The Mafia Encyclopedia (54 page)

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Authors: Carl Sifakis

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Page 150
When Lepke and Shapiro were convicted of labor racketeering and conspiracy in the mid-1930s (with Lepke later going to the electric chair on murder charges), most of the crime syndicate's interests in the garment field fell under the control of Tommy Lucchese, known to many as Three-Finger Brown. Within the Lucchese family gangster Johnny Dio was a prime operative, continuing to play off both the employees and the employers. Mob figures could set up manufacturing businesses and obtain racketeer-dictated exemptions to union contracts on pay scales and rules so that they could hold down costs and thus gain an important advantage over the competition. Dio's blueprint for financial success extended to the West Coast where his expertise put the Los Angeles Dragna Family in the garment manufacturing business while utilizing what amounted to Mexican slave labor.
In recent decades both the Lucchese and Gambino families operated garment industry rackets that according to estimates added 3.5 percent to the retail costs of all garments produced. The Gambino interests were savaged when in the early 1990s Tommy and Joseph Gambino, the late Carlo's sons, plea-bargained out of jail time by giving up some of their trucking firms and paying a $12 million fine. (Tommy later went to prison.) In 1998 major indictments were made against the Lucchese family's acting bosses due mainly to the efforts of ex-police commissioner Robert McGuire, who was a court-appointed "special master" for the garment industry. It seemed likely the mob's hold on the industry would be enormously reduced.
See also:
Dio, Johnny; Lepke, Louis; Shapiro, Jacob "Gurrah."
Genna Brothers: Mafia foes of Capone
They were called the Terrible Gennas, and for good reason. Devotees of violencesome more vicious, others more cunning, but all murderousthe Gennas are part of the reason that today the Chicago Outfit, the heir of the old Capone Mob, is the least mafioso-oriented crime family in the country, with a far bigger ethnic mix than others.
From the first, Johnny Torrio and Al Capone had to battle some of the most backward Mafia families to move into American crime. One group was the Aiello crime family, another the Gennas who recruited many of their soldiers from mafiosi emigrating from the same Sicilian village as themselves. The Genna brothers had been among the premier Black Hand extortionists in Chicago, but they quickly forgot such bush league stuff with the advent of Prohibition. Dominating Chicago's Little Italy, they turned that entire area into one large cottage moonshining industry.
There were six Genna brothers who came to this country in 1900Bloody Angelo, Mike the Devil, Pete, Sam, Jim, and Tony the Gentleman. The first five fit the classic mold of many Sicilian killers of the dayarrogant, treacherous, devious, bloodthirsty and devoutly religious. All of them carried crucifixes in their gun pockets. Only Tony the Gentleman was different. He studied architecture, constructed model tenements for poor Italian immigrants and was noted as a patron of the opera. He eschewed living in Little Italy and resided in elegant style in a leading downtown hotel.
Tony the Gentleman was personally opposed to killingnot that he objected to his brothers doing so. He sat in on family councils when murders of opponents were planned, but he simply did not wish to soil his aristocratic hands on so vulgar a task. Besides, the Gennas had some of the most savage hit men in Chicago in their ranks. There was Sam "Samoots" Amatuna, a gangster dandy who loved music and opera almost as much as he loved filling a victim full of lead; Giuseppe "the Cavalier" Nerone, a university graduate and mathematics instructor turned gunman; and the infamous murder duo of Albert Anselmi and John Scalise, who brought to the American underworld the practice of rubbing bullets with garlic in the hope of producing gangrene in any victim who survived an immediate gunshot wound.
Combined with the Gennas' constant application of deadly force was their ability to corrupt the police. As one newsman put it, "if a cop will take money from the Gennas, he'll take it from anybody." The Gennas had no trouble at all getting cops to take their money. In 1925 their office manager confessed that the Gennas had on their pad five police captains, some 400 uniformed officers, many headquarters plainclothesmen, as well as others from the state attorney's office.
Most of the police officers were attached to the Maxwell Street precinct in Little Italy. The cops were paid $10 to $125 a month, depending on their importance and length of service. All day on monthly bribe day, police officers trooped in and out of the Gennas' alcohol plant at 1022 Taylor Street, openly counting their graft on the street. The Gennas found they had to contend with a particularly venal form of police dishonesty, with "imposters" turning up from other precincts, pretending to be from the Maxwell Street station. The local police brass aided in solving that dilemma for the Gennas by furnishing the mob with a checklist of badge numbers.
The Gennas had many families in Little Italy producing raw alcohol at home. Since the average home still could produce 350 gallons of raw alcohol a week, for much less than $1 a gallon, and further processing by the Gennas did not cost too much, they made a handsome profit selling their booze at $6 a gallon wholesale.
