https://www.downtownpublications.com/si ... metro-areaConfederate wrote: ↑Mon Jun 24, 2019 12:52 amThanks gohn. I wonder if that was the last big case against the Detroit Mafia which was 20 plus years ago? The Feds haven't even acknowledged Detroit as being an active Family for the last 15 years according to Wiseguy's information. Based upon that premise, It sounds to me like there are a few left over guys in Detroit just operating on their own like in some other Cities where there is no structured Family anymore.gohnjotti wrote: ↑Mon Jun 24, 2019 12:31 amI was wondering the same thing, so I did a bit of googling and found that Moscone65 is indeed right:Confederate wrote: ↑Mon Jun 24, 2019 12:26 amMaybe I missed it in the article, but WHERE does it say somebody was a Detroit Wiseguy? Sounds to me like a couple guys with Italian last names were involved in buying drugs which could happen in any major city in America.Moscone65 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2019 11:46 pm A Detroit wiseguy and an Italian American associate of his got busted in Detroit earlier this year for drugs.
https://www.detroitnews.com/story/news/ ... 136698002/
https://gangsterreport.com/motown-mafia ... -20-piece/
The Italian mob, the Mafia, now known as the Detroit Partnership, has kept its head low and operations quiet since that period of time, but have been no less busy. The Detroit Partnership remains one of the original 24 crime families in the United States, but its organization and impact is greatly reduced.
“The mob definitely still exists. The last time the Italian Mafia made a lot of headlines was the end of Prohibition, with the crosstown mob wars of 1930-31,” Burnstein noted. “Par for the course, it's in the shadows. It operates with the mantra of, 'Make money, not headlines,' which it has for the last 80 years or so.”
Since the division of the Mafia between Joe Zerilli and William 'Black Bill' Tocco, the Italians, the “family,” “have been the picture of success, stability, functionality and diversification,” Burnstein said.
A huge way they have achieved that is through a creed, put down by Zerilli and Tocco and followed by those who have taken over for them, today allegedly Jack Giacolloni and Anthony La Piana, to always marry within the family, according to Burnstein.
“Zerilli and Tocco put down an edict when they took over in 1931 – everyone had to intermarry,” Burnstein said. “So if you turned, you're turning on your brother, your uncle, your nephew. Violence brings headlines – which they don't want. But intermarriage, within blood family as well as the crime family, is more difficult to resort to violence.”
Burnstein said in 2018, the Italian mob in Detroit makes their bread and butter in gambling and loan sharking, “and throw in some extortion and narcotics trafficking.”
But the key thing the Italians have done to differentiate themselves from their predecessors, as well as other crime families and gangs, is they have immersed themselves in the white collar business world. Besides the edict to intermarry, the other decree set down is that every one (male) in the next generation had to have a college degree so they could infiltrate the world of white collar businesses.
“All of the guys have gone on and have college and business degrees – business and accounting degrees,” Burnstein said. “They're above the fray, more educated, more polished.”
It's also provided for greater business diversification for the Mafia into a variety of different big businesses, Burnstein noted, either owning, backing, or being involved in restaurants, food wholesale, produce companies, meat packing, construction industry and sanitation.It also allows for opportunities to launder illegal profits through legal entities.
“It's incredibly rare in organized crime circles around the country, versus other cities, many mobsters here are corporate rich, not just mobster rich,” Burnstein said. “They have gotten rich in legitimate businesses, and are wealthy way beyond mobsters.”
He noted that when Jack Tocco died in 2014, “he was worth tens of millions of dollars – that's not normal in the day and age of mobsters.”
The Detroit mob is like a ndrangheta clan aka based on intermarriage and also they are focused more on gambling and loansharking and occasionally on drug sales (even the only rat Nove Tocco ratted because was caught selling coke),they also have strong ties with bikers.I can say that Detroit Mafia motto could be "make 10 and enjoy this money that make 100 and stay in jail".