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Colombo crime family

NCFGT • September 7, 2021

Colombo Crime Family

The Colombo crime family is the youngest of the "Five Families" that dominates organized crime activities in New York City, United States, within the nationwide criminal phenomenon known as the Mafia (or Cosa Nostra). The family, formerly known as the Profaci crime family, was originally formed in 1928 by Joseph "The Olive Oil King" Profaci. The family has since gone through three separate family wars. The first war took place during the late 1950s when Crazy Joe Gallo began revolting against his boss Joe Profaci for demanding too much tribute. The war began to lose momentum in the early 1960s, when Crazy Joe was arrested and boss Joe Profaci died of cancer. The family came together under Joseph "Joe C" Colombo's command. After some years the second family war began immediately after the release of Crazy Joe from prison he ordered the shooting of Colombo in 1971. The Colombo supporters led by Carmine Persico won the war when his side murdered Crazy Joe Gallo in a Little Italy restaurant in 1972.


After two decades of peace the third and bloodiest war erupted in 1991 when Victor Orena undermined the imprisoned boss Carmine Persico. The family then split into two separate factions, one loyal to the boss Persico and others to Orena. The Persico faction attacked soldiers and capos who were supporting Orena and vice versa. In 1993 with twelve family members dead and Orena imprisoned the war was finally over. Since then, the family has been hit again and again by prosecutions, informants and convictions due to the third war. Due to this, the Colombo family is believed to be the weakest of the Five Families of New York City.


History


Origins


In September 1921, Joseph Profaci arrived in New York City. Months before he had decided to make the voyage to America, leaving behind his small town of Villabate, Sicily, Italy. After some time of struggling in Chicago with his businesses he moved back to Brooklyn in 1925, becoming a well known olive oil importer. Profaci obtained his American citizenship on September 27, 1927. With his olive oil importing business doing well he made deals with friends from his old town in Sicily and one of his largest buyers was Tampa mobster Ignazio Italiano. He controlled his small gang of criminals that operated mainly in the borough of Brooklyn. The most dominant Cosa Nostra groups active in Brooklyn were led by Salvatore D'Aquila, Frankie Yale, Giuseppe Masseria and Nicola Schiro (leader of the Castellammarese Clan).


On July 1, 1928 Brooklyn mobster Frankie Yale was murdered by Chicago Outfit's boss Al Capone hit-men. Yale was murdered because he did not want to give Al Capone the control over the Unione Siciliana. Yale's murder allowed Joseph Profaci and his brother in-law Joseph Magliocco to gain territory for their small gang. Profaci's gang gained territory in Bensonhurst, Bay Ridge, Red Hook and Carroll Gardens while the rest of Yale's group went to the Masseria family.


Months later on October 10, 1928 the capo di tutti capi Salvatore "Toto" D'Aquila was murdered resulting in a dispute over who would take over D'Aquila's family. In order to prevent a long and violent war in Brooklyn a Mafia meeting was called. The meeting took place on December 5, 1928 in the Statler Hotel in Cleveland. The hotel was chosen in Cleveland, Ohio because it was under the Porrello crime family control and protection. The main topic discussed was the dividing of D'Aquila's territory. At the meeting the mobsters representing Brooklyn were Joseph Profaci, Joseph Magliocco (Profaci's second ), Vincent Mangano (who reported to disputable D'Aqulia family boss Alfred "Al Mineo" Manfredi), Joseph Bonanno (represented Salvatore Maranzano), Chicago mobsters Joseph Guinta, Pasquale Lolordo and Tampa mobster Ignazio Italiano arrived to make a peace resolution. As a result of Profaci's connections present at the meeting he received a fraction of D'Aqulia's Brooklyn territory.


The Castellammarese War


Months after the D'Aquila murder, Joe Masseria began a campaign to become Capo di tutti capi (Boss of Bosses) in the United States demanding tribute from the remaining three Mafia groups in New York City which included the Reina family, the Castellammarese Clan and the Profaci family. Castellammarese Clan boss Salvatore Maranzano began his own campaign to become boss of bosses, this started the Castellammarese War. Masseria along with his allie Alfred Manfredi, the new boss of the D'Aquila family ordered the murder of Gaetano Reina. Masseria believed that Reina was going to support Maranzano to become the new boss of bosses. On February 26, 1930, Gaetano Reina was murdered and Masseria appointed Joseph Pinzolo as the new boss of the Reina family. During the war Profaci remained neutral, while he secretly supported Maranzano. The war would come to an end when Charles "Lucky" Luciano a lieutenant for Masseria betrayed him and worked with Maranzano. The secret alliance between the two had Masseria killed on April 15, 1931. Maranzano then became the new Capo di tutti capi in the United States. Five months later on September 10, 1931 Luciano had Maranzano killed and created the Mafia Commission. Now there would be five independent Cosa Nostra families in New York City and twenty one additional families across the United States. 


Gallo-Profaci War (1960-1964)

Joseph Profaci in 1959.


Joseph Profaci had become a wealthy Mafia boss and was known as "the olive-oil and tomato paste king of America". One of Profaci's most unpopular demands was a $25 due from every soldier in his family. In the late 1950s, capo Frank "Frankie Shots" Abbatemarco became a problem for Joe Profaci. Abbatemarco controlled a lucrative policy game that earned him nearly $2.5 million a year with a average of $7,000 a day in Red Hook, Brooklyn. In 1959, Abbatemarco with the support of gangs (the Gallo brothers and the Garfield Boys) he controlled in Red Hook, Abbatemarco began refusing to pay Profaci's excessive tribute demands. In 1959, Abbatemarco's debt had grown to $50,000 and Joseph Profaci ordered Joe Gallo to murder Abbatemarco. In return Profaci agreed to give the Gallo's control over Abbatemarco's policy game. On November 4, 1959, Frank Abbatemarco walked out of his cousin's bar on 4th Avenue and Carroll St in Park Slope, Brooklyn when Joseph Gioielli and another hitmen shot and killed him. Profaci then ordered the Gallo's to hand over Abbatemaro's son Anthony, the Gallo's refused and Profaci refused to give them control over the policy game, this started a war. The Gallo brothers and the Garfield boys (led by Carmine Persico) went up against Profaci and his loyalist. 


