InCamelot wrote: ↑Mon Jun 13, 2022 3:27 pm
In the subjected of being venerated: as far as your research can tell, did Alo (or any captains, especially the older ones for that matter) have any role in OK'ing the Chin for boss in the early 80s? Or were captains not voting the way they used to by then and it was simply passed from Tieri to Lombardo to Gigante? I haven't seen anything to indicate the captains were deliberating on who would succeed Tieri in 1980.
It seems like one school of thought believes "if you're retired you're retired" while another believes their word in political matters always has some sway (if they choose to be involved of course).
I'm sure Alo had a role in okaying the new boss. It's unclear how much influence he had, especially in the late 1970s and 1980s. By that point, various members of the Greenwich Village and 116th Street Crew dominated the family's politics.
Either way, it's tradition for the Genovese to vote and discuss their bosses:
Vito - strongarmed Costello into retirement; regardless, all the captains went to his house at a meeting in NJ in May 1957 and pledged their support (Augie Pisano was the only exception)
Catena - series of meetings between February and April 1969 where the captains had to beg him to accept the position
Tieri - series of meetings between August and October 1972; eventually, Tieri ( who was the UB or AB at the time ) edged Lombardo, who was the other serious candidate
1980 - There was a high-level meeting in late 1980. In this meeting, Tieri stepped down as boss. Then, depending on which source you want to believe, Fat Tony got elected boss, or they set up a ruling panel with Chin, Fat Tony, and Lombardo sitting on it. Then Fat Tony had a stroke in January 1981, and Lombardo took over as official boss from February for most of the year. By late 1981, Lombardo had stepped down, and Chin took over. By that point, Fat Tony had recovered and became the de facto acting boss; Lombardo retired.
JoelTurner wrote: ↑Mon Jun 13, 2022 6:39 pm
It would be interesting if the was the what triggered his secrecy. What was his and Fat Tony's exact ranks at this time?
Lombardo would have been acting captain for Mike Coppola, but then what was Fat Tony?
The 116th Street Crew had a special arrangement. In the late 1950s and 1960s, Coppola, Lombardo, and Fat Tony ran the crew together. Almost like a panel. Coppola was the capo, of course, but the other two had influential roles and technically ran everything for him. New recruits went in front of all three to get approval, etc. So when Fat Tony saved Barone's life, he could've been only a soldier, but he wielded more influence than a regular soldier. Lombardo was the same way, to the point he surprised even the FBI that he had a low rank.