thekiduknow wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2019 9:25 pm
So the Commission meeting happened around 93/94, and the family was put together roughly a year later? I'm not at all knowledgable about the Colombo's, or even this time period, I just reread this thread and want to try and get the timeline straight.
A ceasefire was called sometime in mid-to-late 1992. The following year, the ceasefire briefly broke with the murder of Orena Underboss Joseph Scopo, which essentially ended the conflict. The family remained in disarray in 1994, with the Persico and Orena factions both being separate. There were two meetings which both helped officially resolve the conflicts, although it's unsure which meeting came first.
One meeting, which was not given an accurate timeframe by Bonanno Underboss Sal Vitale, occurred with the entire Commission present. Persico Faction Acting Boss Andy Russo, who was released from prison in 1994, met with Orena Faction Representative Vinny Aloi at the meeting, and the pair discussed the conflict in a separate room, where they failed to reach a resolution. Thereafter, the rest of the Commission, de facto led by Genovese Acting Boss Liborio Bellomo, agreed to put their weight on the Persico Faction, designating them the winners of the conflict.
Another meeting occurred in approximately 1994 or 1995, shortly after both Alphonse Persico and William Cutolo were acquitted of racketeering charges and released from prison. The meeting consisted of Cutolo, Persico, and Colombo Soldiers John DeRoss and Joseph Campanella. At that meeting, Cutolo and Campanella - both Orena Faction members whose crew and affiliates represented a significant portion of the Orena Faction's strength - agreed to come back into the Colombo Family as Soldiers under newly-appointed Caporegime Alphonse Persico.
These meetings are the only two that I have seen which formally resolved the conflict. It should be noted that approximately 24 Orena Faction members refused to come back into the fold during the mid-to-late 1990s. Joseph Campanella referred to these holdout members as "the Long Island Guys," and other evidence points to various Long Islanders refusing to come back into the fold, although most of them progressively did overtime.