06/11/2026
An Inch from Death: The Day Vito Genovese Survived an Assassination Attempt
On July 5, 1926, in the quiet early hours just before dawn, Vito Genovese was standing under the elevated train line in the Woodhaven section of Queens.
A car approached. Gunfire erupted from inside the vehicle. Shots ricocheted violently beneath the iron framework of the tracks, echoing through the still morning air. Genovese was ambushed, a bullet tore into his neck. He dropped to the sidewalk as the car sped away.
Unarmed and bleeding heavily, Genovese somehow managed to get back to his parents’ house. After stumbling for a block, Genovese made it inside and collapsed unconscious in the hallway. A trail of blood stretched from the front door all the way back to the spot under the elevated train line where the shooting took place.
His father Frances rushed him to a nearby hospital. Doctors performed emergency surgery to remove the bullet and repair the damage. The slug had come within an inch of severing his carotid artery and larynx. Genovese was lucky to survive.
Police quickly connected the attack to the ongoing bootlegging wars. The Queens Leader-Observer reported that investigators suspected a bootlegging feud was behind the ambush. The shooting bore a striking resemblance to an earlier attack on Genovese’s associate, Arnello Albertini.
Albertini had been ambushed from behind with a shotgun weeks earlier and killed. The similarities suggested escalating violence between rival underworld factions. When questioned, Genovese revealed very little to the police and was unable, or unwilling, to identify his attackers.
Pic. Vito Genovese, June, 1945.