Bonanno 1960s chart

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Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by thekiduknow » Tue Mar 18, 2025 8:32 am

https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... ch=cosenza

Some more info on Cosenza's relationship with Bonanno. Interesting the informant says Cosenza was from an "influential family" with the longshoreman's union, but believed they were with Bonanno.
B. wrote: Sat Mar 15, 2025 10:55 am Excellent info. Did not expect to see a Mangano nephew in the Bonannos.

One possibility too is he wasn't straightened out until after his uncles were killed, going with the Bonannos in part because of that along with the Tucson connection.
Could be. Sounds like either way, when he went to Tucson he was under Bonanno rather than Mangano.

I wonder the same about Russ Andalaro, was he already made in the Pittston family or made with the Bonannos in Tucson?

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by B. » Sat Mar 15, 2025 10:55 am

Excellent info. Did not expect to see a Mangano nephew in the Bonannos.

One possibility too is he wasn't straightened out until after his uncles were killed, going with the Bonannos in part because of that along with the Tucson connection.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by thekiduknow » Fri Mar 14, 2025 10:28 pm

Image

I'm not sure if this has been brought up before, but Michael Cosenza was a nephew of Vincent and Philip Mangano. His mother Verna was their sister. News to me.

Unsurprisingly, he was a delegate/business agent for the ILA, local 327-1 in Brooklyn since 1940. When he moved to Tucson around 1947, it was reported that he was still receiving "gratuities and monies" in the form of Christmas gifts from various stevedoring/shipping companies in Brooklyn, on top of his regular salary despite being inactive. He told the FBI that he had moved to Tucson for health reasons.

Worth speculating that he may have been a Gambino member prior to the move to Tucson. Later in his file, there's mention that the smoke shop he ran was a " phone drop" for Tucson hoodlums, where they'd leave messages for each other with Cosenza.

Not a whole lot in his file that isn't redacted, especially when it gets to the mid-60s/Bonanno split.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by Don_Peppino » Tue Oct 15, 2024 6:36 am

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Here's an article from 1920 on member Thomas Scardino. It includes info not referenced in the LCNbios article but the address and round-a-bout age match the article. Apparently, Scardino defrauded some business associates then fled to Italy.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by Augie » Fri Aug 30, 2024 11:11 am

Wasn’t Sylvester Carollo(a), New Orleans boss, from Terrasini as well. Wonder if there was a relation with Carollo on this Vito Licavolis’ mother side as well.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by Don_Peppino » Fri Aug 30, 2024 6:37 am

B. wrote: Thu Aug 29, 2024 6:11 pm
JoelTurner wrote: Thu Aug 29, 2024 5:44 pm Morale Crew

VITO LICAVOLI
(Willie Rex)
DOB: May 21 1904
POB: Terrasini, Palermo, Sicily
F: Vincenzo Licavoli
M: Paola “Pauline” Carollo
Occupation: Owner - Rex Tavern (174 Humboldt St, Brooklyn, NY)
Address: 196 Johnson Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Prior addresses: 143 Humboldt St, Brooklyn, NY
Death: Sep 1974

Both Licavoli & Carollo were surnames shared by important Terrasini mobsters, however they were mostly in the Midwest, especially Detroit. TBH, I can’t think of any notable figures from there in the NYC area.

————
There were a couple Terrasinesi with the Gambino Family, Battista Balsamo and Ignatius Crachiola. The Balsamos' true surname was Cracchiolo and it's likely the Crachiolas' name was originally spelled that way, Battista's father name being Ignazio as well, so maybe there was a relation.

Balsamo isn't to be confused with the much older Giuseppe "Battista" Balsamo, whose grandson wrote a book claiming the grandfather founded the Gambino Family. That Balsamo may have been from Terrasini as well though.

In general though, no, Terrasini doesn't surface in NYC much at all. Vito Licavoli's Bonanno membership does bring to mind the overlapping Detroit/Bonanno networks.
Speaking of the overlapping Bonanno/Detroit connections, has anyone ever flushed out the connection between Antonio "Papa Tony" Mirabile, who started on Detroit but transfered to the L.A. Family and Joe Bonanno? I dobknow that even today there are some Bonventre's in San Diego where Mirabile operated. There is a couple photos of Bonanno and Mirabile which l think lends to a strong association especially considering "on paper", even within the mafia, the are a world apart. Where there's smoke, there's fire.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by B. » Thu Aug 29, 2024 6:11 pm

JoelTurner wrote: Thu Aug 29, 2024 5:44 pm Morale Crew

VITO LICAVOLI
(Willie Rex)
DOB: May 21 1904
POB: Terrasini, Palermo, Sicily
F: Vincenzo Licavoli
M: Paola “Pauline” Carollo
Occupation: Owner - Rex Tavern (174 Humboldt St, Brooklyn, NY)
Address: 196 Johnson Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Prior addresses: 143 Humboldt St, Brooklyn, NY
Death: Sep 1974

Both Licavoli & Carollo were surnames shared by important Terrasini mobsters, however they were mostly in the Midwest, especially Detroit. TBH, I can’t think of any notable figures from there in the NYC area.

————
There were a couple Terrasinesi with the Gambino Family, Battista Balsamo and Ignatius Crachiola. The Balsamos' true surname was Cracchiolo and it's likely the Crachiolas' name was originally spelled that way, Battista's father name being Ignazio as well, so maybe there was a relation.

