Information from Old NYTimes Articles

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Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by TSNYC »

Came across some old NYTimes articles, can't copy/paste because they're too old, but figured I'd share some of the interesting highlights.

March 22, 1968: 3 Men Held by FBI in Extortion Plot

FBI arrested Samuel Rizzo DeCavalcante of Princeton Township, and Gaetano Dominick Vastola (39 yrs; 1335 86th St, Brooklyn) and Daniel Annunziata (29 yrs; 1311 Brightwater Ave, Brooklyn). Vastola and Annunziata were alleged to have "robbed four other players following a dice game at a Trevose, PA, hotel, and then conspired with DeCavalcante ... to extort large amounts of money from the robbery victims."

October 31, 1964: Pappadio, Aide of Luchese, Gets 2 Years for Silence at Inquiry

Andimo Pappadio, "a close associate of Thomas (Three Finger Brown) Luchese in the garment industry, was found guilty of contempt for refusing to answer questions before a federal grand jury..sent to prison for two years." Pappadio, known as Tommy Paps, was the 3rd member of Luchese's organization to be sent to jail for refusing to answer questions. The other two Luchese men were Salvatore Shillitani and Anthony Castaldi. Pappadio was listed as the principal stockholder of Tempo Fashions, Inc., 230 W. 38th St., with an annual income of $30,000 to $40,000.

January 25, 1934: Prison Gang Chiefs Served by Valets

Article described Welfare Island as a "gangsters' paradise, "where Joe Rao, ally of Ciro Terranova and Dutch Schultz, and Ed Cleary, ruled absolutely as monarchs," during hearings by the New York State Crime Commission. "Rao, head of the Italian inmates, and Cleary, head of the Irish inmates, had valets to press their clothing, shine their shoes, cook their food, and wait upon them hand and foot as if they were feudal barons."

June 15, 1965: Staten Island Raid Nets One of Heads of Crime Activities

"One of the three brothers who are commonly known to dominate organized crime on Staten Island was taken into custody in a bookmaking raid last night.." that being Alexander D'Alessio, known as Pope Dee. The NYPD raided the basement of 247 Reid Avenue in Old Town Section, arresting Raymond DeFina (38yrs), Anthony Burino (46yrs), Emanuel Graffignia (48yrs), Ernest Griffith (45 yrs, D'Alessio's brother-in-law), and Nunzio Lomassaro (49yrs), for running a bookmaking operation. In 1953, D'Alessio and 8 others pleaded guilty to bribery, perjury, and conspiracy for paying off the police, and in 1954, was convicted of tax evasion.

June 2, 1967: Staten Island Man Acquitted in Theft

Michael (Mikey Dee) D'Alessio, 54 years old, was acquitted of an interstate hijacking conspiracy . . . on a basis of insufficient evidence to connect D'Alessio of Staten Island, with 14 others at trial . . . the 15 defendants were charged with hijacking four interstate shipments of more than $5-million worth of goods, including silver and expensive cameras.

March 7, 1949: Gangster Is Seized in 29-Year Search

"Memories of prohibition days were revived yesterday when detectives walked into a Brooklyn home and arrested the last surviror of the Clutching Hand gang that flourished in the dry twenties.

Sought since he jumped bail of $20,000 after his indictment 29 years ago for stealing alcohol, Nicolo Failla, 63 years old, surrendered meekly int he apartment of some of his children at 446 Henry Street, Brooklyn...On Columbus Day in 1920, Failla and four of his associates were surprised trying to steal some drums of alcohol valued at $5000. The gang leader, Giuseppe Piraino..and three others were found guilty at their trial; but Failla had fled to Italy, Piraino was rubbed out by rival mobsters in 1930 and his chief lieutenant, Joseph Manino, met a similar fate. Until 1939, Failla remained in Italy, serving two 5 year sentences there for terrorist activities .... in 1944, Failla became a citizen and opened a grocery store on Staten Island...

December 29, 1973: 13 Cited as Heads of Game Ring Here

Thirteen men described by the police as known gamblers were indicted yesterday for operating an $80-million-a-year bookmaking and sports wagering business in Queens, the Bronx, and Manhattan. The indictment culminated a 9 month joint investigation, identifying the five major violators as Morris Becker, 71 yrs old, 201 E. 66th Street, Manhattan; his brother George Becker, 65 yrs old, 2675 Henry Hudson Parkway, Bronx; Joseph Galizia, 32 yrs old, 533 Scranton Ave., Lynbrook; Philip Tare, 30 yrs old, 208 Maple Avenue, Rockville Centre; and Jack Kleinstein, 2020 Grand Concourse, Bronx.

