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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Crazy_Joe_Gallo]
#645645
05/01/12 11:53 AM
05/01/12 11:53 AM
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Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 290 ATL
SilentPartnerz
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 290
ATL
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1. He a good business man, but was too greedy. He upped his tribute from 10% to 15%. This angered all of the Family members. Carlo proud?...who knows. He was respected by the Chin, that is one indicator that says he was a good boss. You could make a long list of reasons why he was a good boss, and why he was not a good boss.
2. Once Paul announced he was going to break up Gotti's crew for selling and getting busted for Heroin, his fate was sealed. In order to survive, Gotti felt he had to take out Paul before Paul took out Gotti.
3.Father Neil - awesome as a boss. But would have gone down on a RICO quick IMHO. The bug in his bedroom would have gotten him 103 years in the Comission case. Fo sho.
Last edited by SilentPartnerz; 05/01/12 11:53 AM.
"Three can keep a secret..if two are dead." Calogero Minacore
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Turnbull]
#645657
05/01/12 01:09 PM
05/01/12 01:09 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 100
Crazy_Joe_Gallo
OP
Made Member
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Posts: 100
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Castellano was not a good boss. In addition to being greedy, he seldom left his mansion to mingle with his guys. He got involved in minutia that was below his status. He made deals with other families that his people resented. He openly cavorted with his housekeeper under the same roof where his wife and daughter lived--a big Mob no-no. Even bigger no-no: he failed to go to Neil's wake or funeral. But his biggest sin was his greed--in the Mob, always follow the money.
He would never have made Gotti underboss--like oil and water. Gotti belonged to Neil and his "blue collar" faction--antithetical to Castellano's "white-collar" preference (Sammy Da Bull dismissed him as a mere "racketeer," while he and Gotti were "gangsters."
Mr. Neil wouldn't have lasted long as Don, even if he weren't terminally ill with brain cancer. He had plenty of force, and was highly respecsted among his own men and in other families. But he wasn't that smart. One of the reasons Gambino didn't name him as his successor was that Mr. Neil was in prison on a five-year tax evasion rap--he lost more than $100k in a Puerto Rican casino while declaring annual taxable income of only $10k. He was already too visible--and too vulernable--with a variety of law enforcement agencies. Wasn't Sammy part of the Castellano faction--the white collar branch of the Family--before Gotti and his people wooed him over? I just found you saying Sammy dismissed Paul as being merely a racketeer interesting, because Sammy seemed to be less of a "gangster" than Gotti was. I see Gotti, Ruggerio and that crew as being throwbacks to the earlier days of Albert Anastasia--Muscle, an enforcer, a "thug". A killer. Whereas I see Sammy, DeCiccio and that lot as being guys who were smarter, savvier, knew how to keep a lower profile, etc, and who were involved in white collar rackets. Guys who might've represented the future of the Mafia. Yes, you'd always need bread and butter guys like Gotti to run hijackings and narcotics and shylocking and whatnot, but it just seems like Carlo was taking the Gambinos in the direction of having it be 50% blue collar crime and 50% white collar crime. Paul and Gotti were indeed oil and water. Paul took the "white collar, legitimate businessman" stuff to an extreme, which got him killed. Because he forgot the importance of the street guys and underappreciated them, besides being greedy. He was a gangster who wanted to pretend he wasn't a gangster, who looked down on his soldiers and blue collar crime crews--Guys who were lining his pockets with cash. A guy who would've made a great CEO of a legit company, or a great Capo of a white collar crime crew. But Gotti on the other hand took being a "gangster" to the extreme and was arrogant and overly smug. He didn't seem to have the intelligence or foresight for any long term goals or planning and just seemed to be a glorified hood in his mindset and the way he ran the Family. A guy who'd have been great as a Capo or soldier, but not Boss material--Couldn't see past the streets. This is a guy who wore $2000 suits but claimed to be a plumber. And he never shut up and he got life in prison as a result. Guys like Sammy, Frank DeCiccio and others seem to be to have been bridges between the two worlds--Guys who recognized the meat and potatoes of La Cosa Nostra was and would always be the blue collar rackets but at the same time recognized how "safe" and lucrative white collar crimes could be, guys who could deal in murder and truck hijackings if need be, but also had tons of legitimate companies to make them appear legitimate and who had all the union deals and whatnot backing the blue collar money up. To put it in Godfather terms, when Carlo died, the Family needed a Michael Corleone. In Paul, they instead got a Barzini, and in John Gotti, a Frank Pentangelli or Joey Zasa.
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Crazy_Joe_Gallo]
#645664
05/01/12 02:01 PM
05/01/12 02:01 PM
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Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 74
Rompipalle
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Posts: 74
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crazy joe i think gotti was more part of the Dellacroce faction and was taking orders from him.
