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- Organized Crime in America
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- Joanne Klein
- March 8, 1996
- Period 4
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- One morning, as Mario Luigi opens his family-owned shoe store, a small envelope on the
- ground catches his eye. He immediately knows what it is-another black hand letter from the
- Mafia. "If this goes on much longer, I will surely go out of business," he thinks angrily.
- "Immigrating to America did me no good. The Mafia is everywhere." One of the reasons
- immigrants came to America was to escape criminal organizations like the Mafia. The Mafia
- is a secret, terrorist organization that began in Naples, in southern Italy. From Naples,
- the Mafia spread first to the island of Sicily, off the toe of the Italian boot. After
- ruling there for many centuries, the Mafia spread to America in the 1870s and 1880s, when
- it was brought over from Italy and southeastern Europe by immigrants. The immigrants
- brought with them their traditions of violence, crime and secret criminal organizations.
- Although most immigrants were honest and hard-working, looking for a new start and a better
- life, some immigrants from Italy belonged to the Mafia and other criminal organizations.
- Like Mario Luigi, many Italian immigrants received a "Black Hand" letter. Black Hand
- letters were a type of blackmail used by the Mafia to demand money. The letters were marked
- with drawings of a dagger, pistol or other lethal weapon. If the letter was paid off, there
- would be no trouble until the next letter. However, if the letter was not paid off, the
- immigrant's store or business could be wrecked, a member of their family could be assaulted,
- or the immigrant himself could be killed. In an actual case, a wealthy Brooklyn butcher
- named Goetano Costa received a Black Hand letter in 1905 saying, "You have more money than
- we have. We know of your wealth and that you are alone in this country. We want $1,000
- which you are to put in a loaf of bread and hand to a man who comes in to buy meat and pulls
- out a red handkerchief." Costa refused, and as a result one morning some Mafia members came
- into his store and shot him to death. Witnesses to the crime couldn't risk their lives to
- say anything about it. They were bound by the Omerta code of silence, which literally means
- the "ability to act like a man."
- You might be wondering where the term "Mafia" comes from. Historians say the Mafia began
- in the 13th century when Italy was fighting the French Angevins. Their slogan was "Morte
- alla Francia, Italia Anela!" This means "Death to the French is Italy's Cry!" The word
- Mafia comes from the first letter of each word in the slogan. However, the American
- Mafiiosi do not agree. They say the term Mafia came from when a French soldier raped a
- Palermo maiden on her wedding day, Easter Monday, 1282. Consequently, angry Sicilians
- struck back by killing an entire French troop. More Sicilians joined in, going from town
- to town killing the French and raping their daughters. "Mafia" became their name when
- hysterical mothers ran out in the streets screaming, "Ma fia, ma fia!" ("My daughter, my
- daughter!"). Another organization connected to organized crime is the Camorra. Like the
- Mafia, the Camorra originally spread from Naples to Sicily. They too ruled parts of the
- island for many centuries. The Camorra also enforced the Omerta code so well that no
- witness to a crime dared say a word for fear of being killed. In America, the police knew
- very little about organized crime because of the Omerta code. Police even thought the
- Black Hand letters came from a Black Hand Society, instead of the Mafia or the Camorra.
- Lieutenant Joseph Petrosino was the first American to realize that crime was organized and
- very dangerous. Lieutenant Petrosino was a stocky, 5' 8" man with a round head, slightly
- pock marked face, and black eyes. He was born in the coastal town of Salerno, near Naples,
- and later moved to America. Petrosino was also the first to become convinced that Black
- Hand letters were not from freelance extortionists, but from a highly organized and
- powerful mob. He persuaded his superiors to appoint a special Italian squad. Petrosino
- headed the squad, which met in the old Metropolitan Police headquarters on Mulberry Street
- in New York. This squad was the first to make complete records on the Mafia and its
- members. Petrosino risked his life every day to gather information that identified the
- principal Mafiosi. One of his greatest accomplishments was in 1900, when he uncovered a
- plot to murder Italian King Humbert. He sent the information abroad and foiled the plan.
