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October 8, 2025 34 mins
Recently I was given information about the arrest of Anthony Stango, an alleged mobster in New Jersey's DeCavalcante Crime Family. Stango is the son of longtime DeCav heavyweight Charles Stango. Today I delve into father and son. In the first ten or so minutes I discuss some recent Mob news including a plea for senile former Colombo street boss Ralph DeLeo in a bizarre case and we have a new alleged boss in New Jersey.

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USE REFERRAL CODE- JEFFNADU

Jeff Nadu is an American Mafia and organized crime researcher, podcaster and content creator. He has worked at Barstool Sports and was hired personally by Dave Portnoy. His podcast "The Sitdown" with Jeff Nadu has put out hundreds of biographies on various mobsters, gangsters and criminals. He's also personally interviewed mobsters like Sammy "The Bull" Gravano, Dom Cicale, Anthony Ruggiano Jr, Gene Borrello and others as well as US Prosecutor John Gleeson and FBI Agents Joaquin "Jack" Garcia and Michael Campi. He has been personally endorsed by former Gambino mob captain Michael "Mikey Scars" DiLeonardo, esteemed author RJ Roger, and former Colombo Crime Family captain Michael Franzese.

DISCLAIMER: My videos and podcasts are meant for entertainment and educational use. All material found in my videos reflect this use. ANY opinions and or statements of any guest is merely he/her's opinion. 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Welcome to The sit Down, a mafia history podcast. Here's
your host, Jeff Naydo. What's up everybody, and welcome in
to another edition of The sit Down. I am your host,
Jeff Nayd. This is episode two hundred and thirty one
of the podcast. As always, if you're enjoying what we're

(00:33):
doing here each week, please make sure you leave us
a five star rating and a review. It's helpful on
both iTunes, Spotify, or wherever you get your shows. I
appreciate all of you, nonetheless, I hope all of you
have had a great week so far. Another week, another dollar.
We're into October now, but I'll tell you what. The

(00:54):
weather hasn't really felt like it. It's been like high seventies,
low eighties around here. It seems like that's kind of
going on around the country right now. But I wouldn't
say it's not historic. I actually looked up recently that
they're like high in Maine was eighty degrees in nineteen
sixty three, So it's not that crazy, I guess. But

(01:15):
I don't know why weather interests me. But it's not
like I'm going to start a weather podcast right now.
I'm just interested in I guess that said, we are
back with another show. Got a kind of a partner
episode to last week's show. We interviewed former FBI agent
Seamus McLarney last week. If you haven't checked that out,
make sure you go check it out. Today, we're going
to talk a little bit more about the people they

(01:37):
call the real Sopranos, the Tacavocanti crime family. I got
a little news on the family and then we'll get
into the episode. I also want to talk a little
bit about a recent plea we had in federal court.
I always like to keep people updated on what the
mob is up to right now and today. Last over

(01:58):
the last few days in federal court in Boston, an
eighty two year old man called Ralph de Leo pled
guilty to two federal charges in a case that goes
back earlier this year to when he allegedly was looking

(02:19):
to kill three FBI officials, mostly agents, and there was
also talked that he wanted to take out a judge. Well,
he played guilty tarika conspiracy a felon in possession of
a firearm. The racketeering charge was dismissed, but in terms
of this whole thing, de Leo who look at one

(02:41):
point was the street boss of the Columbo crime family.
Lea's had kind of a weird career because you know,
I've talked about de Leo at one point he actually
cooperated back in the seventies for whatever reason, I guess
the Columbo crime faily wasn't aware of that. He operated
out of New England and for like a period of
about a year, Ralph Dalio was the street boss in

(03:04):
his family. Between approximately the summer of two thousand and
eight and the end of two thousand and nine, Ralph
Delo was allegedly in control of his family. He's kind
of a bit of a nutcase, he said, kind of
a weird life, weird career, but he is a gangster
in the end. And what essentially went on is there

(03:27):
was a tip back in I believe May of this
year that basically said, hey, you know, this guy is
pissed off. Now. De Leo had gotten out of prison
in twenty twenty four and he had an a vendetta
against the case agents in his indictment, so he allegedly
plotted to whack him and eventually the Feds go to

