Acting boss:
On Joe Bonanno:"Fratianno lived fast for the months he led the Los Angeles Family of La Cosa Nostra. While it enabled him to make a giant impact- expanding operations in gambling, loan sharking and pornography- it ultimately left him with powerful enemies.
Dominic Brooklier and the hierarchy of the LA mob were sent to prison in June 1975 on a federal conspiracy charge. In their absence, Brooklier authorized Fratianno, who had been living in SF, to become acting underboss for LA, the number two man for West Coast operations, working in concert with the acting boss, Louie Dragna. But when Fratianno found Dragna, a millionare ladies' dress manufacturer, suffering from a bad case of cold feet, he took it upon himself to play the role of number one in LA, the boss- a title of nobility by his reckoning. And, as the weeks and months passed, he found it necessary and comforting- in order to achieve his goals of enriching himself and the LA Family- to introduce himself as the boss, sometimes neglecting to mention his partnership with Dragna.
During the next 18 months, he initiated some potentially profitable deals, generally conspiring with or taking orders from Dragna. A few times he visited with Brooklier in prison, to fill him in.
Fratianno did not make a lot of money, but- and this was more important to him- he made friends and gained influence. His name was circulated in every mob stronghold in the US, he made sure of that by traveling the length of the country, to towns and cities he had never been seen before, to introduce himself and proclaim his respect for the ways of LCN.
By 1977, he had initiated deals, arranged investments, or fought turf wars in NYC, Hollywood, Florida, Cleveland, Las Vegas, SF, Albuquerque, Palm Springs and elsewhere.
As opportunities presented themselves, Fratianno began making unilateral decisions about the LA Fam- a small enterprise compared to the east coast Families. He initiated one new member, sought others, and was arranging long term investments. It was inevitable that when "the old man" Brooklier, got out of prison he would take offense at Fratianno's free-wheeling lifestyle.
By Jan of 1977 Brooklier was back in control. And by June, when he sent word out to the bosses of LCN in other cities that Fratianno had been "misrepresenting himself," all the new friendships dissolved. He tried straightening things out with his partners and colleagues but one one would listen.
The other bosses recognized their own vulnerability in Fratianno's actions. They would never abandon Brooklier.
Joe BonannoAccording to informants, Bompensiero was traveling around the country, talking to bosses, plotting to get Bonanno reinstated so they could take over.
"There may have been rumors, but there was no fuckin' plot. Look, Bomp wasn't interested in taking over LA. You have to be elected boss by the members and Bomp didn't have the juice for that. And Bonanno knows there's no way he's going back into action. I don't even know the guy, never spoke to him. But he know NY would clip him in a hot fucking minute if he tried to get back into this thing."
"I know Bomp used to talk like that. I mean, he'd say things like "I'm taking over this Family" and "Those guys don't tell me what to do in SD, this is my town." But the only guy who ever thought about taking over was me. I had the juice to get elected boss if Sciortino and Brooklier weren't in the way."
Should be noted that this book DOES NOT mention Fratianno's alleged transfer to and back from Chicago."The government didn't want Fratianno to take the stand in my case because the government knew ahead of time that Fratianno had nothing bad to say about me. If he had been given the chance to testify, Fratianno would have said that he didn't know me and that the Bonannos were not part of organized crime.
In October 1980, Fratianno got to say as much anyway in the Los Angeles trial of five men implicated in the death of Frank Bompensiero.
In that trial, Fratianno said: "Joe Bananas ain't got nothing to do with organized crime."
Attorneys kept badgering Fratianno about the Bonanno family and one point Fratianno blurted out: "Sir, you've asked me that twenty times. I never met anybody in that family. I don't know what they look like."