by B. » Tue Feb 03, 2015 10:42 pm
Chris Christie wrote:B. wrote:A period I want to know more about is the time when Bruno was in Yardville. I'm not sure if Phil Testa was acting boss but I can't imagine anyone else in the spot except maybe Rugnetta. I think this is when the seeds were really planted against Bruno, as various people got a taste of life without him.
But what was bad with him at the helm? He was a very hands off boss, allowed people to do whatever save for a few rules... Not to ask a BB question but who would you rather be under, working for, and answerable to? Bruno or Scarfo?
I know football season's officially over, but Scarfo was what they'd call a "player's coach". They may have feared his wrath, but he was popular with the soldiers and even the ones who flipped seemed to genuinely like him. He also let his guys branch out into new ventures and earn money as long as they kicked up. The only really questionable murder by mob standards was the Testa hit and a lot of that had to do with what his trusted guys were telling him. If anything, his greatest mistake was delegating Merlino to run South Philly for him and not keeping a better eye on what was happening up there.
I can't say what specifically was bad with Bruno at the helm, but from the start he was heavily criticized by many of his ranking members. His own cousin (Simone) helped plot his murder with one of Bruno's closest associates (Sindone), and they sided with a guy who had been wanting to kill Bruno for 20 years (Caponigro). His underboss, Testa, who had come up in the family with Bruno, participated in murders with him, and was ultimately named underboss by him, grew indifferent to him and distanced himself. Frank Narducci, a Bruno capo, is on tape talking about how the boss doesn't keep him in the loop on anything. Whether these guys had legit grievances or not is up for debate but the evidence is clear that his guys did not like working for him, even the people he put in place.
[quote="Chris Christie"][quote="B."]A period I want to know more about is the time when Bruno was in Yardville. I'm not sure if Phil Testa was acting boss but I can't imagine anyone else in the spot except maybe Rugnetta. I think this is when the seeds were really planted against Bruno, as various people got a taste of life without him.[/quote]
But what was bad with him at the helm? He was a very hands off boss, allowed people to do whatever save for a few rules... Not to ask a BB question but who would you rather be under, working for, and answerable to? Bruno or Scarfo?[/quote]
I know football season's officially over, but Scarfo was what they'd call a "player's coach". They may have feared his wrath, but he was popular with the soldiers and even the ones who flipped seemed to genuinely like him. He also let his guys branch out into new ventures and earn money as long as they kicked up. The only really questionable murder by mob standards was the Testa hit and a lot of that had to do with what his trusted guys were telling him. If anything, his greatest mistake was delegating Merlino to run South Philly for him and not keeping a better eye on what was happening up there.
I can't say what specifically was bad with Bruno at the helm, but from the start he was heavily criticized by many of his ranking members. His own cousin (Simone) helped plot his murder with one of Bruno's closest associates (Sindone), and they sided with a guy who had been wanting to kill Bruno for 20 years (Caponigro). His underboss, Testa, who had come up in the family with Bruno, participated in murders with him, and was ultimately named underboss by him, grew indifferent to him and distanced himself. Frank Narducci, a Bruno capo, is on tape talking about how the boss doesn't keep him in the loop on anything. Whether these guys had legit grievances or not is up for debate but the evidence is clear that his guys did not like working for him, even the people he put in place.