A former boxing
promoter, the
Napthine government (
of the state of Victoria) withdrew his fight promotional licence. He told the court he kept the loaded
sawn-off shotgun in his home because of fears for his life, having been threatened by a criminal cartel. The magistrate accepted his fears were genuinely held. Gatto pleaded guilty to two weapons offences and was fined. In April 2017 it was reported that Gatto settled a long-running dispute with the
Australian Taxation Office (ATO). It was claimed that Gatto and his family owed the ATO $15 million; and both parties agreed to settle the matter for less than $4 million. It was reported that in order to pay the ATO, Gatto sold his home for $4.1 million. Gatto and his family also own a residence at , on the
Mornington Peninsula. In 2020 Gatto launched a defamation lawsuit against the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC). Gatto claimed the article made him out to be a "murderer" and "one of Australia's most violent criminals". In 2021 Justice Andrew Keogh ruled in favour of the ABC, stating "Far from being distorted, the article was entirely accurate and correlated with what occurred in those parts of the Proceedings which were reported." ==Published works==