Mainlanders and their alias after committing crimes. Worse then Sicilians. As a researcher they are some deceptive mofos.PolackTony wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2024 10:19 pmRight, in 1910, Ferdinando Mauro was recorded as living as a boarder in the apartment of a “Ralph Alberte” in the Hill district of Pittsburgh. “Alberte” had stated that he was an English speaker, worked as a book keeper at a bank, was born in 1853 in Italy, and had entered the US in 1907. Given the first name, we’d want to know if there is any possibility that he was Raffaele Amendola, the reputed caposocietà of Sambiase alleged to have fled to the US prior to the 1896 trial. The only possible match I was able to find was a Raffaele Alberto who entered the US at Boston in 1906 bound for Chenango County, NY. He was a Northerner, however, and said that he was born in 1869. Neither of us were able to confirm Amendola’s arrival in the US, but if he used in alias or assumed identity it may not be possible to confirm it. As one prominent example, look at Felice De Lucia, who also fled justice in Italy and then lived prominently for decades in Chicago as “Paolo Ricca”, a stolen identity, until his true identity was uncovered by the Feds.Angelo Santino wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2024 9:35 pm In 1910. Mauro was living with a "Ralph Alberte," who was 50. I wonder if that was an alias that might have been one of the guys in the Sambiase case.
The boss of Braddock was arrested and claimed he was from Mola di Bari. He was actually from Vazzano. But there was someone of the same name from MDB who landed in LA. As far as I can tell he had no connection. But the fact that the Braddock Boss knew of this individual and used that to hide who he was indicates his knowledge. And case in point, the modern 'ndrangeta has no (known) association with Vazzano, yet the early Camorra did. On the macro, an Italian wrote about her growing in Braddock and going to Vazzano and surprised to learn that people there know of that small town in PA. The Braddock's boss protégé was none other than Frank Amato, the longtime UB of Pittsburgh.