How a former killer for a major crime family became a New Jersey councilman
"Are you aware that he's committed welfare fraud?" the man asked Englishtown Mayor Daniel Francisco, referring to the borough's newest councilman, John Alite, whose mob past has drawn an unusual amount of attention to the quiet borough east of Princeton.
"He's started a new life!" a resident shouted back. "We don't want to hear any of this!" another resident declared. "Go! Go! Go!" residents chanted. The support for Alite was palpable.
The man who brought up the accusation of welfare fraud, who admitted to working for Alite's former boss John Gotti Jr., left the room, leaving a packet of handouts on a seat on his way out. A resident snatched up the stack of papers before anyone could read them and later handed them to Alite.
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It's certainly not the back-and-forth you would expect in a town meeting for a small historic place like Englishtown, which has a population of about 2,300 people.
Alite by his own admission is a former mobster who ran with the Gambino crime family, one of the five major families who for decades controlled organized crime in New York City. He pleaded guilty to racketeering activity in federal court, which included two murders, four murder conspiracies, at least eight shootings and two attempted shootings.
He has also acknowledged that he was part of armed home invasions and robberies in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Florida. Alite said in an interview that the home invasions and robberies were committed against drug dealers.
In New Jersey, disqualification from serving a public office is limited to crimes involving a person's public office or public employment.
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Alite had a reputation for brutality, according to his 2021 book "John Alite Mafia International," which was cowritten with Lou Romano. It was that reputation and his connection with John Gotti Jr. that drew him into the mob. Gotti Jr. is the son of John Gotti Sr., who was the boss of the Gambino crime family from 1985 to his imprisonment in 1992.
A 1989 New York Times article placed Alite, then 26, with Gotti Jr., then 25, at a restaurant in Long Island where they got into a brawl.
Alite would later move to New Jersey and then Florida, where he was involved with drug trafficking and extortion. As investigators were closing in, Alite fled to Brazil in early 2004, according to a St. Petersburg Times article at the time.
Alite was accused of "controlling illegal businesses, illegal gambling, extortion, drug trafficking, money laundering, kidnapping and murder as a top lieutenant in New York's Gambino family," according to the article.
After spending 10 months in Brazil, the FBI tracked down Alite at an internet cafe. Alite would then fight extradition for over two years in a prison in Brazil before being handed over to the FBI in late 2006.
In early 2008, Alite pleaded guilty to a Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act conspiracy charge and admitted to the two murders and shootings, local news outlets reported at the time.
He began to cooperate with prosecutors, including in a case against Gotti Jr., who had succeeded his namesake father as boss of the Gambino crime family.
In 2011, Alite was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Some of the 10 years was considered served due to time spent in jails in the US and Brazil and, according to the Tampa Bay Times, he received an additional 20-month reduction in his sentence. He was released in 2012.
Gotti Jr.'s case ended in a mistrial, with some jurors stating they did not believe Alite, who was the chief witness.
Since Alite's release in 2012, he has declared himself to be a reformed man, doing interviews with news stations about his former life and recording podcasts.
Alite said he moved to Englishtown after his daughter Chelsea died from using fentanyl in 2022. His family had owned a house in Englishtown but had been renting it out. Alite said after his daughter's death, he decided to move to the sleepy town to forge a new life.
In March, Alite was appointed to the town council to fill a vacancy with support from Francisco, the mayor of Englishtown, and other local leaders.
Francisco said he and Alite have known each other for a few years. "Our understanding of each other is hanging out at these local businesses, hanging out with our business owners and talking about the issues that our town faces, mostly around the prospect of trying to get development going," Francisco said.
Alite described Francisco as a nonjudgmental person who doesn't care about his past criminal record. The two don't discuss the past much, but Francisco has taken an interest in Alite's role as a speaker, sharing cautionary tales from his days in the Gambino crime family.
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"I have a big interest in drug issues, whether it's this town or around the country," said Alite. "(I) took a big interest in that after being devastated like hundreds of thousands of families have."
Alite's talks also discuss the dangers of drug use but mainly center around his life of crime and how he managed to turn his life around. "I don't run from (my past). I'm not proud of it. I'm ashamed of it," he said.
Alite is not up for election until 2027.
Contributing: Christopher Cann
This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: This New Jersey councilman was once a killer for Gambino crime family

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