Chris Christie wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 5:52 am
While I can't connect him personally to Carini aside from his closest associates being from there, the Carinesi appear to have been the most influential groups of compaesani in the Profaci family aside from the Villabatesi, producing multiple captains and consiglieri. While limited, there is reason to speculate that this group had its roots under Peraino. Peraino's ties to Palermo Centro could lend itself to a Mineo connection, too.
I found some earlier Carinesi in Brooklyn on the same street/area Mineo was on, I think I shared it with you, they in 1910 were connected with Palermitan in the same area, I believe some Carinesi even had relatives in Palermo as its very close.
I haven't ruled out that the Perainos themselves might have originally come from Carini, or have some direct connection there. I know a sister or sister-in-law of Peraino was living in Palermo Centro when he visited Sicily, but I haven't seen conclusive enough records to trace his family's background. His sons and his early associate Nicolo Failla (from Carini) would become Profaci members, and another close Carinese associate of his was Giuseppe Mannino, who was murdered around the same period as Peraino. The Manninos of Carini were part of the Buffa-Badalamenti-D'Alessandro clan who would be the powerful Carinesi faction of the Profaci family.
Chris Christie wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 5:52 am
Joe Bonanno talked about how Commission meetings would be attended by an aide in addition to the boss, and I'd have to check, but I thought he said the boss could consult this aide. There is precedent with Traina and Mangano attending the 1928 meeting together, when Traina probably outranked Mangano. Based on the 1940 Treasury report, it appears that after the war Mangano and Traina continued this relationship where Traina was invited to participate in high-level matters as an "aide" (maybe more like senior counsel).
Almost makes me want to break down these meetings and look at who attended more. I never looked into the 1928 meeting.
You can def see some leader+aide relationships at the Cleveland 1928 assembly. Profaci/Magliocco, Lolordo/Bacino, S.Lombardino/A.Lombardino, SanFilippo/Mirabile, etc. Some of them are harder to determine but it's clear (to me at least) that some of the attendees at that meeting were aides to senior figures and I believe Mangano probably attended as Traina's aide. It's interesting too because it shows that while Profaci was not yet a boss, he was an important figure presumably of the Mineo group.
What do you make of these claims? I took it as Valachi being confused or incorrect.
It would depend on the claim. I tend to see some of Valachi's more confusing statements as "Where there's smoke, there's fire," i.e. there is some truth to it somewhere, but he may have gotten it slightly (or very) wrong, though I don't discount it entirely. He isn't the best source on what went on at the highest levels and he was politically clueless but I think he was smarter than he's given credit for. I don't have reason to question him on some of these claims, though. It's possible the consiglieri of different families did have some kind of "commission", but a consigliere was not an official member of the big national Commissione -- it's probable, though, they attended as a boss's aide.
It's possible Agrigentesi were in NO that early on, but they were never larger or greater or more influential than the Palermitans. Unless a group of Maggiore-Amari-Caternicchios arrived in 1840 to St Phillips and Decatur it's hard to place them anywhere close to being founders. And problem with imm. that early on is we'll be lucky if we get "Sicily" on the manifest.
It's something I need to look into more before I would seriously entertain it and like you said, I might not even get anywhere based on how limited those early records are. I know the Marcellos and Gaglianos were from Agrigento (the Marcellos via Tunis) and there were other Agrigentesi in the family during that era, but I would have no idea if those guys have relatives or paesani with deeper roots in the area. It's possible NO was more like a staging area for an early Agrigentesi element that moved elsewhere.