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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: Mukremin]
#690735
01/15/13 03:43 AM
01/15/13 03:43 AM
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Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 2,108
Giancarlo
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Jul 2012
Posts: 2,108
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Those are some really nice charts you made Mukremin. Looks like you put in a lot of effort to make them. Thanks for posting them. I really liked all the photo's you used on them too. It was a pretty big download for a chart and i had trouble the first couple times getting the complete chart but in the end i did download them. Thanks again, keep up the good work.
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: Skinny]
#695369
02/08/13 07:29 PM
02/08/13 07:29 PM
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
Dwalin2011
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
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I have recently read 2 books about the 'ndrangheta in the province of Cosenza which have some rare photos and descriptions of less known facts about the mafia wars in the 70s and the 80s. So I made some charts (incomplete, unfortunately) and translated a couple of pages from one of the books so you understand what are the charts about: The Cosenza province has been the last one of the Calabrian provinces to end up in the grip of the ‘ndrangheta. In 1903 86 people have been convicted for gang association. Their leader was Stanislao De Luca, a young man from a good family, aided by one Francesco De Francesco, nickamed “za Peppa”. The clan had initiation rites similar to the ones of the “picciotteria” of Reggio and Catanzaro. After that, the criminal organizations remained unnoticed for a long time. From the 30s to the 60s one of the most feared bosses was Luigi Pennino, a freelance photographer, very good at using the knife. The clans drew attention to them again when Luigi Palermo, nicknamed “Zorro”, a boss who made career under Pennino, has been killed in Cosenza 14 December 1977. It was Franco Pino, a young ambitious gangster, who ordered his murder. A war without quarter started. The Muto clan of Cetraro, the Basile-Calvano of San Lucido and the boss Giuseppe Cirillo (the trusted man of Raffaele Cutolo’s New Organized Camorra in the Sibari area) took the side of Franco Pino and his main ally, Antonio Sena. The Pranno brothers and the Vitellis, the Africanos of Amantea and the Serpas of Paola chose to take the side of Franco Perna, the killed boss’s nephew-in law instead. The war continued until the end of the 80s. Dozens of people have been killed, including a 12-year-old boy, Pasqualino Perri, the son of a businessman close to the Pino-Sena group. Another significant episode of this violent conflict was the murder by the Pino-Sena group of two members of the Reggio ‘ndrangheta the 6 August 1983 in Scalea, at the request of the clans of Reggio Calabria headed by Pasquale Condello and Giovanni Fontana. In Cetraro, Giannino Lo Sardo was killed, chief secretary of the Public Prosecutor’s office in Paola and Comunist councillor, an enemy of the clans of the Cozenza province. “They only kill each other, it’s better to wait”. That’s what was often heard in Cosenza during the 80s. The fighting clans hunted each other like beasts. To kill the enemy, before he kills you. At the end of the 80s, after dozens of murders, a “pax mafiosa” (mafia peace) was established, although it was short-lived because of the detachment of the Bartolomeo-Notargiacomo group from the Perna-Pranno-Vitelli clan. It was then that the murder of Sergio Cosmai, the director of the Cosenza prison, was committed. “My husband”, Tiziana Palazzo says, “has been killed by the ‘ndrangheta because he was a state official who believed in the respect of the law”. Before Cosmai’s arrival, the imprisoned clan members of Cosenza lived by small and big privileges. 21 June 1983 there was a mutiny. The prisoners wanted the lengthening of out-of-cell time. The director of the prison decided to use severe methods. Some prison guards used batons to convince the prisoners to re-enter their cells. Even the boss Francesco Perna didn’t avoid being beaten by the guards. And he remembered this very well. “I want a 12-caliber sawed-off shotgun” he is alleged to have said in prison “because when I will shoot him, I have to disfigure him, I must reduce him to such conditions to make him unrecognizable”. 12 March 1985 Cosmai was killed by a Perna clan hitman while he was in his Fiat 500 on the way to take his daughter from school. The second mafia war was also a massacre. One of the most ferocious episodes was the murder of the brothers Stefano and Giuseppe Bartolomeo, 24 and 26 years old, kidnapped 5 January 1991. The bodies of the two brothers were dissolved in acid, as the murderers Aldo Acri’, Ferdinando Vitelli, Angelo Santolla and Mario Pranno declared. An underage boy, Francesco Bruni, was killed in November 1991 to take revenge on his father, considered responsible for the death of Francesco Carelli, close to the Pranno-Vitelli group. He was 16 years old. He was found with his throat slit, strangled with an iron wire in a ravine among the woods under Montescuro, one of the tallest Mountains of the Silan highland. During the operation “Missing” in October 2006 a quarter of the century of mafia wars in the Cosenza province has been reconstructed, with the arrest of the bosses Giuseppe Irilli and Domenico Cicero, top members of the former Perna-Pranno clan, and the brothers Michele and Pasquale Bruni, bosses of the homonymous clan. Francesco Muto, the boss of Cetraro, and the bosses of San Lucido and Paola, Romeo Calvano and Giuliano Serpa, were also indicted. Thanks to the decimation of the ‘ndrine of Crari, the so-called “gypsy clan” took over the drug trafficking. Only in December 2007 the antimafia law about the assets sequestration was applied for the first time. The end of the 70s:The Pino clan during the 80s:The Perna clan during the 80s:
Willie Marfeo to Henry Tameleo:
1) "You people want a loaf of bread and you throw the crumbs back. Well, fuck you. I ain't closing down."
