JoePuzzles234 wrote: ↑Thu Feb 01, 2024 5:18 am
CornerBoy wrote: ↑Thu Feb 01, 2024 5:04 am
where did this guy come from and who is he
Originally a Colombo affiliate around Felice Vizzari, he was a long-time associate of the Los Angeles family in Orange County.
His introduction to the local family appears to have been through captain Michael Rizzitello in the late 1970s but it might’ve actually been a connection to Dominic Brooklier or the Milano crew.
He was proposed for membership in 1985 (almost certainly by Rizzitello) but was shot down at the ceremony by the Caci brothers because he was a drug dealer. Possibly proposed again in the 1990s but that remains unclear.
Unlike a lot of Milano-era guys, he was still involved in more violent crimes and probably assisted Rizzitello in the George Yudzevich murder and possibly even the Carroll hit, given that he reintroduced the two.
Dino D’Agostino also claimed that the LAPD told him that Paduano had been ordered (by the Milanos?) to kill him for an unspecified reason.
Took a big state bust in February 1988 (sentenced to 8 years in 1991) for extorting and robbing drug dealers throughout OC with a crew of Samoans and that’s where it ends so far.
He doesn’t appear to have been around the family in the late 1990s after his release or was at least not a known entity to Kenny Gallo and Ori Spado.
I asked him about the Colombo's.
Bobby told me he was far closer with Bonanno guys. Something about neighborhood friends.
I didn't ask why he came out to California, essentially for no other reason than the weather and good coke.
I've never brought up the Caci Brothers as I know they did not like him because he was big into drugs and they absolutely despised drugs.
He tried to get Tony Brooklier to defend his son a few years back. Rest In Peace.
He went to Maniscalco's memorial service at Michael's Pub in Huntington Beach. Told me there were a few patched members there.
Pete Milano wasn't much of a gangster. Bobby even called him, "A nice guy."
Rizzitello was Bobby's sponsor, his first line.
The Los Angeles Mafia died in the 90's.
What was left for Rizzitello to associate with?
The Los Angeles Mafia was really nothing more than independent Italian-American criminals working together as opposed to the East Coast Families which were organic to the area and had a unified structure. The LA Mafia members would've been independent criminals without anything called the "mafia".
He was closer than Mike Rizzitello than anyone else and spoke very highly of Maniscaloc and the Hessians.