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As part of their graft-bound duties, the police were required by the Gennas to crack down on those alky cookers in Little Italy not working for the Gennas but selling independently. The Gennas, therefore, supplied the police with a complete list of their own stills, and whenever a private operation was uncovered, the police moved in with axes swinging. Naturally the newspapers were alerted in advance so that they could run stories and pictures of the precinct's ever-alert fight against crime.
Overall the Genna operation grossed $350,000 a month. After expenses, the six brothers netted a clear profit of $150,000 per month, or almost $2 million a year. They always sought to extend these profits, which put them in conflict with the efforts of Johnny Torrio to bring the bootleg gangs under one umbrella. The Gennas agreed to Torrio's arrangement, but proved hard to control as they constantly flooded other gangs' territories with their cheap booze at prices the other gangs couldn't match. A three-way competition soon developed among the Gennas, the Torrio-Capone forces, and the North Side's O'Banion gang.
The Gennas proved to be the first losers in the ensuing bootlegger battles. Bloody Angelo Genna was assassinated on May 25, 1925. He was driving in his roadster when he became aware of North Side gangsters tailing him. He picked up speed but, in his desperate effort to elude the enemy, ran into a lamppost and was pinned behind the wheel. All he could do was watch helplessly as a shotgunner stepped out of the pursuing car and blasted him to death.
Mike Genna swore vengeance on the O'Banions, and the following month he, Anselmi and Scalise went out hunting for North Siders. What Mike didn't know was that Anselmi and Scalise had switched their allegiance to Capone and were actually taking him for a ride. As it developed the police saved them the trouble. The three got caught in a gun battle. Anselmi and Scalise killed two officers, wounded another and fled, leaving the wounded Genna to be captured. As Mike Genna was being put on a stretcher, he used his good leg to cut loose with a mighty kick and knock out one of the attendants. ''Take that, you dirty son of a bitch," he snarled. He died two hours later.
Tony the Gentleman, the mastermind of the Gennas, figured that Anselmi and Scalise had defected and decided to go into hiding. Before he left, he notified his supporter Nerone to meet him on a darkened street corner. Tony the Gentleman didn't know that Nerone also had deserted the Genna cause. When Tony Genna approached Nerone, the latter seized him in a vise-like handshake. Just then one or two gunmen stepped out of the darkness and pumped Tony full of lead.
That broke the Gennas. The three remaining brothers fled, Jim all the way back to Sicily, where he was soon caught and imprisoned for two years for stealing the jewels from the statue of the Madonna di Trapani. Eventually all three Gennas returned to Chicago on a pledge to stay out of the rackets. They ran an importing business in cheese and olive oil and lived out their days in relative obscurity.
Genovese, Vito (18971969): Mafia boss
Despite all the hype about the American Mafia being ruled by a "boss of bosses," the last man to lay claim to the title was Salvatore Maranzano in 1931, and he lasted only a few months before being assassinated. Since then, the press has assigned the mantle to various mafiosi, but none have really deserved it. Carlo Gambino did achieve a sort of de facto status, but he knew the value of humility and made no effort to grab the title.
In 1957 Vito Genovese made an overt effort to seize overall mob leadership. He was to fail almost as ignominiously as Maranzano did, although he ended up being "taken out" by the feds rather than by bullets.
In many respects Genovese, who preferred being called "Don Vito," had all the qualifications for being the boss of bosses. He was one of the most feared of the Mafia dons, killing as readily as Albert Anastasia, but possessing the cunning to plot his foes' downfalla quality the slow-witted Anastasia did not possess. As much as any single person, he can be credited with keeping the Mafia in the narcotics business, a move that some other mafiosi, such as Frank Costello and, despite the contentions of federal narcotics authorities, Lucky Luciano, at times strongly opposed.
Genovese started out in Luciano's shadow in the 1920s and in the course of knocking off many rivals rose to the top with Lucky. After World War II he started a murder campaign to gain new status for himself, with Luciano in exile in Italy. He is known to have ordered the deaths of Willie Moretti in 1951, Steve Franse in 1953, and Albert Anastasia in 1957. And he was the obvious mastermind behind the attempt on the life of Frank Costello, which eventually led to Costello's retirement.
Facing a murder charge in 1937, Genovese was forced to flee to Italy, where he succeeded in ingratiating himself with Benito Mussolini, despite the Fascist leader's ruthless campaign to destroy the Italian Mafia. He became the chief drug source for Mussolini's foreign minister and son-in-law, Count Ciano. During the war, to further gain Mussolini's approval, Genovese ordered the execution in New York of II Duce's longtime nemesis, radical editor Carlo Tresca, a mob hit that was performed by a rising mafioso named Carmine Galante. By 1944 Mussolini's regime was crumbling, and the oppor-
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tunistic Genovese surfaced suddenly as an interpreter for the U.S. Army's intelligence service. Due to his energetic and diligent labors for the U.S. Army, a number of black market operatives were arrested in southern Italy. However, the military's pleasure with Genovese soured when it was discovered that he himself had simply taken over the operations.
