Double Affiliation

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Re: Double Affiliation

by johnny_scootch » Mon Apr 15, 2019 5:02 pm

Sicilian Side Of Gambino Boss Frank Cali
By Ed Scarpo

"It is absolutely out of the question that a Sicilian man of honor could become a made member of the American Cosa Nostra ..."
--Tommaso Buscetta, aka the "boss of two worlds"

Frank Cali, the reputed leader of the Gambino crime family who was shot to death outside his house in Staten Island, allegedly was made acting boss in 2015.

Strong factors leading to his ascension were his strong ties to both the Sicilian Mafia and the Calabrian Ndrangheta. His rise also was part of an attempt by the Gambinos to lower the crime family’s profile after John Gotti shot his way to the top in December 1985, according to law enforcement officials.

The Brooklyn-born Cali was related by blood to, and married into, Palermo's Inzerillo family and had cultivated close ties with members of the Ndrangheta's Siderno Group, a global drug trafficking network based in the southern Italian town of Siderno in Calabria. In the 1950s, representatives of the group first migrated to Canada and Australia. Today, the Siderno crime group reportedly operates in Canada, the United States, Australia, and Europe. Siderno is home to one of the Ndrangheta's largest and most important clans, the Commisso 'ndrina, which focuses on cocaine trafficking and money laundering.

In January 1997, the FBI reportedly notified Italian police of Cali’s distinctive standing as a made member of the Gambino crime family. Some media reports seem to believe Cali was a member of both the Sicilian and American Mafias; he most certainly was a member of the Gambino family only. Dual loyalties aren’t allowed, as per sources.

The topic of dual membership – meaning a person belonging to both the American and Sicilian Mafias -- was discussed at length during an interrogation with an infamous Sicilian turncoat known as the "boss of two worlds" for a criminal career that spanned Europe and Latin America.

The turncoat, Tommaso Buscetta, who died in April 2000 at 71, was the former Sicilian Mafioso who comprehensively pierced the veil of secrecy shrouding the inner workings of Cosa Nostra.

Buscetta found himself on the losing side of the Second Mafia war and decided to turn state's evidence. When discussing his reasoning for flipping, he would speak of his disapproval of how the Sicilian Mafia had drifted from its traditional cultural and moral roots by making narcotics trafficking its central focus.

He began cooperating with Italian and American prosecutors in 1984 and was instrumental in helping convict Salvatore (Toto, aka The Beast) Riina, whose assassins had killed 11 of Buscetta's family members, including his sons, a brother, and two nephews. Buscetta was the first "pentito" to reveal the existence and functions of the Cupola, the Mafia Commission that governed the organization.

Buscetta had major prestige while a Mafioso and had close relationships with the highest ranking members, though he himself never actually rose above the rank of soldier owing to his legendary proclivity for beautiful women, which led to his three marriages and multiple affairs, which put him in violation of Cosa Nostra's strict codes about marriage long before he broke "omertà.” Though he never formally rose through the Mafia hierarchy, Buscetta attained a notable criminal prestige and became privy to some of the most sensitive secrets of the organization.

The testimony of Buscetta, who also spoke extensively with judge Giovanni Falcone and others in law enforcement in Italy and America, paved the way for the trial of more than 300 Mafiosi in Palermo. Buscetta said that prior to the 1960s, the American and Sicilian Mafias had allowed members to intertwine: a made Sicilian mobster could join one of the Five Families, and vice versa. But that ended in the 1960s, Buscetta said.

"It is absolutely out of the question that a Sicilian man of honor could become a made member of the American Cosa Nostra at this time," Buscetta said. "By now the cultural differences between the two organizations are too great for there to be any organic ties between them."

In 1999, former Gambino soldier Frank Fappiano, from Staten Island's Tottenville section, was nabbed by the Feds. Fappiano was the first to formally name Cali as a made man in the Gambino crime family. Fappiano told the FBI that Cali had been "introduced to him as a wiseguy." Four years later, former Gambino capo Michael DiLeonardo, who was Fappiano's brother-in-law, revealed the extent of Cali's growing influence in the New York Cosa Nostra.

In 2003, Cali reportedly began making regular trips from the US to Sicily.

