These two don't get mentioned much but were significant figures in Buffalo before their double murder in August 1933. They also have connections to people of note.
Brief Background
- Vincenzo (b. 1894) and Salvatore (b.1896) came to Buffalo from Licata, Agrigento, same hometown as much of the Cleveland Family as well as Chicago member Vincenzo "Jack McGurn" Gibaldi and Gambino soldier Andrea Torregrossa. Longtime Buffalo member John Cammilleri was from Campobello di Licata, inland from Licata, and a Cammilleri from Licata was on the same ship as Salvatore Callea when he arrived to the US in the early 1910s. There were thriving Agrigento colonies not only in WNY as a whole but also in Buffalo itself, producing a number of important mafia members.
Salvatore Callea:
- Vincenzo Callea looks to have come to the US initially in the early 1910s like his brother. Returned to Sicily at some point and arrived back to a relative in Brooklyn in 1920. Visited Sicily again and returned in 1923 with the brother-in-law of future Cleveland boss Salvatore Todaro, Stefano Giglio, from Licata like Todaro and Callea. Nicola Gentile had Stefano Giglio's Akron address in his address book and talked in his memoir about Todaro. Giglio has not been identiied as a mafioso but his relation to Todaro, friendship with Nicola Gentile, and voyage from Sicily with Salvatore Callea show he was well-accepted in these circles.
- Salvatore's voyages follow a similar pattern as Vincenzo. Another brother, Giuseppe, may have been in Buffalo before them but haven't come across info confirming/denying his involvement in mafia activity. I wasn't able to look into their family tree to substantiate relationships to other known mafia surnames from Licata but it wouldn't be a surprise to find some.
Mafia Activity
- Vincenzo Callea was arrested for bootlegging in Cleveland in 1921 and then again in Buffalo in 1927, his bond in the latter case posted by Calogero Romano who put up his home. Calogero Romano is listed in Nicola Gentile's address book and came from Pietraperzia, Enna, being described in Tom Hunt's book as an esteemed senior mafia figure very close to the Carlisis, moving from Chicago to Buffalo like them. Roy Carlisi would go on to marry Calogero Romano's daughter and become a Magaddino capodecina. The Carlisis were from Canicatti, Arigento, and were in turn close to the Calleas like their in-law Romano.
- In 1923, Vincenzo Callea was living in Welland, Ontario, near the New York border. Perhaps he moved to Canada for a time in response to his Cleveland arrest or there was another reason, but he was a short distance from Buffalo and the Buffalo Family by then already had an active Agrigentini group in Hamilton from Racalmuto. That same year his wife and children arrived to North America coming from Licata, heading to Vincenzo in Ontario. Arriving on the same ship were the Monachino brothers, Saverio and Pasquale, who came from Realmonte, Agrigento, and were heading to Montreal, Quebec. The Monachinos would go on to be Buffalo members in Auburn, NY and Canada. Another Callea from Licata, named Gaetano like the Callea brothers' father and sons but not proper age to be them, was also on the ship but appears to be accompanying the Monachino brothers suggesting relationships already existed in Sicily between coastal Agrigentini heading to WNY-Ontario.
- By 1924 Vincenzo's wife and children had returned to Sicily and that year Vincenzo accompanied them back to North America, heading directly to Buffalo instead of Canada. Vincenzo Callea and his brother Sam quickly became involved in bootlegging and went on to invest in restaurants and taverns frequented by other underworld figures.
- The Callea brothers were carried as suspects in the Filippo Mazzara and Giseppe DiBenedetto murders in 1927 and 1929, respectively, whether as conspirators or direct participants I'm unsure. Filippo Mazzara and Giuseppe DiBenedetto were from Castellammare del Golfo and both influential in the Buffalo Family. Along with the Calleas' suspected inolvement, LE believed the murder of Mazzara was connected to the Cleveland mafia war happening at this time and may have included assailants from Cleveland. Comments on the Magaddino tapes suggest Stefano was at odds with Mazzara in the 1920s so there may have been multiple factors at play and we can't rule out Magaddino working in tandem with the Calleas.
