Am I overlooking something, or does he say somewhere in this interview that his father was a captain?
johnny_scootch wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2019 6:17 pm
In the 1960s and 1970s, Anthony (Fat Andy) Ruggiano had one of the biggest crews in the Gambino family, and he wanted to keep it that way.
He had had around
70-75 guys in his crew, and out of all of them, Andy
wanted to straighten out only one, Nicky Corozzo.
Fat Andy "
didn’t want to make anybody his equal at one point," said Anthony Junior. "He had a
big crew with him and he liked it that way. He wound up being right."
Andy and Anthony (Tony Lee) Guerrieri even got into an argument over Fat Andy's
reluctance to make any of his guys.
In the above part, it is clearly implied that the 70-75 crew members are all associates, as it says he only wanted to straighten out one of them. It then makes it clear that by straightening them out, they would become his "equal", which is to say a soldier, and they would no longer be "with" him, as they would belong to his captain. By not making many members, he would retain a large crew of associates under him as a soldier.
This segment of the interview is clearly saying he had a crew of 70-75 associates under him as a soldier, nothing to do with being a captain. Whether you want to believe he had that many associates is another question. He very well might be high-balling the estimate, as I doubt the son had an official count and wants to paint an impressive picture, but keep in mind that many associates, especially back then, could just be neighborhood guys, store owners, etc. who happens to be on record with Ruggiano in addition to full-on criminals. An aggressive figure like Ruggiano who was made in the early 1950s and active for decades in NYC and Florida could certainly put a lot of people on record over the years, though again I have no reason to support nor refute the 70-75 estimate.