Philly 2016 Chart
Moderator: Capos
- Angelo Santino
- Filthy Few
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Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Does anyone have any info on the Philadelphia Ranieris, Milanos and Stillitanos? Someone once alleged that the Milanos and Scarfos were related. Has this been verified?
- Pogo The Clown
- Men Of Mayhem
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Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Chris Christie wrote:Someone once alleged that the Milanos and Scarfos were related. Has this been verified?
I doubt it. According to GA Gino Milano did not grow up around the mob and his only connection was knowing Salvy Testa (if I remember right they went to school together). Nicky Milano got in through his brother.
Pogo
It's a new morning in America... fresh, vital. The old cynicism is gone. We have faith in our leaders. We're optimistic as to what becomes of it all. It really boils down to our ability to accept. We don't need pessimism. There are no limits.
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- Straightened out
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Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Hey any pics you need for the chart just let me know exactly who you need and ill get it. Ive probably posted almost every single member in BB's rare pics thread and ill go through and find it. I had one of robert ranieri in that thread. ill find it.
- Angelo Santino
- Filthy Few
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Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Thanks, buddy. If you could go through the list of names in the 82 and 16 chart, I'll add them and you'll receive credit at the top.Handsome Stevie wrote:Hey any pics you need for the chart just let me know exactly who you need and ill get it. Ive probably posted almost every single member in BB's rare pics thread and ill go through and find it. I had one of robert ranieri in that thread. ill find it.
Eventually I'd like to collaborate more with B. on some more historical Philly stuff.
http://s17.postimg.org/wu0oy4shb/Philly1963.jpg
http://s23.postimg.org/7d1urqybt/philad ... ineage.jpg
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Christie, you saw the old photos I uploaded to the Philly photo thread, right? Check the last two or three pages. Guys like Salvatore Scafidi, Vincenzo Amato, etc.
- Pogo The Clown
- Men Of Mayhem
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Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Chucky wrote:Wasn't Faffy Iannarella Sr a made guy?
He was made in 1969. Sponsored by Phil Testa.
Pogo
It's a new morning in America... fresh, vital. The old cynicism is gone. We have faith in our leaders. We're optimistic as to what becomes of it all. It really boils down to our ability to accept. We don't need pessimism. There are no limits.
- Angelo Santino
- Filthy Few
- Posts: 6564
- Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2014 8:15 am
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Yes I did but I didn't make the connection. This is for the 60's chart?B. wrote:Christie, you saw the old photos I uploaded to the Philly photo thread, right? Check the last two or three pages. Guys like Salvatore Scafidi, Vincenzo Amato, etc.
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Yep, exactly. Amato died in the mid-1960s I think, but was still around in the early 1960s.Chris Christie wrote:Yes I did but I didn't make the connection. This is for the 60's chart?B. wrote:Christie, you saw the old photos I uploaded to the Philly photo thread, right? Check the last two or three pages. Guys like Salvatore Scafidi, Vincenzo Amato, etc.
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- Full Patched
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Re: Philly 2016 Chart
I posted this in charts section but more people will see it here:
CosaNostraNews has 4 of the recently made guys in Philly as
Anthony Borgesi
Sonny Mazzone
Dave Salvo
Anthony Accardo
Heres your grain of salt .
CosaNostraNews has 4 of the recently made guys in Philly as
Anthony Borgesi
Sonny Mazzone
Dave Salvo
Anthony Accardo
Heres your grain of salt .
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
FBI Launches Major Probe Into Philadelphia Mob
The FBI has tripled the size of its squad in Philadelphia and has brought in a well-seasoned supervisory agent from New York to oversee what appears to be the formation of a new Organized Crime Strike Force, reliable sources have told Cosa Nostra News.
One of the operation's key goals is reportedly to nail Philadelphia Cosa Nostra boss Joseph "Uncle Joe" Ligambi and his top associates for three unsolved gangland hits in the city. Those murders were committed while Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino, reputed official boss, and former consiglieri/Ligambi nephew George Borgesi were in prison.
The Fed's also are aggressively investigating a mobster considered Ligambi's chief shooter from back when "Uncle Joe" was tasked with holding together a badly battered and fractured Cosa Nostra family. That was the backdrop against which the three murders, now intensely being scrutinized, were committed.
That shooter is reputed Philadelphia captain Michael "Mikey Lance" Lancelotti, 51, who reportedly now assists in the running of the family's daily operations after recovering from cancer. Lance was a shooter, likely for both Merlino and Ligambi.
