Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by Wiseguy »

B. wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 4:47 pm Points to consider, re: Montreal's affiliation:

- Nick Rizzuto challenged the leadership decades ago as well and they killed the acting captain Paolo Violi who was also the heir apparent. The crew remained Bonanno members. We don't know the exact details of Montagna and Rizzuto's disagreement -- Rizzuto refused to allow Montagna to take control, that's for sure, but how that corresponds to wider Bonanno affiliation is unclear.

- FBI reports from the mid-1960s discuss how the Montreal decina operated autonomously and in 1968 emissaries visited Joe Zicarelli and wanted the Montreal decina to break off, but he convinced them otherwise. When Mickey Zaffarano visited them in the 1970s, he told Violi that Montreal was too independent and needed to be in closer communication with NYC.

- While Montagna went to war with the Rizzuto faction, there were Montreal Bonanno members on his side as well. The Montreal war can't be framed as "Bonanno" vs. "Rizzuto", but a conflict between Bonanno members that included other organized crime figures on each side. We don't know if the goal of the Rizzuto faction was to denounce Bonanno membership entirely or simply to maintain power while retaining their Bonanno membership.

- We lack significant inside information on who exactly has or had Bonanno membership in Montreal, with only a handful ever being confirmed in any era.

- Frank Cotroni Sr. appeared as a member being replaced on a Bonanno induction list following Cotroni's 2004 death. This indicates communication was still ongoing between Montreal and NYC. It also lends itself to Cicale's info via Baldo Amato about NYC demanding higher Christmas tribute, which they reluctantly gave to liaison Sal Montagna. This would have occurred ~2005.

- While Sal Vitale felt Vito Rizzuto was cold regarding the Sciascia murder and refused to accept a promotion to official capodecina, Rizzuto did not say anything about formally breaking off, and in fact suggested his father Nick take the position of official capodecina. This suggests Rizzuto was not intersted in outright denouncing Bonanno affiliation. The Montreal decina held a banquet for Vitale that included the entire Montreal membership and he was chaffeured around Montreal by Bonanno member Joe DiMaulo, who would later side with Sal Montagna.

- It is fair to say that Vitale received mixed messages, but his impression that Montreal was formally breaking off was his own intuitive feeling, not something substantiated by hard evidence. While Vitale was used by Massino during this period as a representative of the Bonanno leadership in meetings with other NYC leaders as well as Montreal, he was admittedly kept out of Massino's inner circle by this time and his knowledge of high-level affairs was limited. His perspective is important, but it conflicts with other information and his experience in Montreal shows as much deference to the Bonanno faily as it does a "cooling off."

--

The details from Project Otremens on Montreal haven't been made clear, but what has come out so far suggests there remains a Bonanno connection of some kind to Montreal.

- The sergeant who supervised Project Otremens recently identified Montreal's affiliation as "NYC" on his list that identified Hamilton as "Buffalo" and Toronto as "'ndrangheta." He didn't elaborate much on Montreal, but said Bonanno member Vincenzo Morena had existing mob ties there in addition to Hamilton. Morena was apparently in Montreal prior to his cooperation with Otremens.

- Following Morena's induction into the Bonanno family, Domenico Violi told him the earlier issues there were over and offered to introduce him to three well-known Montreal mafia figures, at least one of which is believed (but not confirmed) to have been inducted as a Bonanno member, and another being the son of a previous Bonanno soldier and nephew of the historic capodecina. We don't know if Violi implied making a formal introduction as "amico nostra," but if nothing else it indicates that the non-Sicilian faction in Montreal is amiable to the Bonanno family given Violi's offer to introduce Morena, a member of a Bonanno NYC decina, to three prominent Montreal mafia figures.

- Joe Violi's option of joining the Bonanno family was apparently independent of Morena's induction into the Bonanno family. It is possible if not likely that Joe Violi was offered induction into the Bonanno Montreal decina, where friends of his deceased father still lived. It is unlikely Joe Violi was offered membership by the NYC Bonanno element, who inducted Morena seemingly through his history as a Bonanno associate in the 1990s.

--

- In Scoppa's book, his knowledge of formal mafia affairs appears to be vague, suggesting he was not a formally made member of any group. He does, however, refer to a comment from Stefano Sollecito in 2015 about them recently establishing their own "family."