2) "Get out of here, old man. Go tell Raymond to go shit in his hat. We're not giving you anything."
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: DonMega]
#695490
02/09/13 06:25 PM
02/09/13 06:25 PM
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Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 1,153
Mukremin
OP
Underboss
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OP
Underboss
Joined: Sep 2010
Posts: 1,153
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: LuanKuci]
#696137
02/12/13 06:12 PM
02/12/13 06:12 PM
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
Dwalin2011
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
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I found this document about the trial of some 'ndrangheta groups for the gang war that happened in the 80s (unfortunately it's only available in Italian). http://www.stopndrangheta.it/file/stopndrangheta_439.pdfIf I got it right, it describes the groups as they were at the moment of the arrests made in 1992, with the so-called operation "Olimpia". Here I tried to make a chart of the Libri 'ndrina. However, I put on it only the members listed in the document and they seem too few for one of the most powerful 'ndrangheta clans. Maybe they weren't able to identify the other members back then. Maybe somebody could provide information to complete the chart?
Last edited by Dwalin2011; 02/12/13 06:14 PM.
Willie Marfeo to Henry Tameleo:
1) "You people want a loaf of bread and you throw the crumbs back. Well, fuck you. I ain't closing down."
2) "Get out of here, old man. Go tell Raymond to go shit in his hat. We're not giving you anything."
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: Mukremin]
#697452
02/18/13 01:15 AM
02/18/13 01:15 AM
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Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282 Nuevo Mexico
Vigil
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 282
Nuevo Mexico
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Very cool charts! Thank you for posting all of them.
*** il capo di tutti capi ***
"You'll never meet another guy like me if you live to be 5, 000." -John Gotti
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: LuanKuci]
#697678
02/19/13 08:00 AM
02/19/13 08:00 AM
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
Dwalin2011
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
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I tried to make a chart of the Racalmuto mafia in 1991 (Racalmuto is in the province of Agrigento): However, I am not sure if it's 100% correct as I don't know if Diego Di Gati was the only capo in the family in 1991 when the war with the stidda started. However, it's possible he was the only one as the family was quite small and not very powerful, they even had to ask the help of Salvatore Fragapane from Santa Elisabetta. Also, I am not sure who of the low-level members was actually made and who was just an associate. I read Nicolo' Cino and Diego Petruzzella were made, but I don't know for sure about the others. Maurizio Di Gati was made later, in 1991 he was just an associate.
Last edited by Dwalin2011; 02/19/13 08:11 AM.
Willie Marfeo to Henry Tameleo:
1) "You people want a loaf of bread and you throw the crumbs back. Well, fuck you. I ain't closing down."
2) "Get out of here, old man. Go tell Raymond to go shit in his hat. We're not giving you anything."
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: Sonny_Black]
#698732
02/22/13 06:36 PM
02/22/13 06:36 PM
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Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
Dwalin2011
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,781
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Here I made a chart of the Castelvetrano family in the 90s. But there might be one HUGE mistake about the capos: I read a book published in 1993, before the trial and the convictions, so they changed many of the surnames. In the book they call the 2 capos "Saverio Riesi" and "Peppe Nicastro". Saverio Riesi must be Saverio Furnari, but I still don't understand who Giuseppe Nicastro might be. In the family, as I read, there were 2 high-placed members named Giuseppe: Marotta and Clemente, i think it's one of them, but who? Anyway, I put them both on the same level on the chart because another book states they later had more or less the same power. Also, I found no mention of who the underboss of the family might have been. But I read that, when Francesco Messina Denaro went into hiding, the consigliere (Vaccarino) became acting boss. P.S. I hope Matteo Messina Denaro won't find and kill me for the mistakes I may have made in this chart And here is a chart of the Catania family in the 80s. I made it according to this document which contains the interrogation of Antonino Calderone, the former underboss of the family. http://archiviopiolatorre.camera.it/img-repo/fondo_zupo/Sez._I_serie_0001_Vol_022.pdfStrangely, it seems that according to him at the beginning of the 80s Santapaola only had 1 capo, while in the 70s they were at leat 2. Maybe the other one went with Alfio Ferlito and his group.
Willie Marfeo to Henry Tameleo:
1) "You people want a loaf of bread and you throw the crumbs back. Well, fuck you. I ain't closing down."
2) "Get out of here, old man. Go tell Raymond to go shit in his hat. We're not giving you anything."
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: Mukremin]
#701158
03/05/13 11:19 PM
03/05/13 11:19 PM
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Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 722 Midwest
LittleNicky
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 722
Midwest
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What program do you guys use to make the charts?
Should probably ask Mr. Kierney. I guess if you're Italian, you should be in prison. I've read the RICO Act, and I can tell you it's more appropriate... for some of those guys over in Washington than it is for me or any of my fellas here
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Re: New York and other mafia family charts (UPDATED)
[Re: Mukremin]
#705378
03/23/13 04:33 PM
03/23/13 04:33 PM
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 525 So-Cal
vinnietoothpicks26
BANNED
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BANNED
Underboss
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 525
So-Cal
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Is Tin ear sclafani out already? I just read the book about the jersey family "made men". From the looks of their chart, the Decalvecantes are decimated; mabye 30 guys on the street.
Frank Costello: Fucking rats. It's wearing me thin. Mr. French: Francis, it's a nation of fucking rats.
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