by quadtree » Tue Nov 14, 2023 6:23 am
One of the founders of the Ribera Club, Joseph Carlino, has the same last name as Leo Carlino. Perhaps it is a coincidence, but Leo Carlino comes from Burgio, with which the origins of many mafiosi from the Agrigento network are connected. Carlino was part of the Agrigento decina of the Bonanno family, which was headed by Coletti and Caruso. These things don't give me peace, there's clearly something there. There are astonishingly many connections between Chicago, DeCavalcante, the Bonanno and Gambino Agrigento crews. Natives of Caltabellota were involved in the founding of the Ribera Club and the DeCavalcante family, Pasqualino LoLordo's wife was a Mule from Caltabellotta, and Pellegrino Mule was an early figure in the Agrigento network in New York. Mule could have been a member or even a leader of the Agrigento crew of the Gambino family, or he could have been a member/boss? early DeCavalcante when they were based in Manhattan. The LoChicheros of the Gambinos intermarried with natives of Caltabelotta, so in any case the Mule and LoChicheros must be related somehow. In the context of all this, B's version that the DeCavalcante family comes from the LoCichero's crew of the Gambino family seems plausible. But can all these connections be explained differently? There was also the mysterious Brooklyn crew of the Lucchese family, also from Agrigento, led by Salvatore Curiale. How the Agrigentini ended up in the Lucchese family, as well as in the Bonanno family, is a mystery. Al D'Arco said that this decina existed back in the days when there was only one family in Brooklyn. Could there have been a single New York Agrigento family that was then divided, like the Newark family later? If this is true, which is not a fact, this family could be the same La Chiesa that Al D'Arco spoke about, supposedly the first LCN family in the USA?/New York. The diversity of participants in this network is interesting; they are both in Manhattan and Brooklyn. Something must have caused the Agrigentini to split between Elizabeth, Bonanno, Gambino and Lucchese. Or the collapse of the united Agrigento family in the USA or the collapse of the Gambino's Agrigento crew. There is something here that we don’t really know anything about yet.
One of the founders of the Ribera Club, Joseph Carlino, has the same last name as Leo Carlino. Perhaps it is a coincidence, but Leo Carlino comes from Burgio, with which the origins of many mafiosi from the Agrigento network are connected. Carlino was part of the Agrigento decina of the Bonanno family, which was headed by Coletti and Caruso. These things don't give me peace, there's clearly something there. There are astonishingly many connections between Chicago, DeCavalcante, the Bonanno and Gambino Agrigento crews. Natives of Caltabellota were involved in the founding of the Ribera Club and the DeCavalcante family, Pasqualino LoLordo's wife was a Mule from Caltabellotta, and Pellegrino Mule was an early figure in the Agrigento network in New York. Mule could have been a member or even a leader of the Agrigento crew of the Gambino family, or he could have been a member/boss? early DeCavalcante when they were based in Manhattan. The LoChicheros of the Gambinos intermarried with natives of Caltabelotta, so in any case the Mule and LoChicheros must be related somehow. In the context of all this, B's version that the DeCavalcante family comes from the LoCichero's crew of the Gambino family seems plausible. But can all these connections be explained differently? There was also the mysterious Brooklyn crew of the Lucchese family, also from Agrigento, led by Salvatore Curiale. How the Agrigentini ended up in the Lucchese family, as well as in the Bonanno family, is a mystery. Al D'Arco said that this decina existed back in the days when there was only one family in Brooklyn. Could there have been a single New York Agrigento family that was then divided, like the Newark family later? If this is true, which is not a fact, this family could be the same La Chiesa that Al D'Arco spoke about, supposedly the first LCN family in the USA?/New York. The diversity of participants in this network is interesting; they are both in Manhattan and Brooklyn. Something must have caused the Agrigentini to split between Elizabeth, Bonanno, Gambino and Lucchese. Or the collapse of the united Agrigento family in the USA or the collapse of the Gambino's Agrigento crew. There is something here that we don’t really know anything about yet.