Chicago and the Camorra

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Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by B. » Fri Jul 10, 2020 2:01 am

ChicagoOutfit wrote: Thu Jul 09, 2020 12:48 am
B. wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 6:02 pm
aleksandrored wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 5:19 pm How does someone enter Camorra? is it like entering Cosa Nostra? and in the case of the Capone era?
Someone else can comment on internal Camorra protocol, but from the examples we have, Camorristi had to enter the US mafia the same way any associate would. Camorra was not recognized as "the same thing" as the mafia, so while Sicilian mafia members were recognized as "the same thing" and could be introduced to US mafia members (something that still happens, as evidenced by recent Italian investigations) and therefore transfer their membership, Camorristi had to go through a mafia induction the same way any associate would. Naturally their underworld experience as Camorristi could make them more deserving of induction than an average neighborhood Joe and the mafia would have known who these people were.

Former San Fran boss Tony Lima who turned CI commented on this, as he inducted a Camorrista into the San Francisco family while he was boss. There are similar examples in other cities, too and in each case the Camorristi joined the mafia rather than the other way around, at least by a certain point in history. Richie Boiardo's FBI file includes a report that says this began around 1915. Al Capone and other Masseria/Genovese members are referenced in the same report.

I'm aware of no known examples of Camorristi being recognized as members of the mafia in the US or Sicily based on their status as Camorristi alone, it is only after they have been inducted into the mafia / Cosa Nostra that they are recognized. Of course this is open to review if new info ever comes.
Would Paul Ricca count?
He would have had to undergo a mafia induction in order to be recognized, even if it was just someone saying "you're in." An easy way to understand it is, you have to be able to be introduced as a "friend of ours" / "amico nostra" and the only way that can happen is if you join the mafia.
MSFRD wrote: Thu Jul 09, 2020 7:09 am Didn’t a pentito in Sicily state that the leaders of the Camorra and ‘Ndrangheta are members of Cosa Nostra and went through the induction ceremony?
I've read that, too, but I couldn't remember who it was. They said they inducted them into Cosa Nostra in order to recognize them. It would fit exactly with what seems to have happened in the US.

Anthony Lima said he inducted a Camorrista into the mafia in San Francisco after getting advice from someone else (probably his uncle Sam Lima). They felt by inducting him into the mafia they could better control him but it didn't work out and Lima shelved him a year later.

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by MSFRD » Thu Jul 09, 2020 7:09 am

Didn’t a pentito in Sicily state that the leaders of the Camorra and ‘Ndrangheta are members of Cosa Nostra and went through the induction ceremony?

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by ChicagoOutfit » Thu Jul 09, 2020 12:48 am

B. wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 6:02 pm
aleksandrored wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 5:19 pm How does someone enter Camorra? is it like entering Cosa Nostra? and in the case of the Capone era?
Someone else can comment on internal Camorra protocol, but from the examples we have, Camorristi had to enter the US mafia the same way any associate would. Camorra was not recognized as "the same thing" as the mafia, so while Sicilian mafia members were recognized as "the same thing" and could be introduced to US mafia members (something that still happens, as evidenced by recent Italian investigations) and therefore transfer their membership, Camorristi had to go through a mafia induction the same way any associate would. Naturally their underworld experience as Camorristi could make them more deserving of induction than an average neighborhood Joe and the mafia would have known who these people were.

Former San Fran boss Tony Lima who turned CI commented on this, as he inducted a Camorrista into the San Francisco family while he was boss. There are similar examples in other cities, too and in each case the Camorristi joined the mafia rather than the other way around, at least by a certain point in history. Richie Boiardo's FBI file includes a report that says this began around 1915. Al Capone and other Masseria/Genovese members are referenced in the same report.

I'm aware of no known examples of Camorristi being recognized as members of the mafia in the US or Sicily based on their status as Camorristi alone, it is only after they have been inducted into the mafia / Cosa Nostra that they are recognized. Of course this is open to review if new info ever comes.
Would Paul Ricca count?

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Villain » Wed Jul 08, 2020 1:40 am

Antiliar wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 2:39 pm If you want you can look over the vital records from Napoli to see if they really were cousins. I don't have time for it.

