An
Overview of Current Conditions
By: Richard C. Lindberg
Significant federal prosecutions in the 1980s and 1990s have
crippled the power of the 26 Mafia "families" in the U.S. The
"old-time" bosses governing every American city where there has been a
Mafia presence since before the turn of the last century are either
imprisoned, dead, or in exile as a result of sweeping Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (R.I.C.O.) legislation, and the
combined efforts of the eighteen regional "strike forces" established
between January 1967 and April 1971 under the auspices of the of the
Organized Crime and racketeering Section within the criminal division
of the U.S. Justice Department. In 1989, U.S. Attorney General Dick
Thornburgh bolstered the U.S. Attorney’s organized crime investigative
resources by merging the regional strike forces with local offices.
The Clinton administration has continued the
successful initiatives against organized crime begun by President
Ronald Reagan in 1983, when he convened a special Commission on
Organized Crime, spotlighting money laundering, labor racketeering, and
narcotics trafficking. In 1986,after three years of investigation and
follow-up, the heads of three of the five crime families of New York
were convicted of running the Mafia as a continuing criminal enterprise
controlled by a ruling national commission. By 1989 the government had
already imprisoned some 1,200 Mafia brigands from New York to
California.
It was a far cry from the days when the late J.
Edgar Hoover denied the Mafia’s existence. Stepping up their efforts,
the U.S. Justice Department’s "Operation Button Down" targeted the
ruling cadre of national organized crime. Between 1993-1996, law
enforcement arrested or prosecuted 42 upper-echelon mob figures in
Boston, New Orleans, Chicago, Philadelphia, Cleveland, New York, and
Newark, N.J. In April 1997, nine more individuals with links to
organized crime in Las Vegas, Los Angeles, and Buffalo were indicted on
murder-for-hire charges. Attorney General Janet Reno’s strategy was
geared toward lulling career criminals into a false sense of well being
while federal law enforcement quietly built its case.
In the opinion of many veteran prosecutors and
federal agents, the Russian "Mafyia," Colombian drug cartels, Japanese
Yakuza, Chinese Triads, and the evolving ethnic inner-city street
gangs—comprising elements of the "new" organized crime—have supplanted
the Mafia and pose a much more lethal threat to the fabric of society
as America prepares for the Millennium.
The Mafia is down—but never out. Their corruptive
influence is deep and pervasive and extends well beyond drug
trafficking, extortion, and the more traditional forms of vice. Its
tentacles reach into organized labor, and every facet of legitimate
business, irrespective of R.I.C.O. The mob owns car dealerships,
restaurants, cleaning services, construction companies, waste-handling
businesses, and quite possibly may even hold seats on the commodities
exchange, the trading floors of Wall Street and financial centers of
mid-America.
However, R.I.C.O. (the major weapon in the war on
organized crime) has imparted valuable lessons in gangland. The vicious
"wars" of past years have, for the most part, ceased. In Chicago there
has not been a significant mob "hit" since the early 1990s. The "trunk
music" refrain popularized by members of Joe Ferriola’s crew of
extortionists and shakedown artists has been silenced, at least for the
moment. Today, when the Chicago media reports on gang warfare in the
Windy City, inevitably it involves a young man falling victim to a
drive-by shooter over distribution of drug profits, or ownership of a
pair of sneakers.
The inexperienced and undisciplined younger mob
bosses are just now beginning to understand the perils associated with
maintaining a high-profile lifestyle. They need only consider the
plight of John Gotti who languishes in a "super-max" prison half-way
across the country from his Ravenite Social Club digs in lower
Manhattan. In happier times, Gotti was afforded the title of "The
Dapper Don" by an admiring throng of media and well-wishers. Nowadays
it’s harder to pinpoint just who’s in charge in many Mafia cities, and
that has created new dilemmas for law enforcement and fresh
opportunities for the mobs to regroup.
