Underboss/ consigliere

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Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by Stroccos » Thu May 31, 2018 11:22 pm

Chris Christie wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 12:12 pm
Stroccos wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 9:24 am
Chris Christie wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 8:59 am Hmm, let's see, um, I was close to Tony LaPiana in Detroit years ago. He did the Atkins diet with gluten free pasta. He said I was a damn good server so I took that as a sign that I was On Record with him and went around Eastern Market telling people that Chicago Tony was sponsoring me for membership. That was 9 years ago, I haven't seen him since and I longed stopped dressing in a suit waiting near my phone for The Call. I think I may have been a little overzealous.
Damn man , did you go out and buy A new suit?
My dad's, found in the trunk of my mother's basemhh :? -- um my penthouse. :D :D

Anyways, what's your take on the roles of Milano / Demarco in their respective positions and how did they differ from Moceri, Delsanter, Lonardo and others during the Licavoli years? Would you argue that the roles stayed the same or differed depending on the individual and era?

A mutual friend of ours, thankfully, kept bringing up to me Dom Mazzola and I looked into it and he was from Carini as were his killers. Scalish I believe I wanna say was also of Carini descent, I don't believe Licata, if someone knows please correct me. Anyways, that could have been another faction within the Cleveland-Akron network which goes back... Quite honestly a great number of mafia murders appear to be in-house cleaning as opposed to gang-on-gang. The Mafia Wars of 1912, 1921-23 and 1930-1931 are really the few examples apart from little spiffs between Pittsburgh-Cleveland over Youngstown and Buffalo-Rochester over Utica. "We only kill each other" is generally true in regards to gang warfare.
well hopefully you have moved out the penthouse lol

yes scalish wasnt licatese , I found a picture/drawing of Mazzola i posted in the mugshot section , I tend to agree with our mutaal freind that Mazzola was somebody. But never found anything about him outside of him getting whacked.

[/quote]Anyways, what's your take on the roles of Milano / Demarco in their respective positions and how did they differ from Moceri, Delsanter, Lonardo and others during the Licavoli years? Would you argue that the roles stayed the same or differed depending on the individual and era?[/quote]

the roles differed in eras imo , its almost if the roles were ceremonial , escpecially in the latter years of the scalish era, he had no interest in making any new members , he didn't care if his underboss was active , we cant find any indication scalish even replaced his consigelere when brancato died. Milano wasn't very active outside of his own affairs. He had the unions and political influence. Being that he was underboss in name only IMO. He could of switched titles with Demarco . Milano should of been consilerge and been the elder statesman . Demarco was more of A underboss , but I would also throw in Frank brancato who was basically serving A underboss role as the "street boss" . The Scalish era was the "don't rock the boat " regime. He basically let people earn and kept the violence to a min. His one fault he didn't make any one . There were allot of disgruntled people take John nardi, As Jimmy weasel said "to many chiefs not enough Indians" but of old guys sitting back collecting there money

the roles of admin in the licavoli regime was forced right out the gate to be more active as the war was on.
well we didnt see much from moceri because he got whacked so quickly , but its likely had he lived , he would of been out there shaking down everyone , allot more active then Milano , I also belive allot more violence would of been implemented .
Lonardo was your typical underboss running the day to day of the family, back to a tradional underboss role
delsanter was being A typical consirlege advising and running the danny greene hit team. I would argue the consilrege role was similar to the role DeMarco played . Again Delsanter died in 77 so he wasn't in the admin that long.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by Angelo Santino » Thu May 31, 2018 12:12 pm

Stroccos wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 9:24 am
Chris Christie wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 8:59 am Hmm, let's see, um, I was close to Tony LaPiana in Detroit years ago. He did the Atkins diet with gluten free pasta. He said I was a damn good server so I took that as a sign that I was On Record with him and went around Eastern Market telling people that Chicago Tony was sponsoring me for membership. That was 9 years ago, I haven't seen him since and I longed stopped dressing in a suit waiting near my phone for The Call. I think I may have been a little overzealous.
Damn man , did you go out and buy A new suit?
My dad's, found in the trunk of my mother's basemhh :? -- um my penthouse. :D :D

Anyways, what's your take on the roles of Milano / Demarco in their respective positions and how did they differ from Moceri, Delsanter, Lonardo and others during the Licavoli years? Would you argue that the roles stayed the same or differed depending on the individual and era?

