Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

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Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by JoePuzzles234 »

Came across this book called Trail of Shadows, lots of great info about the Dionisio clan and suggests that the Colorado family had interests in Colfax County, New Mexico.

The book primarily concerns the murders of Prohibition agents Dale Kearney and Raymond Sutton in 1930.

August 15th 1930 arrests in probe of Kearney murder:
[Kearney was killed on July 6th 1930]

Joseph Riggio, Santo Alenci, Rosario Dionisio and R. V. Dionisio (Dionisio spelt as Dioniscio in newspaper accounts) were grabbed in this probe.

Riggio:
Joseph Riggio (1862-1952) was the father-in-law of boss Pietro A. Carlino.

He was born Giuseppe Mortellaro in Lucca Sicula and immigrated to New Orleans under that name. He changed it to Riggio sometime prior to 1910.
This complicates whether or not he was related to Giacomo “Jack” Riggio (Palazzo Adriano), whose daughter Antonina married Robert Victor Dionisio. Jack Riggio’s son Nicola (1903-1987), was also connected to the Colorado family per the Denver PD.

Not sure if Joseph Riggio was related to Mortellaro brothers Frank (suspected member) and Vincent (killed) who were from Bivona, Agrigento.

Alenci:
Santo Alenci (1908-1990), of Camporeale, was a painter living in Brooklyn by 1950. Not sure if he was connected.

Dionisios:
R. V. is Robert Victor Dionisio while Rosario is [Sebastiano] Rosario Dionisio, given his later identification as the father-in-law of Jack Dionisio, Robert’s brother.

Notably, the interrogation of the Dionisios erroneously describes them as brothers. This continues the confusion that surrounded their actual uncle-nephew relation.

September 1930 arrest of Jack Dionisio:
This was Gioachino Dionisio, son of Vito Dionisio and Anna D’Azzo & brother of Robert Victor.

DOB: 1900/11/27 (Lucca Sicula, Agrigento), died December 1955

He married his cousin Pearl Dionisio, the daughter of his uncle Sebastiano Rosario.

Jack Dionisio had pointed out Dale Kearney during a dinner at the Saddle Rock Café on July 4th 1930 to a group of “Italian strangers” and then later fled to El Paso, as vouched for by uncle Phillip D’Azzo of Kansas City.

On July 5th 1930, Kearney, acting on a tip, left Trinidad for Aguilar and was killed there in an ambush. Law enforcement had evidence that he was followed in a sedan registered to Robert V. Dionisio and believed the strangers who were with Jack Dionisio had committed the murder.

He was subsequently arrested on September 11th 1930 with a load of alcohol and taken into custody in Colorado Springs, where he claimed that he was severely mistreated by federal prohibition agents (beatings and other violence).

During his interrogation on the 18th and 19th of that month, he was asked several interesting questions:
• His connections to Aguilar mayor John Boccaccio (posted about in the political figures thread)
• The activities of his uncle/in-law Sebastiano Rosario
• His connections to John Cha
• The murder of Giuseppe Mantelli in 1928
Dionisio at first refused to answer any questions but later admitted to standing up to “see something” while at the Saddle Rock Café and also admitted to following Kearney to the sidewalk.

Colorado Springs arrest September 13th 1930
Robert J. Dionisio, James Vinci and Russell "Cacio" were arrested in Colorado Springs. Dionisio had a revolver on him and was almost shot by the police. They refused to admit anything but according to LE it was “clear” that they were looking for Jack Dionisio.

Dionisio:
Robert J. Dionisio (1908-1982) was the son of Robert Victor.

Vinci:
James Vinci (1902-1951) was born in Missouri to Salvatore Vinci and Josephine LNU, both of Lucca Sicula. The Vinci family had moved to Pueblo by 1920.

Jack Riggio’s wife was Giuseppa Vinci, who was also from Lucca Sicula but I’m not sure if there was any relation.

James Vinci appears to have fatally shot pioneer John Arthur in 1922, after a violent argument that involved Arthur threatening people with a shotgun. It doesn’t look like he was prosecuted over this issue.

“Cacio”:
This seems to have been Russell Cascio (1908-1995), born in Pueblo. I was unable to find who his parents were but he doesn’t appear to have been related to suspected member Carl Cascio (family from Lucca Sicula).

