The trip experience informed the design of a tattoo themed around all of this compiled research about Kuklinski. So I located the spot and found ducks – still right there. Of particular interest on my 2012 trip was finding the spot where Richard used to go to feed ducks near his house, something he loved to do in the neighboring community of Demarest. The Tappan Zee was slated for replacement construction that then began in 2013, and is slated for completion in 2017. I explored both sides of the Tappan Zee Bridge north of NYC, where Kuklinski met DeMeo and others in blue collar diners that provided anonymity to casually discuss murder contracts. It was a place Richard was familiar with. He was convicted of two murders, but claimed to have killed at least. Since Kuklinski had worked for Mafia capo Roy DeMeo, I also visited the building that had been DeMeo’s infamous Gemini Lounge in Brooklyn where many murders had occurred. Richard 'The Iceman' Kuklinski parlayed his penchant for violence into a lucrative career for prominent Mafia crime families. Kuklinski had lived in Dumont for years while he worked as a contract killer for the mafia – something he never involved or ever informed his family about. Seeing what that neighborhood looked like today, finding where his house sits, experiencing what the air and sounds are like there informed my insight in a primary way that complements text and the documentaries can only inform about. In August of 2012 I flew to New Jersey to visit Kuklinski’s former house in Dumont. I also reviewed the three HBO documentary interviews with Kuklinski and began to think about visiting some of the locales mentioned within Carlo’s text. The early spring of 2012 marked a little over a year since my first reading of Philip Carlo’s book “The Ice Man” – a book about the life and times of mafia hit man Richard Kuklinski.