- Law enforcement noted telephone contact between the Calleas and Stefano Magaddino as well as phone contact with the Porrellos in Cleveland, from Licata like the Calleas. The Calleas were very close to their compaesani the Porrello brothers and partners in a joint Cleveland / Buffalo bootlegging operation during Prohibition. Angelo Porrello, living in Buffalo by the early 1930s, was killed in early 1933 in front of a tavern formerly owned by the Calleas.
Double Murder
- In August 1933, Vincenzo and Salvatore Callea were shot to death in front of their Buffalo restaurant by a team of up to five unknown men, two or three of which served as shooters using pistols and a shotgun. Two innocent bystanders were also injured. Allegedly the Calleas received a call from an unidentified person who asked to meet them at their restaurant. While the Calleas waited outside for their associate, the hit team pulled up in a car and occupants jumped out and began shooting. Salvatore Callea dove into a friend/associate's vehicle where he was killed by one of the gunmen, while Vincenzo was shot to death on the street.
- At the time of the murder the Calleas were described by authorities as "two of the largest alcohol distillery operators in Western and Central New York." They said the Callea brothers' operations involved multiple US states and letters were discovered in the deceased brothers' possession showing correspondence with Cicero, Illinois, as well as Detroit and Cleveland. Note the Calleas' friends the Carlisis were closely tied to Cicero and that's where Sam Carlisi later gained power.
- The double homicide of the Callea brothers is generally attributed to a bootlegging feud, though this may have been law enforcement or the media's best guess given their lack of inside access into what was going on at the time. I haven't seen later sources or insiders discuss the murdered Calleas. Their murders came on the heels of internecine warfare that killed many Licatesi in Cleveland, including their friends the Porrellos, so it's possible the Callea murders spilled over from Cleveland given the Cleveland war was largely the Licatesi massacring each other. The Buffalo murder of Angelo Porrello in front of a former Callea establishment just months prior to the Callea double murder lends itself to this connection.
- A Police Commissioner stated the belief that killers came from Cleveland to commit the Callea double murder. However, to my knowledge only the following local men were arrested: Joseph SanFilippo (b. ~1882), Charles Manguso (bartender at the Calleas' restaurant; b. ~1882), and Joseph Bonvissuto (owned the car Salvatore Callea was killed in; b. 1897). SanFilippo and Manguso (his true name likely Mancuso, though he used Manguso on records) were Sicilians but I can't pin down the hometowns -- Bonvissuto was from Licata like the Calleas and previously lived in Cleveland, though he doesn't appear to have been part of the hit team, rather had another car parked nearby.
- Roy Carlisi and his father Giuseppe were questioned by police about the Callea murders. It's unclear if they were suspected of involvement or were simply interviewed due to their friendship/association with the Calleas.
Other Connections
- Giuseppe Carlisi was linked to underworld activity and likely an early member, his sons becoming leaders in both Buffalo and Chicago. In addition to sons Roy and Sam, at least one other Carlisi son was involved in underworld activity in Chicago and a cousin, Al Tornabene, would go on to be a high-ranking Chicago member. Giuseppe Carlisi's nephew Joe "Frisco" Gentile (son of Carlisi's stepbrother) was murdered in Chicago in 1961, with Roy Carlisi captured on an FBI tape telling Stefano Magaddino he'd be traveling to Chicago to tend to this matter. Figures like the Calleas and Roy's in-law Calogero Romano tell us something about the men Roy Carlisi came up around.
- Buffalo member Charles Cassaro, heritage in Ravanusa, Agrigento, may have been a relative of the Carlisis. Roy and Sam's mother was a Cassaro and their hometown of Canicatti isn't far from Ravanusa. Roy and Sam Carlisi's sister married a Charles Cassaro and they moved from Chicago to Gloversville which fell under the Utica group's jurisdiction, though I don't know if this Charles Cassaro was the Buffalo member or a different one. The Buffalo member Charles Cassaro was close to other members from Agrigento like Stefano Cannarozzo (family from Ravanusa like Cassaro) and John Cammilleri (hometown right next to Ravanusa). A 1977 FBI report IDs Charles Cassaro as a capodecina alongside Roy Carlisi -- depending on the timeline of his promotion it's possible Cassaro took over for Cammilleri, murdered in 1974.