(03:50):
his house and they discover a bunch of things they discover, addresses, names,
all sorts of stuff. There was also burglary, kids, body cameras,
all sorts of stuff. So now he's gonna have to
go back to prison for this little stunt. And I mean,
Ralph the Leo has spent a lot of years of

(04:11):
his life in prison, you know he. I mean, he's
literally spent like thirty forty years in prison. And like
I said, in twenty twelve, I mean, he was sentenced
to sixteen years, got out last May, or not last May,
but in May twenty four and now he's going back
eighty two years old, going back to prison. You know,

(04:34):
this is again, you know, maybe he's lost his marbles
a little bit. You know, maybe he needs obviously think
a little bit more before he does things. Now, as
far as the court documents, the officials weren't mentioned that
he plotted to kill, but I mean we would assume

(04:54):
that it had to do with the case that he
was jammed up on, just kind of you know, this
is not how the mob works anymore. You know, back
in the day, they wouldn't threaten, they would just do it,
all right, But we're not back in the day anymore.
So stuff like this gets Look how quick it got
figured out. He's already been sentenced. This only happened in May,

(05:17):
so it happened in literally five months. All of this.
That's how, you know, shoddy of a plan this was.
There was also contact he had with like former associates
of like different organized crime, like the Chinese Mob and
stuff like that. Just this guy's all over the place.

(05:38):
I've also heard rumors that Ralph Delio may have at
one point used to post like on real you know,
like mafia forms and stuff like message boards and stuff.
But I don't know if that was ever proven, but
there is rumors that he used to do that. So
and yeah, what's crazy is at one point he was

(06:02):
allegedly cooperating to cops out in Ohio. He was a
part of a kidnapping for hire case involving killing a
physician in Ohio, and he allegedly was cooperating back then.
So just kind of a wild where the mob is
and kind of how they're doing things some of these

(06:23):
crazy you know, kooks. But another story that I wanted
to get into, involving the Jersey family. I reported this
last week. The Cavalcanti crime family have a new boss.
You know, for a while it was Charles Majori. Majori though,
is in his eighties and he's kind of taken a

(06:44):
bit of a step back. According to multiple sources that
I have, the new boss is Domenico Marzulo, a person
they call Mimo. Mimo is from Montclair. We lives in
Montclair now. He had a deli restaurant at one point,
he was involved with book making and loan sharking. Was
a guy that did some time back in the early

(07:06):
two thousands. Kind of a well to do guy. You're
definitely known in the community. I know he has a
brother that that's involved with the restaurant as well. He's
pretty active in the community. This guy's low, you know,
just a low make money, not headlines type of guy.
Low profile, you don't make noise. Which is kind of

(07:29):
interesting because today we're going to talk about a guy,
Charles Stango and his son Whitey, who had been anything
but quiet. I reported recently that Anthony Stango, the son,
was arrested for for drugs. This can't look good in
terms of that family and the boss now, or the
alleged boss, Marzulo is significantly less active. He's not you know, big,

(07:56):
big time make money, you know, a big make headlines,
not money guy. He wants to be quiet. He wants
to keep it like that life is, and that's the
kind of boss you need to have. We see that
kind of across not only New Jersey, but in New York.
A lot of the bosses are quiet. We barely know
that they exist. And that's what these people want. That's

(08:18):
what they want to have. They don't want a lot
of law enforcement scrutiny. We're starting to see that the
FBI is consolidating everything. It was reported that recently the
FBI is no longer looking at organized crime. Now it's
not completely true, but instead of having three or four

(08:39):
or five OC crews that look over these families, there's
just one group. Now there's one unit C five that
looks over all five families. So again, the scrutiny continues
to get smaller and smaller, and the scrutiny that there
is they don't want. So they're quiet. A new boss,

(09:01):
a new day in New Jersey. According to what I know, Uh,
the new boss is Mimo Marzullo. They're in New Jersey
before we get into the episode this week, and it
is a good one. On Whitey Stango and his father
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(11:13):
Right now, all right, everybody, let's get into today's episode.
We're going to talk about Whitey Stango and his father,
Charles Stango, who, according to the government, is a member
of the Cavalcanti crime family. Another kind of look into
what the mob is today. Let's get into it. Here
on to sit down. Anthony Stango was born in nineteen