On February 27, 1961 the Gallo's kidnapped four of Profaci's top men underboss Joseph Magliocco, Frank Profaci (Joe Profaci's brother), capo Salvatore Mussachia and soldier John Scimone. While holding the hostages Joe Gallo was sent to California by his brothers. Profaci's Consigliere Charles "the Sidge" LoCicero negotiated with the Gallo's and all the hostages were released peacefully. On August 20, 1961 Joseph Profaci ordered the murder of Gallo members, Joseph "Joe Jelly" Gioielli (who was murdered) and Larry Gallo who survived a strangulation in the Sahara club on Utica Ave in East Flatbush by Carmine Persico and Salvatore "Sally" D'Ambrosio after a police officer intervened. The Gallo's then began calling Carmine "The Snake", he had betrayed them, the war continued on resulting in nine murders and three disappearances. 


The war lost momentum when Crazy Joe Gallo was sentenced to seven-to-fourteen years for murder in late November 1961. A year later boss Joe Profaci passed away from cancer, leaving Joe Magliocco as the boss. The war continued on between the two factions. In 1963, Carmine Persico survived a car bombing and his enforcer Hugh McIntosh was shot in the groin after as he attempted to kill Larry Gallo. On May 19, 1963 a Gallo hit team opened fire shooting Carmine Persico multiple times, Persico survived. 


In the same year boss Joe Magliocco aligned himself with Joseph Bonanno together they planned to murder bosses Carlo Gambino, Tommy Lucchese, Stefano Magaddino and Frank DeSimone. Joseph Magliocco gave the contact to Joseph Colombo, who feared for his life and reported the plot to The Commission, resulting in the forced retirement of Magliocco and Bonanno. 


Colombo and the second war


In 1963, Joseph Colombo was rewarded becoming boss of the Profaci family for his loyalty to the Commission. Along with former Gallo crew member Nicholas Bianco and New England family boss Raymond Patriarca, Colombo was able to end the war. As a reward for his loyaly Bianco was made into the Colombo family. As boss Colombo was able to bring stability back to the broken crime family. Many American Mafia bosses viewed Colombo as Carlo Gambino's "puppet boss", who never deserved to be a boss. Colombo's leadership was never challenged due to his support from Carlo Gambino. In 1968, the Colombo family leaders watched the renegade Gallo crew leader Larry Gallo die of cancer. 

In 1969, Joe Colombo founded the Italian American Civil Rights League many American Mafia bosses disapproved of the idea because it brought unwanted attention. Colombo ignored the concerns of the other bosses and continued gaining support for his league. On July 28, 1970, Colombo held the first league demonstration which was a success. In 1971, months before the second demonstration began, the other Mafia bosses order their men to stay away and show no support for Colombo's cause. In the same year Colombo also lost one of his biggest supporters, the league's chief organizer Gambino family capo Joseph DeCicco, who had become ill and resigned. Joe Gallo was also released from prison, and he did not agree with the past peace treaty. On June 28, 1971 Colombo held the second demonstration at Columbus Circle in Manhattan. As Colombo prepared to speak, an African American man, Jerome Johnson, walked up and shot Colombo in the back of the head three times; seconds later Johnson was shot to death. The shooting did not kill Colombo but left him brain dead; he died naturally on May 22, 1978. 

Colombo's Consigliere Joseph Yacovelli to become the family acting boss, and directed a campaign to murder Joe Gallo and his crew. On April 7, 1972 four gunmen walked into Umberto's Clam House in Little Italy and shot and killed Joe Gallo. Yacovelli later fled the city, this left Carmine Persico as the new boss. 


The family under Persico

Gennaro "Jerry Lang" Langella


Following the high-profile media exposure of Joseph Colombo and the murderous excesses of Joe Gallo, the Colombo family entered a period of comparative calm and stability. With Colombo in a coma, the family leadership went to Thomas DiBella, a man adept at evading the authorities since his sole bootlegging conviction in 1932. However, DiBella was unable to prevent the Gambino family from chipping away at Colombo rackets, and the Colombos declined in power. Poor health forced DiBella to retire in 1977, and Colombo died in 1978. The Colombo family was facing another power vacuum.


During the 1970s, Carmine Persico had grown in stature within the family and was considered to be the clear successor as boss. However, Persico had spent much of this time in prison, and it was unclear if he could effectively rule the family from prison. Nevertheless, Persico took control, designating Gennaro "Jerry Lang" Langella as his street boss. In 1986, both men were convicted on massive Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) charges and were sentenced to 100 years. In 1988, Persico named Victor Orena as the new acting boss.


Third Colombo war


Orena, an ambitious capo from Cedarhurst was not content with being acting boss to Persico. In 1990, using his strong ties to Gambino boss John Gotti, Orena petitioned the Mafia Commission to declare him the official boss of the Colombo family. Unwilling to cause more conflict, the Commission refused. On June 21, 1991, an enraged Persico sent gunmen under the leadership of Carmine Sessa to murder Orena at his house. However, Orena managed to escape before the gunmen could strike. The third Colombo war had begun. 


While both sides appealed to the Commission for help, the war continued. On November 1991, Gregory Scarpa Sr., a Persico loyalist, was driving his daughter and granddaughter home when several Orena gunmen ambushed them. Scarpa and his relatives managed to escape. The war continued until 1992, when law enforcement imprisoned Orena and most of his loyalists.


Twelve people, including three innocent bystanders, died in this gang war. More than 80 made members and associates from both sides of the Colombo family were convicted, jailed or indicted. These included Persico's brother Theodore "Teddy" Persico and his son Alphonse Persico, DeRoss, and Orena's two sons, Victor Jr. Orena and John Orena.


While the Colombo war raged, the Commission refused to allow any Colombo member to sit on the Commission and considered dissolving the family and splitting its manpower and resources among the remaining families. In 2002, with the help of Bonanno family boss Joseph Massino, the Commission finally allowed the Colombos to rejoin them. 