How did this parasitical crime structure evolve, and
where do they stand today on the threshold of a new century? A historic
and contemporary overview presented as a public service to our readers,
follows.
Structure of a Mafia Crime Family
The "Honored Society" as the Mafia is commonly known among its members
is structured much like a modern corporation in the sense that duties
and responsibilities are disseminated downward through a "chain of
command" that is organized in pyramid fashion. (Example follows)
1. Capo Crimini/Capo de tutti
capi (super boss/boss of
bosses)
2. Consigliere (trusted advisor or family counselor)
3. Capo Bastone (Underboss, second in command)
4. Contabile (financial advisor)
5. Caporegime or Capodecina (lieutenant, typically heads a faction of ten or
more soldiers comprising a "crew.")
6. Sgarrista (a foot soldier who carries out the day to day business
of the family. A "made"
member of the Mafia)
7. Piciotto (lower-ranking soldiers; enforcers.
Also known in the streets as the
"button man.")
8. Giovane D’Honore (Mafia associate, typically a non-Sicilian or non-Italian
member)
The National Commission, the Mafia’s ruling body, founded in September
1931 Charter members included: Joseph Bonanno, Joseph Profaci, Thomas
Gagliano, Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Vincent Mangano (New York City),
Stefano Maggaddino (Buffalo), and Frank Nitti (Chicago). It is believed
that representatives from Chicago, Detroit, Buffalo, Philadelphia, and
the five families of New York comprise the modern-day National
Commission.
The Major Mafia Crime Families :
Boston~
Gaspare Messina imported the Mafia to Boston and
ruled a small, insignificant organization from 1916-1924. The real
criminal power in the city was a South Boston Irishman named Frankie
Wallace, leader of the Gustin Gang until the Italians assassinated him
in the North End in 1931. After that fateful day, there was finally
enough room for the Italian Mafia, confined to the North End, to expand
and prosper.
Following Gustin’s demise, Boston organized crime
was a loose confederation of ethnic bootlegging and policy gangs. Until
Irish gangsters abruptly ended his life outside Boston’s Cotton Club on
January 24, 1933, Charles "King" Solomon reigned over the Jewish
criminal operations. Thereafter the criminal landscape of Beantown was
dramatically altered. A former Sicilian fight promoter named Filippo
"Phil" Buccola, ultimately gained the upper hand in the Boston Mafia
over Joseph Lombardo, and ruled a small but lean family until 1954.
The New England crime family with satellite
operations in Connecticut, coalesced under the leadership of Raymond
L.S. Patriarca, Buccola’s successor, who maintained his office in
Providence, R.I. For nearly three decades. Patriarca’s influence
stretched from Portland, ME, to New Haven CT. His lieutenant, Gennaro
"Jerry" Angiulo, a North End wise-guy, was given a free hand to run the
Boston faction from his office at 98 Prince Street, but he was
convicted in 1986 along with two of his brothers under federal R.I.C.O.
charges following a five-year investigation. Patriarca died in 1984,
deeding control of the family to his son who led them down a ruinous
path.
The organization remains in chaos and disarray
following a disastrous gang war in the late 1980s, defections of top
leadership, and the FBI’s secret recording of a 1989 Mafia induction
ceremony—the first on record. In 1995, James "Whitey" Bulger of South
Boston went on the lam after feeling betrayed by his FBI "handlers"
whom he accused of trying to embarrass his brother, former
Massachusetts Senate President William Bulger. Whitey, an ally of Steve
"the Rifleman" Flemmi, had secretly worked as an FBI informant for
nearly 20 years until he was indicted on racketeering charges in 1995.
Flemmi and Bulger were leaders of Sommerville’s Winter Hill Gang.
Francis "Cadillac" Salemme, shot and wounded outside a Saugus, MA
pancake house on June 16, 1989, served as boss until 1996 when he was
arrested on federal R.I.C.O. charges. Acting boss Nicholas "Nicky"
Bianco is reportedly in charge.