- If the Rizzuto faction did formally break off and receive recognition as their own mafia family, it does not necessarily rule out the possibility that other mafia figures in Montreal have retained Bonanno membership.

- From what has come out of Otremens, Violi did not mention Montreal becoming its own family, but we are still missing too much from that investigation. If the three Montreal mafia figures he referred to were now recognized as part of an official Montreal family, it would indicate the Bonannos provided some degree of approval again given his willingness to introduce an NYC-sponsored Bonanno member to them.

--

Precedent shows the Montreal decina operating independently of NYC and even attempting to back away from the Bonanno family while ultimately retaining their membership in the family over decades, including after conflicts much more severe than the Sciascia murder. For example, the Cotroni leadership sided with Joe Bonanno and remained friendly/loyal to him long after he was deposed, even attempting to break off mid-way through this process.

In the same way the Hamilton group was revealed to still be formally affiliated with Buffalo (something we would have never known without Morena's cooperation), we can't rule out a similar possibility in Montreal. We can be confident that Cosa Nostra membership and recognition is still valuable to Italian and Sicilian figures in Montreal, especially those who were previously inducted into the Bonanno family, so whatever the arrangement is, it is unlikely they made a decision that would devalue their Cosa Nostra membership.
Well, Vitale testified that Rizzuto told him, "We're our own little family, there's about 18, 20 of us, we stay by ourselves." He also said in court that Montreal was "supposed to report to Massino but they have their own little splinter group."

Up to at at least early 2004, U.S. officials apparently still considered the Montreal crew part of the Bonannos. When he was charged, Vito Rizzuto was described as "the most influential Bonanno family member in Canada, the only family with a significant presence in Canada." Of course, this was before Massino flipped later that year.

But by 2013-2014, we see the U.S. feds not only referring to the "Rizzuto Crime Family," but also differentiating between it and the "Bonanno Crime Family" in the same sentence. That can't be ignored.  

As far as precedence goes, that can only be taken so far. My point being, and this goes to my response to antimafia below, the more time goes by and there are less members that can be identified - or even potential members identified, as seems to be often the case with Montreal - the less one can rely on precedent to assume there could still be any living Bonanno members in Montreal; much less a recognized, formally affiliated crew there.
antimafia wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 4:49 pm
7. Frank Cotroni Jr.
8. Francesco Arcadi
10. Romeo Bucci
12. Tony Mucci
15. Tony Van(n)elli
18. Antonio Pietrantonio
So having removed 12 deceased names, how many of the names above are confirmed made members.

That question also goes for Vincenzo DiMaulo and Domenico Tozzi, who motorfab mentioned.
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by Laurentian »

Personnellement je ne crois pas que Alfonso Gagliano, un ancien ministre du gouvernement canadien, était un membre en règle de la Cosa Nostra, affiliée à la famille Bonanno. C'est franchement surréel! Bien qu'il a été démontré que Gagliano a eu de fréquents contacts avec des membres de la mafia. Mais cela ne fait pas de lui pour autant un membre en règle. En raison de mon service antérieur avec la GRC, je n'élaborai pas davantage.

Enfin, si vraiment Gagliano avait été un membre en règle de la mafia, connaissant la mafia pour son obsession pour le secret et la protection de l'organisation, il aurait immédiatement été assassiné après sa démission comme ministre, car il serait devenu une réelle menace pour la mafia, si jamais Gagliano avait décidé de parler...

Google translation

Personally, I do not believe that Alfonso Gagliano, a former minister of the Canadian government, was a member in good standing of the Cosa Nostra, affiliated with the Bonanno family. It's frankly surreal! While it has been shown that Gagliano had frequent contact with members of the mafia. But that doesn't make him a member in good standing. Because of my previous service with the RCMP, I will not elaborate further.

Finally, if really Gagliano had been a member in good standing of the mafia, knowing the mafia for his obsession with secrecy and protection of the organization, he would have been immediately murdered after his resignation as minister, because he would have become a real threat to the mafia, if ever Gagliano had decided to speak...
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by Laurentian »

Also I believe that none of the Frank Cotroni Sr sons were made, even if Frank Jr. was (has been) in crime activities.
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by Rocco »

stubbs wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 3:42 pm
Rocco wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 1:27 pm
Wiseguy wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 12:57 pm
Rocco wrote: Wed Mar 10, 2021 2:33 pm Im not up to date here. Is Montreal still considered a Bonanno Crew after Sal was hit up there?
It doesn't appear so. We all know what Vitale said about the breakoff post-Sciascia. Even if one goes with the Cicale version of events, and the split didn't happen as immediately as thought, Massino's defection seems to have done it. Nick Rizzuto essentially tells Montagna he doesn't recognize him as his boss. And the fact the former acting boss of the Bonanno family sided with a rebel group attempting a coup against the Rizzutos should tell you all you need to know.

