I got that same impression. He all but confirmed it when Rizzi told Fiato that he had just been made and is now a capo, that he's pulling Fiato close and told him to dress up tomorrow. Fiato shows up all decked out and is instead sent extort someone.Costigan wrote: ↑Wed Aug 19, 2020 4:10 amExactly. It sounds like Rizzi was bullshittin' Fiato, trying to make himself sound important. Big plans and all that.Grouchy Sinatra wrote: ↑Tue Aug 18, 2020 7:08 pm Why would anyone as high up as Dellacroce even care about the Los Angeles family, much less "sanction" anyone or anything, when the Gambinos already had guys out there?
1 You don't generally tell an associate you've just been made. It may be understood but its not announced. Then again I was not there.
2 Fratianno's version doesn't indicate he made Rizzi a capo after the car ceremony, he does later tell Tieri that Mike's his skipper several months later in NY.
3 Even if true, a newly-minted capo doesn't have the authority to set up a ceremony. A capo would have to go through the formal process of recommending someone and there'd be a discussion and decision. If a captain told his boss that he just made someone the consequences for such a violation of protocol would be on par with Frat misrepresenting himself. So Fiato was either lying or was lied to.
Should be noted though that Rizzi was well connected to NYC via the Gallos who were connected to Dellacroce. There's a good chance that both men knew each other and just what that led to in LA is still very much up for debate. We already know that after Fratianno flipped the burden landed on Rizzi's lap, based on what all the sources say about Milano, Rizzi is a guy Milano would avoid and rather not be around. We don't know if this led to an official shelving or how it played out. But if Rizzi was ostracized and had connections to Dellacroce, its possible. Its possible he was able to "switch" families. I could see Milano not caring in the least and giving his consent, or maybe Dellacroce said: "You're disrespecting a friend of ours on account of that rat, you don't want to do nothing with this guy then we're taking him." Maybe DiLeonardo telling Milano the way it is in his territory isn't the first time the Gambinos punked him. Whatever the case, it's possible Milano viewed it as an advantage because the LA family of sleepy housecats were Hollywood wiseguys living middle class lives, growing old and playing the part with businessman and celebrities who wanted to lay claim to being connected. Why should the FBI focus on them when you got this Rizzi-Fiato crew running around engaged in violent shakedowns and just drawing heat, alot of it? But on the other hand, there is recording of Gelfuso of the Milanos poaching Fiato for membership which casts a cloud over what I'm speculating.
What I do know is that this shortlived Rizzi Crime Family was a crew with one made member (Rizzi) surrounded by a well-rounded crew of hustlers, nothing more. This was not a Family, not a decina of the Gambinos. In 150 years of history, this has never occurred before or after. It would be like the Gambinos taking in the Gallos formally and letting them form a semi-independent 6th Family. There's no precedent and if there was it would only lead to internal chaos which the mafia system is in place to avoid.
Biggest takeaway after finally taking a deepdive into the Animal's book is that Fiato was never an LCN member. His entire "Rizzi Family Acting Boss" claim was never a formal position in any formal group. Operationally though, he was a lieutenant in Rizzi's LA activity and the people under him. But Rizzi was never more than a capo (if he was even that post-Fratianno) without any formal LCN soldiers under him.