Arlyne Brickman


Arlyne Brickman is a former mafia informant.

Biography

Brickman was born in New York's Lower East Side in 1934. When growing up in New York City's Lower East Side, Brickman chose as her role model Virginia Hill, girlfriend of gangster Bugsy Siegel. Brickman said of Hill, "here was a broad that really made it good." As a teenager Brickman became involved with Italian mobsters, hanging out in mafia nightclubs, seducing them in Cadillacs, and in later years running drugs. At 35, Brickman was beaten and raped by gangsters and learned none of her mafia friends would help since she was a woman and Jewish.
According to Brickman, she turned on the mob eight years later when a loan shark threatened to hurt her eighteen-year-old only daughter, unless Brickman paid off a loan. Brickman contacted the FBI, agreeing to wear a wire, hiding the microphone in her brassiere or purse. In return the government paid her debts and gave her a plea bargain. Over the next decade, Brickman worked as an informant and in 1986 her testimony helped convict gangster Anthony Scarpati of the Colombo crime family and several others of racketeering conspiracy.
After the Scarpati trial, Brickman refused to participate in the Witness Protection Program because, in her words, "That's the quickest way to get killed." Brickman now resides in Florida. Brickman was the subject of the non-fiction book by Teresa Carpenter, published by Simon & Schuster.