John 'Sonny' Franzese, left, arrives at Brooklyn's federal court. (June...

John 'Sonny' Franzese, left, arrives at Brooklyn's federal court. (June 15, 2010) Credit: AP

NEW YORK (AP) — Convicted mob boss John “Sonny” Franzese is so old, he knew Frank Sinatra in his heyday. He’s so old, his recent extortion trial became nap time — even when his turncoat son took the witness stand against him.

Franzese also is so old that, if federal prosecutors have their way, he’s almost certain to die behind bars.

To the dismay of supporters who insist the frail 93-year-old is a decrepit shadow of his former self, the government has asked a judge in federal court in Brooklyn to sentence him Friday to 12 years or more in prison.

The reputed underboss of the Colombo organized crime family remains a remorseless mobster who deserves no mercy, “having denied so many of his victims the opportunity to live out their lives safely and securely with their families,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memo.

The defense says Franzese, who suffers from an array of ailments, should be allowed to “live out the remaining few years or months with his family.”

Franzese’s lawyer has sought to portray the nonagenarian as a harmless relic from “the age of Eisenhower and Lyndon Johnson and maybe the age of George Washington.”

According to Mafia lore, he was a regular at the Copacabana nightclub, where he hobnobbed with Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr., and also once had a stake in the classic porn film “Deep Throat.”

But the government says Franzese’s true legacy is something more akin to “Goodfellas.”

Franzese’s life of crime began in 1938, while he was still a teenager, with an assault arrest. Prosecutors say he was kicked out of the Army four years later after displaying “homicidal tendencies.”

In 1947, court papers say, he raped a waitress in a garage. In 1966, he beat a murder charge accusing him of killing a rival and dumping the body — cement blocks chained to the feet — into a bay.

Franzese was convicted in 1967 in a bank robbery, sent to prison and paroled in the late 1970s. Though never convicted of another crime, authorities say he rose to second in command of the Colombos, one of New York’s five Italian crime families.

Prosecutors say one reason Franzese dodged arrest in other murders is that he became good at making bodies disappear. Investigators caught him on tape in 2006 describing his favorite recipe for that: Dismember victim in kiddie pool. Cook body parts in microwave. Stuff parts in garbage disposal. Be patient.

“Today, you can’t have a body no more,” the latest court papers quote him saying. “It’s better to take that half an hour, an hour, to get rid of the body than it is just to leave the body in the street.”

The FBI arrested Franzese in a mob takedown in 2008 on charges he shook down Manhattan strip clubs and a Long Island pizzeria.

At trial last summer, prosecutors used John Franzese Jr., a former Colombo associate-turned-paid informant, to help convince jurors that his father’s frail appearance was deceiving. The defendant, who used a wheelchair in court, briefly dozed off when his son began testifying.

“I’m not talking about my father as a man,” Franzese Jr. testified. “I’m talking about the life he chose. ... This life absorbs you. You only see one way.”

Junior testified that he tried to follow in the footsteps of his father, who used him to pass messages to other mobsters. But after developing a crack cocaine addiction, he wanted “to make up for what I had done in my life” by becoming a government cooperator.

A jury convicted the elder Franzese in July after five days of deliberations. A judge revoked his bail and threw him in jail.

In letters to the judge since then, Franzese’s doctors catalogued what lawyers call his “serious maladies,” including gout, high blood pressure and kidney disease. His family also wrote to say they saw a domesticated don while he was out on bail awaiting trial at his daughter’s home.

“The Sonny Franzese I know as my grandfather is kind considerate, warm, and funny,” wrote one granddaughter. “When he is around family he just loves to tell jokes, watch baseball on television, nap, and tell stories about the past.”

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