Lancelotti "never came up in any of the major RICO trials that put lots of guys away, " a source told CNN.
Merlino inducted Mikey Lance in the 1990s, bolstering Merlino and Stevie Mazzone's efforts to win the family war with Sicilian-born boss John Stanfa, who is now serving life for racketeering and murder.
Gangster Report noted that it was told by a retired FBI agent that, “We heard Lance was possibly one of the shooters in the Joey Chang hit and Merlino planned it and was in a car nearby monitoring things."
Ligambi, when he rose to acting boss after Merlino went away, created a tight-knit inner circle that included longtime Philadelphia mobsters such as Joseph Massimino, Gaeton Lucibello, and Lancelotti.
The three hits said to be part of a larger probe into the re-surging Philadelphia crime family are John "Johnny Gongs" Casasanto, a young mob soldier who couldn't keep it in his pants and was reportedly seeking to join New York's Gambino crime family; Ronnie Turchi, hit in 1999; and Raymond “Long John” Martorano, who was whacked in 2002.
Members of organized crime in Philadelphia have indeed kept law enforcement busy in recent months, as reported.
Federal, state and local law enforcement entities are indeed surveilling mobsters as they move in and out of the new social club on 11th and Jackson. They are monitoring the group's moves into Philadelphia's booming home building/home renovation business, which has fueled the vibrant construction work seen across the city.
Ligambi is back in harness, serving as acting boss, with Stevie Mazzone reportedly serving as underboss.
Beneath the seemingly tranquil surface there may be as many as four factions vying for control, with the very visible and very active Borgesi making moves all over the place.
Today, the crime family has about 30 to 40 members on the street; plus several new members, who were recently inducted. The Philly mob hasn't been this large since the bloody days of Nicky Scarfo's reign.
The FBI's Philadelphia organized crime squad was enlarged from around 3 to 4 agents, to 12, and a veteran supervisor was brought in from New York. Sources wouldn't identify him for non-disclosed reasons, but another source said the agent is believed to be a former head of the Gambino squad.
This enlargement of the FBI unit to monitor the Philadelphia Cosa Nostra clan, which interestingly hasn't been named after a boss since the violent Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo era is likely part of a new Organized Crime Task Force that would include state and local law enforcement agencies, as well, sources said.
This follows a few moves made by elements of the Philadelphia-based Cosa Nostra clan that raised the Mafia family's profile in both media reports as well as media reports. The Philadelphia mob recently opened up a social club and also inducted five new members last October. News of the ceremony was quickly leaked to the media.
"Borgesi is in full-throttle," said one source, noting that he's been very visible lately, visiting the club on 11th and Jackson Streets. He's also been holding meetings there supposedly with gangsters from other regions of the country.
"Uncle Joe" has been seen going to the club less frequently.
Still, all of them are under major surveillance, sources said, with one noting, "The Feds are watching them like a hawk."
Cosa Nostra Clan Made Five
Among the newly initiated members of the crime family (two appear specifically to have been put forth by Borgesi, sources told Cosa Nostra News) are:
George Borgesi's younger brother, Anthony;
Steven "Handsome Stevie" Mazzone's brother, Salvatore "Sonny" Mazzone;
David "Dave" Salvo, one of two brothers who served as Borgesi's emissaries while he was on parole (David also allegedly was Ligambi's driver for a time, earlier in "Uncle Joe's" tenure as boss);
Anthony Accardo, a violent associate who was one of about a dozen local mobsters indicted in 2000 on a slew of racketeering charges.
Accardo pleaded guilty but refused to testify against reputed mob boss Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino and other mob members.
This is likely a key reason he got his button. As prosecutors said at the time, Accardo had bolstered his street cred exponentially and is now viewed by area gangsters as "a stand-up guy."
"He will be in a perfect position to step right back into these criminal actions" when he gets out of prison, the prosecutor predicted.
Ligambi, 72, is known as the peaceful Don who cooled down flaring tempers and stabilized a crime family riven by decades of strife and rampant violence that began with the spectacular shotgun murder of Angelo Bruno in 1980 and continued on through the regimes of Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo, John Stanfa, and Ralph Natale, then Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino, who, along with the family's young turks, had fought an open war against boss Stanfa for control. (Natale has been described as a front boss for Merlino when Merlino went off to prison.)