Buffalo~
Joseph Peter DiCarlo founded the Buffalo faction of
"La Cosa Nostra" around 1921 but was driven out of the city and forced
to take up residence in Miami where he became a gambling czar. The
history of organized crime in Western New York rightfully begins with
Stefano Maggaddino, cousin of Joseph Bonanno, who headed one of the
five families of New York before retirement. Born in the same town as
Bonanno, Maggaddino established his own family in Buffalo in 1922,
after falling out with the Buccellatos who fought for control of the
Brooklyn rackets. During Prohibition, Maggaddino and his brother
Antonio made enormous profits moving bootleg whiskey across the
Canadian border and quickly became the man to be reckoned with in
Buffalo, Rochester, NY., Toronto, Canada, and portions of Ohio.
Maggaddino was one of the last of the old "Dons" who formed the
National Commission in 1931. For 52 years—a Mafia record for
longevity---he managed to survive assassination attempts, Joe Valachi’s
damning testimony, and FBI heat. It is believed that Maggaddino
arranged the disastrous November 1957 Appalachin conference in upstate
New York, and masterminded the 1964 abduction of his cousin Joe Bonanno
on Park Avenue in Manhattan retaliation for an earlier attempt on his
life. In 1974, Maggaddino died of natural causes resulting in power
vacuum within his organization.
What Russell Bufalino, boss of North Eastern
Pennsylvania did not directly claim for himself, went to Salvatore
Pieri, a former drug runner who ruled the Buffalo rackets until 1987
when Joseph "Lead Pipe" Todaro, a labor union racketeer took over. In
recent years the Buffalo mob has aligned with Pete Milano’s L.A. crew
in an attempt to establish a toehold in Las Vegas. The Buffalo group is
involved in the street rackets once controlled by Tony "the Ant"
Spilotro of Chicago.
Chicago~
Over the years, the Chicago "outfit" earned a
fearsome reputation as the most kill-crazy organized crime group in
America. The violent legacy of murder and mayhem had its origins in the
Windy City long before Al Capone and his minions ruthlessly eliminated
rival bootleg gangs with strongholds on the West, and North Sides of
the city in the 1920s. The "outfit" was a loose coalition of former
Black Hand extortionists, vice merchants, narcotics traffickers, and
corrupt labor union leaders, operating out of the South Side "Levee"
vice district prior to World War I.
Illegal gambling was fragmented and widely scattered
across the city. Bookmaking was controlled by neighborhood bosses Mont
Tennes (North Side) James O’Leary (South Side) and Harry Perry and
Charles "Social" Smith (outlying areas). Al Capone, a former saloon
bouncer, pimp, "consolidator," and America’s most famous and
recognizable mobster applied modern business principals and instilled a
sense of fear and loathing among his rivals while buying off
politicians and judges with alacrity. Capone eliminated his rivals one
by one during the endless gang wars of the 1920s and early 1930s, until
his South Side organization prevailed. Frank Nitti, Paul "the Waiter"
Ricca, Tony Accardo, Sam Giancana, Joey Aiuppa, and John "No Nose"
DiFronzo inherited Big Al’s organization in the intervening decades
following his conviction for income tax evasion in 1931.
It is believed that between 70-200 members comprise
the scaled down 1990s Chicago "outfit." As recently as the mid 1980s,
seven multi-ethnic street crews responsible for juice loan operations,
collecting street taxes from independent gamblers, drug trafficking,
and overseeing other criminal activities, roamed the streets of Chicago
with impunity. Imprisonment and federal heat emanating out of the U.S.
Attorney’s office downtown have reduced the number of crews to three
apportioned geographic areas and just who is in charge these days
remains a matter of conjecture. It is widely assumed that Anthony
Centracchio rules the West Side, Joe "the Builder" Andriacchi the
North, and John "Apes" Monteleone the South Side and Northwest Indiana.
