CITYWIDE — ONCE SYMBOLS OF underworld power, homes tied to infamous mob figures are struggling to sell across the tri-state area — not because of their criminal history but their gaudy interiors and costly upkeep, the New York Post reports. From Paul “Big Paul” Castellano’s marble-heavy Staten Island estate — recently pulled from the market after failing to fetch $18 million — to Albert Anastasia’s demolished Fort Lee fortress, luxury buyers are balking at properties frozen in mid-century excess.

Even Victoria Gotti’s long-abandoned Long Island mansion, once the backdrop of Growing Up Gotti, sold for just $1.1 million, far below its past listings.

In contrast, Al Capone’s childhood home in Park Slope, completely renovated and stripped of its mob-era design, shows that in New York

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