Beyond that, in 2013 the U.S. Justice Department referred to Allesandro Taloni as an "associate of the Montreal-based Rizzuto organized crime family of La Cosa Nostra" and part of a drug distribution organization "affiliated with the Rizzuto and Bonanno crime families." In 2014, the DEA referred to Jimmy Cournoyer a "Canadian drug kingpin with ties to the Rizzuto and Bonanno Crime Families."  

Lastly, every known Bonanno Montreal crew member I can think of is dead. I'd be surprised if anyone can name a single verified living member at this point.

There are still connections along business lines but that shouldn't be confused with a formal ties within the same organization.
Thanks. yeah Montagna showing up telling Nick Jr hes in charge..and Nick telling him to go scratch kinda says it all. lol And Massino the Boss flipping weakens the family as a whole. The Boss flipping tells every other member they can do the same as well when push comes to shove...
It was Nick Sr he spoke to, if I remember correctly.
Typo on my part. I meant Sr
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by motorfab »

Wiseguy wrote: Fri Mar 26, 2021 6:27 am
antimafia wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 4:49 pm
7. Frank Cotroni Jr.
8. Francesco Arcadi
10. Romeo Bucci
12. Tony Mucci
15. Tony Van(n)elli
18. Antonio Pietrantonio
So having removed 12 deceased names, how many of the names above are confirmed made members.

That question also goes for Vincenzo DiMaulo and Domenico Tozzi, who motorfab mentioned.
Technically nobody (at least not to my knowledge), but these are the oldest names and/or the most likely to be part of the Montreal decina
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by motorfab »

Laurentian wrote: Fri Mar 26, 2021 6:40 am Personnellement je ne crois pas que Alfonso Gagliano, un ancien ministre du gouvernement canadien, était un membre en règle de la Cosa Nostra, affiliée à la famille Bonanno. C'est franchement surréel! Bien qu'il a été démontré que Gagliano a eu de fréquents contacts avec des membres de la mafia. Mais cela ne fait pas de lui pour autant un membre en règle. En raison de mon service antérieur avec la GRC, je n'élaborai pas davantage.

Enfin, si vraiment Gagliano avait été un membre en règle de la mafia, connaissant la mafia pour son obsession pour le secret et la protection de l'organisation, il aurait immédiatement été assassiné après sa démission comme ministre, car il serait devenu une réelle menace pour la mafia, si jamais Gagliano avait décidé de parler...

Google translation

Personally, I do not believe that Alfonso Gagliano, a former minister of the Canadian government, was a member in good standing of the Cosa Nostra, affiliated with the Bonanno family. It's frankly surreal! While it has been shown that Gagliano had frequent contact with members of the mafia. But that doesn't make him a member in good standing. Because of my previous service with the RCMP, I will not elaborate further.

Finally, if really Gagliano had been a member in good standing of the mafia, knowing the mafia for his obsession with secrecy and protection of the organization, he would have been immediately murdered after his resignation as minister, because he would have become a real threat to the mafia, if ever Gagliano had decided to speak...
Je n'ai pas d'avis définitif là dessus, il est vrai que Gagliano soit membre de la mafia est un peu surréaliste. D'ailleurs dans la plupart des livres que j'ai lu, les auteurs se montrent très prudent et prennent le témoignage de Lino avec des pincettes.

Il était en tout cas connectés à d'autres mafieux.

I don't have a definitive opinion on it, it's true that Gagliano is a member of the Mafia is a bit surreal. Moreover, in most of the books that I have read, the authors are very cautious and take Lino's testimony with a grain of salt.