Now that Accardo, Aiuppa, and Jackie Cerone have expired as a result of
the complications of old age, the current boss is thought to be Joseph
"the Clown" Lombardo, who was released from a federal penitentiary a
few years ago after serving time for his part in the Las Vegas casino
skimming cases of the mid-1980s.
The Five Families of New York~
Despite the embarrassing antics of John Gotti the
"Teflon Don," the celebrated defection of underboss Sammy Gravano and
various setbacks played out in the courtrooms of Brooklyn and
Manhattan, the Carlo Gambino family remains the largest Mafia family in
the U.S. today with 20 separate capos, 300 made members, and 3,000
associates. John A. "Junior" Gotti reportedly took control of the
family after Gotti Sr. was convicted on murder and racketeering charges
and shuttled off to prison in 1991. His uncle, Peter Gotti, ably
assisted him until indictments were handed down against Junior. The
ruling Commission decided it was in the best interests of the family to
appoint Nicholas "Little Nicky" Corozzo acting boss, but Corozzo was
indicted on racketeering charges in Florida and is currently in prison.
Less sophisticated than the Genoveses who continue to gain momentum in
areas outside of New York, the Gambinos are involved in loan sharking,
narcotics trafficking, construction, pornography distribution, garbage
collection, Atlantic City casinos, and garment district labor unions.
The seven garment district trucking firms controlled by the family
gross $40 million dollars a year with net profits pegged at $12
million. The family’s total operation grosses $300 million a year.
The Vito Genovese family with 200 "made" members and
1,300 "associates" is second largest but steadily gaining influence
amid the Gambino turmoil. Until he went off to prison, the family was
headed by Vincent "the Chin" Gigante, who lolled about his Greenwich
Village neighborhood in carpet slippers and a bathrobe and wanted
everyone to believe he was as crazy as a bedbug. Liborio "Barney"
Bellomo reportedly stepped in as acting boss, but is boiling in hot
water these days after entering a guilty plea for shaking down the
street vendors who worked the San Gennaro Street Festival in Little
Italy. Bellomo became a "made" member of the mob at age 19. The Feds
believe that Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo is the current street boss.
Before Gigante’s misfortunes became a matter of public record, Anthony
"Fat Tony" Salerno, a scowling, old-time mobster, called the shots
until he died in prison following conviction in the celebrated
"Commission Case." The Genoveses derive much of their income from their
lock on the trucking industry, waste hauling, and their control of the
Fulton Fish Market, but they are also deeply involved in the
entertainment industry, the construction trades, and have been
described as the "Ivy League" of labor racketeering. The New York State
Organized Crime Task Force categorized the group as "the most stable,
the best counseled, and the most diversified business crime group in
the country.
The prestige and influence of the Gaetano "Thomas"
Lucchese family, third largest New York crime family with 125 members
and 500 associates, has dwindled in the face of government crackdowns
that have resulted in long prison terms for the ruling cadre. Former
bosses Anthony "Ducks" Corallo and Salvatore Santoro were convicted and
sent away. Corallo, a close friend of the late James R. Hoffa, died in
1986 and was succeeded by Vittorio Amuso who ruled the family until
1992 when he was handed a life sentence. Reportedly the New Jersey
branch of the family is headed by Martin Tacetta, whose influence
stretched all the way to Los Angeles where he masterminded a take over
of the lucrative pornography business through a bogus company set up in
Chatsworth. The family is involved in airport cargo hijacking (one of
their crews, headed by the late Paul Vario, was the subject of the 1990
motion picture Good Fellas), Florida gambling, the carting industry,
construction, pornography, and labor union racketeering. Alphonso
"Little Al" D’Arco was in charge of the family until he agreed to
become a government informant against the younger Gotti and other
mobsters. Joe DeFede is alleged to be the current acting boss of a
Mafia family that continues its downward slide. Anthony "Gaspipe"
Casso, a fugitive from justice for several years, serves as underboss
from his jail cell.