(11:37):
eighty one. He is currently forty three years old and
was born in Livingston, New Jersey. He is the son
of longtime mobster Charles Stango. Now, when you talk about Stango,
he was born in approximately nineteen forty three in Elizabeth,
New Jersey. In his youth, he would live at six

(12:00):
point twenty five Fourth Avenue in Elizabeth, which is just
a stone's throw away from a place called the Reverera
Social Club. If you've ever heard of some of the
early workings of the Di Cabalcanti crime family, this neighborhood
is really kind of where this family took shape, and
Stango was from that neighborhood and not far away. It

(12:23):
was said that Charles Stango became an associate in and
around the late seventies and he was in a crew
run by a person called Vincent Jimmy Rotunda. Now Rotundo
is a guy that was based in Brooklyn. He was
originally in the crew of a person called bank Big
Frank Cochiaro, who generally, from what I understand, Coachyard got

(12:47):
older and Rotundo took his crew over, and a lot
of the early captains and a lot of the down
the road captains were actually based in Brooklyn. A guy
Rudy Faron was at the Cavalcanti guy. He was based
in Brooklyn. A lot of these guys kind of were
based in Brooklyn, but the family was based in New Jersey.
Charles Stango in nineteen eighty though, and he would actually

(13:11):
talk about making his bones. He made his bones. He
allegedly murdered a debtor to the mafia named Billy Mann.
And this was on orders from allegedly a man called
Tino Fumara, who is a Jersey based Genoese mobster who
held sway on docks and in certain areas. Billy Mann

(13:32):
allegedly owed him money and for whatever reason, Charles Stango
was given the job and he would ultimately spend over
twenty years in prison over that. So from approximately nineteen
eighty to two thousand and two, Charles Stango was in prison.
Now what does that mean for his son, Whitey Stango,

(13:52):
who as I said, was born in nineteen eighty one, Well,
it means that Whitey Stango spent virtually his entire life,
or at least his early life without his father, and
that would shape him into being kind of what he became.
He was always I think looking for acceptance from his father,
who he had to get to know behind a prison wall.

(14:15):
That's difficult for a young young boy, a young child,
and it's no surprise that what e Stango would follow
his father into the life because that was all he
knew and that's all his father knew. Charles Stango was
eventually released from prison, but it wouldn't be the last
time he would go to prison. He would do various
bids throughout his life. Now eventually once he's released in

(14:39):
two thousand and two. By that point, Stango the youth
is in his early twenties and he's already driving his
life into the ground by entering organized crime and he
wants to be around his father now. In and around
twenty thirteen, Charles Stango allegedly becomes a captain in the

(14:59):
cavalcan Anti crime family and he is based out of
North Jersey, the Elizabeth area, but he also spends time
in Henderson, Nevada, which is a suburb of Las Vegas.
He goes back and forth, and his crew operates in
New Jersey and they're getting involved in everything. Included in
his crew was his son, Anthony Stango, a person called

(15:24):
Paul Kalella and one of Stango's pals, a person called
Mario Golli. Now also involved in this crew was a
person called Lewis the Dog. Aliveri and Stango's scene here
in surveillance tapes also had an individual and his crew

(15:44):
on the far left, a person called Giovanni Gado. Now Gatto,
little does anybody know, is a police undercover and he
infiltrates Stango's inner circle. He had posed at one point
he was a biker who kind of just started moving

(16:05):
around in oc circles. He starts slotting in with members
of the Stango crew and eventually gets closed to Stango himself. Now,
one thing we begin to start to see developed between
Giovanni Gaddo and Louis Oliveri. From what I've gathered and
from what information has told us, they did not like

(16:27):
each other and regularly engaged in verbal altercations over different things.
And at one point Oliveri basically says that he believes
Giovanni Gaddo is actually no good and he may be
the police or FBI, or he's some sort of rat.