Current leadership


Carmine "Junior" Persico allegedly remains boss of the much-weakened Colombo family. He is serving a life sentence in a federal prison in North Carolina. Persico had designated his son Alphonse "Little Allie Boy" Persico as his successor. However, in December 2007, Alphonse Persico and Underboss John "Jackie" DeRoss were convicted of ordering the 1999 killing of William Cutolo and were sentenced to life in prison.

John "Sonny" Franzese, 92 years old and a bitter Persico enemy, is allegedly underboss. Franzese has spent much of his life in prison and is under tight parole restrictions, but has still assumed a top spot in the family. In May 2007, Franzese was arrested on parole violation charges from meetings with Colombo capo regimes and high-ranking members of other crime families. Franzese was released from jail in 2008. In January 2011, Franzese was convicted of extortion and sentenced to eight years in prison.


Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo, longtime capo and former street boss, assumed the role of acting boss after the 2008 arrest of Thomas Gioeli. Vincenzo "Vinny" Aloi is said to be the current Colombo Consigliere. He is currently living in Florida and considered semi-retired.


In June 2008, acting boss Thomas "Tommy Shots" Gioeli, underboss John "Sonny" Franzese, former consigliere Joel "Joe Waverly" Cacace, captain Dino Calabro, mob soldier Dino Saracino and several members and associates were indicted on multiple racketeering charges. These charges included drug trafficking, loan sharking, extortion and three murders dating back to the Colombo Wars. As of October 2010, Gioeli is being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. If convicted, he faces life in prison. On December 24, 2008, Franzese was released from the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. However he is still under indictment and is scheduled to go on trial sometime in 2009 along with Gioeli and Calabro. If convicted, they are all facing life sentences.


On December 17, 2009, the FBI charged members of the Colombo family with allegedly engaging in drug trafficking, extortion and loansharking. The crew was operating in Massachusetts, Arkansas, Rhode Island, New York and Florida. The leader of the crew is the current "Street Boss", Ralph F. DeLeo. He grabbed a piece of territory in Boston for the family. As the new street boss, DeLeo is not a New York City based mobster. He met Alphonse Persico in prison in the early 1990s and when he was released he became a made member in the family. DeLeo became street boss after the Gioeli arrest in 2008. 


On January 26, 2010 capo Dino Calabro, facing trial for murdering a New York police officer, became a government witness. His testimony could be devastating to the family leadership. On July 20, 2010. Michael Souza became a government witness, testifying against Anthony Dentico of the Genovese crime family


On January 20, 2011 members of the Colombo crime family, as well as members of other Mafia families in New York City, were arrested on charges of murder, narcotics trafficking, and labor racketeering. 


Historical leadership


Boss (official and acting)


The Boss (also sometimes called Godfather or Don) is the head of his own family. He makes all the major decisions within the organization. The Boss, Underboss, and Consigliere are the only men allowed to induct an associate into the family. If the Boss is incarcerated or debilitated, he chooses an Acting Boss to enforce his decisions.

  • 1928–1962 — Joseph Profaci  – died of natural causes
  • 1962–1963 — Joseph Magliocco  – forced to retire by Mafia Commission
  • 1963–1971 — Joseph Colombo  – left in vegetative state by assassination attempt
  • Acting 1971–1972 — Joseph Yacovelli  – fled, after the murder of Joe Gallo 
  • Acting - 1972–1973 – Vincenzo "Vincent" Aloi  – imprisoned
  • Acting - 1973 — Joseph "Joey" Brancato – imprisoned 
  • 1973–present — Carmine "Junior" Persico – imprisoned 1973-1979 for truck-hijacking, 1981–1984 for criminal conspiracy, 1985–present 
  • Acting - 1973–1979 — Thomas DiBella – stepped down, became consigliere
  • Acting - 1981-1983 — Alphonse "Allie Boy" Persico – Carmine Persico's brother; fugitive 1980-1987, imprisoned 
  • Acting - 1983–1984 — Gennaro "Jerry Lang" Langella – imprisoned 
  • Acting - 1985–1987 — Anthony "Scappy" Scarpati – imprisoned
  • Acting - 1987— Ruling Panel: Benedetto Aloi, Vincent "Jimmy" Angelino and Joseph T. Tomasello – disbanded September 1987
  • Acting - 1987–1991 — Vittorio "Vic" Orena – imprisoned sentenced to life 
  • Acting - 1991–1993 — Vacant – disputed leadership during the third war
  • Acting - 1993–1994 — Ruling Panel: Joseph Tomasello, Theodore "Teddy" Persico and Joseph Baudanza – disbanded 1994
  • Acting - 1994–1996 — Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo – imprisoned March 1997
  • Acting - 1996–present — Alphonse "Little Allie Boy" Persico – Carmine Persico's son, imprisoned serving life


Street Bosses


  • 1991–1994 — Joseph T. Tomasello
  • 1994–1996 — Alphonse "Little Allie Boy" Persico – became acting boss
  • 1996–1999 — Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo – imprisoned
  • 2000–2003 — Joel "Joe Waverly" Cacace – imprisoned
  • 2003–2008 — Thomas "Tommy Shots" Gioeli – jailed
  • 2008–2009 — Ralph F. DeLeo – jailed, operated from New England 
  • 2009–2010 — Ruling Panel – Theodore N. Persico, Jr. (jailed) and others
  • 2010–present — Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo – jailed January 2011


