*** Welcome to piglix ***

Angela Raiola

Angela Raiola
Big Ang 2012.jpg
Raiola in 2012
Born Angela Joyce Raiola
(1960-06-30)June 30, 1960
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Died February 18, 2016(2016-02-18) (aged 55)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Cause of death Throat, lung, and brain cancer
Other names Big Ang
Occupation Television personality
Years active 2012–16
Known for Mob Wives
Spouse(s) Neil Murphy
(m.2009-2016; (her death))
Children 2

Angela Joyce Raiola (June 30, 1960 – February 18, 2016), better known by her nickname Big Ang (pronounced Anj) was an American reality television personality who co-starred in the VH1 series Mob Wives. Raiola was the niece of Salvatore "Sally Dogs" Lombardi (1941–2009), a caporegime ("capo") and drug dealer in the Genovese crime family. Known as a “mob moll”, Raiola dated gangsters and lived an opulent lifestyle. She joined the Mob Wives cast during the show's second season, in 2012. The same year, after she became the show's breakout star, VH1 gave Raiola her own reality show, Big Ang, which evolved into Miami Monkey. She has been described as a gay icon.

Raiola had two children, Raquel and Anthony (AJ) Donofrio. She married Neil Murphy in 2009. In 2007, Raiola opened a Staten Island bar, The Drunken Monkey, but it was closed down in 2015 due to her past as a convicted felon.

In May 2001, Raiola was one of fifteen defendants indicted—and later convicted—for their roles in the narcotics operation, which distributed crack cocaine, powdered cocaine, and marijuana in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Federal agents described Raiola as an associate of the drug ring’s leader, who was sentenced to nearly thirteen years in prison (and remains locked up). She was provided cocaine for “street level distribution,” according to an affidavit sworn by a DEA agent and an NYPD detective. Raiola sold the drug from Brooklyn bars where she worked. The case against Raiola and her codefendants was built with the aid of wiretapped conversations, the work of an undercover NYPD detective posing as a drug trafficker, and a confidential informant (CI) who made cocaine buys at the direction of federal agents. Some targets of the federal investigation were low-level associates of the Colombo crime family. Raiola was indicted in May 2001 on six felony counts. Along with a conspiracy-to-distribute charge, she was hit with five counts related to separate cocaine sales she made to the CI. At the time of her arrest, Raiola’s handbag contained fourteen small plastic bags containing cocaine. In March 2003, nearly two years after her arrest, Raiola—who was free on $100,000 bond—pleaded guilty to the indictment’s top count. In October 2003, she was sentenced to three years probation and ordered to spend four months under home confinement. Nine months later, in July 2004, a federal judge issued an order modifying Raiola’s probation conditions. She was directed by Judge Sterling Johnson, Jr. to enroll in “an outpatient and/or inpatient drug treatment or detoxification program.” Court records do not indicate what prompted this order. Of the fifteen defendants indicted in the drug case, nine were sentenced to probation. The other six received prison terms ranging from 33 to 151 months.


...
Wikipedia

...