- Salvatore Callea's son Gaetano "Thomas" Callea (1921-1967) was identified by an FBI source as a made member of the Buffalo Family at the time of his death. He was close with member Salvatore Bonito and involved in bookmaking. Thomas Callea's wake was attended by captains Roy Carlisi and John Cammilleri, as well as underboss Fred Randaccio and members Peter A. Magaddino, Peter J. Magaddino, Antonio Magaddino, and Joseph Fino. His father's murder seems to have been no roadblock to Gaetano joining the organization and being properly honored by the leadership. He died young but I've seen nothing to suggest it was nefarious.
- Another significant Cleveland / Buffalo connection from the early period is Lorenzo Lupo, capodecina under Joe Lonardo in the mid-1920s and part of the faction loyal to capo dei capi Salvatore D'Aquila. Lupo was a boxing promoter from Vallelunga, Caltanissetta, and a cousin of the DiCarlos of Buffalo. He is believed to have become leader of the Lonardo faction after Joe Lonardo's death before being murdered himself in 1928. Later Lupo's relative Joe DiCarlo Jr. and his loyalists fled to Youngstown where according to Angelo Lonardo at least one of them (Tronolone) transferred from Buffalo to Cleveland.
- Stefano Magaddino talked about Joe Lonardo being actively involved in an early 1920s Assemblea meeting in Buffalo to help settle a volatile leadership dispute within the local Family. Michael DiLeonardo was told by Salvatore D'Aquila's decendants that Buffalo and Cleveland were two of the Families closest to D'Aquila, with Gentile's account of Lonardo supporting this. There do seem to be strong political links between Buffalo, Cleveland, and D'Aquila during this time.
- The rival Porrello faction is said to have been Masseria loyalists and the Calleas are noted for their close relationship to the Porrellos, suggesting they may have been part of the political opposition in both Buffalo and Cleveland where the sitting leadership was pro-D'Aquila. Adding to this is Vincenzo Callea traveling with Todaro's brother-in-law, Todaro being another Cleveland leader who had serious problems with the Lonardos.
- Jack McGurn apparently had a connection to Cleveland too, being from Licata. While his 1936 murder wasn't connected to these Cleveland / Buffalo intrigues like the Calleas, it adds to the pile of dead Licatesi. I wonder if any other group of compaesani was killed in such high numbers in such a short period. They were often the ones killing each other too.
----
Unfortunately the early Calleas don't get mentioned by later FBI sources from what I've seen so we don't have proper context for who they were within the organization itself. The later membership of Salvatore's son Gaetano and Vincenzo/Salvatore's high position in interstate bootlegging in collaboration with the Porrellos is a good indication they were made members. They appear to have been a hub for the Agrigento network in Buffalo and brought the politics of Cleveland and Buffalo in close proximity, with indications of ties to Chicago, Brooklyn, and other cities.
Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
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Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Great post as always
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Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Great job B, never heard of them before
Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Interesting... there was a Bennie Callea in Rockford (died in 2011) who was a bookmaker for the Rockford LCN. His family was from Aragona. The Calleia family as well which I think was derived from Callea, specifically Gregorio Calleia who was born in West Virginia before moving to Rockford. He was an influential alderman that was photographed by the FBI leaving Phil Emordeno's funeral.B. wrote: ↑Thu Jun 30, 2022 12:19 am These two don't get mentioned much but were significant figures in Buffalo before their double murder in August 1933. They also have connections to people of note.
Brief Background
- Vincenzo (b. 1894) and Salvatore (b.1896) came to Buffalo from Licata, Agrigento, same hometown as much of the Cleveland Family as well as Chicago member Vincenzo "Jack McGurn" Gibaldi and Gambino soldier Andrea Torregrossa. Longtime Buffalo member John Cammilleri was from Campobello di Licata, inland from Licata, and a Cammilleri from Licata was on the same ship as Salvatore Callea when he arrived to the US in the early 1910s. There were thriving Agrigento colonies not only in WNY as a whole but also in Buffalo itself, producing a number of important mafia members.
