Honor Thy Father (61 page)

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Authors: Gay Talese

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Salvatore resigned immediately from his ninety-thousand-dollar-a-year position, and would not reconsider his decision even after his employer had offered him a raise.

Salvatore’s sister, Felippa, youngest of Rosalie and Bill’s four children, was perhaps the only member of the family who seemed not to have experienced personal humiliations as a consequence of having the surname Bonanno. As a girl she had a somewhat sheltered existence, attending mass regularly with her mother and devoting herself as she got older to Catholic teachings of the most binding belief: she was decidedly pro-life. She and her husband, whom she met when she was twenty and was operating a day-care center in a town near Lake Tahoe, Nevada, had raised ten children together, and, at the age of forty-two, Felippa was expecting another child a month after the reunion. She told me the job she most enjoyed as a schoolgirl in San Jose was babysitting.

Never at odds with her faith, she attended mass and received communion every day, she said, adding that she and her husband prayed together with the children at home and as a family ventured out in the community to participate in charitable and humanitarian activities. Although she was no longer known as a Bonanno since taking her husband’s name in marriage, she had always been guided by her mother’s often repeated warning to her and to her three brothers when they were growing up in San Jose: “You are not ordinary children. You have to try twice as hard to be good. You have to be better than everybody else. The world won’t give you a second chance because of your name.”

Rosalie and Bill’s four children, with the exception of the bachelor Charles, not only had children of their own (seventeen in total at the time of my visit in May 2007) but a few grandchildren as well. And again, except for Charles, none of the Bonanno offspring had ever been, as their father often referred to it, “a guest of the government.”

At the conclusion of the family reunion, Rosalie and Bill escorted their children outside the house and onto a grassy field across the street to pose for the
Newsweek
photographer. They arranged themselves in the same order they had posed forty years before in a family snapshot that I had obtained in 1970 for use in
Honor Thy Father
. This old photo, together with the one taken at the reunion, illustrated my article that appeared in the June 25, 2007 issue of
Newsweek
.

I saw to it that copies of the recently posed photo were mailed to members of the Bonanno family, and in the months that followed I called Tucson on two or three occasions to chat with Bill Bonanno—the last time in late December to thank him for the Christmas card that he and Rosalie had sent, and also for his accompanying note in which he expressed satisfaction in our having known one another for more than forty years. He said that he and Rosalie were planning to be in New York sometime after the holidays—he would let me know when—but first they would be driving up to northern California to spend time with their daughter and her husband, adding that the couple’s hillside home fortunately was large enough to accommodate their ten resident children
and
had private quarters for the children’s grandparents.

Late in the afternoon of January 2, 2008, I received a call in New York from Dr. Joseph Bonanno’s wife, Kathleen, in Phoenix. She said that Bill Bonanno had died suddenly of a heart attack in the early morning of New Year’s Day. As I listened in stunned silence and sadness she explained that he had felt well enough on New Year’s Eve to dine with Rosalie and a few friends in Tucson, then he had gone to bed and did not wake up. He was seventy-five. Kathleen said that the funeral mass would be held on January 7 at the Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church in Tucson.

I flew to Tucson a day early in order to attend the evening viewing, and, on the following morning, I joined hundreds of mourners in pews crowded with people from Arizona as well as New York, California, other parts of the country, and also Canada. Those in attendance belonging to the Bonannos’ immediate and extended family amounted to nearly one hundred people. Some of the grandchildren and the cousins served as gift bearers and pallbearers. Television cameras were posted outside the church, and extra police were added to oversee the arrival of lines of limousines at the curb and the steady stream of cars pulling into the church’s parking lot.

Lengthy obituaries and articles about the funeral appeared in national newspapers and weekly magazines.
The New York Times
’s correspondent, seated with other reporters in the rear of the church, noted in the next day’s edition: “There were several men in impeccable black suits, and some women wore fur coats on a chilly, blustery day…. Mr. Bonanno’s widow, Rosalie, walked behind the casket wearing a black lace veil to cover her face.” The
Los Angeles Times
printed above its obituary a subhead quoting Bill Bonanno: “When I got up in the morning, my goal was to live to sunset. And when sunset came, my second goal was to live to sunrise.”

Dr. Joseph Bonanno, who delivered one of the eulogies from a rostrum near the altar, began his remarks with: “Well, Dad, you did it again. You managed to get all of us to drop everything in our lives and come together to be with you today.” After explaining that the name Bonanno means “Happy New Year” in Italian, he said, “It is probably fitting that Dad was taken from us on New Year’s Day. I will think of him always on this day for the rest of my life.” He then concluded: “I don’t know why he had to go so soon. All I can say is that Grandpa probably called and as usual Dad came running.”

