by CabriniGreen » Thu May 10, 2018 11:53 pm
B.
That's a great post, you make some compelling points.... I would pose a few questions..
1. I was a little confused, do you believe Vito made the 2 non Italians?
2. You mentioned Fernandez. When he's in Sicily, how do you think he was received? As an emmisary from the Bonnano Family, or as a representative of, let's call it " an Italian criminal organization based in Montreal"?
(This goes to your point of acknowledgment, I dont think they were hesitant to deal with him because they didnt recognize Vito, more that he wasnt Italian..)
How do you think Vito, who was in the process of building a 7 billion dollar bridge, was perceived by Scicilian mafiosi? As a boss, or something less?
In fact, I mean, wouldn't it take a boss to make a move like that? You have to cut in the Cosa Nostra AND Ndrangheta.
3. I've often compared the Rizzutos to the South American drug clans. Powerful drug clans morph into powerful organizations in their own right all the time.
The Caruana- Cuntrera have more in common with the Ochoas, even so far as BOTH families owning South American ranches...
4. On the point of recognition, it speaks to the crux of the matter...
WHO would have recognized them? The Commision? It hasn't really functioned totally since the Commision case.
Or the Cupola, which was by the late 90s was run by Provenzano, who was more concerned with business..
Like Vito gets out in what 2012? How Is he recieved, in your opinion, when he meets with the New Yorkers in Toronto? You think Vito acquiesced and accepted capo with the Bonnanos. Turned over all the business to NY?
Accepted a NY representante in Montreal?
5. I actually believe Vito was "functionally" under the Caruana- Cuntrera family, and they ran the Venezuela family. I also think Vito started to rival them, at the same time Calabrian ascendancy began....to rival the SICILIAN network.
6. It's very interesting, because in John Dickes book Mafia Republic, his EXACT main point is there is essentially a narcotics syndicate that exists WITHIN the mafia. He describes it as a mafia in it's own right.
It became apparent to me that this was the authors of the Sixth family were trying to describe. The problem is they stopped at the Rizzuto organization, and didnt take it further. It's not a separate family, rather something more similar to the Corleonesi, in that it's like an alliance of Mafiosi ACROSS family lines...
So I thought it fascinating when you said that.....
Any thoughts..... great stuff here...
B.
That's a great post, you make some compelling points.... I would pose a few questions..
1. I was a little confused, do you believe Vito made the 2 non Italians?
2. You mentioned Fernandez. When he's in Sicily, how do you think he was received? As an emmisary from the Bonnano Family, or as a representative of, let's call it " an Italian criminal organization based in Montreal"?
(This goes to your point of acknowledgment, I dont think they were hesitant to deal with him because they didnt recognize Vito, more that he wasnt Italian..)
How do you think Vito, who was in the process of building a 7 billion dollar bridge, was perceived by Scicilian mafiosi? As a boss, or something less?
In fact, I mean, wouldn't it take a boss to make a move like that? You have to cut in the Cosa Nostra AND Ndrangheta.
3. I've often compared the Rizzutos to the South American drug clans. Powerful drug clans morph into powerful organizations in their own right all the time.
The Caruana- Cuntrera have more in common with the Ochoas, even so far as BOTH families owning South American ranches...
4. On the point of recognition, it speaks to the crux of the matter...
WHO would have recognized them? The Commision? It hasn't really functioned totally since the Commision case.
Or the Cupola, which was by the late 90s was run by Provenzano, who was more concerned with business..
Like Vito gets out in what 2012? How Is he recieved, in your opinion, when he meets with the New Yorkers in Toronto? You think Vito acquiesced and accepted capo with the Bonnanos. Turned over all the business to NY?
Accepted a NY representante in Montreal?
5. I actually believe Vito was "functionally" under the Caruana- Cuntrera family, and they ran the Venezuela family. I also think Vito started to rival them, at the same time Calabrian ascendancy began....to rival the SICILIAN network.
6. It's very interesting, because in John Dickes book Mafia Republic, his EXACT main point is there is essentially a narcotics syndicate that exists WITHIN the mafia. He describes it as a mafia in it's own right.
It became apparent to me that this was the authors of the Sixth family were trying to describe. The problem is they stopped at the Rizzuto organization, and didnt take it further. It's not a separate family, rather something more similar to the Corleonesi, in that it's like an alliance of Mafiosi ACROSS family lines...
So I thought it fascinating when you said that.....
Any thoughts..... great stuff here...