Chris Christie wrote: ↑Mon Aug 10, 2020 7:12 am
I am cautious about the west coast because the only real source we have is Fratianno and his opinions influenced Craig Fiato and Kenji Gallo who continued the narrative. All of them paint Milano as the real docile don. If Tommy Gambino was under since at least 2001, that jives with the time Milano lost the sit to DiLeonardo and that may have been his response to that. Having Gambino would have likely strengthened the relationship and Milano's ability to get better deals with NY. From a functional perspective, an underboss wasn't necessary so it had to have served some political purpose.
Pete Milano and Tommy Gambino have similar stories. They were both sons of highly regarded mafia members from other areas who came to LA and joined a family that had limited underworld opportunities long before either of them arrived. Neither of them brought an impressive reputation of their own with them.
- Milano was from Cleveland, whose organization was arguably in worse shape than LA. Even if he stayed in touch with "Joe Loose" to keep the Cleveland->LA pipeline hot, what could the two of them cook up?
- Gambino is a different story. In the last ten years we've found out that his uncle is a boss in Palermo, his father Rosario is still active with the Sicilian mafia, and his relatives and childhood friends are the ruling faction of the Gambino family in NYC. In the past year there have been three cases showing increasingly strong ties between the US and Sicilian mafia, one of these cases involving Gambino's immediate relatives and another that made reference to putting Sicilian mafia slot machines in California.
This doesn't mean Tommy Gambino is suddenly seen as a tough gangster and cowering shop owners are dropping off envelopes for him in LA, but if anyone is going to be able to do something with his "union card" on the west coast, it is someone with Tommy Gambino's connections to prominent mafia groups. He wanted mafia membership even though his father and relatives were all serving long prison sentences and he accepted a promotion to underboss. It's not as if he was scared to turn down Pete Milano's offer of promotion.
Why would Milano promote Gambino to underboss? Many of these guys want to keep their organizations alive if they can. It's not illegal to be a member of the mafia and induct/promote members like it is in Sicily, where even mafia association is a serious crime. Unless they lose interest, turn against the mafia, or truly have no candidates, I don't see what the incentive is not to induct members and maintain connections when possible (and it's not always possible).
Milano was born into the mafia, as was Tommy Gambino, and was willing to be a mafia boss at a time where it gave him little material benefit. As DiLeonardo's story shows, Milano still wanted to play the role even in the mid-1990s. Same thing for Joe Todaro today, who like Milano has been surrounded by the mafia his entire life. He has Goodfellas quotes on his delivery driver's hats. It might not be what it was, but for these guys being in the mafia is not like a goth phase they went through as teenagers that they now laugh at. It's their identity and even if they're not killing people and counting stacks of syndicate cash, the organization is who they are.
If Milano wanted to give the organization a chance at surviving in some form, Gambino was the well-connected choice. The LA family has always depended on members with ties to other cities. The Dragnas with the Luccheses, Licata and Brooklier with Detroit, Milano with Cleveland, Tommy Gambino with the NYC Gambinos and Sicily. If Milano had an interest in the LA family staying alive even another five years, it makes sense why he'd point to Gambino even if there's very little to be done in LA. Except, you know, induct Canadian real estate agents who get murdered in an Ontario mob war.
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If I wrote a movie about the LA family, I would include a scene showing Pete Milano on his deathbed:
Milano: Massino, come here... I am going to make you the new boss. You must remember one thing... to be a successful boss.... Wiseguy must not believe we exist. Wiseguy must not believe... it is even possible... do you understand?!
Gambino: Zu Pietro, don't speak. You must rest.
Milano: I am not long for this world... and I must pay God for my sins. Massino... you will be a good boss. Just remember... Wiseguy...
Cue Tommy Gambino leaving the hospital and immediately going to Disneyland where he uses a payphone inside of the park to call Sicilian mafia members. Sicilian mafia hitmen fly to LA and on Gambino's orders they begin participating in violent mafia warfare in Hamilton, Ontario. A montage of the violence is shown.
Wiseguy is then shown turning on his computer and reading news about the Los Angeles family's involvement in the Ontario mob war. He screams, "It is not possible!" as Tommy Gambino's face is superimposed on the screen. Gambino's mouth turns into an evil grin and the scene fades to black.
The movie wins an Oscar.