Russell married Josephine Dionese, daughter of Luca “Louie” Dionisio (later changed to Dionese) and Vincenza Martellaro, both of Lucca Sicula. If Luca was related to the more infamous Dionisio family, it appears to have been a distant connection.

Another of Luca’s daughters married a Spinuzzi whose family was from Alia, Palermo. Scotty Spinuzzi’s parents also hailed from there so there might be some sort of relation on that side as well.

Roma, Campanella & New Mexico:
In 1932, Prohibition agents began investigating two Zerobnick Bottle Works plants in Denver. The locations were raided and bootlegging equipment as well as documents were seized.

Among these files were “client lists” that included customer records for Denver-area member Joseph Roma, three Smaldone brothers (probably Clyde, Eugene and likely actually their father Ralph), the Carlinos and bootlegger John Campanella of Cimarron, New Mexico.

Campanella info:
John Campanella aka “Big John”
POB: Described as Sicilian – possibly actually from Abruzzo?
DOB/D: 1883/10/22 – 1953/10/12

I was unable to determine where Campanella was born and who his parents were. Hopefully others can figure out these details.

He was a saloon owner in the 1910s and became involved in bootlegging from there. He was based out of Cimarron, about an hour away from Raton.

New Mexico:
The Zerobnick investigation is not the first time that Roma was tied to New Mexico. According to the Mountain Mafia book, he married Annette Greco in Raton on April 14th 1931.

While it can’t be confirmed that Campanella attended the wedding or that he even met Roma while he was in New Mexico, their connection through Zerobnick does create some space for speculation.

Probable underboss Sam Carlino was killed less than a month later (May 7th 1931) and then Pete Carlino was murdered on 13th September that year – though we know that can be possibly linked to other national issues.

Trail of Shadows suggests that the Roma wedding was held in Raton to avoid ongoing tensions in Denver but I think it is not unrealistic that Roma was also seeking support in his conflict with the Carlinos.

He self-admits to being in Pueblo later that month (ostensibly on his honeymoon) and could have been doing the same thing there with local members.

Additional ties, August 28th 1930 murder of Ray Sutton
John Campanella, James Perry Caldwell, George Pobar and possibly Elias Shedoudy apparently kidnapped, beat and then shot Prohibition agent Raymond Sutton at Pobar’s dairy farm near the Koehler mining camp in Coal Creek Valley, Colfax County.

Sutton had previously investigated and arrested Campanella in July 1930. He was also a leading law enforcement figure in the Kearney murder.

Connections:
Dale Kearney’s investigative efforts were an issue for the Dionisios and their associates in Trinidad and Aguilar – he is eliminated as a result.

Ray Sutton’s efforts in Colfax County are an existing issue for Campanella and his associates. Him being brought onto the Kearney case then also presents a problem for the Dionisio group.

As established by the bottling works raid and wedding location, Roma and Campanella are connected. We know obviously that Roma and the Dionisios are part of the same family.

Raton is 30 minutes away from Trinidad, Cimarron is an hour away – via Rock Springs, it is clear that the Colorado family had connections at even greater distances.

Based off this, I suggest then that Campanella was a remote member or associate of the family in the same vein as guys like Boschetto, the Anselmis and Pete Zanetti. Establishing his origins might help build other connections.

Other prominent Italians in Raton:
Trail of Shadows discusses two other prominent Abruzzese in Raton. These were:

Giuseppe Thomas DiLisio aka Joseph
POB: Pacentro comune of L'Aquila, Abruzzo
DOB/D: 1885/03/19 – 1972/02/26

Antonio Marchiondo aka “Tony F”
POB: Pacentro comune of L'Aquila, Abruzzo (also married there)
DOB/D: 1885/10/22 – 1959/07/30

Info:
DiLisio was a prominent bilingual merchant and later a banker, heavily involved with mining camps in Colfax County. He also invested in saloons and taverns prior to Prohibition.

One of the Trail of Shadows authors was later told by DiLisio’s sons to “not to stir the caldron too hard” during his research into Sutton in the 1970s.

Marchiondo was a miner prior to becoming a grocer and dry goods merchant. Trail of Shadows also notes that he had some medical experience and acted as a midwife for Italians in mining camps.