Underboss


  • 1927-1962 — Joseph "Joe Malyak" Magliocco – promoted to Boss
  • 1962-1963 — Salvatore "Sally the Sheik" Mussachio – brother-in-law to Joseph Magliocco 
  • 1963-1967 — John "Sonny" Franzese – imprisoned
  • 1967-1971 — Charles "Charlie Lemons" Mineo – stepped down
  • 1971-1973 — Sebastian "Buster" Aloi
  • 1973-1977 — Anthony "Tony Shots" Abbatemarco – fled
  • Acting 1973-1975 — Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo
  • 1977-1981 — Alphonse "Allie Boy" Persico – Carmine Persico's brother; promoted to Acting Boss 
  • 1981-1994 — Gennaro "Jerry Lang" Langella – promoted to Acting Boss 
  • Acting 1983-1987 — John "Sonny" Franzese – imprisoned
  • Acting 1987— Benedetto "Benny" Aloi
  • Acting 1991–1993 — Vacant — disputed leadership during the third war
  • 1994-1999 — Joel Cacace (became Consigliere) 
  • Acting 1993-1999 — Benedetto "Benny" Aloi
  • 1999 — William "Wild Bill" Cutolo – murdered 1999
  • 1999-2004 — John DeRoss – imprisoned life sentence
  • Acting 2001-2003 — Thomas Gioeli (promoted to Acting Boss)
  • 2004–present — John "Sonny" Franzese (Jailed) 
  • Acting 2008–2009 — Theodore "Skinny Teddy" Persico Jr. – Theodore Persico's son; joined the ruling panel
  • Acting 2009–present — Benjamin "The Claw" Castellazzo (Jailed)


Consigliere


  • 1931-1954 — Salvatore Profaci – Joseph Profaci's brother; died
  • 1954-1963 — Carlaggero "Charles the Sidge" LoCicero – murdered 1968
  • 1963-1969 — Benedetto D'Alessandro
  • 1970-1973 — Joseph "Joey Yack" Yacovelli – became Acting Boss 1971
  • 1973-1977 — Alphonse "Allie Boy" Persico – Carmine Persico's brother; promoted to Underboss
  • 1977-1983 — Thomas "Old Man" DiBella – stepped down
  • 1983-1988 — Alphonse "Allie Boy" Persico – Carmine Persico's brother; died in 1989
  • Acting 1983-1986 — Thomas "Old Man" DiBella – retired
  • Acting - 1987-1988 — Vincent "James" Angellino 
  • 1988-1993 — Carmine Sessa 
  • Acting - 1988-1991 — Benedetto "Benny" Aloi (promoted to Acting Underboss)
  • Acting - 1991–1993 — Vacant – disputed leadership during the third war
  • 1993-1999 — Vincenzo "Vinny" Aloi
  • 1999-2008 — Joel "Joe Waverly" Cacace (promoted to Acting Boss) 
  • Acting - 2001-2004 — Ralph "Ralphie" Lombardo
  • Acting - 2004-2008 — Vincenzo "Vinny" Aloi
  • 2008–present — Richard Fusco (Jailed)


Factions of the third war


The Colombo family divided into two factions during the third family war (1991 to 1993).

The Persico faction 

The Orena faction 


Current family members


Current administration


  • Boss Carmine "Junior" Persico – has been boss since 1973. In 1986, Persico was convicted in the Mafia Commission Trial and sentenced to 100 years in federal prison. His projected release date is March 20, 2050. 
  • Acting Boss Alphonse "Little Allie Boy" Persico – Carmine Persico's son, holding the title of "Acting Boss". In 2009, Alphonse was sentenced to life in prison and is currently in the United States Penitentiary, Florence in Colorado
  • Street Boss Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo – is Carmine Persico's cousin. In November 1986, Russo was sentenced to 14 years, he was released on July 29, 1994 under special parole conditions. In August 1999, Russo was convicted of jury tampering and sentenced to 57 months, he was also sentenced to 123 months for both parole violation and his involvement in a racketeering case of a Long Island carting company. In March 2010, after his parole period expired, Russo became Street boss. In January 2011, Russo was imprisoned along other members of the Colombo family. 
  • Underboss John "Sonny" Franzese – In 2011, was sentenced to eight years in prison
  • Acting Underboss Benjamin "The Claw" Castellazzo – jailed 2011
  • Consigliere Richard Fusco – jailed 2011 


Capos


Brooklyn faction


  • (In prison) Thomas "Tommy Shots" Gioeli – a capo and former Street boss. Gioeli's crew is operating in Brooklyn, Staten Island and Long Island. In 2011, Gioeli's acting capo Paul Bevacqua became a government informant.
  • Joseph Baudanza – a capo with operations in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Staten Island. Baudanza along with his brother Carmine and nephew John were arrested and convicted on stock fraud in 2008. Baudanza was released from prison in February 2011. 
  • William "Billy" Russo – a capo and the youngest son of Andrew Russo. His brother Joseph "Jo Jo" Russo died in prison in 2007.


Long Island faction


  • Ralph "Ralphie" Lombardo – a capo and former acting consigliere. Lombardo runs bookmaking and loansharking activities on Long Island. In 1975, Lombardo was convicted of conspiracy of selling stock in an automobile leasing company in New Jersey. In 2003, Lombardo was the Consigliere and he was indicted on illegal gambling, loan-sharking and witness tampering. He was released from prison on August 27, 2006. 
  • Michael Uvino – a capo since 2007. Uvino ran his crew from "The sons of Italy Social Club" in Hauppauge, Long Island. In 2009, Uvino was sentenced to 10 years for running illegal card games on Long Island and for assaulting two men. 



Florida faction


  • Reynold Maragni – a capo, he was running loansharking and illegal gambling in South Florida since the 1980s. Maragni was arrested during the January 2011 Federal indictments that arrested 127 Mafia members. 


New England faction


  • Ralph F. DeLeo – lives in Somerville, Massachusetts and led the New England faction for family. He met Alphonse "Little Allie Boy" Persico in prison in the 1990s, when he was released in 1997 he was inducted into Colombo crime family, in 2008 became Street Boss after Thomas Gioeli was arrested, in 2009 DeLoe was indicted on Racketeering chargers. 