August 28, 1928: Three Are Indicted for Running a Still

Indictments were handed up by a federal grand jury charging three men with running a 1000 gallon capacity still at 346 Manida Street, the Bronx. Indicted were: Thomas Gambino, Constantino Masotto, and Frederick Gough, all of the Bronx address. Others linked to the investigation were: Steve McLoughlin, 206 W. 46th St., Dimitrious Theophilato, Robert Kane, 190 E. Houston St., John Matson, 8 E. 128th St., Thomas McCarthy, 624 8th Ave., Tony Millone, 575 E. 139th St, Bronx, Michael Anzelides, 350 W. 40th St., Joseph King, 342 W. 49th St.

February 14, 1972: Brooklyn Bank Is Making LOans to Reputed Mafiosi

For more than a decade, Lafayette National Bank / Kings Lafayette Bank, made dubious loans to "reputed Mafia members" despite poor credit ratings, long criminal records, and false information on applications. Informants reported that some of the money was being used to fund loansharking operations. Most of the loans were issued by the branch at 6614 Bay Parkway, Brooklyn. One of the defaulted loans belonged to Carmine Persico, identified as a captain in the Colombo Family. Another defaulted loan belonged to Joseph Gioelli. Other defaulted loans went to Gaetano Masotto, his brother Paul Masotto Sr., and nephew Paul Masotto, Jr. The branch also cashed $200,000 in checks for Gandolfo Sciandra in 1962, despite him only having $40,000 in his account. Sciandra was identified as a Gambino Family member.

Branch manager Frank Albano was confronted about the Sciandra check cashing, and responded, "I spoke to Peter Castellano about this, who told me not to worry, that he would be personally responsible for everything he [Sciandra] does." "Castellano, who had several personal and business accounts at the bank, is the brother-in-law of Carlo Gambino and is listed as a member of the Gambino Mafia Group." When asked, "on what authority did you cash these checks?," Albano said, "I just went by Mr. Castellano's authority."

Other defaulted loans belonged to Carmine Lombardozzi and Alphonse D'Ambrosio.

November 11, 1976: Key Witness Jailed For Not Testifying At Castellano Trial

The main witness against Paul Castellano, the brother-in-law of the late Carlo Gambino, "decided he would rather go to jail than testify against Mr. Castellano, who is on trial with six other men on loansharking charges. The witness, Arthur Berardelli, cited the Fifth Amendment in Brooklyn Federal Court when asked if he knew Paul Castellano....Mr. Berardelli's refusal to talk was seen as a grave blow to the government's case against Mr. Castellano, one of the few men mentioned as a possible successor to Mr. Gambino as head of the Gambino crime family. In his opening statement, the prosecutor said, 'He will name Big Paul as the ultimate provider of monies. He will tell you how Paul Castellano, also known as Big Paul, used a buffer between himself and the others..."

June 12, 1970: Reputed Mafiosi Seized in Raids: Among 35 Arrested After Contempt Indictments