They seem to be fairly clear examples of padroni in Raton
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

Great work as expected from you. Wouldn't be a shock to me if they had activity or even affiliates in New Mexico given they were a sprawling regional Family and it looks like they had interests in different parts of the Mountain States.

As mentioned in the other thread, Joe Riggio was also future boss Jim Colletti's uncle and was identified as a "Black Hand leader" in 1919. Colletti arrived to Riggio in CO before settling in NY. Given his son-in-law and nephew were both bosses and Riggio was identified as a local "leader" in the 1910s I wouldn't be surprised if Riggio was the boss before Scaglia. He may have been a San Jose member when he died.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by PolackTony »

Great work here. Colfax County, NM, borders Las Animas County, CO, so it’s not surprising that the CO Family had ties there.

Very little other info on LCN in NM, apart from a couple of Chicago guys who went there. Leonard Calamia lammed it to NM following the Nick DeJohn hit and was arrested there, living in Albuquerque under a pseudonym, in 1948. Later, in the 60s, Chicago member Ronald DeAngeles lived for some time in Deming, NM (he happened to be Abruzzese, though I don’t imagine that was relevant to him going to NM). Deming is on the opposite side of the state from Colgate County, and I don’t know that either guy being in NM had any connection to the CO Family, though Calamia was close to DeJohn and Ciro Gallo, who were Palazzesi and I’d imagine would’ve had ties to paesani in CO. It’s also interesting to note that Calamia was employed while on the lam by the State of NM, which could suggest that someone with clout had hooked him up there.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

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Regarding Campanella. I note that several ancestry.com family trees assert that he was from Perugia, Umbria, though they provide no supporting documentation for this. In the 1920 and 1930 censuses, John Campanella stated that he immigrated to the US in 1900. In 1900, a passenger manifest from NYC had a Giovanni Campanella, born in 1884 in Gualdo, Perugia. He was bound for Pittston, which, like Colfax County, NM, was of course also a coal mining area.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

I've got a family friend who used to live in NM and their neighbor was an Italian night club owner named Leo Petrino who she said was connected to the Chicago mob and that he and his wife were from Italy. When I looked into them, Petrino (wife name Greco) was indeed from Italy and lived in Chicago before NM as she said. There are a couple newspaper articles that indicate he had legal trouble in the 1950s but I couldn't find anything substantially linking him to the Chicago Family. The family friend is a very reliable person though and I trust her that Petrino was a shady guy who may have maintained ties to Chicago.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

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What’s funny is that Leo Italo Petrino, the guy you’re talking about (died in NM in 2008) was also Abruzzese (Sant’Agapito, Isernia, which was part of the old Abruzzi region when he was born). Maybe there was some broader Abruzzese colony in NM, I have no idea. I spent some time in Albuquerque when I was young and I don’t recall ever seeing any Italians there lol.

Interestingly, his obit stated that in the 1950s, Petrino lived in Denver for a bit before moving to Albuquerque.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

Haha, had no idea he also connected to Denver or that he was Abruzzese. Everything connects to everything.

Curious if the Colorado Family had anything/anyone in Utah. Jimmy Fratianno was staying there for a time where he had trucking interests -- can't remember if that was connected to the failed venture with Frank LaPorte but I think it was a little while after.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

With Santo Alenci coming from Camporeale and settling in Brooklyn, it brings to mind the strong connections between these Colorado circles and the Bonannos. I've never seen Camporeale in the Colorado Family but it was certainly "in network" with them especially in 1930 when the Bonannos had even stronger representation from Camporeale. Whether Alenci was a mafioso or just someone friendly with the mafia it's interesting he turns up.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by JoePuzzles234 »