Internecine gang warfare of the 1980s decimated the
Joseph Bonanno family to the point of virtual insignificance. Cola
Schiro founded the criminal organization during Prohibition. Salvatore
Maranzano, an old-line "Don" who arrogantly proclaimed himself capo de
tutti capi (Boss of Bosses) succeeded Schiro. Maranzano was the
principal architect of the "five family" organizational structure
existing in New York, and the head of this particular family until
September 10,1931 when he was murdered in his Park Avenue office.
Thereafter, and for the next four decades, the
family was governed by Joseph Bonanno, another old-world traditionalist
who grew up in the same Sicilian village as Maranzano. Things haven’t
been quite the same for this Mafia family ever since patriarch Bonanno
fled to the Arizona sun-belt in 1968 after failing to carry out a crazy
scheme to murder the top bosses of the rival families in New York and
New Jersey. In the mid-1970s undercover FBI agent Joseph Pistone,
posing as a street tough named "Donnie Brasco" successfully infiltrated
a Bonanno street crew, resulting in the indictment of 17 "made" members
and associates in New York and Milwaukee. Never before had the Federal
government reached inside a Mafia family and achieved such stunning
results. It was a major embarrassment and a deadly setback for a
troubled crime family plagued by years of internal strife.
In 1979, Boss Carmine Galante was assassinated
in a Brooklyn restaurant. The hit was allegedly carried out by Philip
"Rusty" Rastelli, a loan shark, drug trafficker and union racketeer,
and Anthony "Bruno" Indelicato, an up and coming young capo. U.S.
Attorney Alan Friedman, who stepped down from his post in order to
enter private law practice in October 1990, convicted the top
leadership of this family and leaders of Teamsters Local 814. Joseph
Massina, who served his apprenticeship under Rastelli, inherited the
mantle of leadership of the Bonanno gang in 1989. He runs the
operations from prison following his 1986 racketeering conviction.
Narcotics are the family’s primary stock and trade, but other business
ventures include moving and storage, pizza parlors, espresso cafes and
catering are factored into the mix.
The Brooklyn-based Joseph Colombo family (formerly
the Joseph Profaci family until 1970 when Colombo was given command of
the family by Thomas Lucchese and Carolo Gambino as a reward for
informing them of Joe Bonanno’s secret plot to take over the New York
underworld) is currently headed by Andrew Russo, nephew of Carmine "the
Snake" Persico. Persico is serving a 100-year prison sentence following
his 1987 for helping run the National Commission. The Colombos stirred
much controversy in the early 1970s for their leader’s misguided
Italian-American anti-defamation advocacy. The resulting publicity drew
unwanted attention down upon the heads of the other families who marked
Colombo for death. He was gunned down at one of his unity rallies on
June 28, 1971, suffering permanent brain damage. Colombo lingered for
another seven years.
The family concerns itself these days with liquor
distribution, funeral homes, auto dealerships, airfreight, and
catering. In 1991, a civil war erupted involving two rival Colombo
factions, one of them loyal to the imprisoned Persico, the other to
acting boss Vic Orena. John A. "Junior" Gotti, son of the Dapper Don
attempted to intervene, but he failed to head off a bloody carnage that
left ten people dead and sapped the strength of this once feared
family. Persico emerged as victor of the "Colombo War" and was allowed
to appoint Russo acting boss.
Philadelphia-Atlantic City~
Sicilian-born Salvatore Sabella organized the
Philadelphia crime family and ran criminal operations from 1911-1927,
but Max "Boo Boo" Hoff controlled citywide bootlegging operations
during Prohibition and was recognized as the real power of the local
underworld. Under the thumb of the New York families for much of its
history, succeeding bosses Joseph Bruno (1927-1946) and Joseph Ida
(1946-1959) made only faltering attempts to establish local autonomy in
the City of Brotherly Love. The pattern of subservience continued
during the reign of Joseph Bruno’s son, Angelo "the Gentle Don" Bruno
(1959-1980).