Soldiers



Imprisoned soldiers


  • Theodore "Teddy" Persico - brother to Carmine Persico, uncle to Alphonse "Little Allie Boy" Persico, and father to Theodore N. Persico Jr. The 71 year-old mobster has been a capo in Brooklyn since the 1970s. Persico served on the family ruling panel in the early 1990s until his arrest. His projected release date is October 9, 2013. 
  • John "Jackie" DeRoss – a soldier serving life in prison after his 2009 conviction for the 1999 William Cutolo murder. DeRoss is a cousin to Carmine Persico and was underboss from 1999 to 2004. 
  • Vincent "Chickie" DeMartino - a soldier. In 1993, DeMartino was sentenced to four years on weapons charges. In 1999, Alphonse Persico ordered DeMartino and Thomas Gioeli to murder William Cutolo. On July 16, 2001, DeMartino and Michael Spataro attempted to murder Joseph Campanella but failed. In May 2004, Campanella testified against DeMartino. He is currently imprisoned with a projected release date of January 1, 2025. 
  • Anthony "Chucky" Russo - a soldier and cousin to William "Billy" Russo, in 1990s he worked closely with now deceased cousin Joseph "Jo Jo" Russo, operating in Brooklyn and Long Island. 
  • Michael Catapano - former acting capo. Catapano is the nephew of John Franzese. He is currently serving a 6½ year sentence after pleading guilty to extorting a pizzeria and a gambling club. 


Family Crews



Controlled unions


  • N.Y.C. District Council of Carpenters The Colombo crime family and the Genovese crime family worked together from (1991–1996) extorting the N.Y.C. District Council of Carpenters union. The Colombo family capo's Thomas Petrizzo and Vincent "Jimmy" Angellino were controlling Frederick Devine the President of N.Y.C. District Council of Carpenters. The Genovese crime family had two members working inside the union, Anthony Fiorino (brother in-law to Liborio Bellomo) and Leonard Simon (brother in-law to Ralph Coppola) together the men gave hundreds of jobs and trust funds to their associates. In 1998 informants Sammy Gravano and Vincent Cafaro testified against Devine. He was found guilty of embezzling union funds and sentenced to fifteen months in prison.


Former members and associates


  • Michael "Yuppie Don" Franzese – retired from the crime family 
  • Joseph "Jo Jo" Russo – the oldest son of Andrew Russo, convicted in 1994 with his cousin Anthony "Chuckie" Russo both received life sentences when ex-FBI agent Lindley DeVecchio testified against them, in 2007 JoJo died of kidney cancer in prison. 
  • Salvatore "Sally" D'Ambrosio – During the 1960s Gallo war, D'Ambrosio and future boss Carmine Persico attempted to murder mobster Larry Gallo. D'Ambrosio also participated in the murder of Joseph Gioelli.
  • Nicholas "Jiggs" Forlano – former capo who ran loan-sharking operations with Charles "Ruby" Stein. In the 1970s, Forlano moved to Fort Lauderdale and started operating from Florida. In 1977, Forlano died of a hart attack at the Hialeah race track
  • Frank "Frankie Shots" Abbatemarco – was born in 1899 and grew up in Red Hook, Brooklyn. During the 1950s, Abbatemarco was a prowerful capo in Profaci family controlling Red Hook. On November 4, 1959 Abbatemarco was murdered. 
  • Anthony "Big Tony" Peraino – died of natural causes in 1996
  • Dominick "Little Dom" Cataldo – died in prison 1990
  • Ralph "Little Ralphie" Scopo – died in prison 1993
  • Antonio Cottone – deported back to Sicily where he became the Mafia boss of Villabate the town the Profaci family originated from; he was murdered in 1956
  • Benedetto "Benny" Aloi – capo and brother to Vincent Aloi. During the third family war in the 1990s, Aloi was Orena's underboss. In 1991, Aloi was convicted in the Window Case, was released from prison on March 17, 2009. He died on April 7, 2011. 


Associates


  • Hugh "Apples" MacIntosh – was an Irish-American enforcer for Carmine Persico during the 1960s. In 1969, he was imprisoned on hijacking charges. He was released in 1975 and controlled clubs and loan sharking rings for Persico. In 1982, McIntosh was caught bribing an IRS agent for Carmine Persico early release. McIntosh was imprisoned in the Colombo family Rico case and released on December 31, 1992. He was later arrested for meeting with Daniel Persico (Teddy Persico's son) and was sent back to prison. McIntosh died on November 10, 1997. 
  • Charles Ruby Stein "loan shark to the stars", was a former associate and business partner to Nicholas Forlano. He ran a gambling club on Upper West Side. In early 1970s, Jimmy Coonan became his bodyguard. Stein was murdered in 1977. 
  • Nicholas "Nicky" Bianco – joined the Patriarca crime family, he died in prison 1994
  • Gerard Pappa – murdered in 1980


Government informants and witnesses


Members


  • Gregory Scarpa, Sr. – notorious hitman and FBI informant from the 1970s to 1994. Scarpa Sr. died in prison from AIDS–related complications.
  • Carmine Sessa – in 1993 turned informant with the urging of his wife.
  • Paul "Paulie Guns" Bevacqua – former acting capo of the Gieoli crew. In 2011, Bevacqua became a government witness. 
  • Dino "Big Dino" Calabro – former capo involved in the 1997 murder of NYPD officer Ralph Dols. Calabro was convicted of murder in 2009 and became a government witness in 2010. Calabro is going to testify against mobster Joel Cacace, who allegedly ordered him to murder Dols. 
  • Anthony "Big Anthony" Russo – former acting capo, he is not related to Andrew Russo. In 2011, Russo was charged with the 1993 murder of Orena faction underboss Joseph Scopo and agreed to be a federal witness. 
  • Joseph "Joey Caves" Competiello – former soldier, he was involved in the 1997 murder of NYPD officer Ralph Dols. Competiello became an informant in 2008 and led the FBI to find the body of Colombo mobster William Cutolo. 
  • Joseph "Joe Campy" Campanella – former capo. In 2001, after surviving a assassination attempt, he was arrested and became a government witness. 


Associates


  • Kenny "Kenji" Gallo – former associate. Gallo a Japanese American, worked for the Colombo family before becoming a government witnesses.
  • Joseph "Joe Pesh" Luparelli – was a Colombo associate and bodyguard to Joseph Yacovelli. Luparelli was part of the team that murdered Colombo mobster Joe Gallo. After the Gallo murder, a fearful Luparelli entered the Witness Protection Program and later testified against Yacovelli. 
  • Salvatore "Crazy Sal" Polisi – a former associate of the Colombo and Gambino crime families. Polisi and his friends Dominick and Joseph Cataldo all joined the Mafia. In 1984, Polisi was arrested on narcotic charges and became an informant. Polisi testified in John Gotti's 1986 trial. 