B. wrote: Wed Jul 24, 2024 2:46 pm Great work as expected from you. Wouldn't be a shock to me if they had activity or even affiliates in New Mexico given they were a sprawling regional Family and it looks like they had interests in different parts of the Mountain States.
Thank you
As mentioned in the other thread, Joe Riggio was also future boss Jim Colletti's uncle and was identified as a "Black Hand leader" in 1919. Colletti arrived to Riggio in CO before settling in NY. Given his son-in-law and nephew were both bosses and Riggio was identified as a local "leader" in the 1910s I wouldn't be surprised if Riggio was the boss before Scaglia. He may have been a San Jose member when he died.
I also lean to him being the boss prior to Scaglia, wonder what could have caused him to step back - in a family where bosses were killed more than they resigned it might speak to his respect within the organisation.
PolackTony wrote: Wed Jul 24, 2024 3:35 pm Regarding Campanella. I note that several ancestry.com family trees assert that he was from Perugia, Umbria, though they provide no supporting documentation for this. In the 1920 and 1930 censuses, John Campanella stated that he immigrated to the US in 1900. In 1900, a passenger manifest from NYC had a Giovanni Campanella, born in 1884 in Gualdo, Perugia. He was bound for Pittston, which, like Colfax County, NM, was of course also a coal mining area.
Great info, thank you.
B. wrote: Wed Jul 24, 2024 5:08 pm Curious if the Colorado Family had anything/anyone in Utah. Jimmy Fratianno was staying there for a time where he had trucking interests -- can't remember if that was connected to the failed venture with Frank LaPorte but I think it was a little while after.
Two of the four Buccambuso brothers who were connected, Louis "Luke" and David, were said to have gambling interests in Utah along with the Smaldones apparently. I don't know how accurate this, I have it in my notes as being solely from newspapers who were covering the Denver crew legal issues in the early 1950s.

It's difficult to look up their activities because their last name was spelt in so many different ways (Buccumbusso, Bucambaso, Bucambuso etc.)

The family was from Lucca Sicula and based out of Pueblo. Samuel (aka Sam Buck/Sam Rope) appeared on the DPD chart while Stephen (aka Stevie Shorts) and David are mentioned a few times in the Smaldone book.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

Never heard of the Buccambusos. Even though many of these guys may not have been made it's always amazing how many obscure affiliates there were around the Colorado Family and you're doing a great job uncovering them.

If Riggio was a former boss, one thing to consider is it used to be more common for bosses to step down for reasons independent of age, incarceration, or death. He is one candidate for sure, but I'm also curious about Vincenzo Chiappetta in the 1910s. In the early 1910s he went to NYC to attend a meeting with Bonanno boss and capo dei capi Sebastiano DiGaetano, which may have been an Assemblea meeting, then a few years later the Chiappetta brothers hosted a banquet for the Gentile brothers when they visited Pueblo. I don't know that Chiappetta would have been the boss but he was someone of importance -- he arrived to NYC, spent a period in KC, was a New Orleans member for a time then after Pueblo transferred to Pittsburgh, KC, and possibly even St. Louis where he reportedly helped run the Family when boss Miceli died. Miceli was from Burgio like Scaglia and Scaglia hid out in STL when he was on the lam.

Rosario Desimone may have held rank in Pueblo too. As with Riggio, the local PD regarded Desimone as an important "Black Hand" figure and he went on to become LA boss for a few years before stepping down. He of course married a woman from Lucca Sicula during his time in CO but I've never seen her surname involved although I'd expect she was from a mafia clan. Some of the guys could have filled out the other admin and capidecine ranks too while they were in CO.

Going back to Scaglia, what's interesting is when he was living in NYC before Colorado he was regarded in the papers as the leader of a "White Hand" society who was combating the "Black Hand". These were mainly outsider terms though and we know these so-called "White Hand" groups could be mafiosi themselves who better presented an image of legitimacy. His time in NYC raises the question of who he was affiliated with -- nearby Agrigento towns flocked to the Gambinos but the specific towns in question and the Colorado-connected guys in general later surface mainly as Bonanno affiliates so maybe he was with them.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by JoePuzzles234 »

B. wrote: Thu Jul 25, 2024 12:06 pm Never heard of the Buccambusos. Even though many of these guys may not have been made it's always amazing how many obscure affiliates there were around the Colorado Family and you're doing a great job uncovering them.
The rabbit hole runs really deep for these guys. I personally suspect that David might've been a member out of all of the brothers but there's not much to go on.

Another example of a similar group are the sons and nephew of Frank Bacino. He was from Lucca Sicula and married a Sylvia Mulé, who appears to have been a sister of the "Mulays" Giovanni (member) and Carlo (suspected member). Notably, they were with the Carlino faction while Frank Bacino was a close associate of the D'Anna brothers. He was killed in 1926.

