Mafia Daughter Victoria Gotti’s Mansion Foreclosed After FBI Raid

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Victoria Gotti

Mafia Daughter Victoria Gotti’s Mansion Foreclosed After FBI Raid

John Gotti’s daughter Victoria Gotti’s mansion has been foreclosed on after a FBI raid.

This home is located in Old Westbury, New York, and was showcased on the hit reality show Growing Up Gotti.

Victoria Gotti

On Oct. 26, 2022, the mansion was sold at auction for of $2.65 million — JP Morgan Chase National Bank was the purchaser. The deed transferred ownership from the foreclosed property to JP Morgan Chase on Dec. 7, 2022, according to the records.

Victoria Gotti

The five bedroom and 5.5 bathroom mansion features a center hall entry with a double staircase with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. 

Victoria Gotti

The property was deserted after the FBI raided the home back in September 2016. Victoria’s sons auto parts store located in Queens, NY, was simultaneously raided. Victoria’s convicted mobster ex-husband, Carmine Agnello operated the shop along with his sons.

Victoria Gotti

The FBI’s case centered around a tax fraud investigation involving Victoria’s three sons: John, Carmine and Frank.

Former Mafia boss John Gotti, died at a prison hospital while serving a life sentence in Springfield, Missouri, in 2002. John Gotti aka “Teflon Don” or “Dapper Don” rose to fame in the 1980s after he took over the Gambino crime family.

John Gotti

Back in July 2015, Carmine Agnello was arrested in Cleveland, Ohio — in connection with a $3 million stolen car and scrap metal scam.

The NYPD assisted Cleveland law enforcement with “Operation Goodfella,” which nailed a dozen Ohio suspects, including the former son-in-law of John Gotti.

“This operation was exactly the same one as when (Agnello) went to prison,” said Cleveland Police Deputy Chief Edward Tomba. “He was scamming the way he used to scam. He was extorting people.”

Victoria Gotti

There was one new allegation from the 18-month probe: Carmine Agnello, an owner of racehorses, was accused of injecting his ponies with performance-enhancing drugs, authorities said.

Carmine Agnello, 54, in a plain white T-shirt and jeans, was cuffed at his Ohio business by detectives from Cleveland and NYPD Detective Lynn McCarthy.

“Guard dog on duty,” read a stark black and yellow sign in the background.

The probe into Carmine Agnello’s began after Cleveland cops followed a trail of stolen cars to the made man’s scrapyard.

Victoria Gotti

The scam involved Agnello bought the hot cars, filled them with sand to boost the weight, and then sold the crushed vehicles by the pound to a local scrapyard — making roughly $3 million in the last year, police said.

In a series of raids, authorities seized $45,000 cash, two weapons, heavy construction equipment and an assortment of computers and video equipment.

“Organized crime respects no local boundaries, as today’s arrests indicate,” said NYPD Commissioner Bill Bratton.

Victoria Gotti supported her ex-husband despite their contentious split.

“All I will say is he’s the father of my children, and we will be here to help him if needed,” she told the Daily News. “This deeply saddens me. At the same time, I do not believe it. He was too successful to be a part of what authorities are claiming.”

Victoria Gotti

Agnello and Victoria Gotti were married for 17 years before their union collapsed amid his racketeering prosecution — and charges of his canoodling with the secretary at his Willets Points, Queens, auto-shredding operation.

Agnello was in the middle of a nine-year racketeering, extortion and arson case at the time of his divorce from Victoria. He agreed to pay the federal government more than $11 million as part of his 2001 plea deal.

 

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