Originally Posted By: CabriniGreen
@ JC

That was a great post on Gerry Catena. He's one of those guys I find MUCH more interesting than the guys we usually hear about.

I find it kind of funny, like you say the Genovese are supposed to be, like, the "sophisticated gentleman"... Lol, To me they have always been the snakiest family, with as many nut jobs as anyone.

Contrast Catena move on the supermarket chain with how Paul Castellano went about it. Paul actually make this seem like amateur hour shit.
Same thing, Catena has his bleach, or what ever. But no Union clout there, so no leverage with the supermarket. Castellano had his meat companies, but meat falls under the jurisdiction of the unions, cause it has to be trucked in. So Pauls move on the supermarkets was much more sophisticated.




Edit; Another example is Ettore Zappi, look at how he puts together his " Matress racket". ....

https://books.google.com/books?id=jgCpxT...ses&f=false

Just much more sophistication.....





I've never really bought into the generally accepted truths that the Genovese are a bunch of white collar gentlemen. The whole family is based on wholesale extortion of NYC, that takes a hell of a lot of fear, more than business acumen....


Also,most of Catena wealth was from coin machines, I'm pretty positive he was partners with the Outfit on a lot of those operations.....



Catena also had a lot of ton of legitimate interests in things like Standard Oil, Hellman's Mayonaise, etc. The Genovese also had plenty of union clout, some were different unions than those where the Gambinos had interests. My point is that as relatively sophisticated and intelligent as Catena was, he was at his core a violent man, as at the time particularly you could not get to where he was in that line of work without a violent streak. Just about all of those guys were and are the same, greedy and violent. That is why guys like Granello and DeStefano hung around for as long as they did, they were big earners. Guys like Catena and Accardo really did not care where the money came from, as long as it kept coming.

As for Castellano, yes he was considered to be a smart businessman, but he also could be vindictive and violent. From what I remember he had a friend of his daughter's killed because it got back to him that the kid said that he looked like Frank Perdue. He couldn't have let that go, or at most had some one give the kid a beating? As horrible as what Catena was with the supermarket workers, at least there was some business reason for his actions. What was Castellano's excuse?