35 mob figures were arrested in eight counties in and around NYC as DA Eugene Gold of Kings County announced their indictment on charges of criminal contempt. Among those arrested were Natale (Joe Diamonds) Evola, 63; Paul Sciacca; Bruno Capio, described as a Bonanno Family captain; and Phil Rastelli, 51; Aniello Dellacroce, 55; Nicholas Bianco, described as "3rd in Command of the Colombo Family." Others arrested: Benny ALoi, 135 Beech St, Floral Park; Jerome Asaro, 562 Lincoln Blvd., Long Beach; Nicholas Bianco, 483 Ocean Pkwy, Brooklyn; Anthony Bonacci, 1743 Cropsey Ave, Brooklyn; Vincent Bonura, 158-19 Sapphire St., Queens; Bruno Capio, 44 Charles St., New Rochelle; Joseph Caruso, 9330 Ft Hamilton Pkwy, Brooklyn; Philip Castellano, 99 Buttonwood Rd., Staten Island; Dominick Castore, 1036 84th St, Brooklyn; Gerald Chilli, 38 Monroe St.; Joseph Chilli, 14 Monroe St., NY, NY; Joseph Corozzo, 952 E. 84th St., Brooklyn; Frank Crociata, 72 Wilson Ave. Brooklyn; Peter Crociata, 3 Ridgewood Pl, Brooklyn; Alphonse DAmbrosia, 2112 E. 5th St., Brooklyn; Vincent DeCicco, 7401 18th Ave, Brookyln; Anniello Dellacroce, 232 Mulberry St, NY, NY; James Episcopia, 1938 82nd St, Brooklyn; Natale Evola, 972 Bay Ridge Pkwy, Brooklyn; James Failla, 275 Evergreen Ave, Staten Island; Salvatore Ferrugia, 84-14 250th St, Queens; Michael Fiore, 1 Field Pl, Hicksville; Louis Gilberti, 69 Gravesend Rd, Brookyln; Vito Grimaldi, 65-53 79th Pl, Queens; Anthony Guerreri, 137-23 Lafayette St, Queens; Anthony LaPonzina, 1429 Shore Pkwy, Brookyln; Anthony Leone, 236 Sackett St., Brooklyn; Achilles Lombardi, 2560 W. 16th St, Brookyln; Thomas Lombardi, 2677 Colby Ct., Brooklyn; Frank MAri, 3 Hilldale Dr., Searington; Rocco Matra, 366 Broome St., NY, NY; Steve Menna, 31 Speed St., Brentwood; Philip Modica, 563 Todt Hill Rd., Staten Island; Peter Monteleone, 1960 E. 8th St, Brooklyn; Rosario Morale, 235 Elizabeth St, NY, NY; Vincent Morsellino, 4 Locust Wood Blvd, Elmont; Philip Rastelli, 97-20 57th Ave, Queens; Frank Rizzo, 1163 Havermeyer Ave, Bronx; Anthony Ruggiano, 120 Bevy Court, Brooklyn; Michael Sabella, 84 Boyd St, Long beach; Dominick Scialo, 2325 E. 5th St, Brooklyn; Gandolfo Sciandra, 77 Harold St, Staten Island; Angelo Sparaco, 2221 Belmont Ave, Bronx; George Tropiano, 2730 Ford St, Brooklyn; Paul Zaccaria, 2268 National Dr. Brooklyn.

April 24, 1978: Two More Bodies Found; Gang Killings Suspected

The bodies of two men were discovered yesterday, one in Brooklyn and one in Westchester, in what police believed to be the second and third gangland slayings since Friday. The westchester police discovered the body of a man about 40 years old in a cedar chest just off the Saw Mill River Road in Hastings-on-Hudson...the victim had been shot three times int he head with a small-caliber weapon. The Brooklyn victim was said to be about 50, was found in a plastic bag inside the trunk of a 1969 Cadillac at 84th Street and New Utrecht Avenue in the Bensonhurst Section. ... On Friday, the body of a man who had been several times was found in a trunk in a garage in the Highbridge Section of the Bronx. Over the weekend, the victim was identified as Louis Gioia, 25, of 179 Mulberry Street.

February 6, 1976: 18 Gang Members Indicted In 5 City Truck Hijackings

An 18-member gang was indicted in Brooklyn Federal Court on charges of having carried out 5 hijackings in 1971 and 1972 that netted more than $400,000. Federal officials said the hijackers missed nearly $3-million after they seized one of the vehicles, a mail truck at the Air France Terminal at Kennedy Airport on April 29, 1972. The other hijackings were: February 4, 1971, truckload of fur pelts bound for London; March 4, 1971, tractor-trailer load of women's apparel en route from Newark to LA; November 2, 1972, tractor trailer containing 355 cartons of leather jackets en route from Spain to NYC. Those charged: Carmine Fatico, East Islip; Robert McMahon, 1451 Holiday Park Drive, Wantagh; Vincent Santa, 60-24 59th Dr., Maspeth; William Luzzi, 153 Emporia Ave., Elmont; Richard Sasko, 13 N. Washington St, Tarrytown; Stanley Sciepura, 55 Park Ave Terrace, Yonkers; Frank Frigenti, 162-40 84th St, Howard Beach; John Carneglia, 84-18 163rd Ave, Howard Beach; John Ripoli, 440 E. 81St Street; John Savino, 18 Oxford Road, East Rockaway; Daniel Fatico, 97-11 Lefferts Blvd, Richmond HIll; Charles Carneglia, 84-18 163rd Ave, Howard Beach; James Santamaria, 276 New Hampshire Ave, North Bay Shore. Already in jail on other charges were Tommy DiSimone, Anthony Stabile, and Stanley Diamond. At large were Marco Lionetti and Frank Roder.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by johnny_scootch »

Good stuff.