(16:47):
Giovanni Gatto is actually undercover agent for the New Jersey
State Police. A person called Giovanni Rocco. Now it wasn't
just this that mister Oliveri was engaged in. He was
regularly being very irritating and annoying not only two high
ranking members of the d Cavalcanti crime family, but also

(17:07):
Charles Stango and Stango would have it all come to
a head. It was also said that at one point
in and around twenty fourteen, Louis the Dog Oliveri was
at a social outing involving other members of the Cavalcanti
crime family in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Now including testimony in

(17:30):
different things. Basically, Oliveri was there at this event with
his family and at that point Oliveri had gained a
little weight when a person called Joseph Skolfani noticed Oliveri
and made some sort of joke about his recent weight gain,

(17:51):
to which Oliveri would verbally assault him in a way
in front of his grandchildren and his friendly which again
is a no no. Scalfani is a reputed member, he's
a high ranking member, and this is also done in
earshot of the boss of this family, Charles Majuri. So

(18:14):
mister Oliveri is becoming more and more hard to deal with.
Throw in the fact that Giovanni Gatto, who's undercover, who's
becoming very close to Stango, Alveri is also you know,
being out of line to him. He is an ear
to Stango. Everybody's kind of pissed off at Oliveri and

(18:34):
it all comes to a head now. In a taped conversation,
Stango meets the undercover Giovanni Gado in Las Vegas on
December fifteenth, twenty fourteen. During the course of that meeting,
which was recorded, Stango explained to Gaddo, who's undercover, that
Victim one, who is Oliveri, was the source of a

(18:58):
beef or disagreement with the the Cavalcanti crime family. According
to Stango, Oliveri had been quote made by other leaders
of the family, including a cruise Coppo. However, in December
twenty fourteen, Stango was told by other members of a
family that Oliveri had insulted the acting boss of the

(19:20):
family during the course of a social gathering, which was Skulfani.
In addition, Victim one in Stango had been involved in
an ongoing disagreement over which of the two would control
undercover Gatto within the family. As a result, Stango concluded
that Oliveri was quote out of control and that he

(19:42):
had to quote meet death, or you gotta maim him
or put him in a fucking wheelchair for the rest
of his life, or somebody's gonna get a fucking jar
of acid and throw it in his fucking face. Later,
Stango would tell undercover Gatto that he quote expected that
the undercover would kill or mame Olivery or recruit someone

(20:04):
else to do it on his behalf. On the following day,
the undercover would again meet with Stango in person. During
that meeting, Stango again insisted that v One Oliveri quote
must be killed or maimed or by someone on his behalf.
During the conversation, Stango would tell the undercover that one

(20:25):
might quote consider throwing a couple of pineapples aka plastic
explosives into his place of business or quote stick up
the joint and put a couple of bullets in his
quote nuts, or okay, take his legs out. Later, Stango stated,
we got a problem in our house, meaning the family,

(20:47):
and we've got a quote straighten it out. When Giovanni
Gatto aka the undercover, questions Stango as to what would
happen if Olivery gets done, aka killed Stango respect quote Listen,
I don't give a fuck. If he's gone, he's gone.
See you later. They might give you fifty medals, they

(21:07):
might give us fifty medals. Whatever happened, it comes from me.
Stango would also add, but this guy has got to
get maimed. He ain't got to get killed even. Stango
then continued, I want to quote blow him up, and
that this gotta be ended. This gotta be ended, all right.
I don't want you there. Don't be around it now.

(21:28):
Several days later, on or about January twenty seventh, twenty fifteen,
mister Stango also engages any conversation with his son on
the phone, who is in New Jersey. During the course
of that conversation, Stango and Anthony Stango discuss the ongoing
dispute between Charles Stango and OLIVERI and members of the crew.

(21:51):
Stango told his son, quote, the whole world knew about
the problem with Olivery and that you quote got betrayed
in that crew. You did the right thing, you got betrayed.
Anthony Stango would agree, quote they are a bunch of
backstabbing motherfuckers. I ain't gonna let him fuck with me again,
that's it, that's it, you know. So again Stango, his son,

(22:16):
everybody's very pissed off at OLIVERI, to which he goes
to an undercover who he believes is trusted and orders
that that undercover either kill Mame or set up the
murder of OLIVERI. Now, I also want to talk about
some of the other exploits that mister Stango and his

(22:36):
son are involved in together. And you got to hear
these conversations between Whitey Stango and his father, Charles Stango.
By this point, Anthony Stango has set up shop in
Tom's River, which is a kind of township area not
far away from the Jersey Shore Seaside Heights, bell Mar,

