Police: Construction Worker Known As 'Second Avenue Sinatra' Found Dead
NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) -- A man who gained fame singing Frank Sinatra on Second Avenue has been found dead in an apparent suicide, after he was missing from his Queens neighborhood for a month.
Four years after Gary Russo's brush with fame, the "Second Avenue Sinatra'' vanished without a trace after leaving his home shortly after midnight on July 28.
On Friday, a passerby discovered Russo's body hanging from a tree in a park strewn with reeds in the Howard Beach Queens.
Police: Construction Worker Known As 'Second Avenue Sinatra' Found Dead
Police suspect Russo's death was a suicide. The New York City Medical Examiner's office will determine his cause of death.
Earlier this month, Russo's car was found abandoned in the same neighborhood.
The 54-year-old iron worker shot to YouTube fame in 2011 for crooning out Frank Sinatra and Bobby Darin classics at the Second Avenue subway project during his 30-minute lunch break.
He was the foreman for the subway project. But his stardom was short-lived. Russo was transferred to another job site about a month later.
Friends said Russo still performed at some small venues and gave motivational speeches.
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