An old-line boss who respected traditions and the
art of compromise, Bruno opposed drug trafficking and unnecessary
violence but fell victim to Mafia assassins who were dispatched from
New York on March 21, 1980. Bruno was shot-gunned in his car moments
after buying his evening paper. His bodyguard John Stanfa, was only
slightly wounded that night, and would make the most of his
opportunities, eventually emerging as boss of the Philadelphia rackets.
However, before this came to pass, Philadelphia was a city up for
grabs. Bruno’s successor, Philip Testa, died in a bomb blast that
demolished the front of his home. Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo, part
of a younger generation of mobsters taking control along the eastern
seaboard, made his peace with the New York families and claimed an
interest in Atlantic City gambling action and Local 54 of the Hotel and
Restaurant Employees Union.
Scarfo’s short but violent eight-year reign was
interrupted on May 13, 1989, when he was sentenced to 55-years in
prison for the 1985 murder of Frank "Flowers" D’Alfonso, a member of
the Bruno-Testa inner circle. D’Alfonso was ordered to die because he
had failed to show the "proper respect" for Scarfo when he decided to
cut his boss out of a share of the profits. John Stanfa took over the
family after Little Nicky went away, but in a stunning reversal of
fortune, government informant, and Stanfa hitman John Veasey testified
against his former boss in a sensational 1997 trial that exposed the
underpinnings of mob life. Stanfa was convicted. Ralph Natale, former
president of Local 54, of the Hotel, Motel, Restaurant and Bartender’s
Union International in Camden City is believed to be the man in charge
of Philadelphia.
Detroit~
During the wild and reckless Prohibition Era, the Detroit
River, spanning Windsor, Ontario and the Motor City, was the most
important commercial waterway in America for the illegal transport of
intoxicants coming in from Canada. A fleet of speedboats, many of them
owned and operated by Detroit’s infamous Purple Gang, ferried the booze
across the river and into the city where it was sold and distributed to
thirsty patrons nationwide. Joe and Abe Bernstein founded the Purples,
with the help of Harry and Louis Fleisher, and Joseph Zerilli.
Together, these men ran the Purple Gang, a gang of rumrunners and
gunslingers primarily (but not exclusively) of Jewish heritage. The
Purple Gang ruthlessly eliminated three members of the Little Jewish
Navy in the 1931 Collingwood Manor Apartment Massacre, but three
members of its members were arrested, convicted of murder and sentenced
to life. Abe Bernstein hooked up with Meyer Lansky and Joe Adonis after
1934. Purple gunmen Pete Licavoli and his brother Thomas ("Yonnie")
fled to Toledo, but eventually returned and gained control of liquor
smuggling and gambling on Detroit’s East Side with Joseph Bommarito.
Thereafter, the Licavoli-Bommarito combine became the major players in
the Eastern Great Lakes region, forging alliances based on expediency
with the Cleveland Syndicate, ruled by Moe Dalitz (from Detroit,
originally) Sam Tucker, Louie Rothkopf, and Morris Kleinman. The
lineage of Detroit’s Italian organized crime faction dates back to
1921, when Gaspare Milazzo founded his own gang. Gaetano Gianolla
murdered Milazzo in 1930, and absorbed the remnants of Detroit’s Jewish
gangs into the modern crime syndicate following repeal in 1933.
The Motor City mob was governed by a succession of
bosses including Joseph Vitale (1944-1964) former bootlegger Joseph
Zerilli (1964-1977), and Vincent Meli (son of Angelo Meli who was
listed by Detroit Police as "Public Enemy #1 during the 1930s) and Jack
William Tocco, related to the Melis’ through marriage. Tocco assumed
leadership in 1977 after Zerilli died. In a continuing crackdown
against the heads of the 26 Mafia families, Attorney General Janet Reno
announced the indictment of Tocco and 16 cohorts in March 1996.
