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DiCarlo book #955617
10/14/18 07:05 AM
10/14/18 07:05 AM
Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 23,815
H
Hollander Offline OP
Hollander  Offline OP
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Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 23,815
A historical biography of Mafioso Joseph DiCarlo, once known as the Al Capone of Buffalo and as western New York's Public Enemy No. 1.

http://buffalomob.com/


"The king is dead, long live the king!"
Re: DiCarlo book [Re: Hollander] #955621
10/14/18 07:13 AM
10/14/18 07:13 AM
Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 23,815
H
Hollander Offline OP
Hollander  Offline OP
H

Joined: Mar 2016
Posts: 23,815
The third chapter looks interesting.

3. North of the Border (1918-1921)
A Calabrian criminal network in Canada dominates early Prohibition Era rackets.
Wartime Prohibition, the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act ban alcohol sales and open black market opportunities. Buffalo becomes a major conduit for illegal liquor.

The 1918 murder of James Celona of Hamilton, Ontario, is the first of many regional gangland killings during the Prohibition Era. Rocco Perri is the primary beneficiary of Celona’s death. He takes over a Calabrian bootlegging operation in Hamilton and becomes the equal of regional gang bosses, the Scaroni brothers and Joseph Sirianni. The 1922 murders of Domenic and Salvatore Scaroni leave Perri in control of the Calabrian bootlegging network in Ontario.

Angelo Palmeri becomes a leader in the Niagara Falls underworld and a link between the Calabrian and Sicilian criminal societies of the region.

Authorities believe the murders of Salvatore Russo and Frank Ulizzi are related to bootlegging. Evidence shows Russo and Ulizzi involvement in a regional burglary ring. A bootleggers quarrel with the Vaccaro brothers takes the life of Giuseppe DiCarlo friend Crocevera and results in charges against Joseph DiCarlo.

Calabrian and Sicilian bootlegging operations catch the attention of Prohibition agents.


"The king is dead, long live the king!"
Re: DiCarlo book [Re: Hollander] #955645
10/14/18 12:11 PM
10/14/18 12:11 PM
Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 838
BarrettM Offline
Underboss
BarrettM  Offline
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Joined: Nov 2010
Posts: 838
It's more of a history book than a mob book. Which is awesome. You get more history here than than the history of Napoleon. Evderyone should read it.

Re: DiCarlo book [Re: BarrettM] #955684
10/14/18 08:18 PM
10/14/18 08:18 PM
Joined: Mar 2018
Posts: 406
NickleCity Offline
Capo
NickleCity  Offline
Capo
Joined: Mar 2018
Posts: 406
One of the best books out there... Although it is dense with information so it is hard to read at times. One of the best sourced books I’ve seen too.

Last edited by NickleCity; 10/14/18 09:46 PM.
Re: DiCarlo book [Re: Hollander] #955692
10/15/18 01:39 AM
10/15/18 01:39 AM
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 865
M
MightyDR Offline
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MightyDR  Offline
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Underboss
Joined: Jun 2016
Posts: 865
Just finished Volume 1, came on to post my thoughts on the Mafia Books thread. One of the most thoroughly researched mob books I have read which is especially good since it is on an underreported subject matter. The author does have a tendency to actually go into too much detail on certain topics, but at least you know you are getting the full story. Can't wait for Volume 2!

Re: DiCarlo book [Re: Hollander] #955727
10/15/18 12:30 PM
10/15/18 12:30 PM
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,653
A
antimafia Offline
Underboss
antimafia  Offline
A
Underboss
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,653
Originally Posted by Hollander
The third chapter looks interesting.

3. North of the Border (1918-1921)
A Calabrian criminal network in Canada dominates early Prohibition Era rackets.
Wartime Prohibition, the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act ban alcohol sales and open black market opportunities. Buffalo becomes a major conduit for illegal liquor.

The 1918 murder of James Celona of Hamilton, Ontario, is the first of many regional gangland killings during the Prohibition Era. Rocco Perri is the primary beneficiary of Celona’s death. He takes over a Calabrian bootlegging operation in Hamilton and becomes the equal of regional gang bosses, the Scaroni brothers and Joseph Sirianni. The 1922 murders of Domenic and Salvatore Scaroni leave Perri in control of the Calabrian bootlegging network in Ontario.

