by PolackTony » Fri Sep 20, 2024 11:23 am
Snakes wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 10:57 am
PolackTony wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 10:34 am
pat_marcy wrote: ↑Fri Sep 20, 2024 5:48 am
So when you say members this is just Italians yes? Cause over the years they’ve had people like gus Alex, humphries etc who are not Italian obviously but you’d say they were members of the outfit
“The outfit” is just a synonym for “Cosa Nostra”/mafia (used all over the country also, not at all unique or particular to Chicago). Alex, Humphreys, et al., were *not* members, they were valuable and highly respected associates, as every Family had. *Members* doesn’t mean “Italians” — it means “made guys”, i.e., inducted members of the mafia. There were always Italian guys who were associates and not made guys (all members are Italian, or at least half-Italian in a couple of cases, but not all Italians are members).
I do get what he is saying, as I think guys like Schweihs were considered part of the Outfit from a certain point of view. I don't want to get too much into previously (well) trod territory, but I think it was slightly different in Chicago as they were rarely referred to (internally or externally) as a "family," so I think it was easier for a non-made member to be considered "part" of the Outfit than it would be for a non-made member to be considered "part" of the Gambino Family (as opposed to "with" the Gambino Family). The Outfit is certainly an LCN organization, but I think the terminology does kind of blur the line at times.
As you know, we only have one made guy in Chicago to testify about the organization, Nick C, and he certainly understood “member” to mean an inducted member of the mafia.
Given that we don’t even know what DeLaurentis actually said, I’m not going to get too far into speculating as to what *he* may have meant by whatever he actually said. Some earlier FBI informant sources seem to have used “member” the loose way that you indicate here, but then typically these sources were not LCN members themselves. To outsiders or low-level affiliates, they might have mis/understood any guy with clout to have been a “member”, with little to no understanding of what the actual mafia organization consisted of or what membership in this organization really meant and entailed. As is very often the case with these questions, we also have the ever-present issue of the problem of “attributed speech” — in most cases, we don’t know what these sources actually said verbatim, rather than the way that an FBI agent parsed or summarized their statements, which were almost never reproduced in full (we also don’t know the context of how the agent interviewing them phrased the question and this can also be a vital element of contextualizing someone’s statements and making sense of them).
What we mainly get is “The Blind Men and the Elephant”/“The Outsider Looking In”, so I am very hesitant to make any strong claims as to how nomenclature and local organizational culture may or may not have differed between Chicago and other Families. But when we do get these little peeks from behind the curtain from members or highly trusted associates (by which I mean guys like Frank Schweihs or Teddy DeRose, and not some guy who ran a wire room or whatever that the FBI may have talked to in 1959 etc., of course), we see that they absolutely used terms like “Family”, “capodecina”, “the Life”, “wiseguy”, “made guy”, “avvocato”, “sottocapo”, “Consiglio”. We just have so few/fragmented accounts from sources of this level of quality and validity, as opposed to the Blind Men that the FBI relied so heavily on. Obviously, DeLaurentis does not fall into this category.
To go back to my post above, it wasn’t in response to the DeLaurentis thing, as we still don’t actually know what he even said anyway. It was to “Pat_Marcy”, who was asking about what “you” would say. I can’t answer for anyone else, but when the “you” is *me*, then no, I would not say that any of these associates were “members of the outfit” and I have little doubt that made guys in Chicago saw things any differently (again, going back to Nick C who was made before DeLaurentis and who was specifically queried about this matter on the stand and denied that non-Italian associates had any particular organizational status equivalent to being a made member).
EDIT:
Snakes wrote:
I think guys like Schweihs were considered part of the Outfit from a certain point of view.
Just to respond to this part in more detail. Guys like Schweihs absolutely *are* “part of the organization”. And this is the same with the mafia anywhere, of course. Associates are formally affiliated to the mafia organization, they just aren’t inducted members of it. As we all know, “associate” covers a lot of territory in terms of stature, respect, clout — it can mean anything from a relative of a member who is under his protection to a low-level “employee” of a mafia-affiliated racket operation, to guys like Lansky and Alex, with a lot of middle ground in between. In Sicily, one of the terms used is “affiliati”, which denotes those who are formally affiliated to a Family but not made members. Some of them may be proposed for membership and just not inducted yet, while others are men like LE officers who cannot be inducted. This category of “affiliati” (who are often included in Italian LE reports and not disaggregated from made members when reporting on the total number of affiliates of a given Family in Sicily) denotes the same relationship to the organization that we use “associates” to denote. In the American mafia, however, things became a bit more complicated given that there were many men over the years who became formally affiliated with the mafia but who could not qualify for membership because of non-Italian ancestry, but this isn’t really any different in any meaningful way from Sicilian affiliati who can’t be made due to LE ties. Sicilian “affiliati”, like American “associates”, are thus composed of those formally affiliated to the mafia, with some proposed for membership (or at least theoretically qualifying for membership, as with Italian associates in the American mafia), and others who are barred from membership. Sicilian “affiliati” are also not low level flunkies — they are either being groomed for membership themselves, or are vital assets to the organization in areas like LE, politics, and legitimate business. In this, they are very much like highly respected associates with American Families.
