(via Netflix Series Spotlights Italy's "Fifth Mafia": Rome's Mafia Capitale)

tannertan36
wallacepolsom
KIROKAZE

JBB: An Artblog!

Love Begins

blake kathryn

titsay

Kaledo Art
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
RMH
trying on a metaphor
Jules of Nature
Stranger Things
Peter Solarz
ojovivo
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Show & Tell
No title available
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
dirt enthusiast
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Jordan

seen from South Africa

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@edscarpo
(via Netflix Series Spotlights Italy's "Fifth Mafia": Rome's Mafia Capitale)
(via What NYPD Found on Frank Costello Could've Ended Las Vegas in 1957)
(via FOILED: Feds Uncover Reputed Luchese Killer's Plan to Escape Jail)
(via Martin Scorsese on Frank Vincent: "He Made It Look Easy")
In reality, his name was not Vincent Spinelli, and he was far from being a criminal; in fact, he was an NYPD officer working undercover. The operation lasted three years and led to 42 arrests
(via Martin Scorsese on Frank Vincent: "He Made It Look Easy")
(via Cosa Nostra News: Violi's Revenge? Another Rizzuto Loyalist Whacked -- Just Last Night)
(via Cosa Nostra News: Gomorrah Author Saviano Marks 10th Year in Protective Custody (Sort Of))
(via Cosa Nostra News: Boston-area Editors Cite Mobster's Case While Seeking Ex-Speaker's Release)
(via Cosa Nostra News: New England Mafia "Sleeps with the Fishes?")
(via Cosa Nostra News: Kenji: Gambino Drug Trafficker Tried to Wangle Clinton's Pardon)
(via Cosa Nostra News: Cipollini's LUCKY Graphic Novel Emphasizes True in "True Crime")
the plot to kill Ligambi, Mazzone and Borgesi was simply a business decision for the three New York crime families, which had voiced their intent to support and back Pete the Crumb Caprio to be the new boss of the Philadelphia crime family.
(via Cosa Nostra News: Turncoat Linked to Gambinos for Decades Freed by Florida Governor, Feds)
(via Cosa Nostra News: Jerry Chilli Was a One-Man Crimewave of a Wiseguy)
Michael Mann has approved a true-crime novelization to detail the story of Chicago Outfit bosses Tony Accardo and Sam Giancana, which he intends to direct.
On September 7, Al Pacino and Robert De Niro, who were famously paired in the Michael Mann film Heat, will be reunited, with Mann, for a panel discussion to be hosted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences at the Beverly Hills' Samuel Goldwyn Theatre.
The discussion will follow a viewing of a new digital restoration of the 1995 film.
As was reported earlier this year, Heat is due for a prequel by Mann. The acclaimed filmmaker has also stated that he'd approved a true-crime novelization for his new publishing label, Michael Mann Books, to detail the story of Chicago Outfit bosses Tony Accardo and Sam Giancana. For the book, the debut project for Mann's imprint, the director has teamed up with Don Winslow, the bestselling author of The Cartel "to co-create an original novel about the complex relationship between two Organized Crime giants," as Deadline reported, further noting that "the project will be developed into a feature film that Mann will produce and possibly direct, based on the novel and a pre-existing screenplay Mann co-wrote with Shane Salerno."
Heat is Mann's widely lauded big-screen depiction of the rise and fall of a fictional crew of bank robbers and the high-powered detective who hunts them.
The Heat prequel also will be published as a book under Mann's new label, then shot as a film. As for the content of the prequel, it supposedly will focus on the formative years of Heat's major characters, Vincent Hanna (Al Pacino), Neil McCauley (Robert De Niro), Chris Shihirles (Val Kilmer), and Nate (Jon Voight).
Though the story is fictional, Mann is known for seeding some of his crime films with details from true stories of criminals and lawmen. Mann’s inspiration for Heat was the stories told to him by his friend, Chicago Detective Charlie Adamson, who killed the real-life version of Neil McCauley in a 1963 shootout.
An earlier Mann classic, Thief, starring James Caan, about a professional safe-cracker who unknowingly allows the mob to get its hooks into him, also had a real-life basis. Thief was based on the book The Home Invaders: Confessions of a Cat Burglar, published by the author under the pen name Frank Hohimer. Hohimer's real name was John Allen Seybold (June 12, 1923 – February 2, 2005), an American jewel thief who had ties to former Outfit underboss Felix Anthony "Milwaukee Phil" Alderisio.
Seybold served as the film's technical adviser on the Chicago set (while the FBI still had outstanding warrants for his arrest). He was eventually imprisoned at South Woods State Prison in New Jersey from May 21, 1995 to November 2, 2001.
Heat tells the fast-paced story of the rise and fall of a crew of bank burglars.
Mann is slated to produce and direct a film adaptation of the Accardo/Giancana book, which is listed on IMDB.com as "Untitled Tony Accardo/Sam Giancana Biopic" under the genres of biography, crime, drama.
As Vanity Fair reported:
"Keeping in line with Mann’s John Dillinger biopic Public Enemies, adapted from a book of the same name by V.F. special correspondent Bryan Burrough, the proposed film would combine Mann’s flair for criminal period pieces with intensive character work: the two mens' egos and insecurities collide in a volatile milieu where lives can be taken in a heartbeat."
"Joe Batters" — nicknamed by Al Capone for his skill at pummeling people with blunt objects — aka Anthony J. Accardo died at 86 in 1992.
With nothing more than a 6th grade education, he rose from working as a bodyguard for Al Capone to the position of reputed boss of the Chicago Outfit.