(23:00):
all these different places where there's a lot of young people, clubs, bars,
good places, stell Coke right to which Stango has a
connect for. He instructs Golli and all these different people
that his friends he's friends with to go down and
selling narcotics and they're moving a bunch of cocaine, which

(23:21):
is talked about in the indictment. However, also Stango gets
a bright idea he wants to open in the Toms
River area some sort of high end escort service, like
a bar where you have beautiful women, high end businessmen
come in. There's rooms, everybody gets paid, everybody gets made whole,

(23:45):
and he conducts sexual exploits on behalf of some sort
of escort service, to which he talks openly about with
his father, and his father begins giving him kind of
advice on how to do this. Stango, the old would say, quote,
and you got the big fucking garage in the back.
You need something like a fucking place off the fucking road, okay,

(24:08):
like a warehouse where you can get in there and
not where you can fucking hear your music. And you
gotta make it a private joint where you go in
where you can make it a fucking bar where you
can have all the girls, all them, can have your
company there and they come here. They bring people to drink.
No sex, no drugs, no talking, nothing in that joint

(24:29):
except you set it up, and you'll make a fucking
geno in a fucking day. Just in a bar. You
get good music, not that fucking rap shit, just soft shit,
soft stuff where somebody can come. You got some couches,
get some fucking boobs, you got every fucking thing. It's
a club. You gotta get paperwork, you understand. So essentially,

(24:51):
in a weird convoluted way, Charles Stango is telling his
son to make it low key, make it look like
a bar, and just have women there that look good.
Everybody has conversations, exchange some numbers, and you set it
up where you get paid on the back end. And
it's basically a high end prostitution service. Now, missus Stango
would continue quote establish allegal club as a front for

(25:16):
the illegal business in order to avoid scrutiny. He also
would add, have reasonable prices, and it's also a good
idea to quote put out fundraising materials that are purported
to be for wounded veterans or something like that. Go
get a license for the joint, he added. You know,
make a call, what do I need to get a club?

(25:37):
Call a lawyer, find what the fuck you gotta do
and can't do, and get ready to set that up.
Make donations to the fucking wounded vets or something like that.
For every drink, the bulls and bears, anthony, they survive,
the pigs they get slaughtered. Okay, always go for a
blooney sandwich. You know, if you get five maloney sandwiches.

(26:00):
You're eating pretty good. So he's schooling his son, don't
be too greedy. Just take a couple thousand a week,
nothing wrong with that. Go the right way, make it
look legitimate, have donations. It's almost like when you were
a kid and a cop, you know you would you
would get the dare thing to put it on the
back of your car when you're selling drugs, to make

(26:21):
it look like you're actually, you know, an upstanding citizen.
This guy's teaching his son about how to do all
this stuff, and in turn, Stango's taking the advice. Everybody's working,
everybody's earning. That said, it would all come to a
head eventually because all of this stuff precluded the fact

(26:42):
that mister Stango tried to get an undercover police operative
to murder a made member of the Dacabalcanti crime family.
So eventually everybody's jammed up. Arrests include Charles Stango and
his son Anthony Whitey Stango, among others. Also jammed up

(27:03):
in this was a person called Frank Nigro, who was
the alleged consiglieri of the Cavalcanti crime famous. This was
a pretty serious arrest. A lot of the main conversations
were between mister Stango on the far right and Giovanni
Gatto on the far left, who turned out to be
undercover agent for the New Jersey State Police Giovanni Rocco.

(27:27):
So mister Stango is kind of screwed in a way. Eventually,
Charles Stango would plead guilty in this case and would
receive ten years in federal prison. Here he can be
seen behind the wall with former Banano associate Chris Lobata.

