by Snakes » Tue Jun 03, 2025 10:46 am
A couple of things here as I've been occupied and unable to post. Tony, B, or Antiliar can elaborate and add more, but here are my thoughts:
1) I believe that Ricca, Accardo, and DiFronzo all acted as consigliere, or, especially in the case of Ricca, as "chairman" of the consiglio/board et. al. Basically a de facto consigliere. Chicago seems to have employed the consigliere as it was more "traditionally" used -- a figure of power who was more or less on an equal footing with the boss, but was utilized more for arbitration and important decision-making within the family, while the boss was tasked with the day-to-day running of the family. Like most people, I had previously labeled these guys as "advisors" or some such, and while I do believe some Outfit guys were informally designated as such for operational purposes, I eventually came around to the position of consigliere being used by the Outfit, and even though it's not a word that is found much in Outfit sources (although I do recall Fratianno describing someone as "consligere" -- possibly Accardo?), the organizational function of the role was essentially that of a traditional consigliere.
2) The last "known" underboss was Monteleone. Frank Sr. said on the prison tapes that when Monteleone was promoted to capo, he also "became number 2." Carlisi would have still been boss with DiFronzo as underboss, but both were under indictment, so I'm unsure if this was in an acting capacity, or not. I am unsure if Andriacchi was underboss or capo of EP after Monteleone became boss, but it also wouldn't surprise me if the underboss spot was vacant for a time (or even permanently) due to consolidation within the Outfit.
3) I'm also of the belief that Carlisi was boss until his death in 1997 and DiFrozno was only acting. Carlisi was still actively appealing his sentence, so you would expect that he'd want to stay as boss in the event the appeal was successful. When Carlisi died, DiFronzo abstained from becoming boss and Monteleone assumed the position instead. Nick Calabrese also testified that Monteleone succeeded Carlisi as boss (
viewtopic.php?p=272086#p272086). I'm also of the belief that DiFronzo remained in a top role as consigliere, which would explain why later bosses like Sarno would still be sharing proceeds with him.
I feel like I share this a lot, and I don't mean to toot my own horn, but I think it's a good resource for new posters to view when they come on board as I lay out the evidence and sources for some of the above in this thread:
viewtopic.php?t=12325.
A couple of things here as I've been occupied and unable to post. Tony, B, or Antiliar can elaborate and add more, but here are my thoughts:
1) I believe that Ricca, Accardo, and DiFronzo all acted as consigliere, or, especially in the case of Ricca, as "chairman" of the consiglio/board et. al. Basically a de facto consigliere. Chicago seems to have employed the consigliere as it was more "traditionally" used -- a figure of power who was more or less on an equal footing with the boss, but was utilized more for arbitration and important decision-making within the family, while the boss was tasked with the day-to-day running of the family. Like most people, I had previously labeled these guys as "advisors" or some such, and while I do believe some Outfit guys were informally designated as such for operational purposes, I eventually came around to the position of consigliere being used by the Outfit, and even though it's not a word that is found much in Outfit sources (although I do recall Fratianno describing someone as "consligere" -- possibly Accardo?), the organizational function of the role was essentially that of a traditional consigliere.
2) The last "known" underboss was Monteleone. Frank Sr. said on the prison tapes that when Monteleone was promoted to capo, he also "became number 2." Carlisi would have still been boss with DiFronzo as underboss, but both were under indictment, so I'm unsure if this was in an acting capacity, or not. I am unsure if Andriacchi was underboss or capo of EP after Monteleone became boss, but it also wouldn't surprise me if the underboss spot was vacant for a time (or even permanently) due to consolidation within the Outfit.
3) I'm also of the belief that Carlisi was boss until his death in 1997 and DiFrozno was only acting. Carlisi was still actively appealing his sentence, so you would expect that he'd want to stay as boss in the event the appeal was successful. When Carlisi died, DiFronzo abstained from becoming boss and Monteleone assumed the position instead. Nick Calabrese also testified that Monteleone succeeded Carlisi as boss (https://theblackhand.club/forum/viewtopic.php?p=272086#p272086). I'm also of the belief that DiFronzo remained in a top role as consigliere, which would explain why later bosses like Sarno would still be sharing proceeds with him.
I feel like I share this a lot, and I don't mean to toot my own horn, but I think it's a good resource for new posters to view when they come on board as I lay out the evidence and sources for some of the above in this thread: https://theblackhand.club/forum/viewtopic.php?t=12325.