Villain wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 9:15 pm
PolackTony wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 6:04 pm
Villain wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 9:58 am
Also, during the 50s and 60s the Outfit didnt have some special protocols and so it was hard to say who was made and who wasnt.
The wiretapped sit-down between Giancana, Joe Costello, and an unnamed Italian-speaker provides clear evidence that “protocol” and inducted status was important to Chicago even under Giancana’s reign. The discussants in that convo invoke Joe Fusco’s made status (he was “in the clique”) as relevant to the dispute with Costello and also reference protocol for the chain of command for handling disputes within the family in respect to formal mafia ranks (capodecina, “avvocato”).
I don’t bring this up to divert the topic off on a tangent here (and we both know where our opinions stand on these questions already). But I think it’s more accurate to state that we can’t be clear about the inducted status of many guys in Chicago during this period because we don’t have solid intel, not because Chicago didn’t care about made status or mafia protocol.
The Giancana-Fusco-Costello situation is a good example in which you can make a difference between the Americanized and the old Sicilian factions. Costello was a leftover from the old Sicilian Mafia, which was pushed back and completely brought on its knees after the 1940's conflict or the second war, and maybe thats why he wasnt aware regarding Fusco's made status who in turn was entering Costello's areas without any obstacle and without any question, obviously because Fusco belonged to the wining faction. Also, you can see that LaPorte didnt care about the problem and thats why Costello went straight to the boss. Can we ask ourselves on why LaPorte didnt care much about Costello and didnt follow protocol? I personally believe he was thinking the same way as Fusco.
Now lets see another example in which the so-called protocol was missing....in 1966 Pranno's lieutenant Joe Amabile brought a low level associate in Battaglias presence to talk business, who in turn was the Outfit's boss at the time. When Pranno heard about Henry LaKey’s presence at Battaglias farm, he went ballistic but was stopped by Battaglia himself. Later, LaKey was the main witness in Battaglia's case and so the boss went to jail.
We can also see same and similar examples in the Nitto-Bioff situation and also the Ricca-Cerone-Bombacino situation.
Per Costello's account, Fusco was abusing him and overstepping his bounds. Costello appealed to his capo -- LaPorte -- to intervene and handle the dispute. As LaPorte was either unresponsive or unavailable to one of his men, Costello followed protocol and appealed to Giancana, as "avugad", to intervene. We have no idea what either LaPorte or Fusco thought of mafia protocol and I don't think that their attitudes to it can be inferred at all from this incident. LaPorte was off in California and was most likely either otherwise occupied or derelict in his duty as a capodecina.
Of course, Giancana was not part of the pre-Capone family faction. But it's not like he stopped Costello during the sit down to tell him: "
Say, what's wit' all dis 'gobracheen' and 'avugad' talk, ya know we don' go for dat greaseball siggie horseshit here! Show me how much money is innit and den I'll decide how to rule". Giancana is doing exactly what a later CI stated was part of Aiuppa's role as boss -- to be "available" to the membership on a day-to-day basis when required. That is part of protocol. We already know from another CI that Chicago had a protocol for dealing with complaints from a made member. Just because someone didn't follow the protocol (and we don't really know what happened there or to what degree any of Fusco or LaPorte's actions or decisions had anything to do with mafia protocol one way or the other), that doesn't mean there wasn't a protocol or that it didn't matter. This wiretap is just one conversation, but it is an invaluable document, as it is a window into how Chicago's membership thought of and invoked the prerogatives and responsibilities of membership and rank. It is not a claim to or account of the existence of protocol, but rather it is an example of protocol
in practice. I only wish we knew what the unnamed Italian speaker was saying.
The other examples that you brought up are not relevant to protocol within the family's membership, as these were "operational" dealings between members and associates. Internal mafia protocol would not be a part of it. Just because even high-level Outfit members met with and did business with non-made guys does not mean that mafia membership was not clearly demarcated (it was, regardless of whether that membership was officiated via a formal ceremony, an oath, or simply the word of the admin), that membership wasn't important, or that relationships and matters within the made membership of the Outfit weren't governed by protocol.
All that we can say for sure here is that, to the best of our knowledge, there were periods where Chicago admitted made members either by an abbreviated dinner-and-oath ceremony or just by word. We don't know when that practice started and we don't know for sure that no full ceremonies were ever conducted during whatever period in question. I don't think that we have any basis to say one way or the other whether the post-Capone Outfit differed from the prior "traditional" Sicilian-led incarnation in matters of protocol, membership, crew structure, rank, etc. We have no idea what, if any, innovations or discontinuities were involved. We can all have our opinions, but we don't and will probably never actually know these things.