Salvatore Callea:
- Vincenzo Callea looks to have come to the US initially in the early 1910s like his brother. Returned to Sicily at some point and arrived back to a relative in Brooklyn in 1920. Visited Sicily again and returned in 1923 with the brother-in-law of future Cleveland boss Salvatore Todaro, Stefano Giglio, from Licata like Todaro and Callea. Nicola Gentile had Stefano Giglio's Akron address in his address book and talked in his memoir about Todaro. Giglio has not been identiied as a mafioso but his relation to Todaro, friendship with Nicola Gentile, and voyage from Sicily with Salvatore Callea show he was well-accepted in these circles.
- Salvatore's voyages follow a similar pattern as Vincenzo. Another brother, Giuseppe, may have been in Buffalo before them but haven't come across info confirming/denying his involvement in mafia activity. I wasn't able to look into their family tree to substantiate relationships to other known mafia surnames from Licata but it wouldn't be a surprise to find some.
Mafia Activity
- Vincenzo Callea was arrested for bootlegging in Cleveland in 1921 and then again in Buffalo in 1927, his bond in the latter case posted by Calogero Romano who put up his home. Calogero Romano is listed in Nicola Gentile's address book and came from Pietraperzia, Enna, being described in Tom Hunt's book as an esteemed senior mafia figure very close to the Carlisis, moving from Chicago to Buffalo like them. Roy Carlisi would go on to marry Calogero Romano's daughter and become a Magaddino capodecina. The Carlisis were from Canicatti, Arigento, and were in turn close to the Calleas like their in-law Romano.
- In 1923, Vincenzo Callea was living in Welland, Ontario, near the New York border. Perhaps he moved to Canada for a time in response to his Cleveland arrest or there was another reason, but he was a short distance from Buffalo and the Buffalo Family by then already had an active Agrigentini group in Hamilton from Racalmuto. That same year his wife and children arrived to North America coming from Licata, heading to Vincenzo in Ontario. Arriving on the same ship were the Monachino brothers, Saverio and Pasquale, who came from Realmonte, Agrigento, and were heading to Montreal, Quebec. The Monachinos would go on to be Buffalo members in Auburn, NY and Canada. Another Callea from Licata, named Gaetano like the Callea brothers' father and sons but not proper age to be them, was also on the ship but appears to be accompanying the Monachino brothers suggesting relationships already existed in Sicily between coastal Agrigentini heading to WNY-Ontario.
- By 1924 Vincenzo's wife and children had returned to Sicily and that year Vincenzo accompanied them back to North America, heading directly to Buffalo instead of Canada. Vincenzo Callea and his brother Sam quickly became involved in bootlegging and went on to invest in restaurants and taverns frequented by other underworld figures.
- The Callea brothers were carried as suspects in the Filippo Mazzara and Giseppe DiBenedetto murders in 1927 and 1929, respectively, whether as conspirators or direct participants I'm unsure. Filippo Mazzara and Giuseppe DiBenedetto were from Castellammare del Golfo and both influential in the Buffalo Family. Along with the Calleas' suspected inolvement, LE believed the murder of Mazzara was connected to the Cleveland mafia war happening at this time and may have included assailants from Cleveland. Comments on the Magaddino tapes suggest Stefano was at odds with Mazzara in the 1920s so there may have been multiple factors at play and we can't rule out Magaddino working in tandem with the Calleas.
- Law enforcement noted telephone contact between the Calleas and Stefano Magaddino as well as phone contact with the Porrellos in Cleveland, from Licata like the Calleas. The Calleas were very close to their compaesani the Porrello brothers and partners in a joint Cleveland / Buffalo bootlegging operation during Prohibition. Angelo Porrello, living in Buffalo by the early 1930s, was killed in early 1933 in front of a tavern formerly owned by the Calleas.
