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Goodfellas showed Robert De Niro's Jimmy Conway watching his crew self-destruct after the Lufthansa heist, buying fur coats, pink Cadillacs, drawing heat when they were supposed to lay low. The movie makes it look like Jimmy turned on his people because they got sloppy. That's maybe ten percent of the real story. The actual reason Jimmy Burke systematically murdered almost every person connected to the single largest cash robbery in American history had nothing to do with fur coats. It had to do with the structure of organized crime itself. With debt. With hierarchy. With a set of rules that made murder not just logical but inevitable. Five million in cash stolen. Shares promised that couldn't be paid after the Lucchese family took its cut. And every unpaid crew member a potential federal witness. This is the math problem Goodfellas never explained, and why Jimmy Burke wasn't snapping under pressure. He was solving an equation. In this documentary, you'll discover: The real distribution problem, why crew members promised two hundred thousand were looking at forty or fifty after the Lucchese family and Paul Vario took their cuts Why Stacks Edwards was killed seven days after the heist, not for laziness, but because the abandoned van meant he knew names and faces the FBI could leverage How Martin Krugman, the bookmaker who brought the Lufthansa tip in the first place, was murdered for demanding the finder's fee he'd been promised The jewelry pipeline that turned six murders into a business decision. Eight hundred seventy-five thousand in stolen stones connected to a fencing network Burke had spent a decade building Why Burke took his targets out to dinner before they disappeared. The professional coldness the movie only hinted at How the one person Burke should have killed first, Henry Hill, was the one who brought everything down Why Burke didn't rage when Hill flipped. He understood, because he'd have done the same thing Key Figures: James Burke (nineteen thirty-one to nineteen ninety-six) - Irish associate of the Lucchese family, mastermind of the Lufthansa heist, basis for Robert De Niro's Jimmy Conway in Goodfellas Paul Vario - Lucchese caporegime, Burke's boss, the man whose cut created the payment shortfall that triggered the killings Henry Hill - Burke's closest associate, arrested on drug charges in nineteen eighty, flipped to the FBI, brought down the entire operation Martin Krugman - Bookmaker who delivered the Lufthansa tip, murdered January nineteen seventy-nine for demanding his finder's fee Stacks Edwards - Crew member who failed to dispose of the heist van, murdered one week after the robbery Tommy DeSimone - Burke's enforcer, executed multiple post-Lufthansa murders, killed by the Gambino family in nineteen seventy-nine Louis Werner - Lufthansa employee who provided insider access, the only person ever convicted for the heist Timeline: The Lufthansa Heist (December eleven, nineteen seventy-eight) through Burke's conviction (nineteen eighty-five) and death in prison (nineteen ninety-six) This comparison matters because Goodfellas frames Burke's killing spree as paranoia, a violent man cracking under pressure. The reality was structural. In organized crime, when a major score draws federal attention, the crew chief is expected to contain the situation. Every living witness is a thread that leads upward to the family's leadership. Burke wasn't a psychopath who snapped. He was a logician inside a system that gave him exactly two options. Eliminate the risk, or become the risk. He chose to eliminate. And the cruel irony is that the one variable he didn't remove, Henry Hill, was the one that destroyed everything. Verified Sources: "Wiseguy" by Nicholas Pileggi (nineteen eighty-five) Henry Hill's federal testimony and FBI debriefings (nineteen eighty to nineteen eighty-seven) "The Heist" by Ernest Volkman and John Cummings (definitive Lufthansa investigation, nineteen eighty-six) Trial transcripts from Burke's murder conviction (People v. Burke, nineteen eighty-five) Mob historian Jerry Capeci's documented accounts of Burke's methods FBI case files on the Lufthansa investigation (partially declassified) Subscribe to MAFIA TALKS for weekly deep-dive documentaries comparing mob fiction to brutal reality. We show you what Hollywood leaves out. Comment below: Did Jimmy Burke have any other option after Lufthansa? Or was the killing spree inevitable from the moment the money was stolen? Is Burke a cautionary tale about greed, or proof that the system itself turns everyone into either a killer or a corpse? \#Goodfellas #JimmyBurke #Lufthansa #MafiaHistory #TrueCrime #LuccheseFamily #OrganizedCrime #MartinScorsese #RobertDeNiro #TrueCrimeDocumentary #MafiaDocumentary #CrimeHistory #JFKHeist #RobertsLounge