Camo wrote: ↑Tue Jun 03, 2025 6:45 pm
B. wrote: ↑Tue Jun 03, 2025 6:08 pm
Regarding the consigliere position, Leonardo Messina (high-ranking member of the San Cataldo Family) said the consigliere in Sicily was "the man who controls the head." He used the word "testa", literal for "head", presumably referring to the capofamiglia/boss, a translation of "capo" also being "head". Other pentiti have given comparable descriptions of the consigliere / consiglieri role in the Sicilian mafia.
"The man who controls the head" seems to be a fair description of Chicago's consiglieri as well, particularly the consiglio chairman. Descriptions of this relationship misinterpret this role in Chicago as "the top boss" or a sort of "boss's boss" but that's not accurate either. The consigliere's duty first and foremost is to make sure the organization is being run fairly and that includes making sure the boss is not abusing his power. Messina in Sicily also said the San Cataldo consigliere made sure the boss and capidecine were not collecting more money from members than they should be taking. Descriptions of Ricca and Accardo in the 1960s and early 70s fit this, as sources have said they were primarily concerned with peace, mediation, and making sure the org was operating fairly.
One of the sources Snakes posted from that era i believe said Accardo and Ricca were millionaires many times over and were only concerned with their own affairs.
Actually it was "only concerned with keeping their wealth and status" -
viewtopic.php?p=178667&hilit=millionaires#p178667
It also describes them as letting others (Giancana and Battaglia) run the family while only offering consultation and advice but maybe the source had a limited view of the situation.
Have you read many of the bug transcripts between Accardo, Giancana, Ricca, and others on Mary Ferrell? They are great to review. Accardo and Ricca were very much involved in the details of running the family in that period. Conversations about senators, the commission, various rackets, etc. I would agree however, that they didn't want to get involved in the day to day stuff, both to avoid law enforcement scrutiny and to not have the hassle.
Opinions vary, but whatever their organizational "roles" were, I don't know how anyone comes out of reading those transcripts not thinking that Accardo, at the very least, was heavily influencing, or in some instances outright directing, certain outcomes for the Outfit during Giancana's time as boss.
Additonally, there is a CI report from 1972 following Ricca's death, of a meeting where Accardo states that "he will remain boss of organized crime", and that he will increasingly rely on Aiuppa and Gus Alex for support. This is obviously before Aiuppa really stepped up and learned the ropes, but I would say the involvement was a bit beyond simply looking after his own interests. (not that that wasn't a priority for him, as it is all criminals).