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Was Al Capone a made guy?
#742363
10/01/13 06:20 AM
10/01/13 06:20 AM
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Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 13
SlasherFreak
OP
Wiseguy
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OP
Wiseguy
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 13
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We all know he huge organized crime figure...but was he ever straightened out?
Just curious
South Philly, born and bred!
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: SlasherFreak]
#742410
10/01/13 11:42 AM
10/01/13 11:42 AM
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Joined: May 2013
Posts: 653 Illinois
F_white
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: May 2013
Posts: 653
Illinois
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No,chicago didn't have a ceremony until the 1980's,the outfit thought that stuff was crazy.
From now on, nothing goes down unless I'm involved. No blackjack no dope deals, no nothing. A nickel bag gets sold in the park, I want in. You guys got fat while everybody starved on the street. Now it's my turn.
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: SlasherFreak]
#742411
10/01/13 11:43 AM
10/01/13 11:43 AM
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Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 113 MASS.
paddy78
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 113
MASS.
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capone came from ny to chicsgo though
Southie (South Boston, Mass) my home town!!
Here to learn,lecture and have fun.
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: southend]
#742591
10/02/13 11:56 AM
10/02/13 11:56 AM
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Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 902
ChiTown
WestTown
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WestTown
Underboss
Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 902
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Good topic for discussion. So was it just an oversight on behalf of the rest of the commission that Capone hadn't been formally inducted into LCN? At the time of the commission's founding, Capone's gang was the dominant Italian gang in Chicago and had essentially killed off all rivals (including Joe Aiello's Sicilian cosa nostra). The commission really had no alternatives to Capone's gang if they wanted Chicago included.
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: southend]
#742598
10/02/13 12:35 PM
10/02/13 12:35 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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Nick Gentile said this about Al Capone and his entry into the Cosa Nostra sphere (this is from the translated manuscript of Gentile´s autobiography "Vita Di Capomafia":
"Tony Lombardo [the head of the Sicilian Mafia in Chicago at the time], a man of goodness and tremendous ability, alert and always remembering my counsel and the principles of the Mafia, having learned that Joe Masseria was making Al Capone pay a contribution of about $50,000 because he was not part of the Mafia, requested him not to pay the sum. The Governo Central [Control Government, the assembly of the most powerful bosses at the time] having found out the action of Tony Lombardo, called Al Capone to New York. They explained to him the organisation of the Mafia and conceded to him the privilage of becoming part of the family. [Most likely Gentile meant to say "part of the Mafia".] They elected him "Capo di decina" (head of ten) with the authority to select trustworthy youths. That ten, even though they operated in Chicago, were to be subject to the family of New York whose Capo (head) was Joe Masseria. All this was granted him with the condition that he would eliminate Lombardo and [Joe] Aiello. And they also gave him the authority to eliminate anyone else whom he disliked. [I understand this last part to mean that Capone was given the authority from the Cosa Nostra bosses to get rid of anyone within the Chicago Mafia without having to ask for permission.]"
It´s not always easy to understand Gentile, and there may be vital information lost in the translation (those of you who have read the manuscript or the book may agree) but if Gentile is right, this means that Capone was connected to Masseria but was given power to handle stuff in Chicago as it pleased him. Gentile never mentions Capone being made though. After the Castellammarese war and after the elimination of Masseria, the new boss of bosses Salvatore Maranzano, recognized Capone´s group as a Cosa Nostra Family, most likely as a way to reach agreement for peace, because Capone had fought on Masseria´s side.
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: Turnbull]
#742620
10/02/13 02:18 PM
10/02/13 02:18 PM
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Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 1,156
jonnynonos
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 1,156
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None of Capone's biographers says he was a made man, nor do they associate the Outfit under Torrio and Capone with the Mafia. And with good reason: neither was Sicilian at a time when Mafia meant Sicilian. There was a Mafia of sorts in Chicago at the time--the Unione Siciiliana, a kind of civic association with muscle. Capone treated them with respect, and constantly tried to get his own Sicilian guys to head the Unione. I also believe that there was a "Black Hand" operating in Little Hell before Torrio. The (reported) stastic is that one year they dumped somewhere around 40 or 50 bodies on the corner of Oak and Larabee, or Oak and Cleveland, or Sedeweick and Locust (I've read all three), and it was called Death Corner. This would have been circa 1910s in the area that later became Cabrini. Not sure if they were connected to the Unione etc.
Last edited by jonnynonos; 10/02/13 02:20 PM.
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: SlasherFreak]
#742623
10/02/13 02:45 PM
10/02/13 02:45 PM
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Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 1,156
jonnynonos
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 1,156
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Well, I have read the different corners on similar sites, none of them really seem vigorously researched or better than the other in terms of sources, thus my throwing them all up there.
Cabrini is just a shadow of what it was. Interestingly the only part left are the original rowhouses--which were all, originally, Sicilian. And they are nearly abandonded, except for, at the most, a thousand or so (potentially less) people who still live in the far west row. They'll be gone soon.
It is still a dangerous area, relatively speaking, with a fair amount of crime and the ocassional shooting/homicide, though most of them these days seem to be on the south side of the project at the Chicago Avenue entrance. From what I've heard there is still a fair amount of drug dealing there.
Oak St. ain't s**t now, you can walk through it pretty much without worry, at least during the day. Probably would still avoid it at night. It's the far northern end of the row houses.
Back in the 60s, 70s and 80s that place was a veritable war zone.
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: SlasherFreak]
#742624
10/02/13 02:48 PM
10/02/13 02:48 PM
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 486
LittleMan
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 486
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Capone was running things back when there was a free for all with different gangs trying to control things.
Similar to NYC with Masseria, Maranzano, and the independent Luciano crew. When Luciano joined up with Joe the Boss, did he and his top guys (Italian) get their fingers pricked? What about when he joined Maranzano's organization, taking over Joe the Boss' rackets?
You shit-kicking, stinky, horse-manure-smelling motherfucker you! If you ever get out of line over there again, I'll smash your fucking head so hard you won't be able to get that cowboy hat on. You hear me? Fucking hick. -Nicky (Casino)
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: SlasherFreak]
#742628
10/02/13 03:02 PM
10/02/13 03:02 PM
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 486
LittleMan
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 486
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I meant when Maranzano became Capo de tutti capi, I figured all of the leaders under him were part of his organization. And Lucky ran a family under him. Since Maranzano was old time Sicilian, did they all have to participate in the ceremony of being made? I guess he didn't live long enough to find out.
You shit-kicking, stinky, horse-manure-smelling motherfucker you! If you ever get out of line over there again, I'll smash your fucking head so hard you won't be able to get that cowboy hat on. You hear me? Fucking hick. -Nicky (Casino)
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Re: Was Al Capone a made guy?
[Re: SlasherFreak]
#742670
10/02/13 09:31 PM
10/02/13 09:31 PM
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 380 In a wide open city
Tony_Pro
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 380
In a wide open city
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Were Capone and Torrio surviving Camorrista from the New York Mafia-Camorra was of 1915?
Capone lived on Navy Street in Brooklyn, where one of the major Camorra gangs were based and he was 15 at the time, a good opportunity to make a name for himself.
I've read they were both with the Bowry Boys but haven't seen anything connecting them with the Camorra which were pretty heavy players in NYC before the Mafia and police wiped them out.
Last edited by Tony_Pro; 10/02/13 09:34 PM.
This life of ours, this is a wonderful life. If you can get through life like this, hey, thats great. But it's very, very unpredictable. There are so many ways you can screw it up.-Paul Castellano (he would know)
"I'm not talking about Italians, I'm talking about criminals."-Joe Valachi
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