He was in any case connected to other mafiosi
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

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B. wrote: Thu Mar 25, 2021 4:47 pm Points to consider, re: Montreal's affiliation:

- Nick Rizzuto challenged the leadership decades ago as well and they killed the acting captain Paolo Violi who was also the heir apparent. The crew remained Bonanno members. We don't know the exact details of Montagna and Rizzuto's disagreement -- Rizzuto refused to allow Montagna to take control, that's for sure, but how that corresponds to wider Bonanno affiliation is unclear.

- FBI reports from the mid-1960s discuss how the Montreal decina operated autonomously and in 1968 emissaries visited Joe Zicarelli and wanted the Montreal decina to break off, but he convinced them otherwise. When Mickey Zaffarano visited them in the 1970s, he told Violi that Montreal was too independent and needed to be in closer communication with NYC.

- While Montagna went to war with the Rizzuto faction, there were Montreal Bonanno members on his side as well. The Montreal war can't be framed as "Bonanno" vs. "Rizzuto", but a conflict between Bonanno members that included other organized crime figures on each side. We don't know if the goal of the Rizzuto faction was to denounce Bonanno membership entirely or simply to maintain power while retaining their Bonanno membership.

- We lack significant inside information on who exactly has or had Bonanno membership in Montreal, with only a handful ever being confirmed in any era.

- Frank Cotroni Sr. appeared as a member being replaced on a Bonanno induction list following Cotroni's 2004 death. This indicates communication was still ongoing between Montreal and NYC. It also lends itself to Cicale's info via Baldo Amato about NYC demanding higher Christmas tribute, which they reluctantly gave to liaison Sal Montagna. This would have occurred ~2005.

- While Sal Vitale felt Vito Rizzuto was cold regarding the Sciascia murder and refused to accept a promotion to official capodecina, Rizzuto did not say anything about formally breaking off, and in fact suggested his father Nick take the position of official capodecina. This suggests Rizzuto was not intersted in outright denouncing Bonanno affiliation. The Montreal decina held a banquet for Vitale that included the entire Montreal membership and he was chaffeured around Montreal by Bonanno member Joe DiMaulo, who would later side with Sal Montagna.

- It is fair to say that Vitale received mixed messages, but his impression that Montreal was formally breaking off was his own intuitive feeling, not something substantiated by hard evidence. While Vitale was used by Massino during this period as a representative of the Bonanno leadership in meetings with other NYC leaders as well as Montreal, he was admittedly kept out of Massino's inner circle by this time and his knowledge of high-level affairs was limited. His perspective is important, but it conflicts with other information and his experience in Montreal shows as much deference to the Bonanno faily as it does a "cooling off."

--

The details from Project Otremens on Montreal haven't been made clear, but what has come out so far suggests there remains a Bonanno connection of some kind to Montreal.

- The sergeant who supervised Project Otremens recently identified Montreal's affiliation as "NYC" on his list that identified Hamilton as "Buffalo" and Toronto as "'ndrangheta." He didn't elaborate much on Montreal, but said Bonanno member Vincenzo Morena had existing mob ties there in addition to Hamilton. Morena was apparently in Montreal prior to his cooperation with Otremens.

- Following Morena's induction into the Bonanno family, Domenico Violi told him the earlier issues there were over and offered to introduce him to three well-known Montreal mafia figures, at least one of which is believed (but not confirmed) to have been inducted as a Bonanno member, and another being the son of a previous Bonanno soldier and nephew of the historic capodecina. We don't know if Violi implied making a formal introduction as "amico nostra," but if nothing else it indicates that the non-Sicilian faction in Montreal is amiable to the Bonanno family given Violi's offer to introduce Morena, a member of a Bonanno NYC decina, to three prominent Montreal mafia figures.

- Joe Violi's option of joining the Bonanno family was apparently independent of Morena's induction into the Bonanno family. It is possible if not likely that Joe Violi was offered induction into the Bonanno Montreal decina, where friends of his deceased father still lived. It is unlikely Joe Violi was offered membership by the NYC Bonanno element, who inducted Morena seemingly through his history as a Bonanno associate in the 1990s.

--

- In Scoppa's book, his knowledge of formal mafia affairs appears to be vague, suggesting he was not a formally made member of any group. He does, however, refer to a comment from Stefano Sollecito in 2015 about them recently establishing their own "family."

- If the Rizzuto faction did formally break off and receive recognition as their own mafia family, it does not necessarily rule out the possibility that other mafia figures in Montreal have retained Bonanno membership.

