swag:
Another word for stolen property.
take for a ride:
If you are taken for a ride, chances are you won’t be coming back.
tax:
A euphemism for taking a cut of another’s Mafioso’s booty.
telephone solicitor:
A bookmaker, or bookie, who takes bets over the phone.
through the eye:
As in a bullet in the eye.
through the mouth:
As in a bullet in the mouth. This is a form of execution administered to turncoats and stoolies.
trunk music:
This would not be music to your ears. This is the Mafia euphemism for the decomposing flesh of a murder victim stuffed into the trunk of a car.
underboss:
Second in command in a Mafia family.
underworld:
Not the Hades of Greek mythology. This is a generic expression for the world of organized crime.
usury:
Lending money and collecting interest. It was once banned by the Catholic Church but is a common practice by your credit card company and the corner loan shark. And the interest rate is not all that’s different between the two.
va fa napole:
An Italian expression that literally means “go to Naples” but is used to convey the sentiment “go to hell.”
vig:
The excessive interest of a loan shark, measured in points.
walking book:
A bookmaker who does not have an office. He makes the rounds to visit his clients.
walk-talk, take a walk:
To have a discussion in a public place, such as a golf course, to avoid the possibility that listening devices might pick up the conversation.
waste management business:
A slang expression for organized crime.
whack:
To commit murder.
wise guys:
Mafiosi who are not “made men,” hence not admitted to the inner sanctum.
Young Turks:
Aggressive and ambitious young Mafiosi who are a threat to the older established dons.
zips:
A term used to describe Sicilian Mafiosi operating in America. Originally a put-down, the term morphed into a catch-all term for any Italian mobster made overseas.
APPENDIX C
Mafia Timeline
| | |
---|---|---|
1890-1891: | New Orleans police chief David Hennessy is murdered, allegedly by members of the Mafia. The subsequent trial and mob vigilantism makes international headlines. | |
1920: | The Volstead Act becomes law, beginning Prohibition. | |
1927 -1931: | The Castellammarese War occurs. | |
1929 : | St. Valentine's Day Massacre. | |
1930: | Bosses in Detroit, New York, Cleveland, and Chicago are murdered. | |
1931 : | Lucky Luciano orchestrates the assassination of Masseria and Maranzano. Al Capone is sentenced to eleven years for income tax evasion. | |
1933 : | Prohibition is repealed. | |
1935 : | Dutch Schultz is killed. | |
1941: | Abe Reles "falls" to his death from a Coney Island hotel window. | |
1944 : | Louis "Lepke" Buchalter gets the electric chair. | |
1945 : | Lucky Luciano is released from prison and deported to Italy. | |
1946 : | The Flamingo Hotel opens in Las Vegas. | |
1947 : | Bugsy Siegel is murdered. | |
1950: | The Kefauver Commission takes its mob busting hearings on the road, exposing organized crime to the public. | |
1956 : | Meetings between American and Sicilian mobsters regarding control of heroin traffic. | |
1957 : | Frank Costello survives a botched hit. The raid on the Mafia conference on Apalachin, New York, gives the gangsters unwanted publicity. Carlo Gambino becomes the Boss of Bosses. | |
1959 : | Fidel Castro takes control of Cuba, kicking out the American mobsters and closing their casinos. | |
1961: | Height of the Gallo-Profaci war in New York City | |
1962 : | Lucky Luciano, Joe Profaci, and Philly boss Sal Sabella die. | |
1963 : | McClellan Committee starts hearings into organized crime. | |
1966 : | Mafia meeting at La Stella restaurant in Queens, dubbed "Little Apalachin." Bonanno family internal war. | |
1969 : | Thomas Lucchese and Vito Genovese die. | |
1971: | Joe Colombo is shot at the Italian-American Unity Day he organized. He lingers in a vegetative state for years before dying. | |
1973 : | Frank Costello dies. | |
1975 : | Jimmy Hoffa disappears. Sam Giancana murdered | |
1976 : | Carlo Gambino dies and is succeeded by Paul Castellano. | |
1977 -1978 : | Intrafamily mob war in Kansas City. | |
1980: | Beginning of bloody Philly mob war. | |
1982 : | Meyer Lansky dies. | |
1984 : | Las Vegas skimming case nets Kansas City, Milwaukee, and Chicago mobsters. Beginning of end of mob control in Vegas. | |
1985 : | Paul Castellano is killed; John Gotti takes over. The Commission case takes down the heads of the five families. | |
1987 : | Santo Trafficante Jr. dies. | |
1992 : | John Gotti is sentenced to life for racketeering and murder. | |
1995 -1998 : | The Mafia moves into stock scams on Wall Street, netting tens of millions. | |
2002: | John Gotti dies in prison. Joe Bonanno dies at age ninety-seven. | |
2007: | Leadership of Chicago Outfit convicted for gangland killings in Operation Family Secrets trial. | |
2008: | The feds arrest more than sixty members and associates of the Gambino family. | |