Thanks for posting. To me, it sounds like Red is giving his opinion that in the specific circumstance of preventing the Spilotro hit, Lombardo could've gone over Aiuppa "to Ricca" (hard to make out what he says at that last part, but it sounds like he could be saying Ricca). Definitely sounds like he was claiming that Lombardo could've appealed to someone else to step in and stop the hit; if he said Ricca, I'm assuming that Red was confused and meant Accardo. At least to me, it doesn't sound like Red was trying to say that Lombardo could, in general, go over Aiuppa's head.Pete wrote: ↑Sat Aug 06, 2022 2:32 pmhttps://youtu.be/iHijKJfWXyQAntiliar wrote: ↑Fri Aug 05, 2022 11:25 pmI have heard him say that the Last Supper photo was taken when Lombardo was made street boss. He's made that claim pretty consistently. Could you put in a link for the video where you say that he said Lombardo could go over Aiuppa's head?Pete wrote: ↑Fri Aug 05, 2022 4:51 pmThanks he did say specifically street boss in the video but said as street boss Lombardo could go above aiuppa who was the actual boss which makes no sense. Lombardo being street boss would be incorrect though in 82 anyways. There has never been any information saying the other capos went through Lombardo and there’s plenty of evidence to the contrary. For instance according to Nick calabrese Angelo lapietra got his orders through aiuppa. Red also stated the last supper photo was taken when Lombardo was made street boss lol. That was just one example I found at random I know the videos are filled with more that’s why I stopped watching that showPolackTony wrote: ↑Fri Aug 05, 2022 3:49 pmEhhhh. If that’s what he’s saying, he wasn’t ever saying it before. A couple of years ago I spoke to Red at length, and was very specific in querying him about what he knew about Lombardo. Red stated that Joey succeeded Alderisio as capo (Red specifically stated “capo”, which he said was what they called it); then, in ‘76, Red stated that Joey was appointed “street boss”. When I asked him if this wasn’t just a synonym for “capo” in Chicago, he was firm that it wasn’t the same thing; per Red, the “street boss” was a capo that served as liaison between the admin and the other capos, as well as the enforcer of the family responsible for ensuring that punishments/hits were carried out. Red was very adamant and clear about this, and never mentioned anything about Lombardo ever getting bumped up further or having any de facto boss status or anything like that prior to going to the can. When I asked him if Lombardo could’ve been a “consigliere” or something akin for the family when he left prison, Red conceded that it was possible but cautioned that he had no knowledge of what happened after he himself left the game. In general, I found Red to be careful to state when he didn’t know a guy or the answer to a question. He’d say “I’m sorry, I wish I could help you, but I didn’t know those guys well (for example, guys in Melrose Park or Cicero). So, when I spoke with him directly, I found him to be honest and straight forward, not embellishing things or exaggerating his own knowledge or role. Sounds like after a couple of years doing these podcasts, he’s getting into “tall tales”.
30 minute mark he talks about aiuppa . And Antillar we both know Lombardo wasn’t street boss in 82
While there's still a lot we don't understand, Aiuppa was definitely boss, as in the rappresentante of the family. There are, however, indications that he wasn't a lone dictator. At least in the 1970s, a Chicago CI stated that Aiuppa was the boss of the family but "served under" the board of directors or ruling committee (we know from that same period, according to Bompensiero, that Lombardo, Pilotto, and Torello seemed to have been acting as a council with Accardo). From other Chicago intel in the past, we get the picture that this "ruling committee" not only served to advise the boss but also to mediate problems and disputes within the family. There's also the CI claim that Ricca and Accardo were mainly concerned with preventing violence in the family; the sum of these claims to me suggests that the "board" served the same role that an individual consigliere traditionally served in families that had that position -- i.e., not just advising the boss, but also mediating disputes and protecting the membership from arbitrary action from the admin. We don't know for sure whether some form of this "board" persisted until 1986, but we know that Accardo was still in the loop on things, and presumably, could be appealed to as a check on a contract issued by the boss against a member. Whether or not Red is actually aware of the nuances of how the family was run at the top, it does seem to me plausible at least that Lombardo, if he had been on the street, could've "gone over" Aiuppa in exactly this narrow, contextualized sense, to attempt to stop a hit on a made guy. Lombardo obviously didn't overrule the boss, but the boss wasn't an absolute dictator.
FWIW, Red told me directly that Lombardo was promoted to "street boss" at the "Last Supper". When I asked Red how he could've possibly known this, as he obviously wasn't a made guy, he told me that Joey told him the day after when they were hanging out at the pool in Jimmy Cozzo's compound. Red further admitted that these guys weren't supposed to tell him these things -- it was a breach of protocol -- but that some of them liked to gossip; Red opined that they needed to get things off their chest or brag sometimes, and that, as he wasn't really of their world, he thought these guys liked to confide in him.
Just out of curiosity, Pete. What exactly do you think precludes Lombardo from having been "street boss" from '76 to '82? I'm not saying that he was, but want to hear you out, as it could be an interesting discussion. When I say "street boss", I mean in the specific sense that Red described it to me: as a captain who served as a liaison between the admin and the other captains, and, importantly was tasked with ensuring that punishments against the membership were carried out (the "enforcer"). In this light, if Chicago had that role, it was likely not a formal appointment but a set of responsibilities given to a captain who was something of a "first among equals". Are you saying that Chicago didn't have a "street boss" in this sense, or that they did but it wasn't Lombardo? I know that above you cited Nicky C as stating that LaPietra got his orders from Aiuppa, but Nick wasn't made until 1983, so we'd have to be very careful about the specific time period in question.