The following was published by La Repubblica:

In February 2008 was the takedown, fittingly called "the biggest mafia haul since the days of the "Pizza Connection."

Striking the bosses from Palermo and New York, the Inzerillo 'family' and the Gambino 'family' these 90 arrests represent a simultaneous attack on 'Cosa Nostrà on both sides of the Atlantic. An attack on an organization that was becoming once again a force on the world stage of international trafficking.

The heirs of the historical Sicilian and American 'Dons' were arrested. Thirty of them were captured in the districts of Palermo at Passo di Rigano, Boccadifalco and Cruillas, they were captured in the villages of Torretta and Carini. The others were taken away in Cherry Hill and in Brooklyn. It's an operation which the FBI and Italian police codenamed "Old Bridge"

This 'haul' is still only the beginning of a vast anti crime initiative put into action by authorities in Italy and the USA, the first of a series of assaults against the "Cosa Nostra" 'families' in New York.

It's just two years since investigators started to track down the American Godfathers and allies of the Inzerillo, Mannino, Di Maggio and Gambino families. They followed them day after day, listened to their conversations with microphones and filmed their movements. They discovered their companies and their business arrangements. Above all, they uncovered a pact between Sicilians and Americans after more than two decades of mafia domination by the Corleonesi family. Indeed it was a strategy of rebuilding of Cosa Nostra harking back to the 'old' days. This is how the criminal bands were seeking to create new opportunities and new markets after the era of Toto Riina. And this is how the 'escapees' - or mafia runaways from the wars between bands of the eighties - wished to reconquer territory. They had returned to their old districts in Palermo. And they were ready to take back everything.

The names that have slipped into the hands of Italian and F. B. I. police investigators are big ones; custody warrants were signed by the Palermo Prosecutors Giuseppe Pignatone, Maurizio di Lucia, Domenico Gozo, Roberta Buzzolani, Michele Prestipino, Nino Di Matteo and Guido Lo Forte. More arrest warrants were ordered by the District Prosecutor of New York.

The name at the top of the list is Francesco Paolo Augusto Calì, better known as 'Frank' or 'Franky Boy'. He is considered to be the American 'ambassador' of Cosa Nostra to Sicily with the task of tidying up relations with the families of Palermo. Right back from the beginning of 2003 many Sicilian mafia bosses have flown from Italy to New York to meet him, to do business, and to keep Franky Boy up to date on Sicilian affairs.

For more than ten years Franky Boy has been a 'wise guy', or man of honour, of the Gambino 'family'.

The FBI has two informers - Frank Fappiano and Michael Di Leonardo - who have revealed to the American police all of Frank Cali's activities inside the Gambino organization of America.

"Frank is our friend and he is everything over there" Gianni Nicchi confided to his district boss Antonio Rotolo. Nicchi is one of the Sicilian 'men of honour' who went back and forth between Palermo and the U. S. to traffic narcotics. His reference to 'and everything over therè is a clear admission that it was Frank who commanded in New York.

If "over there" Cosa Nostra's US ambassador has been arrested, in Palermo Giovanni Inzerillo has also wound up in the investigation. He is the second born of Totuccio, one of the great Sicilian mafia bosses before the rise of the Corleonesi. Giovanni Inzerillo is a construction entrepreneur as was, officially, his father. He is 36 years-old, and according to investigators he 'debutted' in Cosa Nostra in a summit held on 11th August 2003 at the restaurant 'Al Vecchio Mulino" (the old windmill) in Torretta, a small village about twenty kilometers from Palermo on the provincial road that takes you to Trapani.

On that day, at the 'Old Windmill', fifteen or so 'Mafiosì came to the meeting. Giovanni's cousin, Giuseppe Inzerillo was there, along with his uncles Giovanni Angelo Mannino and Calogero Mannino. They met to discuss their grand return to Cosa Nostra in Palermo. A few months later Giovanni Inzerillo was given the task of accompanying the old boss Filippo Casamento on a business trip first to Toronto and then to New York. The journey was to meet Canadian 'men of honour' of Italian origin such as Michele Modica and Michele Marrese.

