by B. » Sat Jul 04, 2020 6:48 pm
Ed wrote: โSat Jul 04, 2020 5:04 am
Thanks Halibritain, Scootch and B.
B, If you can find that Barbara report, I'll update the article. Pittston's one of those underreported families with a lot of mystery.
Will do, my friend. The report I saw, along with Barbara's attendance at the LaTorre "trial" convinced me he was a Pittston figure, though we know in the latter example there are exceptions (i.e. Bonanno underboss Frank Garafola attending a San Francisco induction ceremony).
It appears that both the Pittston and Buffalo families each had a large group from Caltanissetta province and a small but powerful faction from Castellammare Del Golfo. Not sure why lower SWNY appears to have belonged to Pittston opposed to Buffalo, especially given the Castellammarese connection, but we know these families didn't draw their boundaries from state lines and mafia politics get confusing.
The Lucchese -> Bufalino confusion of the 1950s/60s is also interesting when we consider early Morello (i.e. half or more of the Lucchese family) figure Tommaso Petto moved to that area in the early 1900s, where he was killed, and future Lucchese boss Bonaventura Pinzolo came to the US from Serradifalco, Caltanissetta, during that period and his arrival destination upon immigration was Pittston, where he had a brother-in-law.
[quote=Ed post_id=158654 time=1593864258 user_id=153]
Thanks Halibritain, Scootch and B.
B, If you can find that Barbara report, I'll update the article. Pittston's one of those underreported families with a lot of mystery.
[/quote]
Will do, my friend. The report I saw, along with Barbara's attendance at the LaTorre "trial" convinced me he was a Pittston figure, though we know in the latter example there are exceptions (i.e. Bonanno underboss Frank Garafola attending a San Francisco induction ceremony).
It appears that both the Pittston and Buffalo families each had a large group from Caltanissetta province and a small but powerful faction from Castellammare Del Golfo. Not sure why lower SWNY appears to have belonged to Pittston opposed to Buffalo, especially given the Castellammarese connection, but we know these families didn't draw their boundaries from state lines and mafia politics get confusing.
The Lucchese -> Bufalino confusion of the 1950s/60s is also interesting when we consider early Morello (i.e. half or more of the Lucchese family) figure Tommaso Petto moved to that area in the early 1900s, where he was killed, and future Lucchese boss Bonaventura Pinzolo came to the US from Serradifalco, Caltanissetta, during that period and his arrival destination upon immigration was Pittston, where he had a brother-in-law.