- From what has come out of Otremens, Violi did not mention Montreal becoming its own family, but we are still missing too much from that investigation. If the three Montreal mafia figures he referred to were now recognized as part of an official Montreal family, it would indicate the Bonannos provided some degree of approval again given his willingness to introduce an NYC-sponsored Bonanno member to them.

--

Precedent shows the Montreal decina operating independently of NYC and even attempting to back away from the Bonanno family while ultimately retaining their membership in the family over decades, including after conflicts much more severe than the Sciascia murder. For example, the Cotroni leadership sided with Joe Bonanno and remained friendly/loyal to him long after he was deposed, even attempting to break off mid-way through this process.

In the same way the Hamilton group was revealed to still be formally affiliated with Buffalo (something we would have never known without Morena's cooperation), we can't rule out a similar possibility in Montreal. We can be confident that Cosa Nostra membership and recognition is still valuable to Italian and Sicilian figures in Montreal, especially those who were previously inducted into the Bonanno family, so whatever the arrangement is, it is unlikely they made a decision that would devalue their Cosa Nostra membership.
Good Stuff. I was always under the impression that the Montreal Bonanno crew was established by Galante thru the Heroin pipeline from Sicily to Montreal to NYC.
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

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Rocco wrote: Fri Mar 26, 2021 7:07 am Good Stuff. I was always under the impression that the Montreal Bonanno crew was established by Galante thru the Heroin pipeline from Sicily to Montreal to NYC.
Not yet Sicily, it was France (Marseille) at first. Some Corsican/Marseille mobsters like Antoine D'Agostino, Jean-Baptiste Croce, Paul Mondoloni or Jean Venturi were on the run or settled in Montreal. The Galante/Cotronis/Montreal decina were supplied by them. The Sicilian pipeline comes after, at the early 80's
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

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BTW, another very possible candidate is Emanuele Ragusa, who presumably participated in the murder of the 3 capos in 1981
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

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- While Montagna went to war with the Rizzuto faction, there were Montreal Bonanno members on his side as well. The Montreal war can't be framed as "Bonanno" vs. "Rizzuto", but a conflict between Bonanno members that included other organized crime figures on each side. We don't know if the goal of the Rizzuto faction was to denounce Bonanno membership entirely or simply to maintain power while retaining their Bonanno membership.

I somewhat agree here. The Rizzutos issue was taking orders from MONTAGNA, in the same way they didnt respect Violi. I think they have respect for the Bonnanos, its just that the Bonnanos have no real bearing on the operations up there. They dont finance Montreal or anything. It's not NY money in the gambling, construction, anything. All that, the business part of the Rizzutos comes from association with the Sicilian Mafia.... and it WAS THE 50s ... things change....




- It is fair to say that Vitale received mixed messages, but his impression that Montreal was formally breaking off was his own intuitive feeling, not something substantiated by hard evidence. While Vitale was used by Massino during this period as a representative of the Bonanno leadership in meetings with other NYC leaders as well as Montreal, he was admittedly kept out of Massino's inner circle by this time and his knowledge of high-level affairs was limited. His perspective is important, but it conflicts with other information and his experience in Montreal shows as much deference to the Bonanno faily as it does a "cooling off."


What you call deference I call POLITICS. What was Vito to do? Go to war over Sciascia? Send crews to NY to wack all the capos? Its not a reasonable response. The reasonable thing he could have done was be very polite, smile, not give away any information, and show Vitale the door, then business as usual...



- Joe Violi's option of joining the Bonanno family was apparently independent of Morena's induction into the Bonanno family. It is possible if not likely that Joe Violi was offered induction into the Bonanno Montreal decina, where friends of his deceased father still lived. It is unlikely Joe Violi was offered membership by the NYC Bonanno element, who inducted Morena seemingly through his history as a Bonanno associate in the 1990s.

A poster had an interesting take on this. He said it was Morena pushing the Violis to join the Bonnanos, so he could TAPE IT!! I found this quite an intriguing thought....



- If the Rizzuto faction did formally break off and receive recognition as their own mafia family, it does not necessarily rule out the possibility that other mafia figures in Montreal have retained Bonanno membership.

True. But I really think Morena was the beginning of the Bonnanos trying to rebuild their crew. Who would have made the Montrealers? Who made Miriarchi IF hes made? Valiquette? These are CANADIAN guys..... does anyone in NY know them? Or were the Rizzuto allowed to conduct their own ceremonies? But they have to send a list of proposed names around, right? It doesnt really make sense .....