Unfortunately it only goes to 1865:
https://www.familysearch.org/search/cat ... %20Library

http://dl.antenati.san.beniculturali.it ... di+Napoli/
Cool and ill definitely let you know if i find something

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by B. » Tue Jul 07, 2020 6:02 pm

aleksandrored wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 5:19 pm How does someone enter Camorra? is it like entering Cosa Nostra? and in the case of the Capone era?
Someone else can comment on internal Camorra protocol, but from the examples we have, Camorristi had to enter the US mafia the same way any associate would. Camorra was not recognized as "the same thing" as the mafia, so while Sicilian mafia members were recognized as "the same thing" and could be introduced to US mafia members (something that still happens, as evidenced by recent Italian investigations) and therefore transfer their membership, Camorristi had to go through a mafia induction the same way any associate would. Naturally their underworld experience as Camorristi could make them more deserving of induction than an average neighborhood Joe and the mafia would have known who these people were.

Former San Fran boss Tony Lima who turned CI commented on this, as he inducted a Camorrista into the San Francisco family while he was boss. There are similar examples in other cities, too and in each case the Camorristi joined the mafia rather than the other way around, at least by a certain point in history. Richie Boiardo's FBI file includes a report that says this began around 1915. Al Capone and other Masseria/Genovese members are referenced in the same report.

I'm aware of no known examples of Camorristi being recognized as members of the mafia in the US or Sicily based on their status as Camorristi alone, it is only after they have been inducted into the mafia / Cosa Nostra that they are recognized. Of course this is open to review if new info ever comes.

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by aleksandrored » Tue Jul 07, 2020 5:19 pm

Two doubts guys:

How does someone enter Camorra? is it like entering Cosa Nostra? and in the case of the Capone era?

From what I understood by reading here on the forum, Capone was the leader of the gang on the South Side, and between 1925 and 1931 he started to absorb the other two gangs and went to war with the North side, and in the end brought all the gangs together and so Outfit formed, was that it?

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by PolackTony » Tue Jul 07, 2020 3:31 pm

Antiliar wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 11:59 am If you notice on the passenger manifest is that it says Gennaro Calabrese lives in Coney Island, but the address is hard to read. The Calabrese that I found who could be a match lived at 6918 Fort Hamilton Ave, which is near Bay Ridge, about 5 miles/8 km from Coney Island. He was born March, 25, 1878 in Naples.
Not that it really matters much, but nowadays at least that's considered Dyker Heights.

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Confederate » Tue Jul 07, 2020 2:40 pm

Antiliar wrote: Mon Jul 06, 2020 8:08 pm The Neapolitan element wasn't large, but maybe you want to include Napoli and the region of Campania, which includes Salerno, Caserta, Benevento and Avellino. Many like Al Capone and the Fischetti brothers were American born, and others like Ralph Capone and Frank Nitto arrived as children. So I think for them the Campanian influence was trivial. Paul Ricca may have been in the Camorra before arriving in the U.S., but once in Chicago he was under Joe Esposito's influence, who in turn was answerable to the Chicago Mafia. Esposito was trying to be legitimate and had a lot of political pull, and I'm sure Ricca learned from that. Capone's mentor John Torrio may have been Camorra connected and was definitely part of the Five Points Gang, but he left all that to manage boxing champion Kid Murphy before joining the Joe Colosimo organization. Colosimo came from Cosenza in Calabria and created what became the Outfit, which as I wrote had an Italian core but with many non-Italians in it. So overall I think the Neapolitan influence was minimal. Capone saw himself as an American of Italian heritage and was open to most ethnicities (obviously there were no black or Hispanic members). When he was made a member under Masseria he had to follow the more traditional Mafia model, but when he became a recognized boss he put his own Americanized Chicago spin on it.
I think the big mistake that some people make (not you) is that the American LCN was based mainly upon culture with crime attached to it. It's really the other way around. The American LCN was based mainly upon crime with SOME culture attached to it. The main driving force behind all of it was money, not culture. Culture only plays a minor role in it when you are talking about sociopaths. I mean, let's be honest, these guys cared more about power & money than they cared about Italian tradition, especially the Outfit.

