JoelTurner wrote: ↑Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:37 pm
Jerry Bruno looks like he was in interesting circles:
- Was born ~1896 // Was 40 in 1936 articles
- In the 1930 census, there's a Jerry Bruno. He was born ~1896 in Massachusetts to Italian parents and living at 241 E 21st St with a wife Annette and daughter Eleanor. This was near the East Village/Lower East Side where Luciano operated.
- 1936 - Arrested as part of Lucky Luciano's pimping case alongside Dave Petillo, Ralph "the Pimp" Liquori/Liguori, Jimmy Frederico, and Tommy Pennachio
- 1938 - Arrested alongside Gambino member Alfonso Attardi and Vincent Gentiluomo, both of Galveston, TX; and Charles Cassesa of NYC for narcotics. Living at 807 Riverside Dr, NYC, NY
- His nickname was
Jerry the Lug
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Angelo Iandosco who was listed as a deceased member of the Alo crew in 1963 also had the nickname
Jerry the Lug
He was born Nov 22 1896 in Boston, MA to Francesco Iandosca and Stella Fiore
According to a Dec 1961 article, he had lived at 344 Upland St, Westbury, NY. A neighbor said that he had died the previous summer.
The nickname, age, and POB are a match. I don't know anything else about Iandosco to really say if it was the same guy but it feels like a lot to be a coincidence.
Great work here.
All of the other men named here were Campanian, and
Iantosca is an Avellines’ surname. I believe that Angelo Iandosco’s parents were most likely from Montefalcione, Avellino. Del Duca was also Avellines’, from the Camorra stronghold of Lauro (also the hometown of the Mazzochis in Newark). Given the Springfield connection here with Antonio Miranda, also worth noting that Lauro borders the comuni of Quindici, Avellino, and Bracigliano, Salerno, that are key source towns in Springfield (eg, the Albano, Siniscalchi, Scibelli, Santaniello, families are all from this section).
Another thing to note is that Antonio Appierto was from Marigliano, the hometown of Boiardo as well (Bill Feather mistakenly had Appierto as being from the neighboring comune of Acerra, but confused him with another guy who immigrated to Chicago). Appierto was connected to Del Duca, and in Newark their respective paesani Boiardo and Mazzochi were connected to each other. Of course, Marigliano was also closely tied to Vito Genovese’s hometown of Roccarainola, both being in the Nola district of Terra di Lavoro/Caserta.