Balsamo isn't to be confused with the much older Giuseppe "Battista" Balsamo, whose grandson wrote a book claiming the grandfather founded the Gambino Family. That Balsamo may have been from Terrasini as well though.

In general though, no, Terrasini doesn't surface in NYC much at all. Vito Licavoli's Bonanno membership does bring to mind the overlapping Detroit/Bonanno networks.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by JoelTurner » Thu Aug 29, 2024 5:44 pm

Morale Crew

VITO LICAVOLI
(Willie Rex)
DOB: May 21 1904
POB: Terrasini, Palermo, Sicily
F: Vincenzo Licavoli
M: Paola “Pauline” Carollo
Occupation: Owner - Rex Tavern (174 Humboldt St, Brooklyn, NY)
Address: 196 Johnson Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Prior addresses: 143 Humboldt St, Brooklyn, NY
Death: Sep 1974

Both Licavoli & Carollo were surnames shared by important Terrasini mobsters, however they were mostly in the Midwest, especially Detroit. TBH, I can’t think of any notable figures from there in the NYC area.

————

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by OmarSantista » Tue Aug 27, 2024 6:57 pm

What a find great stuff Joel, thank you

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by JoelTurner » Tue Aug 27, 2024 1:01 am

B. wrote: Mon Aug 26, 2024 5:26 pm Was Adragna Alcamese like the Williamsburg/Pittsburgh/San Jose members?
Nope, but still interesting in a Bonanno context. He was born on Jun 30 1884 in Castellammare del Golfo.

His wife Giovanna D’Angelo was also from there. I think she could have been related to Fauney D’Angelo; both their fathers shared the same name, Giacomo.

My guess is that the two were cousins. The latter’s father was born in Nov 1881 to Epifano D’Angelo & Rosaria Asaro; I couldn’t find much info on Giovanna’s father

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by B. » Mon Aug 26, 2024 5:26 pm

Excellent, so he goes way back with the Bonannos if he knew Gallo.

Was Adragna Alcamese like the Williamsburg/Pittsburgh/San Jose members?

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by JoelTurner » Mon Aug 26, 2024 3:49 pm

In Aug 1925, Vito Bello was arrested for forgery with Benny Gallo

Image

——

A few years later in 1929, there was a Salvatore Adragna (born ~1884) living next door at 219 Stagg St, Brooklyn, NY who killed someone over fireworks.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by B. » Sat Aug 24, 2024 8:04 pm

Richard was also involved in bootlegging with Gioacchino Rizzuto in KC along with other mafia figures. It didn't dawn on me when I originally saw it but that must be the same brother from the 1930 census.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by thekiduknow » Fri Aug 23, 2024 3:38 pm

B. wrote: Mon Feb 07, 2022 3:38 pm
- Nino Rizzuto (b. 1902) had 3 or 4 brothers and two of them were Jack (b. 1900, oldest son) and Frank (b. ~1916, youngest), but their arrival manifest shows two more sons named Innocenzo (b. ~1906) and Desiderato (b. ~1908). 1920 census shows only one son in that age range, Louis (b. ~1906). The 1930 census again shows only one son between Nino and Frank, Richard (b. ~1902, same year as Antonino but Nino is listed as born ~1900 so they are off all around).

- 1920 census suggests Innocenzo went by Louis in the US as their ages match perfectly, yet Richard's age doesn't fit either brother on the manifest and would lend itself to Innocenzo/Louis given he was older... unlikely he would use both "Louis" and "Richard" though. Richard would make more sense for Desiderato ("R" sound), yet the immigration manifest is the only place that lists two sons between Nino and Frank. The names, ages, and number of sons are a mess between records.
I don't have anything to add with untangling the names, but Sebastiano Nani Sebastiano Nani met Nicola Impostato in KC through Richard Rizzuto, both noted for being involved in narcotics.

Image

Based on newspaper articles, Richard bounced back and forth from KC and Brooklyn throughout the 40s, looks like he died in 1949 in Manhattan.

Re: Bonanno 1960s chart

by B. » Thu Aug 22, 2024 6:54 pm

JoelTurner wrote: Wed Aug 02, 2023 3:35 pm Vito Bello was born to Giuseppe Bello and Crofinia Adamo.

He immigrated in 1920 heading to an uncle Antonio Bello at “140 stopp st. Brooklyn” (Stagg St?)

He immigrated on Feb 15 1920 and was arrested for a string of robberies on Nov 5 1920. He was living at 138 Stagg St, Brooklyn.

Arrested for burglary on Jul 14 1925, his address was given as 219 Stagg St, Brooklyn. Mentioned as a part of the Flushing Ave Rabbits Gang.

Arrested Mar 8 1926 for holdups, his address was 1423 DeKalb Ave, Brooklyn.

He married Antonina Santoro (daughter of Antonio Santoro and Giazia Valente) on Dec 23 1926. At the time they were living at 215 Johnson Ave, Brooklyn, NY.

Arrested on Dec 22 1927 in Long Branch, NJ for liquor with his address given as Newark.

In 1940 and 1950, he lived at 13012 Foch Blvd, Queens, NY

He died in Apr 1966 in Lakewood, NJ.
Something too about Bello worth mentioning -- it makes sense if he was known as "Tony", as Vito would become "Vitone" (Vee-tone-eh), which could then become Toni/Tony given Italian nicknames come from the end of the name rather than the beginning. We see it not just with names like Antonio/Antonino but also Santos who go by "Toni".

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