Filippo Casamento is another mafia boss involved in last night's blitz. Ex-lieutenant in the Boccadifalco 'family' (before the Corleonesi took power) he was an organizer of narcotics trafficking in the "Pizza Connection". He is one of the main figures involved in the return of the Inzerillo to Sicily. It was he who 'guaranteed' for the heirs of those who were once the masters of Passo di Rignano.

The investigation into Inzerillo and Gambino hasn't explained in detail yet what has happened in the mafia of Sicily and New Jersey in the last few months. What is certain is that Inzerillo's 'plan' to 'reconquer' Palermo has failed. The historical bosses of the Sicilo-American mafia connection have been stopped in their tracks just as they were reforming. In fact they themselves had had some intuition that the project wasn't going to go very far.

It was a hidden surveillance microphone that revealed their fears.

On the 30th August 2000 Giovanni Inzerillo and his cousin Giuseppe went to visit their uncle Francesco in the district prison of Turin. They greeted each other and began by talking of their 'return' to Palermo, which the papers had already been writing about, and manifesting all their trepidation. Every word was taped. Francesco Inzerillo disclosed his alarm to his nephews thus: "Here the only thing to do is to get out and that's it ..... if you do nothing you have to pay.. And if you do do something you have to pay ten times over. You've got to get out of Europe, not just Italy. You've got to get out of Europe because you just can't stay here anymore, there's just no future. You're constantly under control, in chains and padlocks, one's got to get out to South America... all you need is to be indicted under article 416 bis and automatically all your possessions are confiscated. There's nothing worse than getting all your assets seized".

Cali ultimately pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 16 months in prison.

Re: Double Affiliation

by scagghiuni » Thu Dec 20, 2018 11:47 am

Confederate wrote: Thu Dec 20, 2018 1:11 am Do you remember from which Mafia Clan in Sicily Catalano belonged?
ciminna (caccamo mandamento)

Re: Double Affiliation

by Frank » Thu Dec 20, 2018 11:44 am

CabriniGreen wrote: Thu Dec 20, 2018 1:12 am San Guiseppe Jato
Was he made in Sicily??

Re: Double Affiliation

by CabriniGreen » Thu Dec 20, 2018 1:12 am

San Guiseppe Jato

Re: Double Affiliation

by Confederate » Thu Dec 20, 2018 1:11 am

Do you remember from which Mafia Clan in Sicily Catalano belonged?

Re: Double Affiliation

by CabriniGreen » Mon Nov 26, 2018 1:29 am

Interesting..... I've said for years Coppola was the top man in narcotics, but people always looked at him like Lucianos lackey....

Re: RE: Re: Double Affiliation

by Lupara » Sun Nov 25, 2018 11:56 am

CabriniGreen wrote:Okay, you piqued my interest here, Luciano wasnt into drugs in Italy? Legit question here..
I think there has been doubts about his involvement and influence in the Mafia, including drugs, after his deportation, among some historians.

Re: Double Affiliation

by CabriniGreen » Sun Nov 25, 2018 9:22 am

Okay, you piqued my interest here, Luciano wasnt into drugs in Italy? Legit question here..

Re: RE: Re: Double Affiliation

by Lupara » Sun Nov 25, 2018 8:10 am

CabriniGreen wrote:@Confederate


What kills me, is that if you are familiar with my post history, I've pretty much always said I thought the Bonnanos, in the structure, were the trusted buyers in NY.

But the sicilians were the controllers, where as with the French Connection, they actually had Americans like Luviano, Adonis, Coppola over there organizing and negotiating.

I gave a WHOLE EXAMPLE with the Sicilian San Guiseppe Jato family: Strategic men placed in Brazil, Sicily, AND New York.... Horizontal and vertical control....
Not sure whether Luciano's supposed drug operation was part of the same racket as the French Connection.

Re: Double Affiliation

by CabriniGreen » Sun Nov 25, 2018 5:40 am

@Confederate


What kills me, is that if you are familiar with my post history, I've pretty much always said I thought the Bonnanos, in the structure, were the trusted buyers in NY.

But the sicilians were the controllers, where as with the French Connection, they actually had Americans like Luviano, Adonis, Coppola over there organizing and negotiating.

I gave a WHOLE EXAMPLE with the Sicilian San Guiseppe Jato family: Strategic men placed in Brazil, Sicily, AND New York.... Horizontal and vertical control....

