Great find on the use of the word "consignu." I agree with Tony that's a term Bomp never uses in other FBI docs, which supports its authenticity. I'm more skeptical of some of the other details in the report. As Snakes pointed out, there's more documentation for Giancana retaining the title. There is precedence for some bosses being shelved or demoted to soldier, such as Frank Costello. Some bosses lose their title when they get lengthy or lifelong prison sentences while others like Peter Gotti and Carmine Persico retain it. Its worth looking into the technicalities of the different applications. At any rate, I don't think the totality of the evidence supports Giancana getting knocked down to soldier.
I also don't see for support that Alderisio and Caifano were direct to Giancana except perhaps in an operational sense. There's documentation that they were both under Battaglia, that Alderisio became the acting head of the crew when Teets became acting boss, and Caifano remained in the same crew under the next leader in the line of succession, Joe Lombardo. It reminds me what Roselli allegedly told Fratianno in The Last Mafioso: "All bosses like to have a crew of workers directly under them. Marshall Caifano, Philly Alderisio, Obie Frabotta, Jackie Cerone, seven, eight guys now work directly under Sam." It's true that they were all under Sam since he was the boss, but they weren't under him in the same sense. Cerone was the Elmwood Park caporegime, and he had four people he was technically under during that time period (c1964): Frank Ferraro, Giancana, Accardo and Ricca. Caifano, Alderisio and Frabotta were all in Battaglia's crew. Maybe when the conversation between Alderisio and Bomp took place around 1968, with Battaglia in prison they both reported to the consignu - although we also have evidence that Cerone replaced Battaglia as the acting boss, but there was probably a time gap between them.
In this report from 1967, Giancana is said to still "rule the family in absentia":
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0battaglia
In this doc from 1968, the CI (probably Bomp) said that Fratianno met Alderisio through Louis Dragna. In the book, however, Fratianno said he first met Alderisio and Caifano together in Las Vegas in the early 1950s, and there's no mention of Dragna being involved. After that, when Fratianno kills Russian Louie in 1953, Alderisio was there although he wasn't yet a made member.
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0fratianno
Here, CG T-12 said that Fratianno transferred to Chicago when Jack Dragna was still the L.A. boss, and it was agreeable to both families. In reality he transferred when Frank Desimone was boss and Desimone didn't approve:
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0fratianno
Here Bomp says that Roselli helped arrange with Giancana to transfer Fratianno, but according to Fratianno all Roselli did was recommend Fratianno. Roselli didn't have the authority to transfer anyone, but Giancana did (with approval from the previous boss - which he never obtained):
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0fratianno
Interesting that in The Last Mafioso we never read about Roselli being furious with him over a loan. They always got along in every meeting in the book. Is it because Fratianno was only telling self-serving stories, or because Ovid Demaris had too much material to work with already?
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0fratianno
Here the story is that Roselli arranged the transfer with Desimone and Giancana without anyone else knowing about it. In the book Desimone clearly doesn't approve:
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0fratianno
Nick Licata explained that there's a formal transfer process and it isn't allowed to be done secretly:
https://www.maryferrell.org/showDoc.htm ... 0fratianno
Interesting in this lawsuit against Demaris and the publisher for apparently printing untrue "facts" claimed by Fratianno is the exhibit of notes taken by Demaris of his conversations with Fratianno. We can see how Demaris altered Fratianno's words to turn them into dialogue in the book:
https://books.google.com/books?id=gEBc0 ... io&f=false
Fratianno claimed in the book that journalist Aggie Underwood worked with Mickey Cohen to scam $1 million and she sued for libel. She said she hadn't even met Cohen in 1948:
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1981/04/22 ... 356763600/
So the lesson here is that we can't take any source, whether it's a biography, autobiography, of FBI documents, at face value.