A mutual friend of ours, thankfully, kept bringing up to me Dom Mazzola and I looked into it and he was from Carini as were his killers. Scalish I believe I wanna say was also of Carini descent, I don't believe Licata, if someone knows please correct me. Anyways, that could have been another faction within the Cleveland-Akron network which goes back... Quite honestly a great number of mafia murders appear to be in-house cleaning as opposed to gang-on-gang. The Mafia Wars of 1912, 1921-23 and 1930-1931 are really the few examples apart from little spiffs between Pittsburgh-Cleveland over Youngstown and Buffalo-Rochester over Utica. "We only kill each other" is generally true in regards to gang warfare.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by Stroccos » Thu May 31, 2018 9:24 am

Chris Christie wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 8:59 am Hmm, let's see, um, I was close to Tony LaPiana in Detroit years ago. He did the Atkins diet with gluten free pasta. He said I was a damn good server so I took that as a sign that I was On Record with him and went around Eastern Market telling people that Chicago Tony was sponsoring me for membership. That was 9 years ago, I haven't seen him since and I longed stopped dressing in a suit waiting near my phone for The Call. I think I may have been a little overzealous.
Damn man , did you go out and buy A new suit?

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by FriendofHenry » Thu May 31, 2018 9:04 am

Cheech wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 8:51 am
FriendofHenry wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 7:10 am I was hoping that some of you with so much knowledge of Underboss/Consigliere would share your personal experiences with these upper escelon guys.
Anyone share a meal, have cocktails or even just meet with one of these guys. I'm not looking for any secrets, only what you thought of them on a personal basis.
you went camping with one right?
If you're referring to Charlie Murgie, then yes I went with him to Jo Jo rather large hunting camp in Tionesta, PA. on several occasions. In fact we would go out in the woods together. I was with him when I shot my first deer. He taught me how to gut it and helped me drag it back to camp.

Several of those times we drove there together. I would drop off my car at his restaurant in Warren,Ohio and take his Jeep full of goodies for camp.

Charlie kind of adopted me, especially after I came home from Viet Nam. Like most men he always wanted a son and he had daughters. I would often go to see him first with my Dad then when I was working in Niles. He taught me an awful lot about life. Obviously we were close.

I also met Pat Ferruccio on a number of occasions when I was with Henry. He was different than Charlie, but another really smart guy.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by Angelo Santino » Thu May 31, 2018 8:59 am

Hmm, let's see, um, I was close to Tony LaPiana in Detroit years ago. He did the Atkins diet with gluten free pasta. He said I was a damn good server so I took that as a sign that I was On Record with him and went around Eastern Market telling people that Chicago Tony was sponsoring me for membership. That was 9 years ago, I haven't seen him since and I longed stopped dressing in a suit waiting near my phone for The Call. I think I may have been a little overzealous.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by Cheech » Thu May 31, 2018 8:51 am

FriendofHenry wrote: Thu May 31, 2018 7:10 am I was hoping that some of you with so much knowledge of Underboss/Consigliere would share your personal experiences with these upper escelon guys.
Anyone share a meal, have cocktails or even just meet with one of these guys. I'm not looking for any secrets, only what you thought of them on a personal basis.
you went camping with one right?

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by FriendofHenry » Thu May 31, 2018 7:10 am

I was hoping that some of you with so much knowledge of Underboss/Consigliere would share your personal experiences with these upper escelon guys.
Anyone share a meal, have cocktails or even just meet with one of these guys. I'm not looking for any secrets, only what you thought of them on a personal basis.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by B. » Wed May 30, 2018 10:01 pm