—Gay Talese
2009

Note: Entries in this index, carried over verbatim from the print edition of this title, are unlikely to correspond to the pagination of any given e-book reader. However, entries in this index, and other terms, may be easily located by using the search feature of your e-book reader.

 

Note: References with page ranges may not be contiguous between pages; however, all pages in a range will have relevant references.

A

Accardo, Tony, 12
Adonis, Joe, 205
Anastasia, Albert, 8, 12, 17, 57, 74, 93, 205, 218–220
Anderson, Robert, 169
Angleman, Frances, 404–405
Apalachin meeting, 12, 17, 21, 73–77, 92, 93, 219–220
Arizona bombings, 281–288, 363–364, 372, 400–409
FBI involvement, 401–409, 468–469
Arizona
Republic
, 404

B

Banana War, 250–277, 295, 354, 357, 489, 506–507
events leading to, 374–390
in Tucson, 278–288
unofficial truce, 319–320
Barbara, Joseph, 12, 70, 220
Battaglia, Charles, 100, 222, 408, 483
Battaglia, Mrs. Charles, 284
Birrell, Lowell M., 143
Black gangsters, 77
Black Hand, 195
Black market operations, 212, 214–215
Boccia, Ferdinand, 214, 215
Bonanno, Bill,
see
Bonanno, Salvatore Vincent
Bonanno, Catherine, 11–12, 44, 46–47, 83–85, 107, 128, 131, 237, 261–262, 276, 312, 335–340
Bonanno, Charles, 78, 86–87, 121, 125–126, 130, 135, 234–236, 297, 299–301, 341–347
Bonanno, Fay (née Labruzzo), 9, 23, 36–37, 61, 78, 210, 237, 280, 327, 338–339, 367, 369–370, 395
Bonanno, Felippa, 122, 134, 234, 236, 263–264, 302–304, 505
Bonanno, Joseph (father of Bill), 1–16, 61, 98, 126–128, 239–249, 368
appearance, 4, 43, 166–167
boss of bosses, 94
boyhood in Sicily, 40, 370
business interests, 28–29, 172, 204, 210
commission member, 93–94, 378–384
disappearance of, 3–5, 19–20, 24–25, 65, 107–108, 143, 146, 165, 385–386, 392–393
early life, 191, 193–197, 202–204, 232, 326, 370, 490–491
family background, 14–17, 40, 189–197
leadership, 17, 203–204, 210, 254–255
marriage, 23, 210
organization,
see
Bonanno organization
reappearance, 166–181, 227, 364
suspension by commission, 21–23, 59, 92–93, 227, 374–390
Bonanno, Joseph, Jr. (brother of Bill), 27, 100–101, 109, 143, 286–287, 364–371
Bonanno, Joseph (son of Bill and Rosalie), 18–19, 86, 96, 121, 126, 140, 144–145, 234, 263–264, 301–302, 341–347, 504–505
Bonanno, Rosalie (née Profaci), 10–18, 25–28, 30–33, 89–91, 106, 123–138, 158–159, 229–236, 239–240, 339, 478, 503–510
in Arizona, 72–73, 78–85
in California, 276–278, 291–293
early life, 123–127, 139
financial problems, 254, 348–353
home life, 250–267, 305–316
marital problems, 80–92, 139–140, 144, 257–264
wedding, 10–18, 22, 31–32, 70
Bonanno, Salvatore (father of Joseph Bonanno), 16, 190–196, 326
Bonanno, Salvatore Vincent (Bill), 5–18, 65–98, 173, 180–181, 250–267, 317–340, 387
appearance, 6, 34
attempts on life, 155–158, 160–164, 240;
see also
Troutman Street shooting
business interests, 107
children, 25–26, 125, 144–145, 234–236, 297–304, 504–506
as
consigliere
, 22, 223–226, 376, 392
credit card case,
see
Credit card case
criminal record, 478–480
deportation from Montreal, 479–481
early life, 28–30, 38–40, 44–47, 61–62, 232
education, 10, 38–39, 42, 47–50, 76
extramarital affair, 80–85, 129, 147, 257
financial problems, 348–353
home life, 31–32, 229–238, 291–304, 306–315, 341–353
jail sentences, 110–122, 137–144, 245
leadership, 57
marital problems, 80–92, 106, 130–131
military service, 49, 50
relationship with father, 6–7, 42–44, 75–77, 233, 237, 298, 490–491, 507
role in organization, 75–76
trip to New England, 33–34, 41–42, 51
wedding, 10–18, 22, 31–32, 70
Bonanno, Salvatore Vincent, Jr. (Tory), 86, 121–122, 141, 234–237, 297, 302–303, 505
Bonanno organization, 25, 149, 221, 254–256, 467, 493
consigliere
role, 22, 223–226, 376, 392
decline of, 319–320
defections, 23, 58–59, 240–241, 269
dissension within, 92, 153;
see also
Di Gregorio faction
leadership of, 222–225
membership, 211, 222–223
Bonventre, John, 13, 211
Bonventre, Peter, 202–203, 219
Bookmaking, 7, 58, 146, 147, 148, 210, 362
Bootlegging, 199, 203
“Boss of all bosses (
capo di tutti capi
),” 94, 206, 208, 209
Brooklyn gang war (1929–1930), 9–10, 23, 36, 204–208
Brotherhood, The
, 313, 335
Brown, Three-Finger,
see
Lucchese, Thomas
Bruno, Angelo, 94, 226, 374, 378, 492, 495
Buccellatos clan, 192, 196

