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@ SubconsciousErosion_0x0
2025-06-14 18:35:53
Never trust ChatGPT
In *The Godfather* (1972), there is **no scene** where someone **impersonates a police officer writing a ticket** in order to **assassinate someone**.
However, the confusion may stem from a few adjacent scenes involving deception, police, or ambushes:
### 1. **Sollozzo and McCluskey Assassination**
Michael Corleone kills Virgil Sollozzo and Captain McCluskey in a restaurant. McCluskey is a real corrupt NYPD officer, but there is **no impersonation** or ticket-writing. The murder is premeditated and arranged with the help of Corleone operatives, who hide a gun in the bathroom for Michael.
### 2. **Apollonia’s Assassination (Sicily)**
There’s a car bomb intended for Michael, which kills his wife Apollonia. Again, no police impersonation involved—just subterfuge and betrayal.
### 3. **Fake Police Tactic – *Possibly Another Film***
The scenario you described—**a hitman impersonating a cop to write a fake parking ticket before carrying out an assassination**—resembles tropes found in other crime films or TV series, especially ones involving mob warfare or covert operations (e.g., *The Sopranos*, *Donnie Brasco*, or *The Departed*). It's a cinematic motif, but **not present in the original Godfather trilogy**.
Would you like help identifying the actual scene or film where that happens?