Double Murder
- In August 1933, Vincenzo and Salvatore Callea were shot to death in front of their Buffalo restaurant by a team of up to five unknown men, two or three of which served as shooters using pistols and a shotgun. Two innocent bystanders were also injured. Allegedly the Calleas received a call from an unidentified person who asked to meet them at their restaurant. While the Calleas waited outside for their associate, the hit team pulled up in a car and occupants jumped out and began shooting. Salvatore Callea dove into a friend/associate's vehicle where he was killed by one of the gunmen, while Vincenzo was shot to death on the street.
- At the time of the murder the Calleas were described by authorities as "two of the largest alcohol distillery operators in Western and Central New York." They said the Callea brothers' operations involved multiple US states and letters were discovered in the deceased brothers' possession showing correspondence with Cicero, Illinois, as well as Detroit and Cleveland. Note the Calleas' friends the Carlisis were closely tied to Cicero and that's where Sam Carlisi later gained power.
- The double homicide of the Callea brothers is generally attributed to a bootlegging feud, though this may have been law enforcement or the media's best guess given their lack of inside access into what was going on at the time. I haven't seen later sources or insiders discuss the murdered Calleas. Their murders came on the heels of internecine warfare that killed many Licatesi in Cleveland, including their friends the Porrellos, so it's possible the Callea murders spilled over from Cleveland given the Cleveland war was largely the Licatesi massacring each other. The Buffalo murder of Angelo Porrello in front of a former Callea establishment just months prior to the Callea double murder lends itself to this connection.
- A Police Commissioner stated the belief that killers came from Cleveland to commit the Callea double murder. However, to my knowledge only the following local men were arrested: Joseph SanFilippo (b. ~1882), Charles Manguso (bartender at the Calleas' restaurant; b. ~1882), and Joseph Bonvissuto (owned the car Salvatore Callea was killed in; b. 1897). SanFilippo and Manguso (his true name likely Mancuso, though he used Manguso on records) were Sicilians but I can't pin down the hometowns -- Bonvissuto was from Licata like the Calleas and previously lived in Cleveland, though he doesn't appear to have been part of the hit team, rather had another car parked nearby.
- Roy Carlisi and his father Giuseppe were questioned by police about the Callea murders. It's unclear if they were suspected of involvement or were simply interviewed due to their friendship/association with the Calleas.
Other Connections
- Giuseppe Carlisi was linked to underworld activity and likely an early member, his sons becoming leaders in both Buffalo and Chicago. In addition to sons Roy and Sam, at least one other Carlisi son was involved in underworld activity in Chicago and a cousin, Al Tornabene, would go on to be a high-ranking Chicago member. Giuseppe Carlisi's nephew Joe "Frisco" Gentile (son of Carlisi's stepbrother) was murdered in Chicago in 1961, with Roy Carlisi captured on an FBI tape telling Stefano Magaddino he'd be traveling to Chicago to tend to this matter. Figures like the Calleas and Roy's in-law Calogero Romano tell us something about the men Roy Carlisi came up around.
- Buffalo member Charles Cassaro, heritage in Ravanusa, Agrigento, may have been a relative of the Carlisis. Roy and Sam's mother was a Cassaro and their hometown of Canicatti isn't far from Ravanusa. Roy and Sam Carlisi's sister married a Charles Cassaro and they moved from Chicago to Gloversville which fell under the Utica group's jurisdiction, though I don't know if this Charles Cassaro was the Buffalo member or a different one. The Buffalo member Charles Cassaro was close to other members from Agrigento like Stefano Cannarozzo (family from Ravanusa like Cassaro) and John Cammilleri (hometown right next to Ravanusa). A 1977 FBI report IDs Charles Cassaro as a capodecina alongside Roy Carlisi -- depending on the timeline of his promotion it's possible Cassaro took over for Cammilleri, murdered in 1974.
- Salvatore Callea's son Gaetano "Thomas" Callea (1921-1967) was identified by an FBI source as a made member of the Buffalo Family at the time of his death. He was close with member Salvatore Bonito and involved in bookmaking. Thomas Callea's wake was attended by captains Roy Carlisi and John Cammilleri, as well as underboss Fred Randaccio and members Peter A. Magaddino, Peter J. Magaddino, Antonio Magaddino, and Joseph Fino. His father's murder seems to have been no roadblock to Gaetano joining the organization and being properly honored by the leadership. He died young but I've seen nothing to suggest it was nefarious.