C

Cantellops, Nelson, 220
Capone, Al, 109, 201, 210
Caruso, Angelo, 222, 225
Cassese, Vincent, 266
Castellammare del Golfo, 14–17, 20, 49, 73
Castellammare immigrants, 22, 155, 165, 186–191, 195, 199, 202, 211, 267, 365
Castellammarese War, 204–206, 218, 221
Catena, Gerardo, 296, 492
Chicago gangs, 200–201
Clark, Ramsey, 284, 402
Colombo, Anthony, 498–499
Colombo, Joseph, Jr., 493–494, 498
Colombo, Joseph, Sr., 97, 226, 244, 277, 295, 378, 385, 394, 493–502
Commission,
see
National commission
Consolo, Michael, 275
Corallo, Antonio, 268
Costello, Frank, 11–12, 46, 151, 200, 215–218, 309, 356, 493
attempted murder of, 217–218
Masseria backed by, 205
on national commission, 208, 215–216
political influence, 215
tax conviction, 217
Credit card case, 269–272, 276, 287–288, 291–292, 371–372, 407–449, 506
appeal and jail sentence, 467–510
jury’s verdict, 464–66
Notaro defendant in, 414–415, 419, 426–427, 442, 461–466, 468, 475
Torrillo testimony, 425–441
Cressey, Donald R., 367–368
Crociata, Peter, 273
Cypress Garden Restaurant murders, 266, 326, 425

D

Dean, Paul, 405–407
De Carlo, Angelo, 492
De Cavalcante, Samuel R., 97, 374–390
FBI tapes, 374–390, 391
De Filippo, Pat, 479
De Filippo, Vito, 99, 222, 479
De Sapio, Carmine G., 268
Dewey, Thomas E., 210
Di Angelo, James, 267
Di Angelo, Thomas, 222, 267
Di Gregorio, Gaspar, 22–23, 59, 92, 94, 97–98, 186, 211, 295, 318, 320, 379–381, 392, 493
alliance with Stefano Magaddino, 23, 92, 94, 97–98, 186, 378, 384, 392
disagreement with Joseph Bonanno, 225–227
See also
Troutman Street shooting
Di Gregorio faction, 5–7, 17, 23, 153–159, 240–242, 267, 274–277, 377–381, 387–388;
see also
Banana War
Di Pasquale, Vincent, 269, 272, 324, 419, 478
Di Pasquale, Mrs. Vincent (née Marion Labruzzo), 310–311, 324, 326–327, 331
Dunbar, William John, 400–404, 407

E

East Meadow (Long Island) Bonanno home, 17–18, 25, 29, 96, 133, 227, 250–267, 324, 330, 508
Joseph Bonanno at, 185–186, 229–238
mortgage held by Torrillo, 424–428
Eboli, Thomas, 108, 244, 296, 320–322
Erickson, Frank, 200
Evola, Natale, 320, 493

F

“Families” (Mafia), 74, 92, 169, 209–210
organization of, 206–209
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), 30–32, 78, 169, 181, 287, 294, 355, 368–369, 408
De Cavalcante tapes, 374–390, 391
involvement in Arizona bombings, 401–409, 468–469
picketing by Italo-Americans, 494–496, 500, 502
Flagstaff, Arizona, 72–73, 78, 332
Frankel, Judge Marvin E., 167–179
Franzese, Sonny, 31, 335

G

Gagliano, Gaetano, 205, 210, 219
Galante, Carmine, 150, 211, 219, 220, 222
Gallagher, Cornelius E., 388
Gallo brothers, 18, 240–243
revolt of, 93–94, 222, 494

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