Re: Double Affiliation

by Confederate » Sun Nov 25, 2018 3:37 am

In the book "Last Days of The Sicilians", it is well explained how the Sicilian Clans were involved in the manufacturing and distribution of Heroin. The Sicilians had some of their own men on the receiving end of the Heroin in America. In addition, some of the American LCN guys were ALSO involved (one way or another) in some of the distribution. The drug ban in New York was basically a hypocritical decree of bullshit. What the ban REALLY meant was don't get directly involved in the distribution of drugs "AND GET CAUGHT". What you had was two different organizations (Sicilian Mafia Clans AND American LCN working together in the Drug Business. That's the bottom line. It's actually quite obvious the way it operated and showed great business skill of the Sicilians in particular. As I have said before, in my opinion during that time period, you could not beat the Sicilians for secrecy and organization. The way the Pizza Connection operated for many years was very impressive from a business standpoint.

Re: Double Affiliation

by CabriniGreen » Sun Nov 25, 2018 2:14 am

@wiseguy

" I never specified..." Lol , The whole conversation was sparked by the book Octopus, and the books main premise that the Sicilians ran the PIZZA CONNECTION and CHERRY HILL RINGS, and the cocaine ring by Mannino and LoDuca busted by the DEA.

But, again I get it, IM the confused one.....

Re: Double Affiliation

by John W » Fri Nov 23, 2018 12:18 pm

Are 'The Mafia' and 'The Octopus' books by Claire Sterling the same book but with a different title which happens from time to time or are they completely different books?

Re: Double Affiliation

by Wiseguy » Fri Nov 23, 2018 10:33 am

CabriniGreen wrote: Thu Nov 22, 2018 9:00 pm @wiseguy.

Now you are pissing me off, you dont even know what the fuck you are talking about.....

@Jeremy

It's a bullshit list cause the ban I'm talking about is from the fuckin mid 70s to mid 80s, the Castellano era..... the CHIN ERA... They had a ban in place for AMERICAN WISEGUYS, while at the same time tacitly approving MASSIVE trafficking by the sicilians.

Lot of guys on that list were active in the 50s and shit, its bullshit....

@Wiseguy


You say I'm confused, NO you are. That's one of the reasons this topic is so complicated, there are multiple rings, with intersecting players, that change during different time periods...

You dont even seem to get the point that Double Affiliation is a mechanism to facilitate the ( first tobacco) drug trade, and increase cooperation and reduce conflicts between the mafias, similar to how guys like Zaza and Piromalli were initiated to facilitate the tobacco, then drug trade....

Why the fuck would you give me that silly list. How many of those guys names wound in either the Pizza connection I in d.c. indictment documents, OR Iron Tower?....

I ask you for a list of Americans indicted in those operations and you produce that, and then say I'm unfocused, or confused.

I really dont even think you watched the video, or even have any real point except to disagree with ME, LOL


Why the fuck is he giving me guys like SQUILLANTE? Killed in the 50s? Gagliodotto? THATS THE FRENCH CONNECTION, that was an American mafia initiative, didnt require double affiliation, since the Sicilians hadn't sent soldiers over here for that.


Irritates the shit outta me.... these guys come in 7 pages into the shit, wernt even interested in the topic...

I wish they could keep the same energy when ever threads get derailed by all the nonsensical political bullshit or whatever else.....
Go back and read your post, you never specified those operations.

Your original question (which you apparently felt you already had the answer to) was who ran the heroin trade, the Sicilians or Americans?

When I said both, you apparently didn't like that answer (you wanted the answer to be the conclusion you already came to) and you mentioned the drug ban within the American mob. While there was a ban, or at least a nominal one that went back to the late 1950s if I remember right, there was never a time that there weren't plenty of American mobsters involved in the drug trade. The list I gave you showed as much.

You then tried to move the goal posts, arguing you were only talking about the Pizza Connection. So I told you info you should already know, since you read so much, about the 21 charged included both Sicilian and Bonanno members.

Nobody is denying there was "massive trafficking" by the Sicilians. What I'm saying is the Americans were also very involved and always had been. As such, both ran the heroin trade.