- Another significant Cleveland / Buffalo connection from the early period is Lorenzo Lupo, capodecina under Joe Lonardo in the mid-1920s and part of the faction loyal to capo dei capi Salvatore D'Aquila. Lupo was a boxing promoter from Vallelunga, Caltanissetta, and a cousin of the DiCarlos of Buffalo. He is believed to have become leader of the Lonardo faction after Joe Lonardo's death before being murdered himself in 1928. Later Lupo's relative Joe DiCarlo Jr. and his loyalists fled to Youngstown where according to Angelo Lonardo at least one of them (Tronolone) transferred from Buffalo to Cleveland.
- Stefano Magaddino talked about Joe Lonardo being actively involved in an early 1920s Assemblea meeting in Buffalo to help settle a volatile leadership dispute within the local Family. Michael DiLeonardo was told by Salvatore D'Aquila's decendants that Buffalo and Cleveland were two of the Families closest to D'Aquila, with Gentile's account of Lonardo supporting this. There do seem to be strong political links between Buffalo, Cleveland, and D'Aquila during this time.
- The rival Porrello faction is said to have been Masseria loyalists and the Calleas are noted for their close relationship to the Porrellos, suggesting they may have been part of the political opposition in both Buffalo and Cleveland where the sitting leadership was pro-D'Aquila. Adding to this is Vincenzo Callea traveling with Todaro's brother-in-law, Todaro being another Cleveland leader who had serious problems with the Lonardos.
- Jack McGurn apparently had a connection to Cleveland too, being from Licata. While his 1936 murder wasn't connected to these Cleveland / Buffalo intrigues like the Calleas, it adds to the pile of dead Licatesi. I wonder if any other group of compaesani was killed in such high numbers in such a short period. They were often the ones killing each other too.
----
Unfortunately the early Calleas don't get mentioned by later FBI sources from what I've seen so we don't have proper context for who they were within the organization itself. The later membership of Salvatore's son Gaetano and Vincenzo/Salvatore's high position in interstate bootlegging in collaboration with the Porrellos is a good indication they were made members. They appear to have been a hub for the Agrigento network in Buffalo and brought the politics of Cleveland and Buffalo in close proximity, with indications of ties to Chicago, Brooklyn, and other cities.
Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Good to know about Rockford.
--
- These were additional suspects in the Callea slayings:
Cerio DeSalvo, 38
Anthony "Lucky" Perna, 29
Joseph Mangus, 28
^ Anthony Perna would go on to be a Buffalo member.
- Other suspects detained were John Porrello (age 39) and Philip Lombardo (age 36 or 38), both arrested in Jamestown, but were cleared for the murders and charged for violating prohibition laws. Porrello was described as a nephew of the murdered Angelo Porrello and brother of the Cleveland Porrellos.
- Other suspects were Paul and Anthony DiMaggio and Chester Skolczylos.
- Law enforcement speculated that the 1933 murder of James DiStefano, 51, and the 1934 murder of Michael Palamara, 40, were linked to the Callea murders. However we also know LE tried to connect murders from this period and I'm not sure if there was substance to their theories.
--
- These were additional suspects in the Callea slayings:
Cerio DeSalvo, 38
Anthony "Lucky" Perna, 29
Joseph Mangus, 28
^ Anthony Perna would go on to be a Buffalo member.
- Other suspects detained were John Porrello (age 39) and Philip Lombardo (age 36 or 38), both arrested in Jamestown, but were cleared for the murders and charged for violating prohibition laws. Porrello was described as a nephew of the murdered Angelo Porrello and brother of the Cleveland Porrellos.
- Other suspects were Paul and Anthony DiMaggio and Chester Skolczylos.
- Law enforcement speculated that the 1933 murder of James DiStefano, 51, and the 1934 murder of Michael Palamara, 40, were linked to the Callea murders. However we also know LE tried to connect murders from this period and I'm not sure if there was substance to their theories.
Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Their cousin, named Joseph Callea, was also involved in bootlegging with them and arrested a short time after their murders for running a distillery.