Interesting that June 12 raid lists a Bruno Capio as a Bonanno family captain and has him living in New Rochelle. I don’t think I’ve ever heard of Bonanno’s in that area.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by TSNYC »

Yes, i thought that was interesting as well. His name didnt sound too familiar to me.

Some others:

JANUARY 18, 1952: SLAYING SUSPECT SEIZED: Narcotics Charge Parolee Held in Mulberry Street Shooting

Alphonse (Red Sonny) Indelicato, 24, of 174 Elizabeth Street, was arrested for homicide in the shooting death of Mike Errichello, 31-year-old part owner of the Mayfair Boys Civic Club, 167 Mulberry Street, on Dec. 26. Indelicato was believed to be one of three men who entered the billiard room and fired five shots that killed Errichello. Indelicato, who gave his occupation as clerk in his parents grocery store, denied the charge. The police disclosed that Indelicato had been arrested six times and was on parole for a two-year sentence on a narcotics charge, of which he had served 6 months. They also said Rocco Tisi, 38, of 174 Hester Street, who was severely beaten when Errichello was slain was still in Gouveneur Hospital.

MARCH 23, 1938: HOLD-UP SUSPECT SEIZED

Anthony Corallo, 24, of 335 E. 100th Street, was arrested after detectives recognized him, despite losing 30 pounds, on the charge of participating in a $190,000 jewelry hold-up at 620 Fifth Avenue on Jan. 6 1936. Corallo was charged with acting in concert with three others, who were "serving terms in the federal prison at Lewisburg," on another charge.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by MichaelGiovanni »

Great information. Thank you for sharing.
Nice rug ya got here kid...it’d be great for a craps game
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

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September 25, 1931
Seized in Park Av. Killing


James Alsacia, 31, a salesman, 335 E. 20th St., NY, NY, Stefano Rannelli, 29, 335 E. 20th St., NY, NY, and Felix Mule, 20, 710 E. 52nd St., Brooklyn, were arrested at Avenue L and Coney Island Ave. in Brooklyn on September 24, 1931, and held for questioning for the murder of Salvatore Maranzano.  The men were arrested based on a tip.  

February 1, 1936
Police Raid Dice Game


55 men were arrested at 2am, in a police raid on a Harlem apartment where one of NYC's largest dice games was being run.  The game was in an apartment on the third floor of the tenement building at 110 W. 116th St. near Lenox Ave. in Harlem, and was operated by Charlie Luciano and "under the personal direction of Luciano's chief aide, Trigger Mike Coppolla."  Two of the men arrested were held in on bail, those being Thomas Lorusso, 28, 210 W. 170th St., NY, NY, and Arman Bale, 26, 380 E. 115th St. NY, NY.  

January 12, 1948
Ten Arrest Bare Policy Ring Taking $100,000 A Week


Police "smashed one of the biggest policy rings in the city...Brooklyn DA Samuel Gitlin said during an average week, the operation grossed $100,000."  The raids were conducted by Police Commissioner Arthur Wallander "confidential squad."  The raids were carried out in the Bensonhurst, Bath Beach, and Coney Island neighborhoods.  The first raid was at 2258 83rd Street, a location used a makeshift printing shop for policy slips, where Ignatz Mortarano, 62, the home's resident, was arrested.  Also arrested there were Iswardo Mangano, 29, 2696 Stillwell Ave., and Anthony D'Amico, 37, 228 Fourth Ave., Brooklyn.  The second raid was at 8205 14th Ave., where the police arrested Joseph Tipa, 62, and Salvatore Profaci, 8215 14th Ave., and seized adding machines and account sheets.  This was believed to be the operation's headquarters.  The third raid was at 1901 Cropsey Ave., where in a rear office the police arrested Joseph Tipa, Jr., son of the policy banker, as well as Philip Mangano, 40, 132 Ave. V (brother of Iswardo), Samuel V. Andolina, 40, 132 Ave. V, and Philip Fontano, 50, 1925 73rd St.  The last raid was at 2696 Stillwell Ave., where Gaetano Mangano, 66, was arrested.  