Re: Double Affiliation

by antimafia » Fri Nov 23, 2018 5:23 am

CabriniGreen wrote: Thu Nov 22, 2018 11:08 pm Also, again did anyone watch the video?

Was Bruzzese a Double affiliate, as indicted?
Yes, I watched the video a long time ago. In my opinion, the most interesting information Anna Sergi provided in it was the theory that Carmine Verduci (allegedly) started operating in Montreal because of friction within the Greater Toronto Area Siderno Group, friction he either caused or was on the receiving end of. According to this theory, he was either essentially expelled or he needed a new territory in which to operate as a drug trafficker because he couldn't operate in Ontario anymore.

Carmelo Bruzzese was eventually found not guilty of being a member of Cosa Nostra, i.e., he was found not guilty of what the Italian authorities alleged as a result of Operazione Orso Bruno (Operation Brown Bear): that he was a member of the Rizzuto organization. If Bruzzese was found not guilty, does the verdict put to rest the argument that he was doubly affiliated? Personally, I don't think he was doubly affiliated, but the findings of a court or the evidence presented during an Italian organized-crime trial sometimes don't prove something definitively, regardless of the jurisdiction. If Bruzzese is both a 'ndrangheta member and a member of the (insert here a second secret society: Sicilian Cosa Nostra, American LCN [a made Bonanno?], or "Rizzuto Family"), then the theory in Business or Blood... that Antonio Coluccio was a main instigator in the attempt to take control of the Montreal underworld could be considerably weakened or even nullified. Why, you ask? Because Bruzzese is Coluccio's father-in-law. Because Bruzzese is not some minor 'ndrangheta figure.

On the one hand, the idea that 'ndrangheta members in Ontario, individually or collectively, wanted to take over Montreal doesn't make sense if Bruzzese was as close to Vito Rizzuto and other high-ranking Montreal Mafia members as has been clearly shown over the years. On the other hand, if Bruzzese was indeed doubly affiliated but let his son-in-law wreak havoc in Montreal, the situation is a perfect example of why double affiliation, which has been considered such a bad idea for such a very long time, was decreed an impossibility in North America after the Castellammarese War. To whom exactly was Bruzzese loyal when he was first inducted into another secret society? Did he stay loyal to the second secret society? For how long did he stay loyal? Did he ultimately pledge his loyalty to the first secret society into which he was inducted?

Which mafia organization Domenico and Giuseppe Violi were made in to when they were younger has never been clearly established. I'm interested in facts; so the assertion that they are 'ndrangheta members because of their birthright doesn't mean a whole lot to me or to 'ndrangheta experts like Antonio Nicaso and Nicola Gratteri. The birthright claim is just another way of overstating or inflating the size, power, and influence of 'ndrangheta groups, especially those outside of Calabria. The family tree posted on these forums that show Giacomo Luppino, his children, grandchildren, and extended family is more a genealogical chart than anything else; the family tree is not an organized-crime chart of an 'ndrangheta group. (And with Domenico and Giuseppe Violi being in jail at the moment, what exactly is the size of the Luppino-Violi group?)

What we do have evidence of is the presence of the Violi brothers at a taped Bonanno induction ceremony. They couldn't simultaneously be Buffalo Family and Bonanno Family members--they would have had to transfer from the former to the latter. So then, some of us--because some of us don't appreciate this explanation of their made status--liken their situation to that of their father, Paolo, who grew up in an 'ndrangheta family/clan but was eventually inducted into the Bonanno Family, with the proviso that he was allowed to stay a member of the 'ndrangheta while simultaneously being the acting captain of the Bonanno Family's branch in Montreal.

Domenico and Giuseppe Violi's status as made Bonannos helps clarify why there seemed to have been tensions between the Desjardins-Mirarchi group and Calabrians from Ontario, all of whom were supposedly in cahoots with Sal Montagna to decimate the Rizzuto organization. The Desjardins-Mirarchi group, headed by a French-Canadian and an Italian-Canadian about whom we have no evidence of their being made, plotted to kill an important made Bonanno member and eventually had him killed. I don't see these made Violi brothers, born to Calabrian parents, being beholden to this clan calabrais headed by Desjardins and Mirarchi.

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