THE ex-FBI agent who exposed the mafia family that inspired The Sopranos diced with death for three years as a highly dangerous investigation sent one of the world’s most violent criminal organizations crashing down.
New Jersey cop Giovanni Rocco was pulled deep into a brutal, violent undercover world by the FBI — one he admits was nearly impossible to walk away from, thanks to the constant adrenaline rush.
YouTube/Soft White UnderbellyGiovanni Rocco exposed the mafia family that inspired The Sopranos[/caption] Courtesy of Giovanni RoccoGiovanni Rocco posed as the outlaw biker Giovanni Gatto to infiltrate the DeCavalcante crime family in New Jersey[/caption]FBI STING
Rocco’s descent into the underworld was set in motion at just nine years old.
His father, a no-nonsense beat cop from Elizabth, New Jersey, used to bring home graphic autopsy photos from murder cases.
“My old man was a hard guy who raised us hard,” Rocco said. “He always reminded us he was raising men.”
He’s grateful now. “It kept me alive later on. I knew what a dead body looked like.”
In 2015, Operation Charlie Horse was complete, and it was game over for the powerful DeCavalcante crime family — the real-life inspiration for The Sopranos.
At the center of the probe was Charles “Charlie the Hat” Stango, a notorious mob capo.
Rocco had gone deep undercover, wearing a wire daily and risking his life to bring the family down.
“The Sopranos was so true to life,” Rocco told The U.S. Sun, speaking under a false name while in witness protection.
“What people were watching on TV, I was actually living.”
Growing up around mob-tied families and hardened criminals gave Rocco a front-row seat to the streets.
It wasn’t surprising, then, that Chuck Wepner—the real-life Rocky Balboa—hailed from his neighborhood.
“The place was a mix of hard-working families and gangsters. That shaped me,” Rocco said.
At just 14, he was loading trucks with his Uncle Pete, working alongside ex-cons on parole for murder. Meanwhile, mob presence loomed large on every block.
“We were surrounded. It touched everything — politics, law, businesses, families,” he said.
LIFE OF CRIME
Rocco went to school with kids whose parents were in prison for murder. Some were hitmen. Some had simply vanished.
One Christmas, his dad missed dinner — he was chasing a mob suspect on a murder charge.
While working at a local restaurant, Rocco once watched a man’s face get slashed open with a filet knife.
“There was no shock,” he admitted, “I was already immersed in that life.”
These early experiences primed him for life undercover.
According to Rocco, the FBI believes its best operatives come from the street — people with troubled pasts who chose to do right.
“The common denominator is we all had dark childhoods,” he said.
Rocco started out as a street cop, spinning a nightstick on patrol.
Ocean County Sheriff's OfficeAnthony ‘Whitey’ Stango, 34, was sentenced to six years in prison on drug and prostitution charges[/caption] HandoutCharlie ‘the Hat’ Stango became close to Giovanni Rocco but went to prison following the end of the FBI undercover operation[/caption] GettyJohn Riggi was a former mafia boss[/caption] AlamyThe classic HBO show The Sopranos was based on the DeCavalcante mafia syndicate[/caption]But one night in 2012 , he rode his motorcycle to work—his mother had ties to biker gangs—and got a furious dressing-down from his boss.
Weeks later, he was reassigned to undercover work targeting local bike gangs and a coke dealer named Jimmy Smalls.
Operating under the alias Giovanni Gatto, a fictitious biker-turned-gangster, he wormed his way into the DeCavalcante’s inner circle — and reinvented himself as a rising wiseguy.
He gained the trust of made men, including Stango himself.
“That was my drug. Adrenaline. From the first time I went undercover, I was hooked,” Rocco said.
LIVING A LIE
He had multiple identities, fake Social Security numbers, and phony birth dates, which helped work concurrent operations targeting other drug cartels, including the Triads.
He wore a wire every day. To this day, he shakes his head in disbelief that he survived.
Back in 2014, Rocco had a close call that nearly blew his cover.
While attending his daughter’s soccer match, he was recognized by Danny “Gooms” Bertelli , a mobster tied to the Gambino mafia family.
Dressed casually in shorts and a T-shirt, Rocco looked nothing like the hardened gangster persona of Giovanni Gatto he’d spent years cultivating.
“They invite you into their homes.They show you love. But at the end of the day, I was a cop. I did my job.”
Giovanni Rocco on his life undercover in the New Jersey mafiaThinking fast, he spun a lie about helping out an ex-girlfriend whose kid’s father was locked up.