"Andate tutti a'fanculo"
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Crazy_Joe_Gallo]
#645677
05/01/12 03:34 PM
05/01/12 03:34 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 14 Malmo, Sweden
Salvatore_Tessio
Wiseguy
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Wiseguy
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 14
Malmo, Sweden
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[quote=Turnbull]
To put it in Godfather terms, when Carlo died, the Family needed a Michael Corleone. In Paul, they instead got a Barzini, and in John Gotti, a Frank Pentangelli or Joey Zasa.
Only a Tom Hagen would pull of that kind of analogy:) Does that mean that Peter Gotti is Fredo? (I would probably compare John Gotti with Sonny though)
We Hit Bruno Tattaglia at Four O'clock This Morning
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Crazy_Joe_Gallo]
#645690
05/01/12 05:34 PM
05/01/12 05:34 PM
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Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 74
Rompipalle
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both guys Neil and Paul I think lived by the old rules and stuck by them with some exceptions of course. But, like i think it was mentioned Paul was real money hungry and very greedy while i think Neil was just more about loyalty honor and respect.
"Andate tutti a'fanculo"
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: IvyLeague]
#645697
05/01/12 06:23 PM
05/01/12 06:23 PM
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Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 74
Rompipalle
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I'll say this much. For all his negative points, Paul was a far better boss than Gotti. Of course, that's not saying a lot. haha i agree.
"Andate tutti a'fanculo"
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Rompipalle]
#645725
05/01/12 09:41 PM
05/01/12 09:41 PM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,694 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,694
AZ
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Da Bull could be considered part of the "white collar" faction because of his many "legitimate" interests in construction, drywall, etc. But with 19 murders under his belt, he could hardly be considered "white collar" all the way. DiCicco was a captain under Castellano. In one account I read, Gotti orginally wanted DiCicco to be the new Don, but Frankie sensed that Gotti ultimately wouldn't accept that as a permanent arrangement. He became consigliere after the Castellano hit. DiCicco planned the hit, and it was a brilliant plan. Using six guys, identically dressed, wearing identical Astrakhan hats, and using identical .380 auto pistols, would make it awfully hard for a witness to make a positive ID of anyone.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Turnbull]
#645727
05/01/12 09:57 PM
05/01/12 09:57 PM
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
IvyLeague
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
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DiCicco planned the hit, and it was a brilliant plan. Using six guys, identically dressed, wearing identical Astrakhan hats, and using identical .380 auto pistols, would make it awfully hard for a witness to make a positive ID of anyone.
Yeah, the Castellano hit was probably the high-mark of Gotti's career and was pulled off almost flawlessly. In hindsight though, having so many guys involved was risky. 4 main shooters (Artuso, Carneglia, Lino, Scala), plus a backup shooter (Rampino), plus Ruggiero, Watts, and Pizzonia up and and down the streets; all in addition to Gotti and Gravano in the car nearby. More "moving parts" in the plan makes a greater chance for somebody screwing up or something going wrong. To say nothing of somebody talking about it later on.
Mods should mind their own business and leave poster's profile signatures alone.
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Turnbull]
#645732
05/01/12 10:05 PM
05/01/12 10:05 PM
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Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 3,098
JCrusher
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Feb 2010
Posts: 3,098
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Da Bull could be considered part of the "white collar" faction because of his many "legitimate" interests in construction, drywall, etc. But with 19 murders under his belt, he could hardly be considered "white collar" all the way. DiCicco was a captain under Castellano. In one account I read, Gotti orginally wanted DiCicco to be the new Don, but Frankie sensed that Gotti ultimately wouldn't accept that as a permanent arrangement. He became consigliere after the Castellano hit. DiCicco planned the hit, and it was a brilliant plan. Using six guys, identically dressed, wearing identical Astrakhan hats, and using identical .380 auto pistols, would make it awfully hard for a witness to make a positive ID of anyone.
sammy wanted Frankie to be the boss and i think he told him that when they were planning the Castellano hit. Frank said John'e ego was too big for him to be boss. They made a pact to kill gotti within a year if he wasnt doing well as boss
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: Crazy_Joe_Gallo]
#645734
05/01/12 10:07 PM
05/01/12 10:07 PM
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 4,089 Brooklyn, New York
Dapper_Don
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 4,089
Brooklyn, New York
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Gotti was a gangster and lived the life on his own terms regardless of what others thought. When people think of American LCN, guaranteed John Gotti is in the top 3 or 5 first names that come out of their mouths along with Capone, etc. For the regular Joe on the street, John Gotti is the only gangster they know. The papers still mention Gotti all the time (do a google news search for his name and you will see) till this day even though hes been dead for a number of years now. He and the NY Press ate up all the Dapper/Teflon Don hoopla.