Colombo crime family



Boss(s)

Joe Profaci  · Joseph Magliocco  · Joseph Colombo  · Carmine Persico



Current members

Vincenzo Aloi  · Joel Cacace  · John DeRoss  · John Franzese  · Thomas Gioeli  ·      Gennaro Langella  · Charles Panarella  · Alphonse Persico



Past members


Made men

Benedetto Aloi  · Dominick Cataldo  · William Cutolo  · Michael Franzese  · Joe Gallo  · Victor Orena  · Anthony Peraino  · Ralph Scopo



Associates

Nicholas Bianco  · Albert Gallo



Informants

Gregory Scarpa  · Carmine Sessa  · Kenny Gallo




Family events


Hearings 

Kefauver Committee (1950–1951)  · Valachi hearings (1963)



Trials

Mafia Commission Trial (1986)  · Window Case (1991)



Victims

Murder victims



Wars

Castellammarese War (1929–1931)  · Colombo family's first war (1960-1964)  · Colombo family's second war (1971-1972)  · Colombo family's third war (1991-1993)




Allies

Genovese family  · Gambino family  · Bonanno family  · Lucchese family




By NCFGT September 7, 2021
116th Street Crew The 116th Street crew, also known as the Uptown crew, is a powerful crew within the Genovese crime family. In the early 1960s, Anthony Salerno became one of the most powerful capos in the family. Salerno based the crew out of the Palma Boys Social Club located 416 East 115th Street in East Harlem, Manhattan. History The 116th Street Mob In the early 1890s, a group of five brothers (Antonio, Nicholas, Giuseppe and half-brothers Vincenzo and Ciro Terranova) arrived in New York City from Corleone, Sicily. The Morello-Terranova brothers soon started taking over the growing Little Italy in East Harlem, by using the Black Hand technique of extorting small business and running illegal gambling operations. The group became known as the 116th Street Mob (or Morello gang ), with their increasing power the Morello's sought to control the Lower Manhattan's Little Italy. The Little Italy in lower Manhattan was under the control of Ignazio "Lupo the Wolf" Saietta, before a gang war reputed the two sides decided on joining forcing. Giuseppe Morello became the Capo di tutti capi (or boss of bosses ), but before long he and Ignazio Saietta were arrested and charged with counterfeiting in 1910. Nicholas "Nick Morello" Terranova took over the 116th Street Mob , and became in boiled in the Mafia-Camorra War. The War was between the Sicilian Morello-Terranova family and Brooklyn Camorra gangs led by Pellegrino Morano. Each side wanted to completely control all the Italian gangs in New York City and across the United States. On September 7, 1916 Nicholas Terranova was murdered, giving the Camorra gangs the advantage. The next leaders of the Morello family were brothers Vincenzo and Ciro Terranova. They continued the war and within month's police began arresting top members of the Camorra gangs. This allowed the Sicilian to maintain dominance and control over New York City and the remaining Camorra gangs joined forces with Sicilian gangs. Vincent continued operating from Brooklyn and Ciro continued expanding his operations in East Harlem and The Bronx. The Artichoke King Ciro "The Artichoke King" Terranova controlled the 116th Street Crew during the prohibition era. Coppola's policy racket Michael "Trigger Mike" Coppola, was a top lieutenant in the 116th Street crew of Ciro Terranova. He took over the crew sometime between 1932 and 1936, Terranova was being "put on the shelf" (meaning forced into retirement) by the new Luciano-Genovese-Costello regime of the Luciano crime family. Coppola was also supervising the illegal number racket that was once controlled by Dutch Schultz before his murder. The number racket controlled bookmaking and illegal gambling throughout Harlem and South Bronx making thousands of dollars a year. When boss Vito Genovese was imprisoned in the late 1950s, various influential members began running the crime family through a ruling panel/committee . The panel consisted of acting/front boss Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli, underboss Gerardo "Gerry" Catena and consigliere Michele "Big Mike" Miranda while others served in the advisory capacity, Mike Coppola was considered an influential capo and was used to help the panel. In the early 1960s Mike Coppola was imprisoned on tax evasion charges and followed in the footsteps of his predecessor Ciro Terranova, being put on the shelf after his release from prison in 1963. Coppola later moved to South Florida and effectively retired. His crew, with his vast illegal interests went to Anthony Salerno.  Palma Boys crew
By NCFGT September 7, 2021
Albanian mafia The Albanian Mafia or Albanian Organized Crime are the general terms used for criminal organizations based in Albania or composed of ethnic Albanians . Albanian organized crime is active in Albania , the United States , and the European Union (EU) countries, participating in a diverse range of criminal enterprises including drug and arms trafficking . In Albania alone there are over 15 mafia families or clans that control organized crime. Structure The typical structure of the Albanian Mafia is hierarchical. Concerning "loyalty", "honor" and family (blood relations and marriage being very important) most of the Albanian networks seem to be "old-fashioned". Infiltration into these groups is thus very difficult. Albanian Mafia families or clans are usually made up of groups of fewer than 100 members, constituting an extended family residing all along the Balkan route from Eastern Turkey, to Western Europe, and North America. The Northern Albanian Mafia which runs the drug wholesale business is also known by the name of "The Fifteen Families." According to Ioannis Michaletos, the family structure is characterized by a strong inner discipline, which is achieved by a means of punishment for every deviation from the internal rules, so that the fear should guarantee an unconditional loyalty to the family, with the provisions of the official laws considered to be secondary, not important and non-binding. Due to the fact that the Mafia families are based on the blood ties, which is a factor that restricts the number of the clan members, the bonds between them are very strong, which makes getting close to and infiltrating into them almost impossible. Members of other ethnic groups can be accepted only to execute certain one time or secondary jobs. Moreover, the Albanian mafia families are organized in 3-4 or more levels, which enable them to preserve the organizational action capability even in case some of its members or groups are captured. Rudaj Organization The most famous Albanian criminal organization was the Rudaj Organization . In October 2004, the FBI arrested 22 men who worked for it. This included its