Henry Hill Dead: 'Goodfellas' Mobster Dies At 69

'Goodfellas' Mobster Dies

Henry Hill, the low-level mobster turned FBI informant who was the basis of Martin Scorsese's seminal 1990 film "Goodfellas," died in a Los Angeles hospital on Tuesday at age 69, reports TMZ.

“He had a heart attack around the 27th of May, and he went into the hospital and it was really touch-and-go for a long time,” Lisa Caserta, Hill's long-time girlfriend, told the New York Post. As she said to TMZ, Hill's "heart gave out."

Born in Brooklyn, New York in 1943, Hill's early life and rise up the mafia food chain was recalled with great detail in Nicholas Pileggi's 1986 book Wiseguy, an at-times first person account told in Hill's words. He became involved with the mob at age 12 and took his first arrest at age 16. In 1978, at 35, he participated in the Lufthansa heist at Kennedy Airport, the then-most expensive robbery in U.S. history. It earned Hill and his conspirators over $5 million.

After the Luftansa heist and a subsequent drug arrest, Hill became an FBI informant and testified against his former colleagues. He was placed in the Witness Protection Program with his wife, Karen.

"I get to live the rest of my life like a shnook," Hill famously said at the end of Wiseguy.

Pileggi and Scorsese adapted Wiseguy for the screen, and the result was "Goodfellas," one of the most quoted and lauded films of the last 25 years. Ray Liotta played Hill in the film, while Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci (who won an Oscar for his work) and Paul Sorvino co-starred as mobsters.

In the years after the events depicted in "Goodfellas," Hill would battle drug, alcohol and legal problems. He was arrested in Missouri in 2009 for drunken disturbance.

“He tried so hard to redeem himself,” Caserta told the Post about Hill's many transgressions. “He felt bad about that.”

Hill claimed he never killed anyone, but according to Caserta, he did allow that Scorsese -- and Pileggi -- nailed the details of his mafia life.

“He always said it was 99.9 percent accurate.”

[via TMZ]

Henry Hill - The Man Who Inspired 'Goodfellas'

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