by B. » Thu Sep 10, 2015 9:43 am
Traditionally the underboss seems to have been what we now call "street boss" or "front boss". Over time it seems to have become more of a political position where guys are appointed to show respect to certain factions who may not be 100% supportive of the boss, but originally I think it was purely functional... having someone who can represent the boss closer to the street level. Some of us believe that the confusion with Gigante/Salerno is because Salerno was the official underboss but had the authority of a "street boss", which is how the position was intended before prison sentences, increased factionalism, and "smoke and mirrors" forced the mob to add more layers to the leadership.
Underbosses can have crews with them. I'm not sure about NY, but in Philly Marco Reginelli had a pretty big crew of soldiers reporting direct to him and he was the unofficial #1 in the family. I am pretty sure some NY underbosses have had soldiers direct with them, too, just not an entire crew.
What interests me is how the position operates at the boss's discretion... he has full authority to promote/demote the underboss, unlike consigliere (at least the way it used to work). You have someone like Anastasia who had a number of underbosses during the short time he was boss, then you have the other bosses from that era who mostly kept the same underboss for decades until retirement/death. The consigliere position has changed the most over the years, to the point where now it is just another rung on the leadership ladder whereas it used to be something completely different.
Traditionally the underboss seems to have been what we now call "street boss" or "front boss". Over time it seems to have become more of a political position where guys are appointed to show respect to certain factions who may not be 100% supportive of the boss, but originally I think it was purely functional... having someone who can represent the boss closer to the street level. Some of us believe that the confusion with Gigante/Salerno is because Salerno was the official underboss but had the authority of a "street boss", which is how the position was intended before prison sentences, increased factionalism, and "smoke and mirrors" forced the mob to add more layers to the leadership.
Underbosses can have crews with them. I'm not sure about NY, but in Philly Marco Reginelli had a pretty big crew of soldiers reporting direct to him and he was the unofficial #1 in the family. I am pretty sure some NY underbosses have had soldiers direct with them, too, just not an entire crew.
What interests me is how the position operates at the boss's discretion... he has full authority to promote/demote the underboss, unlike consigliere (at least the way it used to work). You have someone like Anastasia who had a number of underbosses during the short time he was boss, then you have the other bosses from that era who mostly kept the same underboss for decades until retirement/death. The consigliere position has changed the most over the years, to the point where now it is just another rung on the leadership ladder whereas it used to be something completely different.