His son Benjamin Frank and nephews Anthony and Joseph "Blackie" were all listed on the DPD chart. Joe and Tony Bacino were arrested a few times in marijuana probes in the 1940s pretty interestingly, with Joe getting caught up again in the 1960s. They were tavern owners.
If Riggio was a former boss, one thing to consider is it used to be more common for bosses to step down for reasons independent of age, incarceration, or death. He is one candidate for sure, but I'm also curious about Vincenzo Chiappetta in the 1910s. In the early 1910s he went to NYC to attend a meeting with Bonanno boss and capo dei capi Sebastiano DiGaetano, which may have been an Assemblea meeting, then a few years later the Chiappetta brothers hosted a banquet for the Gentile brothers when they visited Pueblo. I don't know that Chiappetta would have been the boss but he was someone of importance -- he arrived to NYC, spent a period in KC, was a New Orleans member for a time then after Pueblo transferred to Pittsburgh, KC, and possibly even St. Louis where he reportedly helped run the Family when boss Miceli died. Miceli was from Burgio like Scaglia and Scaglia hid out in STL when he was on the lam.
I am only really familiar with Chiappetta from the Gentile Informer issue but his membership in Kansas City and possibly St. Louis is particularly interesting.

After the drama with FNU LaRocca and his "accusations", I wonder if him and his brother helped keep connections open. Outside of Scaglia, Colorado consistently maintained ties to these families as late as the 1970s with the Smaldones dealing with Anthony Giordano and William Cammisano Snr.

I've brought it up before but all this talk about previous leaders always makes me think about Joseph Roma. He's a highly probable boss but who were his supporters in a family with all these guys who were interrelated, connected elsewhere etc. etc. Clearly he is well-connected himself but what does his administration even look like? What role do the Sicilians have in later removing him?
Rosario Desimone may have held rank in Pueblo too. As with Riggio, the local PD regarded Desimone as an important "Black Hand" figure and he went on to become LA boss for a few years before stepping down. He of course married a woman from Lucca Sicula during his time in CO but I've never seen her surname involved although I'd expect she was from a mafia clan.
This is a very good point, DeSimone hadn't ever really crossed my mind as a possible administrator while he was living in Pueblo. The "Niotta" account of him being an acting boss in Los Angeles seems more likely to me but obviously the main point is that he was a high-ranking guy.
Some of the guys could have filled out the other admin and capidecine ranks too while they were in CO.
I strongly believe that the Dionisio group in Trinidad had Robert Victor as a captain in that area and with the FBN classifying John Pricco and Vincenzo Spinelli as leaders in later years, maybe someone like Roma was a mainlander captain at one point as well.

With all the Colletti-Mulé-Carlino-Dionisio-Riggio-DiGrado etc. Agrigentini figures scattered across Trinidad and Pueblo, it's easy to imagine that additional leaders from that side as well.
Going back to Scaglia, what's interesting is when he was living in NYC before Colorado he was regarded in the papers as the leader of a "White Hand" society who was combating the "Black Hand". These were mainly outsider terms though and we know these so-called "White Hand" groups could be mafiosi themselves who better presented an image of legitimacy. His time in NYC raises the question of who he was affiliated with -- nearby Agrigento towns flocked to the Gambinos but the specific towns in question and the Colorado-connected guys in general later surface mainly as Bonanno affiliates so maybe he was with them.
Being connected to the Bonannos seems most likely given all the other ties from that family; I am sure this makes him very happy to hear :D
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

Niotta says Desimone was only acting in LA? Because he stepped down, or does he have intel for it? Some of these authors do great research but I'm not always sure what their understanding of the formal org is.

Roma is a good question. Certainly possible a Calabrian could have become boss in the early 1930s as that was happening around the country at that time and we know he associated closely with the Carlinos but offhand I'm not sure if anyone ever identified him as boss apart from outsider reports of him as the Colorado "mob boss" when he was killed.

