Thanks, I'd noticed before that Nicky Dean left to Argentina and thought of some connection via Mops Volpe.Villain wrote: ↑Sat Oct 24, 2020 11:11 am ...in addition, according to one old time Camorra extortion letter, the mainlanders allegedly had many of their members located in Argentina and as I previously said in one of my posts, Tony Mops Volpe was allegedly born in Argentina, and later in 1955 Nick Circella voluntarily went to Argentina, instead of being deported to his native Italy.
On another note, the connections between the Sicilian Mafia in Chicago and mainland Southerners was longstanding. An example here was the Salvatore Di Giovanni killed in 1901 near Grand and Halsted presumably on orders of then Mafia boss Giuseppe Morici. Given the surname I had assumed that Di Giovanni was Sicilian and likely connected to the well known Di Giovanni clans from Palermo. It seems that he was actually Napolitano though. When he was killed in February of 1901 Di Giovanni was living on Polk near Wells in the South Loop with his wife Vittoria and young children Angelina (born in Maine) and Anthony (born in Cincinnati). After he was killed the young family relocated to the Uptown area on the North Side and Vittoria later died in Evanston in 1957. On her naturalization document Vittoria stated that her maiden name was Pupilella and that she was born in Matrice, Campobasso, Molise and that her deceased husband Salvatore was born in Naples. The info here is further confirmed by a marriage document for a Vittoria Pupilella and Salvatori (sic) Di Giovanni from 1900 in Covington, KY (a suburb of Cincinnati). IIRC from the Tribune after Di Giovanni's death, supposedly he was killed in retaliation for attempting to cut Morici's throat. Di Giovanni could've been a Napolitano working with the Mafia, or he very well could've been part of some Camorra network. The Tribune also stated that he may have been previously residing in St Louis, so perhaps there was a Camorra network across the Midwest during this early period.