“I’d let my guard down,” Rocco later admitted. “In that moment, I put the whole operation—and my family—in jeopardy.”
His marriage, meanwhile, crumbled under the pressure.
“You change without the right training, without psychological support,” he said.
The mobsters welcomed him into their homes and treated him like family. But as the months passed, the evidence stacked up — and Rocco could feel tension mounting.
He was earning a regular salary while risking his life, while agents in the office were salivating over what could be a career-making bust.
ALMOST CAUGHT
Toward the end of his assignment, things nearly fell apart.
Unbeknownst to him, the FBI had put a tail on Rocco — who was then followed into a federal building.
The mob grew suspicious.
“They didn’t think I was undercover. They thought I was a rat,” Rocco said. “And if they think you’re a rat, you’re dead. You kill a rat, right?”
Mobsters confronted him. Accused of wearing a wire, he had to de-escalate the situation on the spot.
“I took a step and watched his body reaction. At the end of the day, it’s all about money and greed,” he said.
Stango, fresh out of prison on a previous murder charge, re-entered the picture. Rocco feared that if word got to him, he’d shoot first, ask questions later.
Luckily for him, it never got to that. He expertly diffused the situation.
The close shaves kept on coming, though.
One night at a gas station, Stango’s son approached Rocco while he was fumbling with wires.
Rocco barely managed to stash the recording gear beneath a car seat before being seen.
“I exhaled so hard. I thought that was it,” he admitted.
The investigation was ballooning — and so were the danger levels.
Rocco felt abandoned and exposed. He began to fear for his family’s safety.
“I could’ve pulled the plug at any time,” he said. “But my addiction to the work wouldn’t let me.”
Everything came to a head when Rocco was on the verge of making Mafia history: he was about to become the first undercover agent to become a made man.
But there was a catch — he had to kill another made member to earn his stripes.
He stalled for months.
“What are you waiting for?” they kept asking.
Eventually, the feds feared Stango would handle it himself—potentially blowing everything up. Meanwhile, a leak inside law enforcement added urgency.
Rocco was flown to Las Vegas and sat poolside as the FBI executed coordinated arrests.
He never saw Stango again.
But as the authorities closed in, he heard his colleagues start to round up Stango’s men. More than one mobster asked that Rocco be kept in the loop as they were cuffed and taken away.
They still thought he was one of them and wanted to protect him — even as he helped bring them down.
Stango was arrested at his home in Henderson, Nevada, and charged with conspiracy to commit murder, among other crimes.
EXPLOSIVE ENDING
Rocco’s undercover recordings were the nail in the coffin.
In 2016, Stango took a plea deal, admitting to the murder plot.
He was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison in Jesup, Georgia, with a release date set for March 21, 2024. All nine of his co-conspirators also pleaded guilty.
After the bust, Rocco’s world fell apart.
For nine months, he couldn’t work or leave the house. Stango’s girlfriend Patricia lived near his house — far too close for comfort for him, his wife and three children.
The FBI had no relocation plan. Then came the call: he had four hours to pack and disappear.
He trained his six-year-old in basic operational security. The government built a safe room in their new home. He felt isolated and alone.
“We left toys on the floor,” he said. “My family didn’t sign up for this. It was a nightmare.”
Despite celebrating “some of the best times” with the mob, Rocco feels no guilt.
“They invite you into their homes,” he revealed. “They show you love. But at the end of the day, I was a cop. I did my job.”
Rocco says the iconic The Sopranos captured it well.
“Mafia guys can be good dads. Some are loyal to their wives. Some have ten girlfriends. So do cops,” he said with a rye smile. “That’s real life. I had some funny moments inside this though. It wasn’t all murder and mayhem.”
Today, Rocco tells his story through a new podcast, launched in conjunction with The Mob Museum in Las Vegas, and his memoir, Giovanni’s Ring: My Life Inside the Real Sopranos (2021).
He and co-host Dutch McAlpin interview former mobsters, FBI agents, and others from the world of organized crime.
He moves freely and isn’t afraid of retribution — even though he “still looks the same.”
“I don’t sing their praises,” he said. “But I think they respect that I told the truth.”
Rocco will never forget the life he lived — and he’ll never forget what happened the day Sopranos legend James Gandolfini died in 2013.
“I turned on the TV, and all I saw was The Sopranos and people mourning his death,” he said.
“Everyone was grieving a fake character. But for us, it was real.
“This wasn’t just an HBO show—it was my life.”
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