Peter Casella (cousin of the infamous one) was also shelved and later reinstated in the mid-1960s, though we don't know when he was shelved, only that it was for sharing too much info with his wife. Seems possible for Sabella as well with the little info we have. If I remember right, the source who said Sabella was "demoted" was a non-member and the same informant claimed Avena had been demoted/deposed before his murder as well. I don't believe either of these statements has been corroborated by other sources but I could be wrong.
1 Technically book 2 more or less says the same thing: Sabella was "forced" down due to external reasons. Rather than immediately after 1927 but rather mid-1931 she (or Riccobene) claims it was due to LCN's formation.
2 The Sabella family provided proof that Sabella DID indeed live in NYC for 1930-1931.
If he was demoted in 1927 due the Zanghi stuff, it could explain his return to NYC and later on NJ. If he wasn't demoted in 1927 and indeed still a boss from 1930-1931 period it stands likely he would have been involved in mafia politics but there's no evidence anywhere that he was, aside from Morello's claims that he and 10 picciotti were roving the city for 2 years at Maranzano's behest.
A note on the "Castammaresi Wars of 1927-1931": the dates she provided were the dates Gentile gave for his departure and return from Sicily- 1927-1930, where he writes that during his absence "many men fell." Technically he said that but he wasn't saying a war went on for the entire duration of his absence. It'd be like me writing about my leaving the USA on May 1, 1995 and returning in 2002 and stating that "during that time I was away many people died during the 911 attack" and someone later misconstrues what I wrote and takes it as me saying 911 predates 2001 and extends back to May 1st, 1995.
Joe Rugnetta was married to the Piccolos' aunt according to one FBI report (an interview with Joe or Mike Piccolo, going off memory) and helped out the Piccolos when they were younger after their father died. The FBN had him marrying a Lina Latorre on 3/18/1919 and says she died in 1945. Not sure how that fits in with the Piccolo connection. Leonetti via Scarfo said Nick Piccolo was inducted in the late 1940s, presumably with Rugnetta as sponsor, with his brothers and (second?) cousin/"nephew" Tony and nephew Nick Scarfo being inducted in the mid-1950s. A newspaper article at the time of Rugnetta's death claimed he (Rugnetta) became a captain in 1941 though I've never seen this highly specific year in any reports and wonder where the article got it. Piccolo is a captain by the early 1960s when Angelo Bruno is boss and Rugnetta is consigliere. I try not to assume direct succession with the Philly family captains, but it's likely Piccolo inherited at least part of Rugnetta's crew, though Rugnetta had a decina of his own reporting to him as well during at least part of his time as consigliere.
Interesting. I was searching around in Chester and encountered quite a bit of Scarfo surnames living there. Not sure the connection if any but I did notice that Scarfo was later "technically" in that crew was he not?
If Rugnetta did become captain in 1941 or around that time, the question would be where the crew came from and who the early Calabrian captains may have been. There has been speculation that they may not have had captains early on, but Sam Scafidi who was already made by the mid-1930s told his informant brother Rocco that their father Gaetano was a captain by that time, so we can assume they had other captains by then. We also know the Calabrians/mainlanders were somewhat if not completely separatists when it came to their decinas circa 1950s/60s, so we can also assume they had this mentality earlier on when ethnicities were even stronger. Again, I don't like to assume direct successions, but who did Rugnetta possibly take over for in 1941, or otherwise who were the Calabrian/mainland captains pre-1950s?
The top Calabrian as we stated in Scopelliti but he was out of the picture by 1928 after an attempted murder on his life and moving to Atlantic City. The names we have are Domenico Festa, Joe Sciglitano Snr, Demetrio Pennestri and Giuseppe Perugino of Chester; Angelo Cherico, Frank Piccolo (not sure of/if a relation), Mike Romeo, Joe Rugnetta, Joe Ida and Rocco DiCondina. There's also Marco Reginelli who would have fallen under this faction. Also perhaps Ignazio Amato, Frank Greco and Frank Serno but I can't find records on them. Joe Caro was arrested in 1927 so I don't think the one from Stowe is the same guy. This Joe Caro appears to be involved early on, as do alot of these individuals. Arguably eastern Sicilians fell under this network too: John Avena, Joe Bruno, Eduard Caminiti, Luigi Quaranta. Who Avena made, others made I have no idea.
