Henry Hill, of "Goodfellas" fame, dead at age of 69

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Apr 25, 2002
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Henry Hill, the famed mobster turned FBI informant whose life story was documented in the book "Wiseguy"- upon which Martin Scorsese's 1990 gangster epic "Goodfellas" was based - has died at the age of 69.

Hill died at a Los Angeles hospital of an undisclosed illness on Tuesday, Nate Caserta, the son of Hill's fiancé Lisa Schinelli Casterta, confirmed.

"[His] heart just stopped. He had been sick for a long time," Nate Caserta told ABC News.

"I will never be the same. I lost someone I cared about a lot . Someone who loved my family and helped me a lot with life," Nate Caserta wrote in a post on Facebook. "You truly lived a life no one could live. You touched so many peoples lifes. Your spirit lives forever with me."

Caserta told ABC News that his family was talking about Hill's smoking problem while his health deteriorated.

Hill was famously associated with New York's Lucchese crime family throughout the 1960s and into the 1980s. He began his life of crime at the age of 11 while growing up on the working class East New York section of Brooklyn by running errands for Paul Vario, a captain in the Lucchese family.

"It's an intoxicating lifestyle that sucks you in. Then you get too scared, and too in love with the money, to leave," Hill told "Good Morning America" in 2004. "All people do is fear you - and that's intoxicating. It's a strange lifestyle."

Hill completed his first major robbery when he and Thomas DeSimone - who was portrayed in an Oscar-winning performance by Joe Pesci in "Goodfellas" - famously robbed Air France of a shipment of $420,000 in April of 1967.

In the 1970s Hill spent six years in prison after he was found guilty of extortion. While in prison, with the help of his wife Karen, Hill still managed to operate outside the law by smuggling drugs and food. He was eventually released early in 1978 for being a model prisoner.

Hill became an FBI informant following a 1980 arrest on a narcotics-trafficking charge, and testimony he delivered led to 50 arrests.

Hill, his wife Karen and their two children entered the witness protection program and changed their names. They were relocated to several locations in Omaha, Neb., Independence, Ky., and Redmond, Wash.

Hill and his wife were expelled from the program in the early 1990s following several arrests on narcotics-related charge. The couple soon divorced. Later he relocated to Malibu and began dating Lisa Caserta, began to sell his own artwork on eBay, and made frequent guest appearances on "The Howard Stern Show".

In 2010, Hill was inducted in the Museum of the American Gangster in New York City.

Ray Liota portrayed Hill in "Goodfellas," which was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Crime reporter Nicholas Pileggi published the book "Wiseguy" in 1986.
 
Jan 19, 2011
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I love Goodfellas but the fact that the "hero" is a snitch leaves a bad taste.
YEAH BUT IN THE COLD REALITY OF THINGS HE DIED A SLOW AND PAINFUL DEATH WITH REALLY NO TRUE FRIENDS, AND THE MOB SAW HE WAS SO BAD OFF WHEN THEY FINALLY LOCATED HIM THEY DECIDED A QUICK DEATH WAS TO GOOD FOR A MAN WHO PROLLY PRAYED EVERY NIGHT THAT SOMEONE WOULD RUN UP AND END IT, BUT INSTEAD THEY LET HIM DIE SLOW DWELLING ON THE THINGS HE DID TO HIS SO CALLED FAMILY. AND THE REGRET FOR WICH IT WAS, BASICALLY HE WASNT WORTH THE 20 CENT BULLET TO THEM HE WAS NOTHING JUST A MAN, AND TO HIM AFTER SO MANY YEARS OF THE RESPECT AND POWER THAT CAME FROM A MAN IN HIS SITUATION. HE DIED EVERYTIME HE WOKE UP CUZ HE KNEW IN HIS MIND HE WAS NOTHING JUS A SAD OLD MAN WITH NO MORE RESPECT AND POWER. THATS HOW BAD THEY HATED HIM, CUZ IF THEY WANTED HIM HE WOULDA BEEN DEAD LONG AGO