The First Family: Terror, Extortion, Revenge, Murder and the Birth of the American Mafia (57 page)

Read The First Family: Terror, Extortion, Revenge, Murder and the Birth of the American Mafia Online

Authors: Mike Dash

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #History, #Espionage, #Organized Crime, #Murder, #Social Science, #True Crime, #United States - 20th Century (1900-1945), #Turn of the Century, #Mafia, #United States - 19th Century, #United States, #Biography & Autobiography, #Criminals, #Biography, #Serial Killers, #Social History, #Criminals & Outlaws, #Criminology

BOOK: The First Family: Terror, Extortion, Revenge, Murder and the Birth of the American Mafia
5.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
262.
Andrea Ricci died in 1917:
Kings County death certificate 22069, November 14, 1917, NYMA.

CHAPTER 13.
The Eighteenth Amendment

263.
The world had changed:
Jackson,
The Encyclopedia of New York City
, pp. 605, 921; draft cards for Vincenzo and Ciro Terranova, June 1917, RG 163, NARA-SE.
264.
Joe Masseria:
Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” p. 55.
264.
Umberto Valenti:
Gentile,
Vita di Capomafia
, pp. 55-71 (two thousand associates, “the Ghost”).
265.
fled the country:
Gentile,
Vita
, pp. 70-71 (D’Aquila, sentence, a dozen men); Ignazio Lupo, inmate file 2883, Atlanta Federal Penitentiary papers, Records of the Bureau of Prisons, RG 129, NARA-SE (release date); Dickie,
Cosa Nostra
, pp. 217-20; Gentile,
Vita
, pp. 70-71;
New York Times
, February 23, 1938, p. 40;
Washington Post
, February 5, 1922, p. 64 (Newport News, dates);
New York Times
, June 13, 1922, p. 1 (return date for Lupo).
265
hiding around Palermo:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 100.
267
Alcohol had been outlawed:
Sinclair,
Prohibition
, pp. 205-6 (Prohibition Bureau), 212 (quarter of a million), 220 (exports), 231 (N.Y. juries), 244-48 (market size); Jackson,
Encyclopedia
, p. 944 (speakeasies).
269
Ciro Terranova, with whom:
Downey,
Gangster City
, pp. 38, 199, 202. 269
Vito Genovese:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, pp. 128-31; Critchley,
The Origin of
Organized Crime
, pp. 132-34 (Paretti).
269
“Prohibition was too good to be true”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 65.
269.
“so fearsome a competitor”:
New York Daily News
, May 9, 1922 (Harlem Tiger); trial transcripts, Paretti (1926), fol. 205 (Viserti and the Murder Stable); Critchley,
The Origin of Organized Crime
, pp. 102 (Viserti), 138-41, 154-56 (background of Italian bootlegging).
270.
His name was Giuseppe Masseria:
New York Times
, April 16, 1931, p.1 (criminal record); Critchley,
The Origin of Organized Crime
, pp. 154-56 (background and rise; Curb Exchange).
270.
Whatever it was:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 84-86 (appearance, gluttony, “the Chinese,” messy eater), 100 (“his belly …”).
271.
From the Morello family’s perspective:
Critchley,
The Origin of Organized Crime
, p. 155.
272.
Diamond Joe Viserti was the first to go:
New York Daily News
, October 14, 1921 (Viserti death), and May 9, 1922, pp. 2, 14 (Vincenzo Terranova murder); Manhattan death certificate 13893, May 8, 1922, NYMA (Terranova wounds);
New York Times
, May 8, 1922, p. 1 (Terranova circumstances), and April 16, 1931, p. 15 (attack on Masseria; straw hat);
Herald
, May 8, 1922, p. 1 (Masseria shooting), and August 12, 1922, p. 1 (Valenti murder); Downey,
Gangster City
, p. 139 (Viserti and Masseria linked), 140-41 (Masseria’s gun battles); Gentile,
Vita di Capomafia
, p. 79 (Valenti responsible for killing Terranova); Critchley,
The Origin of Organized Crime
, pp. 155-56 (Valenti’s attacks on Masseria).
273
one further important casualty:
Manhattan death certificate 17260, June 19, 1923;
New York Times
, June 20, 1923, p. 4 (Salemi murder). My thanks to David Critchley for supplying the latter reference.
273
surviving Terranova brother’s place:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, pp. 53-54 (brokers truce, sets up burglars);
New York Times
, December 28, 1929, p. 1, and January 16, 1930, p. 1 (Vitale dinner, murder contract); Terrett,
Only Saps Work
, p. 33 (Vitale’s criminal connections).
276
The assassination of Totò D’Aquila:
New York Times
, October 11, p. 20, and October 12, 1928, p. 22 (criminal career, cheese importer, unknown as Mafioso, witness changes story); Gentile,
Vita
, pp. 70-71 (authoritarian, from Palermo); Critchley,
The Origin of Organized Crime
, pp. 161-64 (murder and aftermath).
278
wearied by age:
New York Times
, October 11, p. 20 (D’Aquila); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” pp. 55, 61n (Mineo, Schiro); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 65 (Reina); Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 84-85 (“careful not to offend”).
278.
the boss as a benevolent “father”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 63, 76-77, 85.
280.
Masseria took things further still:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 65, Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” pp. 44, 75.
279.
the Castellammare War:
Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” p. 61n (origins); Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 86 (guff), 88 (thick-skulled).
280.
“brains trust”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 100.
280
Morello began by sowing dissent:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 87-88 93-94 (Milazzo murder, Aiello, Capone), 100 (Morello and Milazzo), 102 (tribute, Bonventre murder); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” p. 63 (Milazzo murder).
280.
resembled a volcanic chamber:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 95 (“In a war between …”), 101 (sandwich), 102 (condemned).
281.
solved this problem by disappearing:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 102 (“If Masseria”); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” p. 61n (Schiro leaves for Italy).
281
“classic American success story”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 74.
281.
Most of those who encountered Maranzano:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 71 (appearance, voice), 100 (and Morello); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 74 (Valachi’s views); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” pp. 56-61 (background, immigration, and D’Aquila).
282.
knew as Peter Morello:
Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” p. 63n (alias); Manhattan death certificate 19631, August 15, 1930, NYMA (correct identity).
283.
at the meeting place:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 98-99.