- Petrosino received very little support from the police and the public. Despite all his
- efforts and information, Petrosino could not make the government officials or the average
- American believe in the Mafia. Knowing it was up to him, in one year Petrosino personally
- made 700 arrests. Among these was the arrest of Enrico Alfano (Erricone), the chief of
- Camorra. Petrosino deported him back to Italy and turned him over to the Italian police.
- He also knew that Ignazio Lupo (Lupo Wolf) was the chief of the Mafia but Petrosino could
- not catch or arrest him.
- A new wave of Black Hand violence swept over New York in 1907, and again Petrosino was
- forced to fight it on his own. Joseph Trano, an Italian merchant, came to Petrosino with
- a black hand letter wanting $500 on pain of death. Petrosino gave him marked bills and
- set a trap. He then followed and arrested Vincenzio Abadezza (one of Lupo Wolf's
- principal lieutenants) and eight others. Two notebooks were found on one of the suspects.
- One notebook contained the names of twenty Mafia members. The other listed the names of
- sixty laborers who were paying $1 to $3 a week to extortionists. Even so, when Petrosino
- brought this case to court, the judges did not believe the whole idea of organized crime.
- Therefore, Abadezza received only 2 1/2 years in prison, and the others received only a
- few days in jail.
- After the trial, in January, 1909, Petrosino went to Italy using a different name. Although
- he told almost no one, Lupo Wolf learned about the trip and Petrosino's fake name. In
- Italy, Petrosino obtained the records of more than 600 criminals who had immigrated to
- America. In Palermo, on March 13, 1909, he ate in a restaurant on Marino Square, then
- walked toward the Hotel di Palma. Unfortunately, he never made it. On his way, two men
- came up behind him and shot four bullets into his back and head. Although there were many
- witnesses, their lips were sealed by Omerta.
- Petrosino's death stirred New York for a short, intense campaign against Mafia chiefs.
- This resulted in Lupo Wolf's arrest and jailing on a counterfeiting charge. At this point,
- the Mafia became more careful and the city changed back to its old attitude of
- indifference. The Mafia no longer sent Black Hand letters, but switched over to power and
- persuasion. The Mafia then sank virtually out of sight, making it much more effective.
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- The Prohibition era began in 1920, following the ratification of the 18th Amendment to the
- Constitution of the United States in 1919. It has been said
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- that Prohibition was the engine that drove the gangster era. Many Americans ignored
- Prohibition, thus giving organized crime a new way to make money-bootlegging whiskey.
- Bootlegging was essential to organized crime and saved the great criminal gangs from
- collapsing after World War I. Bootlegging continued to be a major criminal pastime that
- deeply involved the Mafia. Bloody wars were fought for control, and in Chicago alone more
- than 1,000 men died in bootleg wars. Liquor was smuggled across the border from Mexico or
- Canada, but many gangs had to make their own liquor to guarantee supplies. They could
- either sell it through the clubs and bars they owned, or through the distributorships they
- controlled. At the end of Prohibition, bootlegging declined but did not disappear because of
- high liquor taxes.