cavita wrote: Tue May 29, 2018 9:13 am One thing I’ve found in my Midwestern families research regarding the consigliere hierarchy is this interesting bit- in the mid 1960s Rockford LCN soldier Sebastian Gulotta called a meeting of the family at the Aragona Club where the LCN held weekly meetings. He told the family that his niece was employed by a local doctor and that this doctor had repeatedly hit on Gulotta’s niece but she refused his advances. The doctor then said he would fire the niece and make sure she never got another professional job in the Rockford area. When Gulotta went to the doctor to try and work things out, he became rude and insulting towards Gulotta. So Gulotta took this incident to the Rockford LCN for permission of some sorts to punish the doctor. Rockford LCN consigliere Joe Zito brushed it off and said that because of the doctor’s position in the Rockford community (I’m assuming because of this that the doctor was Italian) that he was entitled to a certain degree of respect from Gulotta. Rockford LCN Capo Lorenzo Buttice then interjected by taking Gulotta’s side and saying to Zito when the doctor “insulted Gulotta, he insulted you, he insulted me and he insulted every member of our family.” After this statement, Zito was forced to agree with Buttice according to their code of honor and apologized to Gulotta. This is a bit unique in the fact that the consigliere position is supposed to be in place as a non-biased voice of reason and Buttice, a capo, had to remind Zito of the mob’s “code of ethics.” Apparently here, the consigliere’s opinion was overruled in favor of a “panel decision.”
Very interesting, thanks for sharing.

In addition to what's already been said by everyone, both DiLeonardo and Cafaro, possibly along with other sources, have said the consigliere was a power in his own right, with at least one of them saying something along the lines of the consigliere being the most influential member of the family. Manna and later Ida of the Genovese were said by witnesses to have been the main go-between with other families and we know in Manna's case he was a key arbiter in Philly family affairs in the 1980s, so his power extended outside of NY/NJ.

Along with the consigliere originally being voted in by the membership and not simply chosen by the boss, it was also said that a consigliere couldn't become consigliere again if he stepped down from the position. We know of captains going up and down, but I'd be curious what examples we can come up with of bosses or underbosses who stepped down or were deposed who later stepped back up to the administration. Either way, the consigliere originally seems to have fit quite well with the way it's shown on some charts -- off to the side of the other admin rather than directly in the pyramid hierarchy under boss/underboss.

Later the consigliere seems to have become a defacto #3 named by the boss, though I can't think of any specific examples of a witness/informant talking directly about the boss saying "you're the consigliere" to someone in an NYC family. Leonetti talks about Scarfo offering the position of consiglire to his uncle Piccolo, and late 1970s tapes have the Philly underboss, a captain, and two soldiers complaining about how Angelo Bruno was keeping them out of the loop on replacing Joe Rugnetta as consigliere and how there used to be a vote; however, Harry Riccobene, who had been a member for 50 years by this time claims there had never been more than one candidate for the position during elections.

Keep in mind that the boss is supposed to be voted in as well, but we know of this election being rigged. I would assume given that this is the mafia the election of consigliere was possibly rigged or heavily "influenced" as well, with leaders arranging for a pre-selected candidate to be voted in. There is also the example of the Buffalo family, where Stefano Magaddino was recorded in the mid-1960s claiming he never had a consigliere in his family, though this looks to have changed shortly after the recording was made. I'd be curious what led to Buffalo finally adopting the position or if they had one pre-Magaddino for that matter.

Info is kind of murky on the consigliere position pre-1930s, too. We have one or two examples of consiglieres mentioned in NYC pre-1920s and not much, if anything, on the position outside of NYC before that time. There is of course some confusing/distorted info out there about the consigliere position being created after the Castellammarese War to advocate for the membership and solve disputes between/within families, with Valachi mentioned a vague "council" of consiglieres who settled intra-family disputes, but a lot of info about this plays into the Luciano myths. An early Sicilian informant talks about Sicilian families each having a consigliere but he doesn't mentioned the underboss position and what he says about consigliere makes it sound more like an underboss.

As for the underboss... along the lines of what Christie said, it varies. Sometimes an underboss is someone already very close to the boss who serves as their alter-ego (think Profaci/Magliocco); it could be the leader of a rival group designed to balance out the power (Gambino/Dellacroce); someone who is simply a power in their own right independent of rivalry or alliance with the boss (Tony Salerno, assuming he was in fact the underboss under Gigante); someone who is more or less the street boss of the family for an absentee boss (Salerno again could arguably fit, but thinking Reginelli under Ida in Philly as a great example). You also have the example in Philly where Ignazio Denaro was underboss in name only after being stripped of most of his influence for most of his time in the position.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by cavita » Wed May 30, 2018 3:44 pm

richy67 wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 3:24 pm Technicy still should the doc not at the very least get his balls toed for disrespecting a made members daughter. Especially as he wasnt made himself? Despite his connections.
Yeah, hard to tell on this one. The doctor may have just been told to knock it off and give Gulotta's niece a raise for all anyone knows. As for the doctor, he died in a St. Louis hospital in 1969 after a short illness so apparently there was no physical retribution against him.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by richy67 » Wed May 30, 2018 3:25 pm