284
Maranzano made ready:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 95, 104.

284.
“We’re only a few”:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 77.
285.
Every effort was made:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 77, Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 104-5 (limo, machine gun).
285.
“I watched Maranzano loading”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 117.
286.
“Buster from Chicago”:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 77 (Valachi’s initiation); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” pp. 46-51 (Buster identified); Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 105 (virtuoso).
287.
“Maranzano used to say”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 107. 287
Morello never got the chance:
New York Times
, August 16, 1930, p. 1;
Daily
News
, same date, pp. 2, 4;
Herald Tribune
, same date, pp. 1, 4 (details); autopsy report, August 16, 1930, Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, file DA4801, NYMA (wounds); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 67, and Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 107 (events of murder).

Epilogue

289
“had lost his best man”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 107.
289
Defectors began going over:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 120-21.
289.
as his adviser and strategist:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 116.
290.
the next breakthrough:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 120 (“Maranzano had already decided …”); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, pp. 68-71 (“to rent this apartment …;” Masseria spotted, Mineo shot).
291.
Lucky Luciano:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 121-22.
292.
“limited number of meals”:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, p. 120.
292.
the boss of bosses’ murder:
New York Times
, April 16, 1931, p. 1 (circumstances); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” pp. 64-65 (“ritual” aspects dismissed).
294.
Maranzano emerged as the dominant:
Bonanno,
A Man of Honor
, pp. 123-27 (aftermath, national conference, family heads), 131 (“more comfortable …”); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, pp. 84-88 (numbers at meeting; “Whatever happened in the past…;” $115,000; “control everything”).
294.
Maranzano went much the same way:
Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, pp. 89-90.
294.
For years afterward, rumors:
Thompson and Raymond,
Gang Rule in New York
, pp. 374-75 (purge day); Nelli,
The Business of Crime
, pp. 179-218 (no evidence); Critchley, “Buster, Maranzano, and the Castellammare War,” pp. 44-78 (events in context); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 96 (“They got Jimmy Marino …”).
295.
Steve La Salle:
Terranova files (Morello associate); Maas,
The Valachi Papers
, p. 111 (numbers racket); Critchley,
The Origin of Organized Crime
, pp. 111, 113.
295.
his agency assumed some:
Flynn’s Weekly
, November 8, 1924, pp. 253-67 (cases); Melanson,
The Secret Service
, pp. 37-38 (manpower); Fox, “Bureaucratic Wrangling over Counterintelligence, 1917-18” (agencies).
296.
he tendered his resignation:
Washington Post
, December 24, 1917, p. 4, and December 30, 1917, p. 2 (dates, exhausted); McCormick,
Hopeless Cases
, pp. 44-45 (Hale).
296.
William Moran:
New York Times
, December 23, 1917, p. 1 (New York).
297.
appointed director of the Bureau of Investigation:
Ackerman,
Young J. Edgar
, pp. 27-30 (abilities, reaction, FRA police), 256-57 (investigation); McCormick,
Hopeless Cases
, pp. 8, 45-46, 108-9, 118-19, 125-27 (Wall Street, Clemente, resignation, Burns).
298.
“As he has told me”:
Ackerman,
Young J. Edgar
, p. 28 (Palmer quote).
298.
writer for the motion picture industry:
Dumaux,
King Baggot
, pp. 99-102, 243; information from Kevin Brownlow.
299.
running the detective business:
Private information from the Flynn family. 299
William Flynn expired:
New York Times
, October 15, 1928, p. 23;
Chicago
Tribune
, same date, p. 32.
299.
Francesco Ortoleva, the man framed:
Dailies Flynn, vol. 30 fols. 202-3, reel 117, June 25, 1910 (mother); James Ortoleva to William Mayer, Warden, Atlanta Federal Penitentiary, February 7 and 15, March 23, 1911, inmate file 2882, Giuseppe Morello, Atlanta Federal Penitentiary papers, RG 129, NARA-SE (works for Flynn; pressurize Morello); passenger list for SS
San Guglielmo
, 25 January 1914, “Passenger and crew lists of vessels arriving at New York, 1897-1957,” T715/2254, RG85, NARA (arrives N.Y.); Flynn pp. 259, 260-61 (weighted; mutual prayers).
300.
Most of the thugs:
Dailies New York, vol. 39 fol. 17, reel 592, April 3, 1913 (Inzerillo);
Washington Post
, April 26, 1914, SM5 (Di Priemo); Petacco,
Joe Petrosino
, pp. 190, 192 (Costantino and Passananti).
300.
Ralph the Barber:
Brooklyn Standard-Union
, June 12, 1918, p. 8 (begs to stay in jail);
Newark Star-Eagle
, August 17, 1925, and Alfonso Pepe death certificate, August 18, Essex County, N.J., 3346 of 1925 (murder);
New York Times
, June 17, 1929, p. 19 (killed within a month).

Other books

The Lonely by Tara Brown
Billy Summers by Stephen King
A Loving Family by Dilly Court
13 Hangmen by Art Corriveau
The Troll by Darr, Brian
44 Scotland Street by Alexander McCall Smith
Pieces of Hate by Ray Garton
Stormbird by Conn Iggulden
Firebrand by Antony John