- Prohibition made the gangsters bold enough to commit outrageous acts in public. A famous
- example is the St. Valentines Day massacre.. Al Capone wanted to kill Bugs Moran, leader
- of the Irish Northside Gang. On February 14, 1929, Capone had his men dress as police
- officers and pretend to arrest members of the gang, hoping Moran would be there. Although
- Moran was not there, Capone's men made six gang members stand against the wall and blasted
- them with machine-guns. When Moran heard about the crime, he remarked "only Capone kills
- like that." Capone heard this and answered, "Only Moran kills like that." Some people
- even thought the police actually were the culprits, and Capone denied having anything to do
- with the crime. Alphonse Capone ("Scarface Al" or the "Chicago Gangster") was born in 1899
- in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He grew to be a Chicago crime leader and Public Enemy #1,
- although others did more to develop organized crime. He claimed he "owned Chicago" and
- "owned the police" which in a sense, he did. Capone also "owned" alderman, states
- attorneys legislators, governors and congressmen. To control election returns he had his
- gangsters intimidate and terrorize voters. Capone once beat up the mayor of Cicero on the
- front steps of a courthouse while a police officer guiltily tried not to look. He received
- the name Scarface Al after his left cheek was cut in a fight over a girl by Frank
- Galluccio, whom he later hired as his personal bodyguard. Despite the St. Valentines Day
- massacre, Capone could not be convicted of murder but he was convicted of income tax
- evasion. He was sentenced to 11 years at a federal prison in Atlanta, but was later
- transferred to Alcatraz (the "Rock") in 1934. During his imprisonment, Capone's health
- deteriorated. He was released in 1939 a hopeless paretic from untreated syphilis. He had
- gone "stir crazy " in Alcatraz (not uncommon). After this, Capone lived in his Florida
- family mansion for eight years until his death on January 25, 1947. Organized crime has
- been linked to what may be the greatest crime of the century. The Mafia may have been
- responsible for the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Frank Ragano, a mob lawyer, says he
- delivered the message from Teamsters head Jimmy Hoffa to Mafia bosses Sam Traficante and
- Carlos Marcello, to "kill the president." Although Ragano thought it was a joke, he later
- realized that the rest of them were serious. The Mob had the "motive, means and
- opportunity" to kill the President.
- A well-known gangster in modern times was Joseph ("Joe Bananas") Bonanno. Bonanno was born
- in Sicily in 1905, moved to America, moved back to Italy, and returned to America in 1925.
- Although he was the smallest of New York's Big Five gangsters, he wanted to be the largest
- power in syndicated crime in America. As his power grew, he saw to it that Brooklyn
- speakeasies bought whiskey from his sources. Doing this without using threats and pressure
- made Bonanno a most remarkable booze seller for that time. After a big boss moved up,
- Bonanno was named to head a large part of the boss's crime family. As the head of this
- family, he soon became a millionaire. As a result, he started some new businesses and
- covered up the income so well that the IRS never caught him. Bonanno operated clothing
- factories, cheese firms and funeral parlors, where he started the custom of double decker
- coffins. These had room for an extra corpse under the false bottom to hide Mafia victims.
- In October, 1964, Bonanno was kidnapped at gunpoint. He was to disappear for 19 months
- while the Banana War took place between Bonanno's son and Gaspa Digregoria, who was to
- replace Bonanno. Still under constant threat of death, Bonanno made a compromise to quit
- and let Digregorio take over. Instead of keeping up to the compromise, Bonanno fought in
- the Banana War and would have won but for a heart attack in 1968 that forced him to retire.
- Another compromise was made, so Bonanno went to Arizona and gave up holdings he had in New
- York. As the last of the five original bosses, Bonanno's departure marked the end of an
- era. We have seen how organized crime came to America in the 19th Century, grew through the
- Prohibition era, and is now fading in importance. Although organized crime was a major
- threat to some people much earlier on, modern society does not have to worry about organized
- crime any more. Today we worry about random violence and other disorganized crime. The
- only semi-known Mafia figure left is John Gotti, and he is serving a long sentence in
- federal prison. The Omerta Code and Mafia standards of loyalty and proper behavior are no
- longer being honored. As for Mario Luigi, if he were opening a store today, he probably
- would not have to worry about the Mafia. Since there are no Black Hand letters any more,
- all Mario Luigi would have to worry about would be paying his legitimate bills. His
- greatest fear might be that Walmart was coming to town.
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- Bibliography
-
- Cook, Fred J. Mob, Inc.. New York: Crowell-Collier Press, 1969.
- Goldberg, Jeffrey. "The Mafia's Morality Crisis," New York, 28, January 9, 1995,
- pp. 22-35.
- Kelly, Jack. Gangster City. New York: American Heritage, 1995.
- "Prohibition," Encarta 96 Encyclopedia (1996 ed.) CD-ROM.
- Sifakis, Carl. The Mafia Encyclopedia. New York: Facts on File, 1987.
- V.F. Organized Crime, Adams Middle School.
- Waller, Leslie. The Mob. New York: Delacorte Press, 1973.
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