[quote=Snakes post_id=283958 time=1726855073 user_id=66]
[quote=PolackTony post_id=283956 time=1726853657 user_id=6658]
[quote=pat_marcy post_id=283936 time=1726836531 user_id=8498]
So when you say members this is just Italians yes? Cause over the years they’ve had people like gus Alex, humphries etc who are not Italian obviously but you’d say they were members of the outfit
[/quote]
“The outfit” is just a synonym for “Cosa Nostra”/mafia (used all over the country also, not at all unique or particular to Chicago). Alex, Humphreys, et al., were *not* members, they were valuable and highly respected associates, as every Family had. *Members* doesn’t mean “Italians” — it means “made guys”, i.e., inducted members of the mafia. There were always Italian guys who were associates and not made guys (all members are Italian, or at least half-Italian in a couple of cases, but not all Italians are members).
[/quote]
I do get what he is saying, as I think guys like Schweihs were considered part of the Outfit from a certain point of view. I don't want to get too much into previously (well) trod territory, but I think it was slightly different in Chicago as they were rarely referred to (internally or externally) as a "family," so I think it was easier for a non-made member to be considered "part" of the Outfit than it would be for a non-made member to be considered "part" of the Gambino Family (as opposed to "with" the Gambino Family). The Outfit is certainly an LCN organization, but I think the terminology does kind of blur the line at times.
[/quote]
As you know, we only have one made guy in Chicago to testify about the organization, Nick C, and he certainly understood “member” to mean an inducted member of the mafia.
Given that we don’t even know what DeLaurentis actually said, I’m not going to get too far into speculating as to what *he* may have meant by whatever he actually said. Some earlier FBI informant sources seem to have used “member” the loose way that you indicate here, but then typically these sources were not LCN members themselves. To outsiders or low-level affiliates, they might have mis/understood any guy with clout to have been a “member”, with little to no understanding of what the actual mafia organization consisted of or what membership in this organization really meant and entailed. As is very often the case with these questions, we also have the ever-present issue of the problem of “attributed speech” — in most cases, we don’t know what these sources actually said verbatim, rather than the way that an FBI agent parsed or summarized their statements, which were almost never reproduced in full (we also don’t know the context of how the agent interviewing them phrased the question and this can also be a vital element of contextualizing someone’s statements and making sense of them).
What we mainly get is “The Blind Men and the Elephant”/“The Outsider Looking In”, so I am very hesitant to make any strong claims as to how nomenclature and local organizational culture may or may not have differed between Chicago and other Families. But when we do get these little peeks from behind the curtain from members or highly trusted associates (by which I mean guys like Frank Schweihs or Teddy DeRose, and not some guy who ran a wire room or whatever that the FBI may have talked to in 1959 etc., of course), we see that they absolutely used terms like “Family”, “capodecina”, “the Life”, “wiseguy”, “made guy”, “avvocato”, “sottocapo”, “Consiglio”. We just have so few/fragmented accounts from sources of this level of quality and validity, as opposed to the Blind Men that the FBI relied so heavily on. Obviously, DeLaurentis does not fall into this category.
To go back to my post above, it wasn’t in response to the DeLaurentis thing, as we still don’t actually know what he even said anyway. It was to “Pat_Marcy”, who was asking about what “you” would say. I can’t answer for anyone else, but when the “you” is *me*, then no, I would not say that any of these associates were “members of the outfit” and I have little doubt that made guys in Chicago saw things any differently (again, going back to Nick C who was made before DeLaurentis and who was specifically queried about this matter on the stand and denied that non-Italian associates had any particular organizational status equivalent to being a made member).
EDIT:
[quote=Snakes]
I think guys like Schweihs were considered part of the Outfit from a certain point of view. [/quote]
Just to respond to this part in more detail. Guys like Schweihs absolutely *are* “part of the organization”. And this is the same with the mafia anywhere, of course. Associates are formally affiliated to the mafia organization, they just aren’t inducted members of it. As we all know, “associate” covers a lot of territory in terms of stature, respect, clout — it can mean anything from a relative of a member who is under his protection to a low-level “employee” of a mafia-affiliated racket operation, to guys like Lansky and Alex, with a lot of middle ground in between. In Sicily, one of the terms used is “affiliati”, which denotes those who are formally affiliated to a Family but not made members. Some of them may be proposed for membership and just not inducted yet, while others are men like LE officers who cannot be inducted. This category of “affiliati” (who are often included in Italian LE reports and not disaggregated from made members when reporting on the total number of affiliates of a given Family in Sicily) denotes the same relationship to the organization that we use “associates” to denote. In the American mafia, however, things became a bit more complicated given that there were many men over the years who became formally affiliated with the mafia but who could not qualify for membership because of non-Italian ancestry, but this isn’t really any different in any meaningful way from Sicilian affiliati who can’t be made due to LE ties. Sicilian “affiliati”, like American “associates”, are thus composed of those formally affiliated to the mafia, with some proposed for membership (or at least theoretically qualifying for membership, as with Italian associates in the American mafia), and others who are barred from membership. Sicilian “affiliati” are also not low level flunkies — they are either being groomed for membership themselves, or are vital assets to the organization in areas like LE, politics, and legitimate business. In this, they are very much like highly respected associates with American Families.