I looked into Frank Bacino some years back because of Phil Bacino of the Chicago Family. Didn't see anything that indicated a relation but even though Phil was from Ribera his heritage originally came from Burgio which as we know was intertwined with nearby Lucca Sicula and Phil also had relatives from there as well. Bacino's friend Joe Lolordo of the Chicago and DeCavalcante Families married a woman from Lucca Sicula in LA, surname Cascio. In your original post I noticed you found Cascios from Lucca Sicula involved with the CO Family -- I don't know of Lolordo's in-laws being in CO as they bounced between Linden NJ and LA then ended up in NYC but maybe there's a relation.

There was also a Frank Pacino in Colorado who was close to Chicago member (possible capodecina) Sam DiGiovanni, who initially arrived to Colorado from Palazzo Adriano. Pacino stayed in contact with DiGiovanni even later and I believe he ended up in LA. When I came across him I was wondering if it was a misspelling of Bacino but indeed his name was Pacino and he was Palazzese. Phil Bacino was coincidentally very close to DiGiovanni in Chicago Heights.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

Joe Riggio's brother-in-law was also a mafioso active in local "black hand" activity -- Alfonso "Rei". Not sure if that's the true spelling or if it may have been Raia. Riggio's other in-laws Giovanni and Calogero Mule were also active in these activities along with Vito LaRocca and brothers Gaetano and Paolo D'Anna. I'm guessing Giovanni/John and Calogero/Charles could be the same John and Carlo you said were related to the Bacinos but you never know w/ these recurring names. Something to remember with the Carlinos and D'Annas is these people are almost always close until they aren't.

Riggio's store in Walsenburg was where many of these guys held meetings and allegedly Riggio shot a guy to death and dismembered him with an axe in the store. Everything in the late 1910s investigations pointed to Riggio as the central figure and there was also another Joe Riggio involved with these guys as a bootlegger and "black hander" in Trinidad but the leader was the Walsenburg one related to the Collettis, Carlinos, and Mules.

The relation to Jim Colletti came through Riggio's wife, who was sister of Jim's father Vito Colletti. Interestingly just like the Riggios had the other surname Mortellaro, the Collettis had also used the surname Forti/Forte.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

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B. wrote: Thu Jul 25, 2024 2:03 pm There was also a Frank Pacino in Colorado who was close to Chicago member (possible capodecina) Sam DiGiovanni, who initially arrived to Colorado from Palazzo Adriano. Pacino stayed in contact with DiGiovanni even later and I believe he ended up in LA. When I came across him I was wondering if it was a misspelling of Bacino but indeed his name was Pacino and he was Palazzese. Phil Bacino was coincidentally very close to DiGiovanni in Chicago Heights.
Sam DiGiovanni immigrated in 1911 from Palazzo to Trinidad, CO, with his older sister, Carmella DiGiovanni. She was betrothed to marry their paesano, Agostino Fragale, who was already living in Trinidad (the couple moved in the 1920s to Chi Heights around the same time that Sam did). Frank Pacino (Pocino) was a nephew of Fragale, and per some descendants Pacino and Sam DiGiovanni were children friends from back in Palazzo. Pacino later moved to LA but maintained lifelong contact with DiGiovanni, with the FBI noting that they were in frequent communication in the 1970s (they actually both died in 1977).

We don’t know when Sam DiGiovanni was made and he very well may have been made in CO before transfering. As we’ve discussed before, there is some reason to believe that he served as a liaison for Chicago to some other Families, and if so, CO would be an obvious one.
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Re: Colorado family: Dionisio clan info & New Mexico

Post by B. »

A couple other names of interest from Palazzo Adriano in Trinidad during that era were the LoBurgios and Masaracchias. The LoBurgios were older relatives of Bonanno member Tony Canzoneri who were possibly related to Ciro Gallo as well. Masaracchias were in turn related to the LoBurgios and the boss of Palazzo Adriano circa 2014 was a Masaracchia, it being likely this is an old mafia name in Palazzo.

Other Palazzese names to look for are Giambrone and Parrino, which have recurring mafia connections in different locations. I don't think I've seen any in CO but those names are red hot when it comes to Palazzese mafia ties. Parrinos even surface in Pittston where members the Parrino brothers were made members from Palazzo Adriano.

Curious if a relation between Jim Colletti's longtime NYC roommate Joseph Accomando and Scaglia's Palazzese father-in-law Francesco Accomando can be substantiated. Francesco is a confirmed Pueblo / Kansas City member and was no doubt first made in Palazzo Adriano given his age.
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