chin_gigante wrote: ↑Wed Jul 19, 2023 11:45 pm
B. wrote: ↑Wed Jul 19, 2023 12:00 pm
Does he talk about his relationship to other Families?
D'Elia's induction was held at a Howard and Johnson's hotel on Tuesday 30 October 1973. He didn't know he was being inducted and thought he couldn't be because his mother was Irish. Prior to the ceremony, Bufalino had asked him vague questions about if he was always going to be with him. D'Elia says about 30 to 40 guys were present including representatives from multiple different families. The Saturday before the ceremony was the annual dinner dance for Chapter 34 of the Italian American Civil Rights League in Wilkes-Barre and cosa nostra members from New York, Philadelphia, Buffalo, Miami, Chicago, Kansas City, Los Angeles, and other places attended. D'Elia says some of these members stayed an extra couple of days at Bufalino's suggestion to be there for the ceremony. The only member of another family that D'Elia mentions by name at his ceremony was Kelly Mannarino. The Bufalino members he mentions as being present are Dave Osticco, Cappy Giumento, Russell, and Angelo Bufalino. D'Elia's ceremony itself consisted of Bufalino bringing him into the centre of the room and announcing to everyone that D'Elia was "one of us" now. They then congratulated and greeted him.
Very interesting details here, including the truncated ceremony and the IACRL.
My impression of the IACRL had been that it was basically an obvious front for Colombo that enjoyed intense but relatively short-lived popular support from the Italian community in NYC. I was not aware that it had chapters in other cities. The only mentions of it in the press, nationally, that I recalled seeing were for Colombo's Unity Day Rallies at Columbus Circle in 1970 and '71. A 1971 article in the NY Times, however, discussed the push from the IACRL to organize chapters in other cities, which by this time included Utica, Rochester, New Haven, Providence, Boston, Miami, Bayonne, and Newark, with efforts underway to organize chapters in Chicago, Detroit, Buffalo, Hartford, and Vegas. The IACRL was said to have a membership of 40k at this time, impressive for an organization that had been founded just one year before. The Chicago chapter seems to have been formed under the umbrella of the Joint Civic Committee of Italian‐Americans, which represented ~400k members of Chicago paesani and Italian civic action organizations. Peter Lavorata, member of the executive committee of the JCCIA, President of the Vicari Society, and clerk of the Cook County Grand Jury, was identified by the FBI as a longtime personal associate of Chicago member Phil Bacino (Bacino was from Ribera and closely connected to members of the DeCavalcante Family). I was able to uncover that Lavorata's connections to the mafia went back to the 1920s with one-time Chicago boss Pasquale LoLordo. Other JCCIA bigwigs with close mafia ties included former JCCIA President Antonino Paternò (a Sicilian Chicago wine and liquor magnate who was a close personal friend of Tony Accardo, accompanied Accardo on a trip to Italy in the 1970s, and was under investigation at that time by Italian LE for ties to the Sicilian mafia), and US Congressman Frank Annunzio (close to Accardo and other leading Chicago LCN members, and suspected by the FBI of being a member of Chicago LCN himself). An FBI bug in the 1960s apparently captured Vincent Ferrara, then President of the JCCIA, meeting with Chicago LCN member-politicians Pat Marcy and John D'Arco about using the clout of the JCCIA to combat negative press coverage of individuals connected to the mafia and back a civil rights lawsuit on behalf of Sam Giancana against FBI "harassment". While the majority of the members of the IACRL, like the JCCIA, were respected middle-class and professional members of the community, I would imagine that when the IACRL expanded into other cities it naturally tapped into existing ecosystems of Italian civic activism which went back decades and often included longstanding intersections with LCN members and associates.