In the 1910s the Virzis still seemed pretty homogenous but they were mingling with others so it doesn't surprise me that the crew evolved to include others.B. wrote: ↑Thu Jun 13, 2024 2:21 pm The Riccobono crew was heavily Sicilian but in addition to the Serravavallo/Capaci roots, it had multiple Bisacquinese members, Marineo, Agrigento, etc. So it wasn't just a Palermitan crew. They were based in Lower Manhattan but later some of the younger Riccobonos ran a decina in Brooklyn, though they descended from Simone Riccobono who was also a Mangano-era captain of what may have been a separate crew from Joe Riccobono even though they were related. And even though Frank Scalise descended from the same clan, his crew was separate and based primarily in the Bronx. So much like the Gambino-Castellanos having multiple decine early on as well as later, the same is true for the Virzi-Scalise-Riccobono clan.
There was the source you guys discussed in the article who indicated Pietro Inzarillo (spelling different from Inzerillo, though interesting that name recurs) reported to Virzi, so it's a good bet Virzi was an early capodecina. It's a question though of whether these younger leaders from that clan all have roots under him or what.
Joe Bonanno lays it out explicitly on page 161 of my paperback edition. The "conservative" faction was "tradition-bound" and shared a "philosophy" that reflected their "Sicilian roots"... he says the conservative faction was the "Sicilian wing" and they opposed narcotics and prostitution, whereas the "liberal" faction was the "American" wing who reflected "trends" developing in America. Luciano, he says, was born in Sicily but was the product of "American ideas". Bonanno says the Americanized/liberal leaders didn't always agree or side together but represented the same tendencies.I often wondered what he meant by liberal and conservative because that really rests on the perceiver.
At another point, Bonanno says "Americanized" included the inclusion of mainlanders and mainland influences -- he didn't simply mean "Americanized" in a mainstream American sense, but anything that strayed from the Sicilian tradition even within a world of Italian immigrants. Magaddino also made this same distinction, on one tape discussing how the Chicago Family once had the "greaseballs" who were represented by boss Toto LoVerde and the "Americanized" represented by Paul Ricca.
I wasn't meaning to imply sostituti = members of the consiglio, only that Gentile was a soldier and sostituto and for some reason he and Chiri were part of a five-man meeting with the official admin to discuss Gentile's fate and it's not clear why these five men met to make the decision together. The meeting concerned Gentile so his attendance could have been based on that, but he was a soldier authorized to represent Mangano over the Agrigentini and Chiri was either a soldier or capodecina but included in this process for reasons unknown even though they could just as well have brought any number of other capidecine to the meeting. It brings to mind the consiglio, which was typically a five-man body that included the admin, a specific capodecina and often a senior soldier.Gentile never confirmed if sostituti were the same as being on the consiglio. If it was then he was on the Gambino consiglio like we'd have to chart him on it like the charts in Detroit and Tampa.
Sostituito seems to have changed or evolved or used in different contexts. In the Sangiorgi its reported as the second position in the Family, in Gentile he states that "In D'Aquila's absence, Train was substitute." I think there's examples in Allegra but I dont recall them offhand. And then we have in Mangano's case examples of members being selected to lighten the load of the boss administratively.
So did Philly consider or refer to Traina as sostituto?
However now that we're talking about this, I believe consiglio members would be prime candidates to serve as sostituti and there are examples of that even beyond the official consigliere being the acting boss in Bill B and Allegra's accounts. For one, when the Chicago Family was having admin trouble, consiglio members Paul Ricca and Tony Accardo stepped up as acting bosses and in San Jose it was reported that consiglio members Zoccoli and Morici served as the acting bosses in the absence of Joe Cerrito.
I don't think sostituti evolved or changed, only that it was somewhat flexibile in that a sostituto = someone who is authorized to act in the boss's absence. We know it could be "the" acting boss but it could also be someone like Gentile who was authorized to act for the boss within a specific set of parameters (over the Agrigentino crews).
What Allegra said was the consigliere was also the boss's sostituto, which adds to Bill Bonanno's claim that the consigliere was traditionally the acting boss when needed. Since making that connection, we can see a number of examples where that happened even though there are other instances where the underboss or a capodecina serves as acting boss.
There are no examples of Traina being called a "sostituto" with Philly, though his role was very much that. Traina was at that point a capodecina who previously served as consigliere and D'Aquila's sostituto in national matters, but for decades Philly would contact him about issues within their Family and Traina looks to have been designated to act on behalf of whoever the Gambino boss was in matters that concerned Philadelphia. He carried this role under Mangano, Anastasia, and Carlo Gambino so it was clearly a well-established role regardless of who his boss was at any given time and no doubt reflects not just his close relationship with Philly via compaesani but also his experience with these duties going back to the D'Aquila era when Gentile explicitly called him the sostituto.
We agree on sostituto. I guess we should ask how formal are these functions? Did Mangano call Trupia and Parlapiano to a sitdown and introduce Cola Gentile as the new sostituto they are to see if they have any issues? Certainly Gentile couldn't just leave Mangano and go up to both men and say 'Mangano entrusted me to hear grievances.' Maybe, and I'm just throwing this out there, Gentile was describing the past situation and role he saw himself in. Perhaps if we could ask Mangano he might have just said Gentile's a soldier under Trupia. He gets alot of things right but he does have a tendancy of hyping himself up.