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Antiliar » Tue Jul 07, 2020 2:39 pm

If you want you can look over the vital records from Napoli to see if they really were cousins. I don't have time for it.

Unfortunately it only goes to 1865:
https://www.familysearch.org/search/cat ... %20Library

http://dl.antenati.san.beniculturali.it ... di+Napoli/

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Villain » Tue Jul 07, 2020 1:03 pm

Antiliar wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 11:59 am The Calabrese that I found who could be a match lived at 6918 Fort Hamilton Ave, which is near Bay Ridge, about 5 miles/8 km from Coney Island. He was born March, 25, 1878 in Naples.
Thanks again. Do you think he was connected and was there any possible connection to that DeLucia cousin also from NY, since the Calabrese fella was allegedly closely connected to the DeLucia fam (if you put a gun on my head right now, i still wont be able to tell you the source regarding my last claim since i dont remember it lol)?

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Antiliar » Tue Jul 07, 2020 11:59 am

If you notice on the passenger manifest is that it says Gennaro Calabrese lives in Coney Island, but the address is hard to read. The Calabrese that I found who could be a match lived at 6918 Fort Hamilton Ave, which is near Bay Ridge, about 5 miles/8 km from Coney Island. He was born March, 25, 1878 in Naples.

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Villain » Tue Jul 07, 2020 3:47 am

Antiliar wrote: Tue Jul 07, 2020 12:38 am There was a Gennaro Calabrese who was a wine merchant, but no address given. There was someone by that name who was involved in St. Michael's Church in BK - the same church the Capones attended. Might be the importer born in 1879.
Thanks a lot. The BK Church thing makes the situation plausible since Capone and Ricca were "related" but theres not enough additional info out there...speaking for myself

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Antiliar » Tue Jul 07, 2020 12:38 am

There was a Gennaro Calabrese who was a wine merchant, but no address given. There was someone by that name who was involved in St. Michael's Church in BK - the same church the Capones attended. Might be the importer born in 1879.

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Villain » Mon Jul 06, 2020 11:37 pm

Antiliar wrote: Mon Jul 06, 2020 8:08 pm Paul Ricca may have been in the Camorra before arriving in the U.S., but once in Chicago he was under Joe Esposito's influence, who in turn was answerable to the Chicago Mafia. Esposito was trying to be legitimate and had a lot of political pull, and I'm sure Ricca learned from that.
Thanks again bud.

Do we know something about the individual who welcomed Ricca in NY and went by the name of Gennaro Calabrese? He was allegedly a close friend of the DeLucia family and Ricca took an occupation as a restaurant manager at a joint which was owned by the Gennaro family, but i dont have the location...

Re: Chicago and the Camorra

by Antiliar » Mon Jul 06, 2020 8:08 pm

The Neapolitan element wasn't large, but maybe you want to include Napoli and the region of Campania, which includes Salerno, Caserta, Benevento and Avellino. Many like Al Capone and the Fischetti brothers were American born, and others like Ralph Capone and Frank Nitto arrived as children. So I think for them the Campanian influence was trivial. Paul Ricca may have been in the Camorra before arriving in the U.S., but once in Chicago he was under Joe Esposito's influence, who in turn was answerable to the Chicago Mafia. Esposito was trying to be legitimate and had a lot of political pull, and I'm sure Ricca learned from that. Capone's mentor John Torrio may have been Camorra connected and was definitely part of the Five Points Gang, but he left all that to manage boxing champion Kid Murphy before joining the Joe Colosimo organization. Colosimo came from Cosenza in Calabria and created what became the Outfit, which as I wrote had an Italian core but with many non-Italians in it. So overall I think the Neapolitan influence was minimal. Capone saw himself as an American of Italian heritage and was open to most ethnicities (obviously there were no black or Hispanic members). When he was made a member under Masseria he had to follow the more traditional Mafia model, but when he became a recognized boss he put his own Americanized Chicago spin on it.

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