Technically*

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by richy67 » Wed May 30, 2018 3:24 pm

Technicy still should the doc not at the very least get his balls toed for disrespecting a made members daughter. Especially as he wasnt made himself? Despite his connections.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by SILENT PARTNERZ » Wed May 30, 2018 1:56 pm

richy67 wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 5:49 am
cavita wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 5:36 am
richy67 wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 2:32 am
cavita wrote: Tue May 29, 2018 9:13 am One thing I’ve found in my Midwestern families research regarding the consigliere hierarchy is this interesting bit- in the mid 1960s Rockford LCN soldier Sebastian Gulotta called a meeting of the family at the Aragona Club where the LCN held weekly meetings. He told the family that his niece was employed by a local doctor and that this doctor had repeatedly hit on Gulotta’s niece but she refused his advances. The doctor then said he would fire the niece and make sure she never got another professional job in the Rockford area. When Gulotta went to the doctor to try and work things out, he became rude and insulting towards Gulotta. So Gulotta took this incident to the Rockford LCN for permission of some sorts to punish the doctor. Rockford LCN consigliere Joe Zito brushed it off and said that because of the doctor’s position in the Rockford community (I’m assuming because of this that the doctor was Italian) that he was entitled to a certain degree of respect from Gulotta. Rockford LCN Capo Lorenzo Buttice then interjected by taking Gulotta’s side and saying to Zito when the doctor “insulted Gulotta, he insulted you, he insulted me and he insulted every member of our family.” After this statement, Zito was forced to agree with Buttice according to their code of honor and apologized to Gulotta. This is a bit unique in the fact that the consigliere position is supposed to be in place as a non-biased voice of reason and Buttice, a capo, had to remind Zito of the mob’s “code of ethics.” Apparently here, the consigliere’s opinion was overruled in favor of a “panel decision.”
what was the outcome?
The file never told of an outcome, but after doing some digging I believe the doctor mentioned was Dr. August Zacharia. The reason why he may have been entitled to a “certain degree of respect” according to consigliere Joe Zito was that Zacharia’s brother-in-law was Joe Civello, the LCN boss of Dallas, Texas. Zacharia’s other brother-in-law was Frank Maragi, a highly-respected Rockford LCN associate and gambler, and Zacharia’s brother was another valued Rockford LCN associate, Anthony Zacharia. Additionally, Anthony Zacharia was also Sebastian Gulotta’s uncle, so this could very well have been another connection.
aah I see,cheers.
The doctor had a lot of close OC relations. Cool story, thanks.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by richy67 » Wed May 30, 2018 5:49 am

cavita wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 5:36 am
richy67 wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 2:32 am
cavita wrote: Tue May 29, 2018 9:13 am One thing I’ve found in my Midwestern families research regarding the consigliere hierarchy is this interesting bit- in the mid 1960s Rockford LCN soldier Sebastian Gulotta called a meeting of the family at the Aragona Club where the LCN held weekly meetings. He told the family that his niece was employed by a local doctor and that this doctor had repeatedly hit on Gulotta’s niece but she refused his advances. The doctor then said he would fire the niece and make sure she never got another professional job in the Rockford area. When Gulotta went to the doctor to try and work things out, he became rude and insulting towards Gulotta. So Gulotta took this incident to the Rockford LCN for permission of some sorts to punish the doctor. Rockford LCN consigliere Joe Zito brushed it off and said that because of the doctor’s position in the Rockford community (I’m assuming because of this that the doctor was Italian) that he was entitled to a certain degree of respect from Gulotta. Rockford LCN Capo Lorenzo Buttice then interjected by taking Gulotta’s side and saying to Zito when the doctor “insulted Gulotta, he insulted you, he insulted me and he insulted every member of our family.” After this statement, Zito was forced to agree with Buttice according to their code of honor and apologized to Gulotta. This is a bit unique in the fact that the consigliere position is supposed to be in place as a non-biased voice of reason and Buttice, a capo, had to remind Zito of the mob’s “code of ethics.” Apparently here, the consigliere’s opinion was overruled in favor of a “panel decision.”
what was the outcome?
The file never told of an outcome, but after doing some digging I believe the doctor mentioned was Dr. August Zacharia. The reason why he may have been entitled to a “certain degree of respect” according to consigliere Joe Zito was that Zacharia’s brother-in-law was Joe Civello, the LCN boss of Dallas, Texas. Zacharia’s other brother-in-law was Frank Maragi, a highly-respected Rockford LCN associate and gambler, and Zacharia’s brother was another valued Rockford LCN associate, Anthony Zacharia. Additionally, Anthony Zacharia was also Sebastian Gulotta’s uncle, so this could very well have been another connection.
aah I see,cheers.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by cavita » Wed May 30, 2018 5:36 am