Included in the list of mob figures targeted for prosecution was street
boss Tony Giacaclone, rumored to be the point man who set up the
ill-fated meeting the day Teamster boss Jimmy Hoffa disappeared from
the Machus Red Fox Restaurant in the Detroit suburbs in1975. Jack Tocco
was one of the longest tenured mob bosses in America, and his small but
cohesive organization managed to avoid the kinds of bloodbaths that
decimated the Cleveland and Philadelphia families in the 1970s and
1980s. At the time the indictments were handed down, the Detroit family
included 100 associates and 29 made members deeply involved in sports
bookmaking, policy, narcotics, extortion, corruption of public
officials and labor union bosses, vice, and hijacking. The profits from
these illegal enterprises fueled the many legitimate businesses owned
by Detroit mobsters and their associates.
Las Vegas~
Brooklyn-born Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel made grass
grow in the Nevada desert and he built a legal gambling oasis that was
to become a mob Mecca for decades to come. Las Vegas, has always been
fertile ground for organized crime. Just who maintained the spheres of
influence has been another matter. Nowadays the major player is Wall
Street, because gambling has become a respectable family pastime and
"Sin City" has gone legit…well, almost. Siegel, a flamboyant gunsel who
had designs on an acting career when he wasn’t chasing after Virginia
Hill and a bevy of Hollywood chorus girls, built the Flamingo casino
with $5 million dollars in seed money borrowed from Charles "Lucky"
Luciano and Meyer Lansky back in New York. Repeated construction
delays, cost over-runs, and the misappropriation of syndicate money
ultimately led to Siegel’s sudden, but inevitable demise. A sniper shot
him down while he was reading a newspaper in the privacy of Virginia’s
Beverly Hills mansion on June 20, 1947. Jack Dragna, the self-styled
"Al Capone of the West Coast" was blamed for the hit, but in all
likelihood the deed was carried out by gunman Frankie Carbo, acting on
direct orders from former Siegel chum Lansky. Virginia Hill never even
bothered to attend the funeral.
The Commission has always regarded Las Vegas,
arising like a Phoenix in the dust of the desert, as an "open" city. At
various times New York, Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Chicago
partitioned the territory, and set up satellite operations. For many
years, mobsters representing Eastern "interests" conveniently hid
behind front men posing as legitimate business executives, in order to
gain access to the millions of dollars exchanging hands inside the Las
Vegas casino counting rooms. The "skimming" of casino profits was an
irresistible lure until the government discovered that organized crime
was systematically looting the Teamsters pension fund to finance
construction of new hotels on the Vegas strip.
In the early 1980s it was revealed that the Argent
Corporation, the holding company for the Fremont and Stardust Hotels,
was controlled by Chicago’s Vegas point-man, the late Anthony "the Ant"
Spilotro, who basked in his reputation as a trigger-happy,
out-of-control thug. His "Hole in the Wall Gang" carried out
burglaries, home invasions, and shakedowns of drug dealers—their
criminal marauding was profiled in the movie Casino. Spilotro’s
freewheeling lifestyle and trigger-happy temper would eventually cost
him his life. After he exited the world in 1986, Chicago’s influence in
Vegas slowly waned. The Buffalo family, less sophisticated in its
techniques, muscled in on Spilotro’s former street rackets.
In the 1950s, ‘60’s, and ‘70s, the Eastern mobs
established lucrative connections at the Tropicana, the Aladdin, the
Hacienda, and the Marina. But all of that quickly changed. Beginning in
the mid-1980s, after the successful "Pendorf/Strawman" prosecutions of
Chicago, Kansas City, Milwaukee, and New York mobsters had run their
course, the image of Las Vegas as a gangster haven slowly began to
fade. Corporate America re-shaped the entire image of the city, buying
up former gangster properties and turning it into a G-rated wholesome
family vacation spot appealing to Middle America. In the midst of a
building boom that bull-dozed former mob haunts along the Strip, mob
figures from Buffalo and Los Angeles made a last ditch effort to corner
loan-sharking, the escort services, and several other street rackets.