March 20, 1965
Mafia Looks to Ex-Restauranteur With No Record to Fill a Top Job


69 year old Frank Saverio Celano, believed to "be in the running for Genovese's" boss position.  "Others under consideration are such higher-echelon Mafiosi as Thomas Eboli, Michele Miranda, and Gerardo Catena.  "Celano is listed by the FBI as a suspected loan shark and was named by Joseph Valachi as a low-ranking soldier."  Celano said, "That's crazy.  There's northing like that.  There's so much crazy talk going around.  I have nothing to do with that."  Reporters questioned Celano, a slim man with thinning hair and brown eyes, while he wore pajamas at 1:30 PM, in front of his residence at 146 Lafayette Street, at the northern end of Little Italy.  Celano's former restaurant was located at 46 Kenmare St., and was a gathering place for members of the Genovese Family.  "The corner of Kenmare and Mulberry Streets a few doors away was known to the police as 'Genovese's Corner' and the 'crossroads of the underworld'."  

November 9, 1971
6 Seized in Bet Raid After Appearance at Gambling Inquiry


6 men were arrested on gambling charges in a Brooklyn tavern after they had appeared before a grand jury investigating organized crime and gambling; each of the men face contempt charges for their reluctance to testify.  The men were arrested at the Dixie Tavern, 671 Fifth Avenue at 20th Street in Park Slope, Brooklyn.  in total, 12 men were arrested, all of whom were gathered around a table gambling.  The 6 who faced contempt charges were John Demma, Thomas Marino, Pasquale Cosentino, John Bizarro, and Ralph Pollizio. 

December 5, 1952
Hoodlums Guests at Union Wedding
1951 Nuptials of Dock Boss' Daughter Called Gay Event - Cost $20,000


Michael Clemente hosted a 467 guest wedding for his daughter at the Biltmore Hotel, which showed the hotel bill was $10,739.64, and investigators learned that Michael Castellano, a shipping executive, had donated $11,000 to Clemente, to pay for the wedding.  An additional $10,000 was spent on alcohol at the wedding.  The wedding took place on September 5, 1951.  Prominent among the guests were Albert Anastasia, his brother Anthony Anastasio, and other blood relatives of the Anastasia/Anastasio families.  Also in attendance were Willie Moretti, "the talkative lieutenant of Joe Adonis, who was to be felled by an assassin's bullet a month later at Cliffside Park..Willie had made arrangements for a party of five."  Joseph (Socks) Lanza was there, despite being on parole; William Cox, a reputed bookmaker, policy boss, and racketeer was present; Vincent Crissalli, Joseph (the Brain) Chiara, and "lesser gangland figures" were in attendance.  The list of union officials included "Joseph P. Ryan, president of the ILA; Thomas (Teddy) Gleason, now an opponent of Mr. Ryan and delegate of ILA Local 1346..."  "The observers had noted that some of the hoodlums present had come from Las Vegas, Nev.; Hollywood and Miami, Fl.; and Hot Springs, Ark.  

April 1, 1965
Tax-Fraud Charge Laid to Castellana


Peter Castellana was arraigned on a 9 count indictment charging income tax fraud from 1959 to 1961, with the fraud in excess of $100,000.  Castellana, 37, of 8801 Farragut Road, Brooklyn, "is a nephew of Paul Castellana, who attended the Apalachin crime convention in 1957, and a partner in a meat business with Paul Gambino, a racketeer.  He is also associated in the money-lending business with Carmine Lombardozzi, a notorious underworld figure."  

March 19, 1958
Hoodlum is Killed in 2nd Gang Shooting


A trucker found Bartholomew (Buggsy) Garofolo, 24, of 2857 W. 16th St, Brooklyn, shot to death in a lot at Ave. W and E. 69th St..  Garofolo was a friend of Alexander Menditto, 17, of 3083 Cropsey Ave., Brooklyn, who was found the previous Sunday in a Bergen Beach lot, with five gunshot wounds, and was being treated at a hospital.  Detectives suspected Dominick (Mimi) Scialo, 30, of 2827 W. 15th St. 
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by jmack »

TSNYC wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 10:10 am Yes, i thought that was interesting as well. His name didnt sound too familiar to me.

Some others:

JANUARY 18, 1952: SLAYING SUSPECT SEIZED: Narcotics Charge Parolee Held in Mulberry Street Shooting

Alphonse (Red Sonny) Indelicato, 24, of 174 Elizabeth Street, was arrested for homicide in the shooting death of Mike Errichello, 31-year-old part owner of the Mayfair Boys Civic Club, 167 Mulberry Street, on Dec. 26. Indelicato was believed to be one of three men who entered the billiard room and fired five shots that killed Errichello. Indelicato, who gave his occupation as clerk in his parents grocery store, denied the charge. The police disclosed that Indelicato had been arrested six times and was on parole for a two-year sentence on a narcotics charge, of which he had served 6 months. They also said Rocco Tisi, 38, of 174 Hester Street, who was severely beaten when Errichello was slain was still in Gouveneur Hospital.