But interestingly: Zanghi's 1927 hitmen included Sabella (boss), Scopelliti (possible underboss), Avena (successor) etc etc pretty much everyone who was anyone until the 50's were in on that hit. They either didn't have crews to handle wet work or he was important enough to warrant the entire leadership's direct involvement. So my guesses would be Avena, Bruno, Festa, Maggio, Barrale, Reginelli as among those in admin positions. Not very helpful I know.
We have a pretty solid idea who the captains were from 1952 onward. There may be a name or two who held the position for a time 1952-1958 that may have been overlooked given the upheaval/changes during that time, but again the info we have is pretty solid. So let's look at who have been specifically mentioned as captains pre-1952:
Gaetano Scafidi (1930s-1950s)
Giovanni Cappello (pre-1952; arrived in Philly circa mid-1930s)
Francesco Barrale (?-1950s; presumably captain or higher since the 1930s or earlier)
That's three Belmonte Sicilians who likely held captain positions, all possibly around the same time before the early 1950s.
I didn't realize they were all captains at the same time. Seems to indicate expansion. I do noticed that more than a few ceremonies involved making 10 members at once.
Domenico Festa
Demetrio Pennestri
Both Chester-based mainlanders who held underboss and captain positions in the 1930s, possibly to the mid-1940s, with Pennestri holding captain through the 1950s I believe. While we don't know everything about the succession of the Chester crew, it is pretty straightforward and these two seem to have kept the captain position occupied during the years in question. JD suggested that Giuseppe Perugina of Chester may have also been a captain, but later clarified that the wording only made him out to be a leading member in the area. I would guess he was simply a powerful soldier.
Did you see the article above about Pennestri being involved in prostitution? That makes Bruno, Ida and Rugnetta.
Giuseppe Rugnetta (1941?-late 1950s)
Anthony Carfagno (?-1940)
This might suggest that Rugnetta could have taken over for the Abruzzese Carfagno given the timeline, or at last part of his crew, but that would be a huge jump.Here are some other names to consider that I haven't seen explicitly named as captains:
Antonio Domenico Pollina (captain by 1952, probably earlier when put in context with other info)
John Scoppeliti
Giuseppe Ida
Marco Reginelli
I know nothing about Carfagno so I can't comment. I'd like to know more.
Scoppeliti seems to have been one of the most prominent Calabrian members/associates by the 1920s, so it seems likely he would have held some kind of position unless he lost standing. He died in the early 1940s, so if he was in ill health he may have given up his position in the years leading up to his death, which could match up with Rugnetta.
Yes but he faded in 1928 with the attempt on his life. Potentially Sabella and Scopelliti may have been out of power in 1928 if one scenario is correct. I keep coming back to the Zanghi hit because I feel it has more significance than previously suspected. We may never know the true details, but there's something there. If there's any credence to Sabella and Scopelliti suffering reprisals as a result of this hit: it was either due to the heat and exposure, or Zanghi was significant enough and possibly even a member.
Morello's book says that Ida sponsored Reginelli for membership and I'm not sure where she got this info, but we do know that they were very closely associated for many years and Ida later named Reginelli his underboss/street boss and met primarily with Reginelli and few other family members. I haven't seen any info confirming that Ida or Reginelli were captains before they respectively joined the admin, but Reginelli had a decina reporting directly to him as UB and several of his closest associates who were fellow Abruzzesi would become captains or higher. It seems possible that the Reginelli/Camden group originally came from Ida, who also lived in Jersey though a significant distance away. Given the close association between the Abruzzesi, we also have to wonder if Carfagno factored into this group of guys at all.
Which if true means Ida was a member before 1930 (reasonable). Ida followed Bruno to Bristol so the two men were close. It appears under Bruno Reginelli was underboss.
Did you know in 1939 there was another internal Philadelphia mafia war? Anthony Piccarelli, Nicholas Bartilucci, Danny 'Day' Deodato and Frank Piccolo were casualties of this war. Riccobene claims he moved to Bristol with Bruno for safety. He never explains the reasons/background for this war. According to Morello after this war Joe Bruno was pretty much without power, leaving Reginelli and the captains free to do as they'd like until his death. Do you know any more about this?