Yes, I think most would say wiseguy, but I think the most common and maybe the only real one to use was "Our friend" or "friend of ours" to describe a made guy. Goodfella became sort of slang over the years it seems, but it was used to describe made guy, or guy involved in things not necessarily with them. Maybe different crew and different cities used their own terms?JeremyTheJew wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 8:03 pmbert wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 2:53 pmIt was a street term used by, for lack of a better word "Underworld" types as far back as the early 1900's, and adopted by the Mafia as a way to describe someone with them or in a family. In a book written around 1910, a fairly small time thief who was Chinese _American and a pickpocket used the term goodfella in his bio.Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 12:49 pm Was Goodfellas a real term used by LCN or was it created by the movie? I know there was that wiretap of Sal Profaci using the term but that was after Goodfellas was a huge hit. I don't remember If any used the term before that.
Pogo
Wasn't the term actually Wiseguy which is also the book title for Goodfellas??
General Mob Questions
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Re: General Mob Questions
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Re: General Mob Questions
bert wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 9:13 pmYes, I think most would say wiseguy, but I think the most common and maybe the only real one to use was "Our friend" or "friend of ours" to describe a made guy. Goodfella became sort of slang over the years it seems, but it was used to describe made guy, or guy involved in things not necessarily with them. Maybe different crew and different cities used their own terms?JeremyTheJew wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 8:03 pmbert wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 2:53 pmIt was a street term used by, for lack of a better word "Underworld" types as far back as the early 1900's, and adopted by the Mafia as a way to describe someone with them or in a family. In a book written around 1910, a fairly small time thief who was Chinese _American and a pickpocket used the term goodfella in his bio.Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Sun Jan 05, 2020 12:49 pm Was Goodfellas a real term used by LCN or was it created by the movie? I know there was that wiretap of Sal Profaci using the term but that was after Goodfellas was a huge hit. I don't remember If any used the term before that.
All ways felt Donnie brasco movie did a good job with the street talk refferenced. Like lefty all ways said Wiseguy as well as the friend of mine friend of ours discroption.
Pogo
Wasn't the term actually Wiseguy which is also the book title for Goodfellas??
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Re: General Mob Questions
Re: the use of the term "goodfella", I seem to remember that Gotti was caught on a Bergin tape using it as well. He was boasting to someone about how many guys came up to him at a wedding and he said something like "every skipper, every goodfella, every non-goodfella came up to me. My brother Pete says he clocked a hundred guys who came up to me, I says to him I think you undersold me".
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Re: General Mob Questions
Joey Massino said during his testimony that goodfella is used to describe a member along with button man and wiseguy. So they do use the word. Who knows if it was made more popular after the movie came out.
Re: General Mob Questions
Hello folks, nice site ya got here.
During Vietnam, the ARMY base at Fort Leonard Wood grew very quickly in the middle-of-nowhere Missouri.
My understanding is during those years, the Kansas City "mob" (I don't know who that would have been then) fought out a bloody turf war for prostitution rights for the base with the Chicago "mob". (again, I dont know which family-outfit that would be)
There were apparently several murders, disappearances and kidnappings involved.
There are clearly some great researchers and knowledgeable posters here and if any of you have any information or suggestions, input, anything to offer on this topic, I would greatly appreciate it.
During Vietnam, the ARMY base at Fort Leonard Wood grew very quickly in the middle-of-nowhere Missouri.
My understanding is during those years, the Kansas City "mob" (I don't know who that would have been then) fought out a bloody turf war for prostitution rights for the base with the Chicago "mob". (again, I dont know which family-outfit that would be)
There were apparently several murders, disappearances and kidnappings involved.
There are clearly some great researchers and knowledgeable posters here and if any of you have any information or suggestions, input, anything to offer on this topic, I would greatly appreciate it.
Re: General Mob Questions
This type of tax avoidance strategy has been almost entirely eliminated by the IRS.mafiastudent wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2019 7:31 pmThat makes a lot of sense. Thank you!maloots wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2019 5:39 pmThe place that you described could be to generate loses for the purpose of income tax write offs. Especially if who or whatever entity owns it has other assets or properties and offsets this one against the others for tax purposes. Some entities exist for the sole purpose of generating a loss for taxes or for a tax offset. Just think if you go there enough times and they always practically empty every time you go, then you could become their best customer real quick.mafiastudent wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2019 10:28 am I didn't know which thread to put this in but it's a question about the Chicago mob. Maybe I'm giving away too much information but I live near Chicago Heights. Years ago there used to be a ton of outstanding Italian restaurants. Now, it's mostly Mexican. However, there's one restaurant called Carlo's (as in Lorenzetti's) and there's also a pizza place/restaurant nearby owned by the same as well as another Lorenzetti's in another suburb, I think.