Ligambi, part of the Scarfo gang, also had ties to Merlino's father and showed he had the chops to be boss and keep the family together. Ligambi gets kudos (ironically from both law enforcement and the Five Families) for stabilizing the troubled Philadelphia-South Jersey branch of the American Cosa Nostra, thereby ending the violence.
He also revived the crime family, which was close to extinction.
http://www.cosanostranews.com/2016/03/f ... a.html?m=1
The FBI has tripled the size of its squad in Philadelphia and has brought in a well-seasoned supervisory agent from New York to oversee what appears to be the formation of a new Organized Crime Strike Force, reliable sources have told Cosa Nostra News.
One of the operation's key goals is reportedly to nail Philadelphia Cosa Nostra boss Joseph "Uncle Joe" Ligambi and his top associates for three unsolved gangland hits in the city. Those murders were committed while Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino, reputed official boss, and former consiglieri/Ligambi nephew George Borgesi were in prison.
The Fed's also are aggressively investigating a mobster considered Ligambi's chief shooter from back when "Uncle Joe" was tasked with holding together a badly battered and fractured Cosa Nostra family. That was the backdrop against which the three murders, now intensely being scrutinized, were committed.
That shooter is reputed Philadelphia captain Michael "Mikey Lance" Lancelotti, 51, who reportedly now assists in the running of the family's daily operations after recovering from cancer. Lance was a shooter, likely for both Merlino and Ligambi.
Lancelotti "never came up in any of the major RICO trials that put lots of guys away, " a source told CNN.
Merlino inducted Mikey Lance in the 1990s, bolstering Merlino and Stevie Mazzone's efforts to win the family war with Sicilian-born boss John Stanfa, who is now serving life for racketeering and murder.
Gangster Report noted that it was told by a retired FBI agent that, “We heard Lance was possibly one of the shooters in the Joey Chang hit and Merlino planned it and was in a car nearby monitoring things."
Ligambi, when he rose to acting boss after Merlino went away, created a tight-knit inner circle that included longtime Philadelphia mobsters such as Joseph Massimino, Gaeton Lucibello, and Lancelotti.
The three hits said to be part of a larger probe into the re-surging Philadelphia crime family are John "Johnny Gongs" Casasanto, a young mob soldier who couldn't keep it in his pants and was reportedly seeking to join New York's Gambino crime family; Ronnie Turchi, hit in 1999; and Raymond “Long John” Martorano, who was whacked in 2002.
Members of organized crime in Philadelphia have indeed kept law enforcement busy in recent months, as reported.
Federal, state and local law enforcement entities are indeed surveilling mobsters as they move in and out of the new social club on 11th and Jackson. They are monitoring the group's moves into Philadelphia's booming home building/home renovation business, which has fueled the vibrant construction work seen across the city.
Ligambi is back in harness, serving as acting boss, with Stevie Mazzone reportedly serving as underboss.
Beneath the seemingly tranquil surface there may be as many as four factions vying for control, with the very visible and very active Borgesi making moves all over the place.
Today, the crime family has about 30 to 40 members on the street; plus several new members, who were recently inducted. The Philly mob hasn't been this large since the bloody days of Nicky Scarfo's reign.
The FBI's Philadelphia organized crime squad was enlarged from around 3 to 4 agents, to 12, and a veteran supervisor was brought in from New York. Sources wouldn't identify him for non-disclosed reasons, but another source said the agent is believed to be a former head of the Gambino squad.
This enlargement of the FBI unit to monitor the Philadelphia Cosa Nostra clan, which interestingly hasn't been named after a boss since the violent Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo era is likely part of a new Organized Crime Task Force that would include state and local law enforcement agencies, as well, sources said.
This follows a few moves made by elements of the Philadelphia-based Cosa Nostra clan that raised the Mafia family's profile in both media reports as well as media reports. The Philadelphia mob recently opened up a social club and also inducted five new members last October. News of the ceremony was quickly leaked to the media.
"Borgesi is in full-throttle," said one source, noting that he's been very visible lately, visiting the club on 11th and Jackson Streets. He's also been holding meetings there supposedly with gangsters from other regions of the country.
"Uncle Joe" has been seen going to the club less frequently.
Still, all of them are under major surveillance, sources said, with one noting, "The Feds are watching them like a hawk."