(27:47):
Now Anthony Whitey Stango would also plead guilty. He would
plead guilty on charges ranging from selling cocaine and other
drugs to attempting to start a illegal prostitution business, as
well as carrying weapons. He was originally sentenced to seventy
two months in federal prison. Here he can be seen

(28:10):
a little slimmer with a few of his pals behind
the wall. Now the reason for doing this show today is,
according to information I was recently provided with and did
some research on, Anthony Stango has recently been arrested and
he has not learned from his behavior over the years,

(28:30):
and from what I know, according to his supervisor release requirements,
he still I believe is on supervisor release. He was
given a five year supervisor release. Now again I will
point out he may be off that I don't know
the exact dates. That said, if you notice booking date
Essex County, eight twenty six, twoenty twenty five, Anthony Stango

(28:56):
booked in Essex County for CDs, manufacturing, distribution, possession with
intent to deliver h and coke point five ounce to
five ounce. So that's a good amount of narcotics. Now,
notice the charges. These are important. We mentioned the drug charges.

(29:16):
He was also possession of a firearm while committing CDs,
prohibited weapons and devices, unlawful possession of a weapon without
a permit. That is the important thing here. Also, due
to the fact mister Stango is a felon in possession

(29:38):
of a weapon, my guess is this is going to
go federal where it already is going federal. I will
point out mister Stango was arrested approximately thirty days ago.
He is not in the Essex County inmate locator. He
is also not in the federal locator. I'm not saying anything,

(30:02):
I'm just stating where he is currently. I don't know. Now,
my guess is he is gonna go federal with this,
he's already done seventy two months for drug crimes. He
is not allowed to have a weapon. That is a
complete and utter violation of very simple federal statutes, one

(30:24):
of which is nine to two G a federal law
to prohibits certain individuals, such as convicted felons, from possessing
firearms that are either shipped, transported, or received in interstate
or foreign commerce. Violating this immediately you go back to jail. Okay.
This is a very simple statute that the Feds are

(30:46):
using mostly against young gangsters, black gangsters. In the streets
where you go to prison. They use your Instagram and
they see you have a weapon. They can hit you
real quick at a nine to twenty two G. Give
you three four years behind the wall. Now. This is
also concerning due to the fact that mister Stango was
again arrested for p wid possession within ten says ain't good.

(31:15):
He is also a reputed member of the mafia. He
was made in approximately the twenty tens. I have heard
from various sources mister Stango has been shelved from the mob.
We have also heard, and I have heard through good
sourcing that Charles Stango is possibly running the Dicabalcanti crime family.

(31:38):
At this point, there has been rumors that he's the
ub Missouri's quite old. He's even older than Charles Stango,
who's eighty two. These guys are pretty old. Stango is
never going to retire. He's not the kind of guy
to do that. He is a born and bred mobster.
So it's going to be remained to be seen. What
is going on with Anthony Stango. He looks a little different.

(32:01):
He's obviously a little bit older. Now this comes from
his Facebook page. He's very easy to find. I do
want to state, and I think this is important. We
have to realize when we look at Stango. Okay, I
understand years ago, you know, he had kind of the
hip hop look to him. But remember these pictures were

(32:22):
fifteen years ago. Stango's in his forties now. I talked
to someone that knew Stango well and still knows him
quite well. He would tell me that Stango is actually
a pretty good guy, and unfortunately he is just the
product of a person who didn't have his father as
a child. He was always looking for acceptance from his father.

(32:44):
He's a great father himself, and he told me that
he was sorry to hear about the fact that he
had been arrested. Recently, I also spoke directly to Giovanni
Rocco himself, and he would tell me that he always
likes Stango and they had a relationship, and they would
both call Stangler's father dad. They were they were pretty close,

(33:06):
all of them. So we'll see what happens next with
Anthony Stango, but he is going to be facing some
charges here over the next couple of months. We'll see
what he ends up copping to or what he ends
up doing here. But just kind of another story that
is going on right now in the American MAFI. We've
had some morests recently. I reported last week on the

(33:27):
arrest of Gambino member Billy Scatto. This is another guy
recently jammed up. So I hope you enjoyed this video.
I will say at one point here in the next
couple of weeks, we will have on Giovanni Rocco. Looking
forward to speaking to him. I know he's kind of
been around the interview circuit. I also have an interview
coming up recently, coming up soon with with another member

(33:51):
of law enforcement who infiltrated the mob in a way,
So a lot of cool stuff coming. So let me
know what you thought of the video today. And yeah,
Anthony stack a gole arrested recently. We'll see you next week.
You're on to sit there,
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