Carlo's has been around forever. However, it's DEAD in there. Except for the bar which offers a lunch buffet, there's never anyone in the main restaurant even on a Saturday night. I went in there one Saturday at dinner time, I thought it was closed. It was nearly empty. The food was great as usual, but I'm wondering how it stays open. Is it connected? Anybody know? Just curious.
Re: General Mob Questions
This ones more for the new york team.
Just wondering what the mobs like on the ground these days, where im from its a case of dont fuck wi him hes with so and so etc
They still have that power on a street level of aye thats him or hes with such and such and still feared and hold sway on people?
Cheers
Just wondering what the mobs like on the ground these days, where im from its a case of dont fuck wi him hes with so and so etc
They still have that power on a street level of aye thats him or hes with such and such and still feared and hold sway on people?
Cheers
Re: General Mob Questions
We left out the term they use themselves for a guy who is made. "Straightened out" was always the common term they used themselves.
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Re: General Mob Questions
Who made Chin? Was he made by Costello? Rank of soldier under Vito at the time?
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ChicagoOutfit wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2020 8:55 pm Who made Chin? Was he made by Costello? Rank of soldier under Vito at the time?
He would have been made while Costello was the Boss. Don't if he himself performed the ceremony though.
Pogo
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Thanks...I was thinking Chin was for sure made while Costello was boss, I was just curious who presided over the ceremony/who performed it. Was it Vito? My knowledge of this time period is more hazy, I was wondering if Costello was already semi-retired, mostly legit by this point and didn't want to concern himself with making ceremonies and if maybe Vito was initiating the guys?Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Sun Jan 12, 2020 11:15 amChicagoOutfit wrote: ↑Sat Jan 11, 2020 8:55 pm Who made Chin? Was he made by Costello? Rank of soldier under Vito at the time?
He would have been made while Costello was the Boss. Don't if he himself performed the ceremony though.
Pogo
Reason I asked is b/c I had to assume that Vito made Chin...for Chin to be that loyal to Vito in making a move on a boss
Thanks again and thanks to anyone else that can add some insight.
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Re: General Mob Questions
Who pays the Consigliere?chin_gigante wrote: ↑Wed Jan 01, 2020 10:22 amHistorically, the underboss and consigliere positions arguably carried equal weight, with different responsibilities, in the family, but now the consigliere role has more transitioned to a de facto number three position. While an underboss was appointed by the boss to act as a general buffer, street boss and second-in-command lined up to take over, at least in the immediate sense, should something happen to the boss, the consigliere was elected, like the boss, as a neutral arbitrator to settle family disputes and advise the boss. In Philadelphia when the consigliere Frank Monte was given the responsibility to handle the contract on Harry Riccobene, Riccobene had Monte killed in retaliation because he viewed Monte's involvement in organising murders as a violation of his role as consigliere.
Though not the case all the time, both positions have been known to have crews of soldiers reporting directly to them. Philadelphia is more my area of expertise, I remember reading that in the New York families at times the consigliere was allowed to have one soldier reporting direct to them. In Philadelphia the boss and underboss historically had soldiers reporting direct to them and when Antonio Caponigro became consigliere the soldiers in the family from Newark were officially assigned to him. When Philip Leonetti was promoted from capo to underboss his crew continued to report directly to him, so capos retaining their crews has happened but generally rarer than simply promoting a new capo to run the crew or having its members split up among other crews.
Clearly it's a lucrative position if it's number three. But with no soldiers under them it would seem that they'd need to get broken off some other way.
Re: General Mob Questions
I believe the entire administration gets a cut from the captains below them. Not just the boss.Targenmantarian wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2020 9:28 am
Who pays the Consigliere?
Clearly it's a lucrative position if it's number three. But with no soldiers under them it would seem that they'd need to get broken off some other way.
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In addition to that some Consigliere's usually have their separate operations going as well.
Pogo
Pogo
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Re: General Mob Questions
I guess they'd probably get to keep a good amount of their rackets and kick something up to the boss alone.Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Mon Jan 13, 2020 1:34 pm In addition to that some Consigliere's usually have their separate operations going as well.
Pogo
Or do they kick up to the underboss? Hard to say I guess.
Some Consiglieres are huge earners like Tony Pal or Christy Tick and some are sidelined old guys like Turchi.