Cosa Nostra Clan Made Five
Among the newly initiated members of the crime family (two appear specifically to have been put forth by Borgesi, sources told Cosa Nostra News) are:
George Borgesi's younger brother, Anthony;
Steven "Handsome Stevie" Mazzone's brother, Salvatore "Sonny" Mazzone;
David "Dave" Salvo, one of two brothers who served as Borgesi's emissaries while he was on parole (David also allegedly was Ligambi's driver for a time, earlier in "Uncle Joe's" tenure as boss);
Anthony Accardo, a violent associate who was one of about a dozen local mobsters indicted in 2000 on a slew of racketeering charges.
Accardo pleaded guilty but refused to testify against reputed mob boss Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino and other mob members.
This is likely a key reason he got his button. As prosecutors said at the time, Accardo had bolstered his street cred exponentially and is now viewed by area gangsters as "a stand-up guy."
"He will be in a perfect position to step right back into these criminal actions" when he gets out of prison, the prosecutor predicted.
Ligambi, 72, is known as the peaceful Don who cooled down flaring tempers and stabilized a crime family riven by decades of strife and rampant violence that began with the spectacular shotgun murder of Angelo Bruno in 1980 and continued on through the regimes of Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo, John Stanfa, and Ralph Natale, then Joseph "Skinny Joey" Merlino, who, along with the family's young turks, had fought an open war against boss Stanfa for control. (Natale has been described as a front boss for Merlino when Merlino went off to prison.)
Ligambi, part of the Scarfo gang, also had ties to Merlino's father and showed he had the chops to be boss and keep the family together. Ligambi gets kudos (ironically from both law enforcement and the Five Families) for stabilizing the troubled Philadelphia-South Jersey branch of the American Cosa Nostra, thereby ending the violence.
He also revived the crime family, which was close to extinction.
http://www.cosanostranews.com/2016/03/f ... a.html?m=1
All roads lead to New York.
- Pogo The Clown
- Men Of Mayhem
- Posts: 14158
- Joined: Thu Oct 23, 2014 7:02 am
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Wiseguy wrote:Lancelotti "never came up in any of the major RICO trials that put lots of guys away, " a source told CNN.
Gangster Report noted that it was told by a retired FBI agent that, “We heard Lance was possibly one of the shooters in the Joey Chang hit and Merlino planned it and was in a car nearby monitoring things."
This doesn't sound right. Tommy Scafidi testified at the Merlino trial that Lancelotti was one of the shooters in the Joey Chang hit. It was mentioned in the papers at the time and GA even mentioned it in The Last Gangster. It has been public knowledge for 15 years.
I also see that Johnny Gongs is now a "Soldier".
Pogo
It's a new morning in America... fresh, vital. The old cynicism is gone. We have faith in our leaders. We're optimistic as to what becomes of it all. It really boils down to our ability to accept. We don't need pessimism. There are no limits.
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
Interesting to note that there have been articles recently regarding the downsizing with the NYPD and FBI for NYC OC, and now we see a new FBI unit dedicated to OC in Philly. Makes me think someone high up in the FBI saw Scott's article or something where he talked about the new clubhouse.
Regarding the three unsolved murders, I wonder what new information/evidence the FBI can come up with, as these are old cases. I guess they hope somebody new flips or somebody talks on a wire/bug. I bet they are really trying to get Dom Grande as he is mentioned being in the car with Nicademo in pretty much every article about the Gino DiPietro hit.
Regarding the three unsolved murders, I wonder what new information/evidence the FBI can come up with, as these are old cases. I guess they hope somebody new flips or somebody talks on a wire/bug. I bet they are really trying to get Dom Grande as he is mentioned being in the car with Nicademo in pretty much every article about the Gino DiPietro hit.
Re: Philly 2016 Chart
I doubt the feds need Scott's articles to dictate how they disperse their OC agents.moneyman wrote:Interesting to note that there have been articles recently regarding the downsizing with the NYPD and FBI for NYC OC, and now we see a new FBI unit dedicated to OC in Philly. Makes me think someone high up in the FBI saw Scott's article or something where he talked about the new clubhouse.
Regarding the three unsolved murders, I wonder what new information/evidence the FBI can come up with, as these are old cases. I guess they hope somebody new flips or somebody talks on a wire/bug. I bet they are really trying to get Dom Grande as he is mentioned being in the car with Nicademo in pretty much every article about the Gino DiPietro hit.
Also this is an Eddie the Jew article, so who fucking knows how credible it is.
Just smile and blow me - Mel Gibson