leader Alex Rudaj , and effectively ended the criminal organization. They had entered in the territory of Lucchese crime family in Astoria, Queens , New York, and are said to have even beaten up two made men in the Lucchese family. The name Rudaj comes from the boss of the organization. According to The New York Times published on January 2006, "Beginning in the 1990s, the Corporation, led by a man named Alex Rudaj, established ties with established organized crime figures including members of the Gambino crime family , the authorities say. Then, through negotiations or in armed showdowns, the Albanians struck out on their own, daring to battle the Lucchese and Gambino families for territory in Queens, the Bronx and Westchester County, prosecutors say." "What we have here might be considered a sixth crime family," after the five Mafia organizations — Bonanno, Colombo, Gambino, Genovese and Lucchese — said Fred Snelling, head of the FBI's criminal division in New York. International activity Scandinavia "The ethnic Albanian mafia is very powerful and extremely violent," said Kim Kliver, chief investigator for organized crime with the Danish National Police. Law enforcement authorities estimate that different Albanian mafia families may smuggle as much as 440 pounds of heroin a year into Scandinavia at any given time. United States "On the streets where the Italian Mob once ruled, a new syndicate was taking over, run by tough, ambitious Albanian immigrants, who still clump to a code of silence." - “We’re still trying to learn about their culture and figure out what makes them tick,” James Farley, FBI supervisory special agent, and expert on organized crime, says of the Albanians. “They’re difficult to infiltrate.” “We’re just now catching up with Albanian organized crime,” he says. While Italian gangsters may be three or four generations removed from the old country, the Albanians grew up under brutal communist regimes, engaging in protracted blood feuds with rival clans, and subscribing to a strict code of silence that makes the Italian credo of omertà seem playful. “The first generation Albanians have a tendency to be more violent” than American-born syndicates, claims Hall. In the United States, Albanian gangs started to be active in the mid-80s, mostly participating in low-level crimes such as burglaries and robberies. Later, they would become affiliated with Cosa Nostra crime families before eventually growing strong enough to operate their own organizations under the Iliazi family name. Albanian organized crime has created new and unique problems for law-enforcement officers around the country, even threatening to displace La Cosa Nostra (LCN) families as kingpins of U.S. crime, according to FBI officials. Speaking anonymously for Philadelphia's City Paper a member of the " Kielbasa Posse ", an ethnic Polish mob group, declared in 2002 that Poles are willing to do business with "just about anybody. Dominicans. Blacks. Italians. Asian street gangs. Russians. But they won't go near the Albanian mob. The Albanians are too violent and too unpredictable." The Polish mob has told its associates that the Albanians are like the early Sicilian Mafia — clannish, secretive, hypersensitive to any kind of insult, and too quick to use violence for the sake of vengeance. The Rudaj Organization , also called "The Corporation", was a well known Albanian criminal organization operating in the New York City metro area. Italy Albanian emigrants started arriving at Italian ports in 1991. By 1997 the immigration had come under the control of Albanian and Italian criminal groups, tightening relationships between them The Albanians are targeting affluent central and northern areas like Lombardy , Piedmont , and Tuscany . One of Italy's top prosecutors, Cataldo Motta , who has identified Albania's most dangerous mobsters, says they are a threat to Western society. "The road for arms and people, meaning illegal immigrants destined for Europe, is in Albanian hands." "The Albanian Mafia seems to have established good working relationships with the Italian Mafia". "On the 27th of July 1999 police in Durres (Albania), with Italian assistance arrested one of the godfathers of the "Sacra Corona Unita", Puglia’s Italian Mafia. This Albanian link seems to confirm that the Sacra Corona Unita and the Albanian Mafia are "partners" in Puglia/Italy and delegate several criminal activities". Thus, in many areas of Italy, the market for cannabis, prostitution, and smuggling is run mainly by Albanians. Links to Calabria’s Mafia, the "Ndrangheta", exist in Northern Italy. Several key figures of the Albanian Mafia seem to reside frequently in the Calabrian towns of Perugia, Africo, Plati, and Bovalino (Italy), fiefs of the Ndrangheta. Southern Albanian groups also have good relationships with Sicily’s Cosa Nostra "The Albanian criminals were special from the beginning," said Francesca Marcelli, an organized-crime investigator for the Italian government. They have strong motivations and are very violent." Roberto Saviano, The Italian writer, a good expert of Neapolitan Camorra and the Italian mafia in general, spoke of the Albanian mafia as a “no longer foreign mafia” to Italy and stressed that the Albanians and Italians have a "brotherly" relationship between each other. Saviano notes that the Camorra from Naples can't understand the Russian clans , which aren't based on family ties, and feels greater affinity with the Albanian crime families. In an Albanian television station ""ShqipTV" Saviano went on to say that the Albanian and Italian factions are "one of the same", and that they don’t consider each other as foreigners. United Kingdom Albanian mafia gangs are believed to be largely behind sex trafficking, immigrants smuggling, as well as working with Turkish gangs in Southend-On-Sea, who control the heroin trade in the United Kingdom . Vice squad officers estimate that "Albanians now control more than 75 per cent of the country’s brothels and their operations in London’s Soho alone are worth more than £15 million a year." They are said to be present in every big city in Britain as well as many smaller ones including Telford and Lancaster , after having fought off rival criminals in turf wars. Albanian gangsters were also involved in the largest cash robbery in British crime history, the £53 million (about US$92.5 million at the time of the robbery) Securitas heist in 2006. Germany "Ethnic Albanians" (as the German police officially calls them), no matter where they come from — Albania, Republic of Macedonia, or Kosovo — created for a very short time in the last decade of the century, a very powerful criminal network, says Manfred Quedzuweit, director