OcSleeper wrote: ↑Mon May 30, 2022 5:03 pm
- In the book they mentioned a story Scoppa told them about a guy who was kidnapped in 2008 from a gas station and was tortured and the body was never found. If I'm not mistaken, the details given matched to Mario Marabella. So did they ever make the connection and if so why didn't they add it to the book? Did they ask Scoppa if it was Marabella?
- Who did they believe "the mafia of Toronto and and Italy" was?
- A few Lapresse articles have predicted a busy summer due to tensions in the mafia, have Seguin/Thibault heard this from their sources as well? What's causing the tension?
1. The book's co-authors said you were absolutely right about this unnamed person in the book being Mario Marabella. They, the book's editors, and the publisher (ECW Press for both the French and English editions) felt uncomfortable naming Marabella because there was no corpse (my note: the absence of a corpse always has a number of negative effects on, and consequences for, the decedent's surviving family members).
Also my note: We know that Paolo Renda and Giuseppe "Joe" Renda, whose bodies have never been found, have been named in a number of articles and books quite some time after their respective disappearances; so there does seem to be some contradiction in the rationale for reporting on missing-and-never-found mobsters or mentioning them in books. What there is no contradiction about is that law enforcement and the media will not, as a rule, divulge the name of a person who has been killed until the person's next of kin have been notified.
2. I did not directly ask the authors to elaborate which mafia groups in Toronto and Italy gave their approval of Scoppa as an interim leader or -- if all went well -- as a permanent leader of the "Montreal Mafia." Rather, I thought I would elicit more information by asking Séguin and Thibault about what they thought Scoppa's formal mafia affiliation was or whether Scoppa even had one. As background to my question, I mentioned that I have read in the Quebec press and in a couple of French-language organized-crime books that Scoppa was
un homme d'honneur indépendante -- I told the authors how, for years, I found this description absolutely frustrating till I realized that the writers likely had good reason to describe him by using an oxymoron and that, in
La source, Scoppa's own description of how he ostensibly joined a mafia group in Montreal raises grave questions about whether he was made into the Bonannos.
Séguin and Thibault each honestly answered that they too are unsure what Scoppa's formal mafia affiliation was; and that the description of Scoppa as an independent man of honour is apt for the time being. The authors don't know him to have been a member of the 'ndrangheta, at which point I mentioned that the recently sentenced Dominico Scarfo said that his grandfather was in the 'ndrangheta but didn't say that he himself (or his father) is an 'ndrangheta member.
I mentioned to Séguin and Thibault that before Buffalo Family member Paul Volpe was murdered in 1983, police had belatedly detected a flurry of telephone calls that went to Montreal, New York, and Italy in relation to some plotting against Volpe -- all this to tell the authors I am not entirely surprised by mafia groups in Toronto and Italy providing input on who they wanted as the next leader of the "Montreal Mafia."
3. I didn't ask Séguin and Thibault whether, based on the police's prediction of a
printemps chaud (hot spring) in Quebec, they predicted a hot summer, i.e., one marked by violence over the next four months, more or less.