- From what has come out of Otremens, Violi did not mention Montreal becoming its own family, but we are still missing too much from that investigation. If the three Montreal mafia figures he referred to were now recognized as part of an official Montreal family, it would indicate the Bonannos provided some degree of approval again given his willingness to introduce an NYC-sponsored Bonanno member to them.


I gotta check the book, was this the same time as Sollecitos " Family" being formed? I know around the same time as the Violi statements, Renaud put the article out describing Montreal as autonomous cells. This was when the Scoppas were hitting people, and they were all probably avoiding each other, with all the potential leaders in jail or dead. The same time period I think the Scoppas were the most senior figures in the street I think Sollecito was in jail when Violi said that? And Sollecito formed his "Family" when he got out, excluding Scoppa? I gotta check the timeline.......



A question....

Do you really believe Nick and Vito would take orders FROM LoPresti? Like really? You think they were under Sciascia, who gave THEM orders THROUGH LoPresti? Really? I know LoPresti and Sciascia had lots on Mafia row, but I always took that as their CLOSENESS to the Rizzuto, Dejardins had a lot too, right?
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

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Also, on Vitale. He wasnt coming there to run shit, like Montagna. He didn't even really try to GIVE them any orders, he ASKED who they THOUGHT should run it. If anything, THATS deferential, and Massino scolded him for it. For not APPOINTING a capo. The fact he even WENT up there and didnt call Vito or Nick down to NY is more deference..... Gotti, say what you will about his leadership would have NEVER did that. These subtleties of power were not lost on Massino. I'm sure Vito picked up on Vitales hesitance and felt he didnt need to fear from him.
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by Laurentian »

La police redoute le retour du caïd Raynald Desjardins

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2021/ ... desjardins
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by motorfab »

Laurentian wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 2:29 am La police redoute le retour du caïd Raynald Desjardins

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2021/ ... desjardins
"Ça prend pas la tête à Papineau pour savoir que Desjardins, il va se venger"

Alors là, j'admets humblement qu'il va falloir m'aider à comprendre le sens de cette phrase. Je viens de chercher et trouver que c'était un homme politique du Quebec, mais alors pour le reste, j'avoue que c'est un peu flou :o

Apart that, considering de Desjardins' liabilities, I don't think he's going to finish the year alive. he seems pretty isolated now
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by Laurentian »

motorfab wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 3:49 am
Laurentian wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 2:29 am La police redoute le retour du caïd Raynald Desjardins

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2021/ ... desjardins
"Ça prend pas la tête à Papineau pour savoir que Desjardins, il va se venger"

Alors là, j'admets humblement qu'il va falloir m'aider à comprendre le sens de cette phrase. Je viens de chercher et trouver que c'était un homme politique du Quebec, mais alors pour le reste, j'avoue que c'est un peu flou :o

Apart that, considering de Desjardins' liabilities, I don't think he's going to finish the year alive. he seems pretty isolated now
C'est une expression typiquement québécoise. :-)

Voici un lien qui explique le sens de cette expression.

https://www.je-parle-quebecois.com/lexi ... ineau.html
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Re: Montreal Mafia status - Post Rizzuto Era

Post by motorfab »

Laurentian wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 4:03 am
motorfab wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 3:49 am
Laurentian wrote: Thu Apr 01, 2021 2:29 am La police redoute le retour du caïd Raynald Desjardins

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2021/ ... desjardins
"Ça prend pas la tête à Papineau pour savoir que Desjardins, il va se venger"

Alors là, j'admets humblement qu'il va falloir m'aider à comprendre le sens de cette phrase. Je viens de chercher et trouver que c'était un homme politique du Quebec, mais alors pour le reste, j'avoue que c'est un peu flou :o

Apart that, considering de Desjardins' liabilities, I don't think he's going to finish the year alive. he seems pretty isolated now
C'est une expression typiquement québécoise. :-)

Voici un lien qui explique le sens de cette expression.

https://www.je-parle-quebecois.com/lexi ... ineau.html
Bon dieu que j'aime le Français Québecois :lol: . Merci pour l'explication ;) (l'autre fois j'ai appris ce qu'était "faire la charlotte", j'ai bien rigolé aussi)
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