of the Police Department for Fighting the Organized Crime in Hamburg. Here, it could be heard that they are even more dangerous than Cosa Nostra . Albanian "banks" in Germany are a special story. They are used for the transfer of money from Germany which amounts to a billion of D-marks a year. One of these banks was discovered by accident by the Düsseldorf police when they were checking a travel agency "Eulinda" owned by the Albanians. We haven't found a single catalogue or brochure for travelling at the agency, computers were not operating, nor has the printer been ever used. We found that "Eulinda" was a cover-up for some other business, said high criminal counselor from Düsseldorf Rainer Bruckert. Eventually we found out that "Eulinda" had already transferred 150 million dollars to Kosovo — for "humanitarian purposes", says Bruckert. Money has been transferred by the couriers in special waist belts with many pockets. So, in a single one-way trip, they can carry up to six million D-marks. Belgium The Albanian mafia has deep roots in Belgium, which was recently a topic of a special programme on Belgian RTBF Channel One. Reporters tried to investigate the roots of Albanian organized crime but have complained that it is too hard to penetrate the structure and organization of the Albanian mafia, but set out that the Albanian mafia acts on the model of the Italian one, whose crime is part of the "activities of entire families" and which has a clearly defined hierarchy. The Albanian mafia in Brussels has monopoly over activities such as "narcotics and arms deals" according to Belgian sources. Australia Godfather of an Albanian Mafia family 'Daut Kadriovski' gained attention of Australian Authorities after creating a drug pipeline through Albanian and Croatian communities in Sydney and Brisbane. Prominent Albanian Mafioso Alex Rudaj : The boss of the Albanian Mafia's Rudaj Organization based in the New York City area. Alfred Shkurti (also known as Aldo Bare): The boss of one of the most notorious criminal syndicates in Albania known as the “Banda e Lushnjës” (The Lushnja Gang). Enver Sekiraqa : Leading person of organized crime in Kosovo, aka “the boss of the bosses”, who is on the Interpol’s wanted list for several crimes. Ismail Lika : Ismail Lika was an Albanian mobster active in New York City in the 1980s. Dubbed the king of the New York drug underworld, Ismail Lika issued a contract on Rudy Giuliani 's prosecutors in 1985. Caught with at least $125 million in heroin, Lika issued a $400,000 contract on the prosecutor Alan Cohen and the detective Jack Delemore, both placed under protective custody. Lulzim Krasniqi :(1863-2006) Former leader of the Albania Mafia based in Zagreb, Croatia. Almir Rrapo : Leader of the "Krasniqi Crew" based in New York and other US cities. Daut Kadriovski : The reputed boss of one of the 15 Families, embodies the tenacity of the top Albanian drug traffickers. Zef Mustafa : Albanian Mafia kingpin based out of New York. Agim Gashi : Leader of an Albanian Mafia clan based out of Italy. Osmani Brothers : According to the German Federal Intelligence Service (BND) the Osmani brothers as the "most important figures of organized crime in Hamburg and other cities in Germany" Adriatik Coli : Leader of one of the most powerful "15 families" known as " Banda e Lul Berishës" based in Durrës , Albania . Krasniqi Brothers : Bruno Krasniqi and Saimir Krasniqi; leaders of an international crime organization engaged in murder, kidnapping, narcotics trafficking and other illegal activities in Albania and the U.S. Myfit (Mike) Dika : Former drug kingpin of the “Balkan Criminal Enterprises”; an international criminal organization which spanned from Canada , the United States , to Europe . Kapllan Murat : Belgium's most notorious mobster. He was one of the masterminds behind the kidnapping of former Belgian Prime Minister Paul Vanden Boeynants in 1989. Three days later, the criminals published a note in the leading Brussels newspaper Le Soir , demanding 30 million Belgian francs in ransom. Paul Vanden Boeynants was released (physically unharmed) a month later, on 13 February, when an undisclosed ransom was paid to the perpetrators. Plaurent "Lenti" Dervisha : On the Interpol's and FBI's most wanted list as being the leading member of a criminal organization based out of Durrës , Albania , who Albanian authorities say is the brother-in-law of Lul Berisha ;a reputed leader of one of the 15 mafia families. In popular culture In films An Albanian criminal organization in Paris is responsible for the kidnapping of Liam Neeson 's character's daughter in Taken . Le Chiffre is the main villain of the 2006 James Bond film, Casino Royale , portrayed by Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen . Believed by MI6 to be Albanian, Le Chiffre is banker to the world's terrorist organizations. In the French movie The Nest the plot centers around an Albanian mob boss in police custody being escorted to The Hague. Albanian mobsters Rexho and Luan feature in the Danish crime film Pusher III . Dossier K , a Belgian crime thriller, portrays the Albanian mafia in Belgium . In " We Own the Night "; A final drug transaction is made with the Albanian Mafia. In the movie " In With Thieves " A blood diamond deal goes wrong which throws Albanian Mafioso into chaos in the criminal underworld. In Television In the " Law and Order: Criminal Intent " episode "Blasters" (Season 6, Episode 9) two former childstars involved in bootlegging ring are being hunted down by the Albanian mob. The story arc "The Slavers" of the adult-oriented Marvel comic The Punisher: Frank Castle deals with Albanian criminals engaged in human trafficking. In the American TV show " No Ordinary Family " episode "No-Ordinary Mobster" deals with the main character attempting to stop violent Albanian Mobsters. Top Gear , a British car show, featured an episode (comedy) in which they tested three luxury automakers; Rolls-Royce Ghost , Mercedes-Benz S-Class , and Bentley Mulsanne , to see which would be best suitable for Albanian Mafia bosses. In Games The videogame Grand Theft Auto IV features the "Petrela gang" a small crew of Albanian shylocks and goods smugglers. The only known members are Dardan Petrela, Kalem Vulaj, and Bledar Morina. Later in the game, Albanian gangs appear working as muscle for other organizations, such as the Cosa Nostra or the Bratva . In Liberty City the Albanian mob holds a stronghold in the Little Bay section of Bohan. In the video game Socom 2 your first mission is to capture several kingpins in Albania.
By NCFGT September 7, 2021
An Introduction to the New York – Albanian Mob
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