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Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Great write-up, as always. These Licatesi, and "whatever happened there" with them tearing each other to pieces, is an interesting sub-chapter of American mafia history unto itself. Given their connections to both Cleveland and the Carlisis, I wonder if the Calleas had any dealings with the two cousins, both named Antonino Borsellino, from Ravanusa, murdered in Cleveland in 1930; one of them had recently relocated from Chicago and was the uncle of later Chicago member Tony Borsellino (Tony's father and uncles were bootleggers on Taylor St, as was McGurn's father, of course). Not sure how the Borsellino cousins' murder tied into the broader Licatese-on-Licatese violence in Cleveland, though I assume that it probably did, as Ravanusa borders Campobello di Licata.
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Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
Didn't know that, very good info.
- Ravanusa shows up with Licata in at least a couple US Families. That eastern side of Agrigento in and around Ravanusa / Canicatti / Licata was sort of its own sub-network or even a "triangle" and you don't see much crossover or interrelation between them and the more powerful/influential western side of the province.
- Still, Gentile saw the Licatesi as paesans of the entire AG network and a large faction from Canicatti fit right in with the Gambino Family's Agrigentini / "Sciacchitani" faction who were more heavily repped by western AG villages. Gentile talked about knowing the Lonardos and Todaros when he was growing up in Siculiana, which brings to mind the Monachinos coming to the US with the Calleas -- many of these relationships were already formed in Sicily.
- Canicatti and eastern Agrigento province as a whole are close to the Caltanissetta towns that produced many Buffalo members/leaders. Makes sense they followed similar migration patterns and ended up in Buffalo. It also shows Roy Carlisi's marriage to Calogero Romano's daughter wasn't a major geographic jump. Be interesting to know more about Calogero Romano's activities in Chicago given he was a highly respected mafiosi in Buffalo.
- The early 1920s Assemblea that Magaddino talked about is interesting because two of the dominant voices at the meeting were Chicago boss Mike Merlo (seemingly presiding over the meeting -- was he D'Aquila's sostituto like Traina?) and Peppino Lonardo. So a Buffalo conflict was mediated primarily by two of the top Agrigentini in the country and it was Chicago, Cleveland, and Buffalo asserting themselves in the matter.
- Curious if Angelo and John Porrello were Buffalo members when they lived there. I don't know much about the Porrellos or who specifically was who, but Angelo Porrello was described in a newspaper report as an uncle of the other ones while John was said to be a brother. Looks to me like Angelo and John Porrello fled Cleveland after their relatives were killed but would be equally interesting if they settled in Buffalo much earlier.
- Ravanusa shows up with Licata in at least a couple US Families. That eastern side of Agrigento in and around Ravanusa / Canicatti / Licata was sort of its own sub-network or even a "triangle" and you don't see much crossover or interrelation between them and the more powerful/influential western side of the province.
- Still, Gentile saw the Licatesi as paesans of the entire AG network and a large faction from Canicatti fit right in with the Gambino Family's Agrigentini / "Sciacchitani" faction who were more heavily repped by western AG villages. Gentile talked about knowing the Lonardos and Todaros when he was growing up in Siculiana, which brings to mind the Monachinos coming to the US with the Calleas -- many of these relationships were already formed in Sicily.
- Canicatti and eastern Agrigento province as a whole are close to the Caltanissetta towns that produced many Buffalo members/leaders. Makes sense they followed similar migration patterns and ended up in Buffalo. It also shows Roy Carlisi's marriage to Calogero Romano's daughter wasn't a major geographic jump. Be interesting to know more about Calogero Romano's activities in Chicago given he was a highly respected mafiosi in Buffalo.
- The early 1920s Assemblea that Magaddino talked about is interesting because two of the dominant voices at the meeting were Chicago boss Mike Merlo (seemingly presiding over the meeting -- was he D'Aquila's sostituto like Traina?) and Peppino Lonardo. So a Buffalo conflict was mediated primarily by two of the top Agrigentini in the country and it was Chicago, Cleveland, and Buffalo asserting themselves in the matter.