Tommy Shots: They want me running the family, don't they know I have a young wife? Sal Vitale: (laughs) Tommy, jump in, the water's fine.
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: IvyLeague]
#645740
05/01/12 10:23 PM
05/01/12 10:23 PM
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 4,089 Brooklyn, New York
Dapper_Don
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 4,089
Brooklyn, New York
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Gotti was a gangster and lived the life on his own terms regardless of what others thought. When people think of American LCN, guaranteed John Gotti is in the top 3 or 5 first names that come out of their mouths along with Capone, etc. For the regular Joe on the street, John Gotti is the only gangster they know. The papers still mention Gotti all the time (do a google news search for his name and you will see) till this day even though hes been dead for a number of years now. He and the NY Press ate up all the Dapper/Teflon Don hoopla. True. But even though Capone is more famous, Accardo was a superior boss. Pablo Escobar is more famous, but the top Cali guys were better leaders. No argument on that, I agree. I was just referring to most famous.
Tommy Shots: They want me running the family, don't they know I have a young wife? Sal Vitale: (laughs) Tommy, jump in, the water's fine.
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: FaticoWestIslip]
#645799
05/02/12 02:28 PM
05/02/12 02:28 PM
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Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 599 Toronto, Ontario
dontommasino
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 599
Toronto, Ontario
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It looks like Dellacroce had power over three crews in the Gambino Family while being the underboss. This was posted earlier in the thread, and while I'd like to see a source for this information it means that Dellacroce would've been outnumbered. His crews might've been the more "blue collar" type, but we've already established that Big Paul had several crews who were capable of doing the "dirty work." I don't know what reputation Roy DiMeo had in 1976 though, which is the tim period were considering in a hypothetical Gambino Civil War.
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: dontommasino]
#645804
05/02/12 03:43 PM
05/02/12 03:43 PM
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Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418 Secret location (WITSEC)
HairyKnuckles
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Nov 2011
Posts: 2,418
Secret location (WITSEC)
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It looks like Dellacroce had power over three crews in the Gambino Family while being the underboss. This was posted earlier in the thread, and while I'd like to see a source for this information it means that Dellacroce would've been outnumbered. His crews might've been the more "blue collar" type, but we've already established that Big Paul had several crews who were capable of doing the "dirty work." I don't know what reputation Roy DiMeo had in 1976 though, which is the tim period were considering in a hypothetical Gambino Civil War. I don´t think winning a war is dependent on the numbers. It´s about toughness, persistence, cunning, non swaying loyalty and quality of the individual soldiers and followers. And yes, Dellacroce did run three crews within the Gambino Family. "The government proposes to offer tapes of four conversations intercepted at Dellacroce's house in June 1985, after the filing of the indictment. According to the government all four conversations concern chiefly Dellacroce's expulsion of Michael Caiazza (not named as a defendant) from the Gambino Family. Caiazza had been named by Dellacroce some years earlier as the capo of a crew other than the two referred to in the indictment. The chief participants in the first conversation, held on June 3, 1985, are Dellacroce, Ruggiero, and Caiazza. The transcript shows that Caiazza before going into the hospital for treatment had named as acting captain Joseph (Buddy) LaForte, Jr. (whose father, apparently not on good terms with his son, is also present at the conversation). Before doing this Caiazza had not checked with Dellacroce but had consulted directly with Paul Castellano." Furthermore... "Paul Castellano is the "boss" of the Gambino Family and Aniello Dellacroce the "underboss" who supervised certain of the Gambino Family's "crews," each headed by a "capo" or "captain." The alleged "enterprise" is said to be a "segment" of the Gambino Family and to consist of Dellacroce as supervisor and two crews, one run by Charles Fatico and later defendant John Gotti, assisted by his "lieutenant" Angelo Ruggiero (not named as a defendant), the other run by defendants Leonard DiMaria and Nicholas Corozzo." ///Note that the text says "two crews" which i find hard to comprehend since the crews were headed by three captains; John Gotti, Mike Caiazza and Nick Corozzo/Lenny DiMaria. Read more: http://www.findacase.com/research/wfrmDocViewer.aspx/xq/fac.19861002_0000140.eny.htm/qx
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Re: Paul Castellano and Neil Dellacroce
[Re: LCN1987]
#645822
05/02/12 04:29 PM
05/02/12 04:29 PM
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Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 74
Rompipalle
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The most famous boss, is the most media friendly = the most stupid boss.
The best boss is the one who stays in the shadows and hate the media.
Doesn't make you great at all being on the front page. It reveals your weakness. agree.
"Andate tutti a'fanculo"
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