Genovese was returned to the United States after the war, but all the witnesses to the murder charge against him were silenced. He won his freedom. He then sought control of the Luciano family and the dominant role in the American Mafia. To succeed, he had to eliminate acting family chief Frank Costello and diminish the outside influence of Meyer Lansky, while continuing to pay lip service to Luciano. Not being fools, Costello and Luciano from afar continually set up roadblocks against him, and it took Genovese almost a decade to move in earnest, building a war chest out of a secret narcotics racket.
Costello was Genovese's first target, but the murder plot backfired. Costello was only slightly wounded. A few months later, however, Genovese had Anastasia murdered, an advantageous move for Genovese since Anastasia was Costello's main muscle. Without him, Costello, the ''Prime Minister of the Underworld," was helpless.
Next, Genovese sought to tighten his new stranglehold on the Luciano crime family. He was a prime mover in the famed Apalachin Conference in upstate New York. Genovese probably even expected to be anointed boss of bosses at the meeting, but it ended in a total fiasco when authorities raided the affair and scooped up dozens of Mafia figures. Genovese had been set up beautifully by Costello/Luciano/Lansky, none of whom were present, and by Carlo Gambino who was. (Gambino and Lansky had cooperated with Genovese in the killing of Anastasia for their own motives. Gambino wanted to take over the Anastasia crime family, and Lansky was angered by Anastasia's moves to invade the Cuban casino scene, which Lansky deemed his domain. Now, with Costello, they tipped off the authorities about the meeting.) Instead of emerging the foremost mafioso in the nation, Genovese succeeded in angering the nation's bosses, who blamed him for the Apalachin disaster.
Genovese knew that sooner or later he had to eliminate Costello, Lansky and even Luciano. He probably did not yet suspect Gambino's role. Don Vito's mistake was in assuming he had time to act; he knew his enemies would not risk open gang warfare. But warfare was not necessary. Just as their cunning stopped Apalachin, so it stopped Genovese. Costello, Lansky and Luciano concocted a major narcotics smuggling deal. There is reason to suspect that they even induced Chicago don Sam Giancana to join the conspiracy. (All that would have taken was Lansky's offering Chicago a bigger cut in Cuba.) Then, having dropped the deal in Genovese's lap, the four conspirators pitched in $100,000 for a minor Puerto Rican drug pusher named Nelson Cantellops to implicate him. Although it was hardly credible that a low-level figure like Cantellops could have the information to trap a big shot like Genovese, the federal government chose not to be too inquisitive. Genovese and 24 of his supporters were nailed, and, in 1959, Genovese was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
According to informer Joe Valachi, Genovese continued to direct the activities of his crime family from behind bars. Genovese became paranoid about the frameup and suspected almost everybody. He had his top aide on the outside, Tony Bender, assassinated, suspecting him of being involved. Later he also suspected Joe Valachi of being an informer and ordered him killed in prison. Desperately Valachi opted for government protection and turned stool pigeon, becoming one of the prize informers of all time, revealing many Mafia, or as he preferred calling it, "Cosa Nostra," secrets.
In 1969 Genovese died in prison, proof that mere brawn was insufficient to take over organized crime in America. In the 1970s statements attributed to Luciano, and later confirmed by Meyer Lansky and others, revealed how they made the government their partner in getting rid of Don Vito.
Genovese Crime Family
Lucky Luciano, who triumphed as a result of the Mafia wars of the early 1930s, reconstituted the five crime families that had been apportioned by the late, deposed Salvatore Maranzano. Maintaining control of the crime group previously headed by Joe the Boss Masseria, Luciano had inherited that family when he arranged the murder of Masseria. Within the New York Mafia, it remained for several decades the largest and most powerful of the crime families.
In this family, soldier-cum-informer Joe Valachi served under a succession of bossesfirst Luciano, followed by Frank Costello, then Vito Genovese. Costello took over when Luciano, convicted on a prostitution count in 1936, was sent to prison. By rights Genovese, as Luciano's underboss, should have succeeded, but he had his own problems with the law. Fearing prosecution on a murder rap, he fled to Italy, where he was to ingratiate himself with Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
Costello was not an ordinary godfather. He had little time for family affairs, being too involved in his own private criminal enterprises with Meyer Lansky and othersactivities that stretched from New York to New Orleans, and later to Las Vegas and Havana,

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