B. wrote: ↑Sat Mar 14, 2020 3:02 pm Was this purely a business/criminal role, or was he involved in protocol and administration among the Italians? These non-Italians appear to have had immense importance in practical matters and maybe Chicago blurred some lines, but I'd be curious to know the exact details and how they were reported.
Al Capone replaced Toto LoVerde as head of the existing Chicago mafia family, whose hierarchy can be traced back. Al Capone had been inducted into the Masseria family which gave him access to a formal position in Chicago. No doubt the ranks were filled by other Italians with less commitment to tradition, but they weren't a separate gang that was "accepted" by the other families in 1931. They had to become members of the existing Chicago family first, as a formality if nothing else, just like what happened with the Milano group in Cleveland and the Neapolitan/Calabrians in the Pittsburgh and Genovese families.
In addition to what Villain said Roemers books mention that in the early 1970s the Outfit was run by a committee made up of Accardo, Joe Aiuppa and Alex.
If I remember right Capone was made in 1928. By then he had been Boss of his own group for years separate from the local Chicago LCN family. Remember the Outfit started out as a prostitution operation run by Jim Colosimo and his wife. Neither Johnny Torrio or Capone were inducted LCN members when they took over that operation.
Pogo