Aging mob turncoat Salvatore 'Sammy the Bull' Gravano is seen bragging about his erection and simulating oral sex in vile videos obtained by the Daily Mail.
The 81-year-old former John Gotti underboss – once one of the New York Mafia's most feared enforcers – appears on camera boasting: 'Look how hard my d**k is.'
He leers over a blonde employee in another clip, admitting 'I know she's a little young' before making a lewd licking gesture with his tongue.
The footage was shared by a disgusted production assistant who is suing Gravano for battery, defamation, and creating a toxic workplace at his Arizona media company.
Anna Castaneda, 43, says in her complaint that she was pestered for sex, forcibly kissed and even pressured into sharing a hotel bed with the wrinkly wiseguy during her three years there.
She also alleges that Gravano – who admits his involvement in 19 murders – kept a gun in his office and flew into 'extreme' rages that left staff petrified.
'We are not talking about a sweet old grandpa,' Castaneda warned the Daily Mail in an exclusive interview.
'Sammy is still strong and athletic enough to kill me if he wants to. Violence is how he solves problems. He's like a ticking time bomb.'
Production assistant Anna Castaneda, 43, is suing former mobster Salvatore 'Sammy the Bull' Gravano, alleging assault, harassment, and a toxic work environment at his Arizona media company. The two attended an auto auction in Scottsdale
Once one of New York's most feared mob enforcers, Gravano is now at the center of a shocking lawsuit, alleging he harassed a former employee
Gravano famously ratted on Gotti and his Gambino associates in the early 1990s in return for a reduced five-year prison sentence.
He served another 17 years for trafficking ecstasy before reinventing himself as a YouTube personality following his 2017 release.
Castaneda joined Debra's Way Productions, named after Gravano's ex-wife and business partner Debra Scibetta, in 2022 to help turn his grisly life story into a TV show.
Despite attracting interest from major Hollywood figures including Goodfellas writer Nicholas Pileggi and director Antoine Fuqua, she claims the project was overshadowed by Gravano's 'outrageous' conduct.
'In one of the first meetings I organized he made a comment about picking me up at Taco Bell,' said Castaneda, a graduate of the prestigious American Music and Dramatic Academy in Los Angeles.
'He does not know how to read the room or behave in a professional manner.'
Castaneda says in the suit female colleagues quit on the spot because of the elderly Mafioso's sexual comments and 'violent outbursts.'
She told the Daily Mail that employees were subjected to degrading tasks that included buying Viagra or scooping up Gravano's poop for medical testing.
Castaneda and Gravano went to red carpet events together. But now she claims their professional relationship masked troubling behavior behind the scenes
Gravano and Castaneda socialized, including having dinner in Los Angeles, during work on the project
'You look back and wonder why you ever put up with it,' Castaneda said of her harrowing stint at the ex-mobster's home office in Phoenix.
'The only way I can explain it is like a cultish indoctrination. You start to rationalize your abuse.
'You're thinking, this is going to change my life, I've got to get it over the line. But you're in turmoil inside.'
Castaneda's 25-page complaint filed in Arizona federal court includes multiple allegations of sexual assault and battery.
She claims Gravano showed her photos of naked women on his phone and twice forced his tongue into her mouth, the first time after a September 2023 work dinner.
In March 2024 he lured the mother-of-one back to his office on the pretext of 'business matters' and allegedly tried again to 'forcibly' kiss her, according to the complaint.
The suit says that during work trips to LA Gravano demanded they share a hotel room – and even a bed – to save money.
She says that during one such stay he 'proceeded to massage her head, shoulders, and neck without consent.'
In a clip provided to the Daily Mail, the 81-year-old is seen sticking his tongue out and making a lewd remark while shopping at a supermarket
Another video shows him leering at a blonde employee while clinking his champagne glass
Gravano is seen in a third, disturbing clip grabbing a bottle of what Castaneda says is Viagra after making a crude gesture about his genitals
The February 2024 encounter left Castaneda so shaken that she fled the room and vomited, the filing claims.
The lawsuit says that several months later Gravano 'fondled' himself in front of Castaneda and another female staffer.
A video of the incident shared with the Daily Mail shows the leathery-skinned felon grabbing his crotch and declaring: 'Look how hard my d**k is.'
He grabs a bottle of pills – Viagra, according to Castaneda – and chuckles to the camera: 'It has nothing to do with this.'
Another clip provided by Castaneda shows heavily-tattooed Gravano waggling his tongue as he stands in a supermarket.
'I put it inside… no, I don't usually do oral sex,' he says, before the person filming asks him to stop.
Castaneda says she stuck with the job because an executive producer credit on a major TV show would have transformed her career.
But she feared for her life when Gravano 'openly displayed a firearm in his office during working hours,' the suit says.
The pair were also snapped attending an election night event in 2024. Gravano's son Gerard, who is a co-defendant, was with them
Texts show Gravano fired Castaneda via text and threatened to 'crush her' if she pursued a claim against him for unpaid wages, according to the complaint
The former hitman – barred from having a gun because he's a felon on lifelong supervised release – is alleged to have 'pointed it at someone's head on at least one occasion'.
In another scary incident, Castaneda's suit says her boss 'strangled' his manager and son Gerard Gravano, 50, during a heated workplace argument.
Castaneda finally left Debra's Way in February 2025 when she asked to work remotely to deal with a family crisis and Sammy the Bull fired her via text.
He threatened to 'crush her' if she pursued a claim against him for unpaid wages, according to the complaint, before telling fellow media execs she was a hooker.
Debra's Way employees overheard Gravano saying he 'wanted to shoot' Castaneda and was 'sexually aroused by the idea of strangling her… to death,' the suit claims.
Castaneda responded by filing an August 19, 2025 police report alleging death threats, sexual assault and firearm possession.
She also submitted a formal complaint to the United States Probation Office for failing to take Gravano back into custody.
To date, she says, nothing has been done.
Gravano underwent a cosmetic procedure after reinventing himself following his release from prison
Gravano was Dapper Don, John Gotti's right-hand man in the Gambino family in the early 1990s
'I knew he was going to retaliate. He ruined my career. He ruined the show. And that's when the death threats started,' Castenada told the Daily Mail, echoing allegations in her complaint.
'Myself, my family and the Arizona community will never feel safe while he resides here. The government should never have let him out.'
Gravano shot to notoriety as the highest-ranking New York mobster to testify against John Gotti, the swaggering Gambino boss known as the Teflon Don.
After serving five years Gravano was released into the federal witness protection program in 1994 and underwent plastic surgery to change his face.
He left eight months later to give TV interviews about a lifetime of violence that began when he was nicknamed 'Sammy the Bull' at age 10 for getting into vicious fights.
In 2002 Gravano was handed a 20-year sentence for peddling 30,000 ecstasy pills but he was released early in 2017.
Castaneda is suing Gravano, Scibetta and Gerard Gravano for $29,000 in unpaid overtime plus punitive damages for defamation, mental anguish, assault and battery.
'The money will always come second,' she told the Daily Mail. 'The number one priority is to finally feel safe again.'
Court records reveal Gravano was served a summons by the US Marshals Service because the regular process server company refused the 'high-risk' assignment.
Lawyers for father and son Gravano and Scibetta did not respond.

























