with any information about Favara’s disappearance. With Johnson’s track record of accuracy, his silence on this case strongly implies he knew exactly what happened. Maybe he was there. That is the world Willy Boy Johnson was operating in. Deep, brutal, completely tangled.
Now, pay attention to what is coming because this is where the whole thing starts to collapse. In late 1984, a federal prosecutor named Diane Jackalone begins building a RICO case against John Goti and his associates. Jackalone grew up in Ozone Park. She had walked past the Burj Hunt and Fish Club as a girl.
This case is personal for her. On March 25th, 1985, an indictment comes down naming 10 men on two RICO counts, racketeering and conspiracy. The defendants face sentences of up to 40 years in prison and $50,000 fines. On the list, John Goti, his brother Jean Goty, Neil Deeracross, members of the Carglia family, and Wilfred Johnson.
On March 28th, 1985, just after 4 in the morning, NYPD detectives and DEA agents arrest Johnson Goty and Jean Goty as they play cards at the Burj Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park. Johnson is the last defendant to be arraigned. He stands before Judge Eugene Nichlson alone in the courtroom and that is when Jackaloney steps forward and in open court announces that Johnson has been an FBI informant for more than 15 years.
You have to picture this moment. Johnson stands at the defense table. He clenches his fists so hard that his knuckles go white. On those white knuckles, you can see the tattoos. The word true on one hand, the word love on the other. He looks at the judge. He says two words. Not true, but the damage is done.
Every defense lawyer in that courtroom hears it. Every reporter, everyone watching. Before the day is over, Goty knows. The street knows. Willie Boy Johnson’s cover is blown after nearly 19 years. Johnson’s FBI handler, agent Abbott, had warned him this was coming. Johnson had told him, “I will be killed.
My family will be slaughtered.” Abbott had urged him to take a plea, cooperate officially, and enter the witness protection program. Johnson’s response was final and absolute. I will never testify. He is sent to the Metropolitan Correctional Center in lower Manhattan. His existence there, as documented by journalist Jerry Capisi in Mobstar, is deliberately miserable.
23 hours a day confined to his cell. Restricted access to showers, restricted recreation, a glass door to his unit allows other inmates to taunt him around the clock. On Easter Sunday, his wife, who had faithfully passed FBI messages on his behalf for years, is denied visitation. When his lawyers visit, he is led to them in leg shackles.
Jacalone’s intention is clear. She is trying to grind him down until he agrees to testify. It never works. Then Goti himself gets jailed at the Metropolitan Correctional Center during the pre-trial phase and a meeting takes place on the 9inth floor of that building that may be one of the most consequential private conversations in mob history.
Sammy Graano, who was told about it afterward, described it this way. John told Willie Boy, “You did a bad thing for all them years, but I’ll forgive you. It’s not the first time it happened. You can never be with us after this case. But nothing will happen to you. Willie boy listened.
Then he asked Goty to make one promise. To swear on the head of his dead son, Frank Goty. The 12-year-old boy killed in the street by a neighbor’s car in 1980. The deepest grief in John Goty’s life. Goty swore on his dead son’s head that Willie Boy would not be harmed. And Willie Boy believed him. Graano’s verdict.
Jon totally conned Willie Boy. I don’t know how he fell for this, but he did. Lock, stock, and barrel. On March 13th, 1987, the Gia Cologne trial ends. Goty Johnson and their codefendants are found not guilty on all counts. The verdict is what seals Goty’s famous nickname, the Teflon Dawn. It is later discovered that a juror was bribed.
Willie Boy Johnson walks out of that courthouse a free man. He is banned from the Bergen. He knows this, but he returns to his old neighborhood, his old block, his wife and children. He gets a job on a construction site on Staten Island, working as an operating engineer, the same legitimate trade his father once practiced.
He goes to work, he comes home, he tries to be normal, but the source Wahoo files are now in the hands of Goty’s defense lawyers. All of it. The detail that Johnson was the sole basis for Goty’s arrest in the McBratney murder, the narcotics information that helped build the federal drug case against Gene Goti and Angelo Riierro.
Years and years of intelligence laid out in black and white. Goty reads it. He processes it slowly. He does not react immediately. He waits. Then word reaches Goti in the summer of 1988 that Johnson has also been passing intelligence about Alons Persico, the son of imprisoned Columbbo boss Carmine Persico.
Now it is not just Goty who wants answers. Alons Persico is reportedly asking the Gambino family directly, what are you waiting for? The answer is that Goty has been waiting until he can do this cleanly. His concern, as he discusses the plan with Gravano, is not guilt or old loyalty. His concern is operational.
If the hit is botched and Johnson survives, Johnson will immediately enter witness protection and give up everything he knows. Goty needs it done right the first time. The contract goes to Eddie Lo, an ex Banano associate who had participated in the 1985 murder of Paul Castellano. Lo sublets the contract to a cousin in the Banano family.
The cousin assigns three Banano gunmen to carry out the killing. Among them, Thomas Peter, known on the street as Tommy Karate, a man later suspected in as many as 30 murders. Johnson is given no warning, no signal, nothing. 3 years after his cover was blown, with Goty’s sworn oath still echoing in his ears, Willie Boy Johnson walks down the steps of his home at 7,233 Royce Place, Brooklyn on the morning of August 29th, 1988, and never sees what is coming.
The investigators later recover 18 shell casings. Investigators confirm he is hit in both thighs, twice in the back, and at least six times in the head. He tries to run when the first shot sounds. He makes it only a few feet before going down permanently. His wife runs out screaming. She holds his head in her lap on the sidewalk.
He is already gone.
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