B. wrote: ↑Thu May 09, 2019 10:20 pm
One of the issues with the DeCavalcante family is we can't identify when the family had its peak, if it had one. Did they ever max out their cap of 75 members? It doesn't seem to have happened anytime from the 1950s through 1990s, the periods we have the most info on. We have a count of between 30 and 40 members, most said to be old and inactive, in the early 1960s, then we have a count of ~50 members in 1999. There is no indication they had 75 members at any time during the 30+ year interim, so if they ever met their cap number it must have been earlier in their history.
I wonder if the importance of Ribera has been overblown in the formation of the family. There is no denying the presence and influence and we have informants, witnesses, and most sources in general pointing out the endless connections to Ribera. In the years where we have confirmed information on the hierarchy, though, Riberesi heritage was not a major factor in selecting family leaders. Nick Delmore was from Enna province and his NJ underbosses were of Corleone and Monreale heritage, with a second underboss in CT from the mainland. This continued under Sam DeCavalcante for a good chunk of time, with none of the confirmed admin members being Riberese. That said, many of the captains and members were from Ribera and men connected to that town continued to be a major source of recruitment. By the 1970s you see Vitabile from Ribera take over as consigliere and by the time John Riggi is official boss his whole administration is Riberesi and so are most of the NJ captains. A number of acting family leaders after Riggi went to jail and possibly the administration now have had Ribera heritage.
Even though there is a constant theme of Ribera in the make-up of the family and this has survived into modern times, the fact that they had two successive bosses and a number of administration members from other villages is an argument in favor of Badami/Monaco being with the DeCavalcantes. It means early bosses and other family leaders could have been from other villages, too, and a situation developed along the lines of what you've uncovered about the Bonannos. I never would have questioned the idea that the Bonannos were anything except a purely Castellammarese family in origin. Joe Bonanno says it himself along with other sources and the Bonanno family we are familiar with was dominated by Castellammaresi for most of its history, so all of the pieces are there. But now it looks like their roots came from elsewhere, which means the Castellammarese started as one faction that gained influence and was able to dominate the family. Maybe the DeCavalcante family did something similar and the Riberesi swarmed a family that another group had started. You said something to me a while back about how there were probably more Castellammarese mafia members in the Bonanno family than in the entire mafia of CDG and that's probably true of the historic DeCavalcante family and the mafia in Ribera as well.
Is Riberesi heritage important in the formation? Yes and No. Yes in that compaesanismo played a significant role in the group's formation but no in that they don't restrict membership to being Riberesi. Genovese, Gambino, Bonanno, Detroit, Cleveland as we see clusters of people from the same towns. But within these very same groups are members from outside the cluster who held leadership posts. Giovanni Pecoraro of Piana dei Greci was a high ranking Morello member (under or consig?) from the 1900's until he was murdered in the 20's; Giovanni Zarcone, Giuseppe Traina came from Bagheria and Belmonte Mezzagno, Cola Schiro, Benny Gallo, Angelo Caruso were from Roccamena, Santa Ninfa and I believe Palermo. There's never been a rule that dictated where someone had to be from. It's how the Gambinos can be the most Palermitan family with direct ties to Sicily all the while at various times having bosses of Calabrian and Neapolitan descent; or the Americanized Genoveses with almost no remaining ties with Sicily having Barney Bellomo who was born there.
As it would relate to the formation of Elizabeth, I would suggest something very similar in what I described which is why we have a Sam DeCavalcante and a Vinny Ocean in a sea of Riberese/Corleonese.
But again, I'm drawn back to the larger Sciaccatani faction and why, just why they didn't become their own Family or why the other other groups didn't push for it. Instead we have a minor (in numbers) Ribera element that was able to form and coexist alongside the superfamilies of NYC. Leads me to speculate if Bacino/Amari had political the political clout to request their own group and have it granted.
"Your guy, the fat Napolitan fuck, got Chicago, our guys Ribera are feeling homeless and they gotta be taken care of. "
Joe Masseria: "So why not have them come to New York?"
"Your guy Al's (Mineo) got both groups and pretty much all of Brooklyn and those guys fall under them and I don't know, with all the upheaval..."
*Joe Masseria, interested for the first time, lowers his fork with the baseball sized meatball back into the large bowl of pasta and says: "Yeah, so?" It was more a statement than a question.
"So maybe, in the interest of harmony, let the Ribera guys do their own thing. They go way back in our society in America, Phila Bacino's arriving and Phil thinks maybe it's a good idea."
Joe Masseria: "Phil thinks?" Masseria then looked up Clutch Hand Morello who yawned and nodded and then to Manfredi Mineo alongside of him who placed his hand under his chin and flung it forward.
"When Phil arrives have him meet with Sam (Pollaccia) and Sal (DiBella), they'll iron out the details."
"The Riberese give their praise, Masseria."
Masseria snapped his fingers and on command Catania leaned over while Joe whispered in his ear and then obediently went over to the waitress and requested white bean ragu for Joe The Boss.