- Curious if Angelo and John Porrello were Buffalo members when they lived there. I don't know much about the Porrellos or who specifically was who, but Angelo Porrello was described in a newspaper report as an uncle of the other ones while John was said to be a brother. Looks to me like Angelo and John Porrello fled Cleveland after their relatives were killed but would be equally interesting if they settled in Buffalo much earlier.
Last edited by B. on Thu Jun 30, 2022 3:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Callea Brothers / Buffalo / Agrigento
By the mid-1960s a number of the Family captains were from Agrigento:
- Roy Carlisi (Canicatti)
- John Cammilleri (Campobello di Licata)
- Salvatore Falcone / Joseph Falcone (Sciacca)
- Frank Valenti (Grotte).
- The formal leadership in Canada is hard to determine but influential Buffalo members in Ontario were from Racalmuto, right near Canicatti. There were also Buffalo members/associates from Racalmuto in NYS and Calogero Bordonaro's brother lived in Buffalo. If they had early captains in Ontario one of them like Bordonaro or Scibetta is a good candidate. Also unclear if Toronto and Hamilton were under separate leadership, as Magaddino refers to a "Ruffino" being in charge of Toronto for him.
- Nick Gentile spent a lot of time in the Finger Lakes area of WNY which was a huge landing spot for Agrigentini and some of those smaller towns had Agrigentino members in them. Unfortunately Gentile doesn't talk about his time in WNY, maybe due to his illegitimate wife+kids there, but he could have shed a great deal of light on who was who in the Agrigentini network's WNY branch. Fortunately his address books are primarily filled with contacts throughout WNY, a good chunk of which are from Agrigento, so we can see his contacts there were extensive to say the least and included many prominent names and relatives of known members.
- Chris Christie posted about an early Gambino figure named Ignazio Vaccaro who left NYC for Rochester and he came from Canicatti. Later on Vaccaros show up involved with the Buffalo Family. Maybe one of them was a member, can't recall, but I don't know if they were Canicattese.
These seem to be the main Agrigento villages that show up in WNY-Ontario under the Buffalo Family:
Racalmuto
Canicatti
Ravanusa
Grotte
Campobello di Licata
Licata
Montallegro
Realmonte
Cattolica Eraclea
Sciacca
Available evidence shows many of these members were part of the larger AG network and can be connected to paesans and other AG natives in other cities.
- Roy Carlisi (Canicatti)
- John Cammilleri (Campobello di Licata)
- Salvatore Falcone / Joseph Falcone (Sciacca)
- Frank Valenti (Grotte).
- The formal leadership in Canada is hard to determine but influential Buffalo members in Ontario were from Racalmuto, right near Canicatti. There were also Buffalo members/associates from Racalmuto in NYS and Calogero Bordonaro's brother lived in Buffalo. If they had early captains in Ontario one of them like Bordonaro or Scibetta is a good candidate. Also unclear if Toronto and Hamilton were under separate leadership, as Magaddino refers to a "Ruffino" being in charge of Toronto for him.
- Nick Gentile spent a lot of time in the Finger Lakes area of WNY which was a huge landing spot for Agrigentini and some of those smaller towns had Agrigentino members in them. Unfortunately Gentile doesn't talk about his time in WNY, maybe due to his illegitimate wife+kids there, but he could have shed a great deal of light on who was who in the Agrigentini network's WNY branch. Fortunately his address books are primarily filled with contacts throughout WNY, a good chunk of which are from Agrigento, so we can see his contacts there were extensive to say the least and included many prominent names and relatives of known members.
- Chris Christie posted about an early Gambino figure named Ignazio Vaccaro who left NYC for Rochester and he came from Canicatti. Later on Vaccaros show up involved with the Buffalo Family. Maybe one of them was a member, can't recall, but I don't know if they were Canicattese.
These seem to be the main Agrigento villages that show up in WNY-Ontario under the Buffalo Family:
Racalmuto
Canicatti
Ravanusa
Grotte
Campobello di Licata
Licata
Montallegro
Realmonte
Cattolica Eraclea
Sciacca
Available evidence shows many of these members were part of the larger AG network and can be connected to paesans and other AG natives in other cities.