richy67 wrote: Wed May 30, 2018 2:32 am
cavita wrote: Tue May 29, 2018 9:13 am One thing I’ve found in my Midwestern families research regarding the consigliere hierarchy is this interesting bit- in the mid 1960s Rockford LCN soldier Sebastian Gulotta called a meeting of the family at the Aragona Club where the LCN held weekly meetings. He told the family that his niece was employed by a local doctor and that this doctor had repeatedly hit on Gulotta’s niece but she refused his advances. The doctor then said he would fire the niece and make sure she never got another professional job in the Rockford area. When Gulotta went to the doctor to try and work things out, he became rude and insulting towards Gulotta. So Gulotta took this incident to the Rockford LCN for permission of some sorts to punish the doctor. Rockford LCN consigliere Joe Zito brushed it off and said that because of the doctor’s position in the Rockford community (I’m assuming because of this that the doctor was Italian) that he was entitled to a certain degree of respect from Gulotta. Rockford LCN Capo Lorenzo Buttice then interjected by taking Gulotta’s side and saying to Zito when the doctor “insulted Gulotta, he insulted you, he insulted me and he insulted every member of our family.” After this statement, Zito was forced to agree with Buttice according to their code of honor and apologized to Gulotta. This is a bit unique in the fact that the consigliere position is supposed to be in place as a non-biased voice of reason and Buttice, a capo, had to remind Zito of the mob’s “code of ethics.” Apparently here, the consigliere’s opinion was overruled in favor of a “panel decision.”
what was the outcome?
The file never told of an outcome, but after doing some digging I believe the doctor mentioned was Dr. August Zacharia. The reason why he may have been entitled to a “certain degree of respect” according to consigliere Joe Zito was that Zacharia’s brother-in-law was Joe Civello, the LCN boss of Dallas, Texas. Zacharia’s other brother-in-law was Frank Maragi, a highly-respected Rockford LCN associate and gambler, and Zacharia’s brother was another valued Rockford LCN associate, Anthony Zacharia. Additionally, Anthony Zacharia was also Sebastian Gulotta’s uncle, so this could very well have been another connection.

Re: Underboss/ consigliere

by richy67 » Wed May 30, 2018 2:32 am

cavita wrote: Tue May 29, 2018 9:13 am One thing I’ve found in my Midwestern families research regarding the consigliere hierarchy is this interesting bit- in the mid 1960s Rockford LCN soldier Sebastian Gulotta called a meeting of the family at the Aragona Club where the LCN held weekly meetings. He told the family that his niece was employed by a local doctor and that this doctor had repeatedly hit on Gulotta’s niece but she refused his advances. The doctor then said he would fire the niece and make sure she never got another professional job in the Rockford area. When Gulotta went to the doctor to try and work things out, he became rude and insulting towards Gulotta. So Gulotta took this incident to the Rockford LCN for permission of some sorts to punish the doctor. Rockford LCN consigliere Joe Zito brushed it off and said that because of the doctor’s position in the Rockford community (I’m assuming because of this that the doctor was Italian) that he was entitled to a certain degree of respect from Gulotta. Rockford LCN Capo Lorenzo Buttice then interjected by taking Gulotta’s side and saying to Zito when the doctor “insulted Gulotta, he insulted you, he insulted me and he insulted every member of our family.” After this statement, Zito was forced to agree with Buttice according to their code of honor and apologized to Gulotta. This is a bit unique in the fact that the consigliere position is supposed to be in place as a non-biased voice of reason and Buttice, a capo, had to remind Zito of the mob’s “code of ethics.” Apparently here, the consigliere’s opinion was overruled in favor of a “panel decision.”
what was the outcome?

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