In 1988, DiGilio and three other Genovese mobsters were indicted on federal racketeering charges. Defying his family bosses, DiGilio refused to retain a lawyer and instead mounted his own defense at the trial. During the trial, while arguing with the prosecuting attorney, DiGilio suffered a
heart attack, but quickly recovered. While making his closing arguments, DiGilio dismissed
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) recordings of him as
wikt:"locker room talk" and then dumped hundreds of
cassette tapes into a garbage pail. On April 17, 1988, DiGilio was acquitted of racketeering, but the other defendants were convicted. The Genovese hierarchy was furious with DiGilio; they blamed him for the conviction of the other three men. What especially galled the leadership was that Donald Carson, one of the convicted defendants, was then forced to resign his position as secretary-treasurer of Local 1588. A
Gambino crime family mobster replaced Carson at the local, effectively eliminating the Genovese family's major source of labor racketeering revenue. Shortly after DiGilio's trial ended, his wife Ellen reported him missing to police. On May 26, 1988, DiGilio's body was discovered floating in a bag on the
Hackensack River near
Carlstadt, New Jersey. He had five bullet wounds to the head. In 1998, Genovese mobster Louis Auricchio, the brother-in-law of New Jersey senator
John A. Lynch, Jr. confessed to shooting DiGilio while they were riding in a car. Louis Auricchio was released from prison on December 10, 2010, after serving his sentence. Since DiGilio's death, his crew has passed to Auricchio,
Angelo Prisco, Salvatore Lombardo, and
Louis Manna. ==External links==