by Wiseguy » Tue Feb 17, 2015 12:33 pm
paph wrote:NYC is so Big and there is space for everyone.
But in detail , do anyone know something more?
tnx
I assume you mean "The Organizatsiya" or Russian organized crime.
I don't think there is really any specific "situation." The LCN and Russians, as well as other Eurasian criminal groups, move within their own spheres of activity and sometimes they do intersect. The predictions made 20 years ago about the "Russian Mafiya" taking over never came about and even former FBI Director Louis Freeh admitted that their original concerns weren't realized. As a 2011 article stated, the way the Eastern European crime groups organize themselves has prevented them from becoming the organized crime threat some thought they would. Their more horizontal, less hierarchical and fluid makeup makes them a more difficult (though not impossible) target for law enforcement. But it has also kept them from growing into the kind of organizations that are capable of challenging the LCN. And it seems they have no real desire to. I've read that something like 60% of the crimes the Eurasian criminal enterprises are involved in revolve around some kind of fraud, which they are especially good at. This either doesn't involve the LCN or, if it does, it's because the two have worked together for mutual profit in things like stock fraud or health care fraud. The Russian gambling bust back in 2013 was very much the exception to the rule as we just don't see the Russians or other Eurasian groups getting deeply involved in the rackets traditionally dominated by the LCN. In short, as you said above, NYC is big and there's space for everyone. Indeed, contrary to the "ethnic succession" theorists, the new groups, more than cutting into the LCN's share of the pie, have simply added to the overall level of criminality.
[quote="paph"]NYC is so Big and there is space for everyone.
But in detail , do anyone know something more?
tnx[/quote]
I assume you mean "The Organizatsiya" or Russian organized crime.
I don't think there is really any specific "situation." The LCN and Russians, as well as other Eurasian criminal groups, move within their own spheres of activity and sometimes they do intersect. The predictions made 20 years ago about the "Russian Mafiya" taking over never came about and even former FBI Director Louis Freeh admitted that their original concerns weren't realized. As a 2011 article stated, the way the Eastern European crime groups organize themselves has prevented them from becoming the organized crime threat some thought they would. Their more horizontal, less hierarchical and fluid makeup makes them a more difficult (though not impossible) target for law enforcement. But it has also kept them from growing into the kind of organizations that are capable of challenging the LCN. And it seems they have no real desire to. I've read that something like 60% of the crimes the Eurasian criminal enterprises are involved in revolve around some kind of fraud, which they are especially good at. This either doesn't involve the LCN or, if it does, it's because the two have worked together for mutual profit in things like stock fraud or health care fraud. The Russian gambling bust back in 2013 was very much the exception to the rule as we just don't see the Russians or other Eurasian groups getting deeply involved in the rackets traditionally dominated by the LCN. In short, as you said above, NYC is big and there's space for everyone. Indeed, contrary to the "ethnic succession" theorists, the new groups, more than cutting into the LCN's share of the pie, have simply added to the overall level of criminality.