Chris Christie wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 4:44 pm
B. wrote: ↑Thu Mar 19, 2020 4:34 pm
That's why we can look at Gentile, Bonanno, and Maniaci and see where they blend together:
- All three agree that Masseria backed Capone against Aiello.
- Two of them agree that Masseria backed Capone against Lombardo, too.
- All of them agree Capone was paying tribute to Masseria and was associated with him while living in Chicago.
- Two of them explicitly state Capone was inducted by Masseria and made capodecina in Chicago.
- All of them agree Capone's induction into Cosa Nostra preceded his official takeover in Chicago.
- All three agree that Capone became official boss of the Chicago Cosa Nostra family in 1931.
Lombardo seems to be the main question.
-Oct 23, 1930, Joe Aiello is killed. Was he Official Boss after Lombardo or just the remaining leader of the opposing faction? Perhaps it wasn't black and white and some Chicago Family members were seeing the way the tide was going opted not to follow Aiello but instead wait it out. We see that with 1/2 the members in any mafia war.
-December of 1930 at a general assembly in Boston (or was it Buffalo?) Maranzano bitches about Masseria's conduct, citing a list of things including bringing Capone into the organization and staining it wit his membership. Lo Verde was boss of Chicago at this time, but as Gentile noted, the real head was Al Capone.
-April 15, 1931 Joe Masseria is murdered. Gentile describes Capone as a capodecina at this time in Masseria's family.
-April/May 1931 a meeting is held in Chicago where Maranzano becomes boss of bosses, Capone hosts the Chicago meeting and plays the part of an amicable politician. Both Gentile and Bonanno rave about him (rare for them). During this meeting Maranzano acknowledges him as the Official Boss of Chicago.
-Sept 10, 1931, Maranzano is murdered. Following his murder, the commission is formed and originally included Al Capone.
-Oct 17, 1931, Capone is convicted and sent to prison. Meaning he was Official Chicago LCN Boss for 5 months and sat on the commission for an entire month assuming the commission was ironed out within a week of Little Ceasar's murder by the 17th.
Ricca was also involved in high-level discussions with other bosses during those meetings:
- Magaddino was recorded discussing how Ricca approached him privately in Chicago when they were electing bosses to the Commission and Magaddino took Ricca aside and told him he liked him. Ricca in turn told Magaddino they wanted him on the Commission. He seems to suggest Ricca made a comment about Capone being "overruled" in his absence. As mentioned earlier, Capone was frequently traveling and engaged in other priorities during his short time on the street as official boss. It's hard to completely interpret what he's saying, but by Magaddino's own account Ricca was influential in high-level mafia politics during the post-war period and may have made a comment that implied Capone was overruled in some matter.
- Magaddino also talks about how Toto LoVerde was "chief" of the Chicago "borgata", but represented the "Greaseballs" while they also had an "Americanized" faction (Magaddino's words). He seems to say that Paul Ricca had a dislike for LoVerde and, again, it's hard to dissect everything he's saying, but it sounds like Magaddino and LoVerde weren't friendly, while Magaddino and Ricca got along.
Another curious bit about Ricca:
- Gentile talks about Ricca being involved in the Polizzi/Romano issue in Cleveland, with Polizzi apparently having supported Ricca in some matter that would have drawn the ire of other mafia leaders. This is in context with the Romano murder but it's not clear if the Ricca issue was directly related.
The Capone/Maranzano thing is curous, too. Maranzano eventually recognized Capone as official boss, but wasn't Capone also on his hitlist alongside other new bosses he supported, like Luciano and Mangano? It seems like Maranzano went through the motion of supporting various bosses with the plan to later eliminate them.
Because Chicago had already made Diamond Joe Esposito into the mafia in the early 1920s and other families had done the same across the US, it suggests the issue Maranzano had with Capone either had to do with his personal conduct (prostitution?) or something else. Maranzano had a relationship with Valachi, a Neapolitan, who he personally inducted, so it doesn't seem he was opposed to Neapolitan members. Dominick Petrilli was also a top non-Sicilian Lucchese member who supported Maranzano.
It's also possible he had problems with the way Masseria had inducted Capone specifically to be used against Aiello, who was an ally of Castellammarese leaders Magaddino and Milazzo. Joe Bonanno said the Gaspare Milazzo murder was directly connected to the Aiello situation and Milazzo had previously attended meetings concerning the Aiello/Masseria issue. Maranzano may have also been using the Capone situation for political leverage, as there is reason to believe he spun a number of events during that time to gain momentum against Masseria.