At a U.S. Senate Rackets Committee hearing he was called the "godfather of Chicago organized crime . . . a legend in his own time, the heir to Al Capone."
Once Capone was put away for not paying his taxes, Accardo "then seized power little by little until fully taking over as boss in 1943, a position he held with an iron fist until ceding it to his part-protege, part-competitor (Sam) Giancana in 1957."
The Chin's Triangle social club suffered the same fate as the Ravenite: gentrification.
"We got 30, 40 guys. Don't let anyone tell you that we're dead, 'cause we're here." --Genovese crime family member speaking to???
Jerry Capeci of Gangland News discussed last month's bust of dozens of mobsters for large-scale racketeering conspiracy on an episode of MetroFocus hosted by PBS show producer William Jones.
Reputed members of an East Coast crime syndicate were charged in midsummer with racketeering, extortion, loansharking, gambling, credit card fraud and healthcare fraud. The indictment depicts an interesting version of how the New York Mafia seems to be evolving.Though largely focused in New York, crimes alleged in the case also occurred in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Florida and New Jersey.
The MetroFocus episode commences with a clip from a two-year-old Vanity Fair-sponsored symposium (to the strains of The Godfather's iconic theme music) at which the U.S. Attorney for New York's Southern District, Preet Bharara, confirmed that the New York Mafia remains "a very serious force," though not as serious as it's been in the past.Mobsters are committing lucrative white-collar crimes, which tend to carry less prison time than other, more traditional mob crimes, he noted.
MetroFocus's host, Jones, then detailed the recent mob indictment that focused on four of New York's Five Families, plus reputed Philadelphia mob boss Joey Merlino and apparently his Florida crew (which includes a mobster with the unlikely nickname of "Brad." It was "Brad" we referred to in a recent remark about mob nicknames.)
This case is interesting because it brings the mob into new types of rackets, Capeci noted."Like Preet said two years ago, the mob will do whatever it can to make money," Capeci said. "And if they can move into new things, they definitely will. Most recently they're into this Medicaid, healthcare fraud, which made them a lot of money."
By getting doctors to write prescriptions for pain creams that cost maybe 3 dollars to manufacture, "they were getting reimbursed 200 to 300 dollars. There is a lot of money there for the mob to take a piece of. Anything they can take a piece of they will."Jones noted that while not every page of the indictment was "a page-turner" it still generally "made for pretty compelling reading." Noting that the two key characters in the indictment are the undercover FBI agent and the turncoat informant, Jones asked Capeci what in the case most shocked him.
The answer: The FBI agent's ability to infiltrate the Genovese crime family."This is the Ivy League of organized crime, not the Colombo crime family, which is teetering right now."
Read about the teetering crime family, as well as the fate of the Mafia Commission....
"These are the guys Vincent the Chin Gigante founded. They are supposedly the number one. This is the first time any agent has gotten close to them. And he was close enough to two captains, where he was sitting down at the table tape-recording conversations along with a cooperating witness."
What about the slow death Omerta's been suffering the past several decades?
"That's a tremendous asset for law enforcement. Guys on the inside who can tell what happened are very important to have. In this case (the value of having an insider) was even doubled, (because they had) an agent who doesn't have the criminal baggage when he sits on the witness stand and testifies in court. He's a good guy from the get-go. He's much more important, I think, than just a cooperating witness."
Read: Path to WITSEC Built on Omerta's Dead
Geographically, "the hub" of this case is in New York City, though it's described as an "East Coast" syndicate that spanned from Massachusetts to South Florida. Ground zero, in any event, is Arthur Avenue's Pasquale's Rigoletto Restaurant, owned by Patsy Parrello, capo in the Genovese crime family."It's a good restaurant," Capeci said, located in a "great little Italian neighborhood" in the Bronx. "The food is pretty good. He used the restaurant for sitdowns, as well as informal meetings with some of his gangster friends."
What does the indictment say in terms of the Mafia as a priority for law enforcement?
"This is an effort by the federal government to show the Mafia, we're out there still, and going to arrest you if we can, but it's few and far between, these days," Capeci said through a chuckle. "There are a lot fewer major organized crime indictments than there once were, even three-four years ago."
The indictment may put away some of these mobsters for life. "How big a hit" is this case on the Mafia, Jones asked. "Are there others ready to step into the leadership roles if they're vacant?"
"This is a big hit, it's a good case and there will be other indictments, I'm sure. Everybody who's charged in this case is accused of racketeering, there are some others who are going to be charged with specific crimes. I think there will be some other people out there who will be interested in stepping into the shoes of people who will be going away for a long time -- less than there used to be, however, which is one of the things that has made the clout of the Mafia in New York and around the country much less than it used to be in recent years."
MetroFocus posted the slightly repetitively named episode, MAFIA: The Modern Mob, online.
It can be viewed by clicking here.
Read more: Philly Connection to "East Coast" Case? (And What's Compound Cream, Anyway?)