Angelo Palmeri becomes a leader in the Niagara Falls underworld and a link between the Calabrian and Sicilian criminal societies of the region.

Authorities believe the murders of Salvatore Russo and Frank Ulizzi are related to bootlegging. Evidence shows Russo and Ulizzi involvement in a regional burglary ring. A bootleggers quarrel with the Vaccaro brothers takes the life of Giuseppe DiCarlo friend Crocevera and results in charges against Joseph DiCarlo.

Calabrian and Sicilian bootlegging operations catch the attention of Prohibition agents.



Here's a link to my Evernote item that contains some type of death record for Celona (see the middle column):

https://www.evernote.com/shard/s229...0f25543/843cd4336c47b035d382b15efd4e4479

My notes from last July indicate Celona's real first name was something along the lines of Germo.

Re: DiCarlo book [Re: Hollander] #955749
10/15/18 06:40 PM
10/15/18 06:40 PM
Joined: Mar 2018
Posts: 406
NickleCity Offline
Capo
NickleCity  Offline
Capo
Joined: Mar 2018
Posts: 406
Originally Posted by Hollander
The third chapter looks interesting.

3. North of the Border (1918-1921)
A Calabrian criminal network in Canada dominates early Prohibition Era rackets.
Wartime Prohibition, the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act ban alcohol sales and open black market opportunities. Buffalo becomes a major conduit for illegal liquor.

The 1918 murder of James Celona of Hamilton, Ontario, is the first of many regional gangland killings during the Prohibition Era. Rocco Perri is the primary beneficiary of Celona’s death. He takes over a Calabrian bootlegging operation in Hamilton and becomes the equal of regional gang bosses, the Scaroni brothers and Joseph Sirianni. The 1922 murders of Domenic and Salvatore Scaroni leave Perri in control of the Calabrian bootlegging network in Ontario.

Angelo Palmeri becomes a leader in the Niagara Falls underworld and a link between the Calabrian and Sicilian criminal societies of the region.

Authorities believe the murders of Salvatore Russo and Frank Ulizzi are related to bootlegging. Evidence shows Russo and Ulizzi involvement in a regional burglary ring. A bootleggers quarrel with the Vaccaro brothers takes the life of Giuseppe DiCarlo friend Crocevera and results in charges against Joseph DiCarlo.

Calabrian and Sicilian bootlegging operations catch the attention of Prohibition agents.



It appears Perri was involved in bootlegging into Falls and Buffalo but was able to keep Buffalo/Falls out of Hamilton/Toronto until Magaddino arrived and took over for Palmeri and rose in power after DiCarlo Sr.’s death. He then had Perri’s friend Tony Papalia kill Perri’s wife.

Quote
The underworld violence of the period spread north across the border and reached the home of Rocco Perri, boss of the Calabrian bootlegging network in Ontario. On August 13, 1930, Rocco Perri and his wife Bessie went to visit a relative. They returned to their home in Hamilton at eleven-thirty-five that evening. Bessie was driving their car. She parked the car in their garage, and the Perris stepped out. Bessie took just a few steps when shotgun blasts erupted from inside the garage. Rocco Perri jumped into a back alley and spotted a neighbor who was out walking his dog. The two men cautiously returned to the garage. There they found Bessie dead in a pool of blood. Rocco collapsed, crying in grief over the loss of his wife and rackets partner.[ 1209] The authorities were aware that. in her husband’s bootlegging enterprises. Some considered her the financial brains of the illicit business. The investigation of Bessie’s killing was built upon the assumption that gunmen deliberately targeted her. The police were able to assemble a long list of Bessie’s enemies. She was not well liked and had a reputation for greed. One of the suspects was Tony Papalia, a friend and fellow countryman of Perri who had become a supporter of western New York boss Stefano Magaddino.[ 1210] However, the police could not build a convincing murder case against Papalia or anyone else on their list of suspects.[ 1211] In the Ontario underworld, Bessie’s murder was viewed as a message: Stefano Magaddino’s western New York Mafia, which had been the junior partner of the Calabrians for years, was ready to take control of the region.


Looks like Buffalo has had a long history of working with Calabrians across the border—going back to nearly the beginning of mafia history in the area.

Last edited by NickleCity; 10/15/18 06:48 PM.

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