Since the ill-fated attempt failed in 1995, the absence of organized
crime is evident in the management of the casinos, the construction
industry, and union locals.
Los Angeles~
In a moment of uncharacteristic humor, former LAPD
Chief Daryl Gates once labeled the Southern California crime family the
"Mickey Mouse Mafia." The significance of this statement is not lost on
veteran mob watchers who need only recall the bumbling misadventures of
this fragmented group to know that organized crime in the second
largest city is strictly second rate. The history of the Mickey Mouse
Mafia is interesting, if not farcical. Johnny Roselli was dispatched by
the Capone mob to conquer Los Angeles for Chicago. Instead, 1930s
Hollywood glamour and glitz nearly conquered Roselli, who married
actress June Lang then produced and bankrolled a series of B-grade
movies. Before he moved his office to the Tropicana Hotel in Las Vegas
in the 1950s, Roselli contemplated quitting the rackets all together in
order to satisfy his movie lust.
San Quentin jailbird Jack Dragna along with his
brother Tom were chosen to lead the Los Angeles crime group by the New
York families after bookmaker Meyer "Mickey" Cohen fell from grace
following the 1947 assassination of "Bugsy" Siegel, his friend and East
Coast mentor.
Dragna ran the family for nearly a decade, but never
with any degree of competence or sophistication. He tried
unsuccessfully to kill Mickey Cohen on five different occasions, then
failed to establish his family’s presence in Las Vegas following the
death of his old nemesis Bugsy Siegel, leaving this fertile new
territory wide open for Chicago and New York. In 1968, Jack’s nephew
Louis Tom Dragna, AKA: "The Reluctant Prince" because of his shy,
withdrawing nature, replaced Frankie DiSimone and Nick Licata as boss,
continuing on until 1974. It was an unfamiliar role, and one that was
not particularly to Dragna’s liking. As family consigliere for his
Uncle Jack, the "Reluctant Prince" was involved in the garment
business—traditionally a big revenue generator for the L.A. mob. Louie
Dragna relied on less timid mobsters like Adalena "Jimmy the Weasel"
Fratianno to carry out acts of violence, and as a result, failed to
become a "man of respect."
Dragna relinquished his leadership role to Dominic
Brooklier in 1974, but Brooklier and his underboss Mike Rizzitello were
fingered by stool pigeon Fratianno in 1979, resulting in another
management restructuring that brought Peter John Milano and his brother
Carmen to the forefront of West Coast Mafia action. Peter Milano is a
Westlake businessman whose father Anthony Milano was a wheel horse in
the Cleveland crime syndicate for many years. The brothers were handed
an 18-count indictment in May 1987, alleging among other things, that
they had plotted the murder of Louie Dragna with Cleveland boss Jack
Licavoli. Betrayed by Craig and Lawrence Fiato, two former associates
who wore an FBI wire for seven years, the Milanos were convicted,
dealing a near fatal blow to what was left of the Mickey Mouse Mafia.
The final nail in the coffin was delivered nearly a
decade later when "Fat" Herbie Blitzstein, one-time sidekick of Anthony
Spilotro in Chicago and a Luciano Pavoratti look-alike, was "iced" in
Las Vegas. It was part of a scheme for the LA and Buffalo crime groups
to seize control of the extortion rackets thereby establishing a
permanent domain in Las Vegas. Stephen Cino, and LA mob associates
Alfred Mauriello, Antone Davi, and Peter Caruso were among 16 mobsters
indicted for the Blitzstein hit. It is further alleged that Carmen
Milano signed off on the murder plot.
However, neither of the Milanos were indicted in the
case and their names remain at the top of the L.A. chart. Federal
prosecutors expressed cautious optimism in the belief that the
Blitzstein case spells the downfall of America’s most vulnerable crime
family. Copyright 2001 by Richard C. Lindberg