MARCH 23, 1938: HOLD-UP SUSPECT SEIZED

Anthony Corallo, 24, of 335 E. 100th Street, was arrested after detectives recognized him, despite losing 30 pounds, on the charge of participating in a $190,000 jewelry hold-up at 620 Fifth Avenue on Jan. 6 1936. Corallo was charged with acting in concert with three others, who were "serving terms in the federal prison at Lewisburg," on another charge.
$190,000 in 1938 is worth like 4 million in today’s value. That’s a pretty big score.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by TSNYC »

Yeah, I noticed that. Seems like was a high stakes jewelry heist. Corallo one of the most interesting guys I’ve read about. Been a major player since his 20s. Major drug bust. Major heist. Started infiltrating unions and coming up with new ways to do labor racketeering, moved rackets into Long Island.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by Little_Al1991 »

TSNYC wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 1:44 pm Yeah, I noticed that. Seems like was a high stakes jewelry heist. Corallo one of the most interesting guys I’ve read about. Been a major player since his 20s. Major drug bust. Major heist. Started infiltrating unions and coming up with new ways to do labor racketeering, moved rackets into Long Island.
Corallo was close with Hoffa
Very old school he was.His driver Sal Avellino is still active and a millionaire
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by TSNYC »

That’s right. Corallo was a big Hoffa backer, and helped rally the NYC unions behind Hoffa through Jimmy O’Rourke, who was one of Corallo’s top Teamsters guys.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by Ivan »

TSNYC wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 8:22 am Came across some old NYTimes articles, can't copy/paste because they're too old, but figured I'd share some of the interesting highlights.
If you are on Windows 10/11, press the Windows key and PrtScr to screenshot the articles and then post the images from your Screenshots folder you can find by searching the Windows search bar.

The "Robert McMahon" listed in the final article as a hijacker is "Frenchy" in Goodfellas.
EYYYY ALL YOU CHOOCHES OUT THERE IT'S THE KID
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by TSNYC »

Ivan wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 3:23 pm
TSNYC wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 8:22 am Came across some old NYTimes articles, can't copy/paste because they're too old, but figured I'd share some of the interesting highlights.
If you are on Windows 10/11, press the Windows key and PrtScr to screenshot the articles and then post the images from your Screenshots folder you can find by searching the Windows search bar.

The "Robert McMahon" listed in the final article as a hijacker is "Frenchy" in Goodfellas.

Yeah, I just wasn’t sure if quality would be awful. Can give it a shot though.

They also mention Air France. “It’s gonna be a good summer!”
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by newera_212 »

Awesome stuff. The 70s contempt roundup article was great - crazy to see a lot of familiar names there, along with their addresses at the time.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

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johnny_scootch wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 9:44 am Good stuff.

Interesting that June 12 raid lists a Bruno Capio as a Bonanno family captain and has him living in New Rochelle. I don’t think I’ve ever heard of Bonanno’s in that area.
Yeah, that’s super interesting. I have no idea if this guy was actually a captain, or of what crew, but I’d be keen to know more. Seems like he was the Bruno Capio who was born in New Rochelle in 1916 and lived there pretty much his whole life, apart from a stint in Auburn in the 1940s (he died in FL in 2003). So he wasn’t just a guy who happened to be living in New Rochelle in the 70s, but a guy from New Rochelle. Plus, he was Calabrese, which makes me wonder if his family had any links to the old Calabrese criminal network in Westchester back in the day (Rocco Pellegrino, etc). If this guy actually was a Bonanno captain, there was probably some local dynamic there that doesn’t fall into the main Brooklyn Sicilian Bonanno family dynamics of the past.
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by Ryan98366 »

Most interesting to me:

Already in jail on other charges were Tommy DiSimone, Anthony Stabile, and Stanley Diamond.

Famous Goodfellas names
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Re: Information from Old NYTimes Articles

Post by B. »

johnny_scootch wrote: Fri Aug 12, 2022 9:44 am Good stuff.

Interesting that June 12 raid lists a Bruno Capio as a Bonanno family captain and has him living in New Rochelle. I don’t think I’ve ever heard of Bonanno’s in that area.
Bonanno captain Nick Alfano and his soldier Tony Crisci lived in nearby Bronxville / Tuckahoe area.
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