Quinn said the list, which contained fewer than 100 names, will be of use to state and federal law enforcement officials for years to come in tracking "who is who" and understanding the evolution of mob leadership as "made" members die or are killed. Quinn said the New York crime families limit "made" members to a prescribed number. Some of the names on the list had been crossed off when mobsters died, with the names of new "made" members written in nearby, Quinn said. (From January 1998 bust.)