by B. » Thu Mar 18, 2021 9:28 pm
cavita wrote: ↑Thu Mar 18, 2021 6:07 am
@B.
I wasn't aware Pino Ganci called Rockford at all but it's not surprising to me given there are a ton of redacted phone numbers Buscemi was calling and receiving calls from. I don't recall ever seeing Rockford guys traveling to NYC or NJ but in the 1970s there was a newspaper expose that stated in return for allowing east coast Mafia families to operate in the porn business in Rockford, Rockford in turn was allowed to operate schemes out there.
I too am interested in the names involved in the Aragona conflict which could shed light on a lot of things. Do you know what time period this covered?
I should double-check Ganci's phone records when I come across them again, so don't quote me on it yet, but I distinctly remember a phone call or two placed from his pizzeria to Illinois, specifically near the Rockford area. Frank Polizzi was married to a Ganci relative and Polizzi in turn was said to be a nephew of Tony Riela, so all of these San Giuseppe Jato guys could have had a Rockford connection through Riela.
I wonder too if San Giuseppe Jato boss Nino Salamone had contact with Rockford during his time in the US. I see you have Salamones listed with the Rockford family but from Aragona, so likely no connection.
--
The DiGiacomo and Caramazza families were at war in Aragona, and in some kind of Romeo and Juliet situation, Biagio married a Caramazza. Biagio was under investigation for participation in murders related to the war but some time after settling in the US he was dropped from the investigation by the Italian magistrate. There must have been more surnames involved but it is very hard to research as Aragona is obscure.
Timeline of the war would be late 1960s, as Biagio DiGiacomo came to the US in 1970 supposedly on the heels of his relatives being murdered. I was told his relatives were killed on or around Christmas, though haven't been able to confirm. If true, I'm not sure if that would mean Christmas 1969 or earlier. I'm under the impression DiGiacomo left Sicily with some degree of urgency, so something similar may have played out with the Rockford DiGiacomos.
DiGiacomo claimed to an undercover agent he didn't get involved in drugs due to his "family" and "reputation" -- I don't know if he meant his blood family or the Patriarca family. Either way it was nonsene as he got involved in cocaine dealing. If he was connected to Salvatore Caruana before Caruana disappeared, drugs would have been a fact of life.
[quote=cavita post_id=188081 time=1616072852 user_id=72]
@B.
I wasn't aware Pino Ganci called Rockford at all but it's not surprising to me given there are a ton of redacted phone numbers Buscemi was calling and receiving calls from. I don't recall ever seeing Rockford guys traveling to NYC or NJ but in the 1970s there was a newspaper expose that stated in return for allowing east coast Mafia families to operate in the porn business in Rockford, Rockford in turn was allowed to operate schemes out there.
I too am interested in the names involved in the Aragona conflict which could shed light on a lot of things. Do you know what time period this covered?
[/quote]
I should double-check Ganci's phone records when I come across them again, so don't quote me on it yet, but I distinctly remember a phone call or two placed from his pizzeria to Illinois, specifically near the Rockford area. Frank Polizzi was married to a Ganci relative and Polizzi in turn was said to be a nephew of Tony Riela, so all of these San Giuseppe Jato guys could have had a Rockford connection through Riela.
I wonder too if San Giuseppe Jato boss Nino Salamone had contact with Rockford during his time in the US. I see you have Salamones listed with the Rockford family but from Aragona, so likely no connection.
--
The DiGiacomo and Caramazza families were at war in Aragona, and in some kind of Romeo and Juliet situation, Biagio married a Caramazza. Biagio was under investigation for participation in murders related to the war but some time after settling in the US he was dropped from the investigation by the Italian magistrate. There must have been more surnames involved but it is very hard to research as Aragona is obscure.
Timeline of the war would be late 1960s, as Biagio DiGiacomo came to the US in 1970 supposedly on the heels of his relatives being murdered. I was told his relatives were killed on or around Christmas, though haven't been able to confirm. If true, I'm not sure if that would mean Christmas 1969 or earlier. I'm under the impression DiGiacomo left Sicily with some degree of urgency, so something similar may have played out with the Rockford DiGiacomos.
DiGiacomo claimed to an undercover agent he didn't get involved in drugs due to his "family" and "reputation" -- I don't know if he meant his blood family or the Patriarca family. Either way it was nonsene as he got involved in cocaine dealing. If he was connected to Salvatore Caruana before Caruana disappeared, drugs would have been a fact of life.