Posted on 03/15/2019 11:56:13 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
The Colombo family boss Carmine "The Snake" Persico died last week. The last tie to the 'Golden Age' of the mafia is gone. And maybe so is the Italian mob's stranglehold on the American imagination.
Michael Corleone says hello. That line from an iconic scene in The Godfather 2 is uttered just before an attempted hit on the character Frank Pantageli. The garroting in a bar is broken up by a beat cop who just happens to walk in.
The incident is not entirely fiction. In August 1961, Carmine the Snake Persico tried to take out Larry Gallo in a very similar incident the scene was based upon. Ten years later, Persico became the boss of the Colombo crime family, and he stayed the boss until last week, when he died in federal prison.
With Persicos passing, the last major godfather of one of New Yorks five mafia families to serve during La Cosa Nostras heyday is gone. Although he spent the majority of his leadership in prison, from the early 1970s to the late 1980s the Snake controlled a criminal empire unfathomable in todays New York City or America. A
long with the Bannano, Genovese, Luchesse, and Gambino families, the Colombo borgata in the late 20th century ran crime operations that rivaled corporations like General Motors in profit. Outside of New York, they controlled mafia families throughout the country. In the United States, there has never been a criminal enterprise quite like the Italian Mafia.
In 1986 a U.S. attorney general for the Southern District of New York named Rudolph Giuliani decimated mafia power in the Commission Case. Three heads of families were taken down, Persico among them. But like any wild animal, the mob had some death throes.
In 1991, Vitterio Little Vic Orena allegedly tried to snatch power from Persico. (Some mob experts believe Orena was actually loyal to Persico but was framed by another Colombo Capo named Greg The Grim Reaper Scarpa.) The second Colombo war, a major mob war in New York, was incited, and 12 mobsters and an innocent civilian died. It is the last time that a New York mafia family would go to the mattresses.
Today, it is difficult to fathom just how powerful economically, politically, and culturally the Italian Mafia was for much of the 20th century in the United States. It controlled vast industries in New York, like concrete and trucking. It had elected officials in its pocket, and it peopled some of Americas most popular movies and books. With the possible exception of pizza and pasta, it is the most iconic element of the Italian experience in America.
By the time Charles Lucky Luciano and Salvatore Little Caesar Maranzano created the five families commission in New York, mobsters were already becoming a staple of American culture and entertainment. Prohibition had given mafia leaders like Al Capone a ticket to vast riches, but unlike Jewish and Irish mobs, the commission, with its strict rules, created an infrastructure that allowed Italians to dominate organized crime by midcentury.
The Golden Age of the mob, indelibly memorialized by Mario Puzo in The Godfather and the films that followed, was a period of astounding growth, aided by the creation of Las Vegas as a gambling mecca and a growing control over almost every aspect of economic life in New York City. Mafia leaders were celebrities often unmolested by local law enforcement or an FBI that barely even admitted it existed. This thing of ours, as mafia members called it, was generally only bothered by occasional wars between the families. Those wars were further fodder for journalists and novelists to create its legend.
After the Godfather movies came out in the early 1970s, some of its biggest fans were actual mobsters. They reveled in the classy and honorable depiction of their lifestyles. But in reality, the mafia was always a disgraceful organization, bilking billions from the United States and most often extorting their fellow Italian Americans. It was a charade the mafia itself tried to encourage.
In 1971, Joseph Joe Colombo (worst mafia nickname ever) was murdered in broad daylight at Columbus Circle during an Italian American pride rally he organized. It was his death that led to Persico becoming boss. Colombo understood public relations. While running a nefarious crime outfit he pretended to be an oppressed and honest Italian American businessman unfairly targeted because of racism. It was an utter joke, but one that some Italian Americans and members of the media bought.
By the 1980s, mafia power in America was already starting to unravel. Successful law enforcement efforts such as Joe Pistones Donnie Brasco operation in the Luchesse family were successfully nabbing mobsters and in some cases turning them into witnesses, in defiance of their sworn omerta, or silence. This culminated in the Commission Case of 1986, in which Giuliani employed the relatively new and untested Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). RICO finally allowed prosecution of mob bosses who could not be physically attached to crimes.
But it wasnt just the mafia that was changing. Italian American neighborhoods, the natural habitat of La Cosa Nostra, were slowly dissipating as well. Today, as a result of urban flight and intermarriage with non-Italians, there are essentially no Italian American neighborhoods in New York City. Manhattans Little Italy (where Larry Gallos brother Joey was gunned down in 1972) is a block or so of mediocre and hokey Italian restaurants. Brooklyns Bensonhurst, once of the hub of the mob, still has a few traditional Italian delis, bakeries, and ravioli shops, but is slowly being overtaken by Chinese and other immigrants.
Persicos death punctuates with a bold period not just the 20th century phenomenon of the Italian Mafia, but in some ways the phenomenon of the vibrant Italian American communities of the last century. Today people in their early 40s are the last ones who can really remember visiting their Nonnas in the old neighborhood.
The five families still exist, and we still know who their bosses are, but they learned the lesson of camera-hungry godfathers like John the Dapper Don Gotti and Nicademo Little Nicky Scarfo. They stay off TV and try to keep a low profile. Notwithstanding, that, or the broader desire for the mob to lay low, killings still happen. Just yesterday, reputed Gambino boss Frank Cali was murdered outside his Staten Island home.
It is difficult to know what the lasting legacy of the mafia will be in American culture. TV shows like The Sopranos and, later, Boardwalk Empire are receding into the past. The number of mafia movies also seems to be shrinking, notwithstanding Martin Scorseses upcoming film, The Irishman.
Books and TV documentaries on the mob still draw audiences, but also seem to be abating. Put simply, the mafia seems to be losing its magic. This may well be for the best. Like Western criminal gunslingers along the lines of Jesse James before it, the mob doesnt really deserve a rich legacy. It was, after all, a terrible and criminal institution that caused enormous pain and suffering in our nation.
For Italian Americans, and really any Americans in major northeast cities, the mafia is complicated. Its faults were (and to some extent still are) grievous, but it was also an avenue for Italian American culture more broadly to be introduced to America. It is a part of our history, a bloody and shameful one in many ways, but also one that casts a long shadow over the 20th century.
The Snake is dead, and so is the vast power of the Italian Mafia. No history of the United States is complete without it, but its declining influence over New York City and America can only be considered a blessing.
Everyone should wear nametags!!
I have occasion to pass near to the resting places of some of the NY gangsters. The, in most cases, mausoleums sit there on the lawns, in the sun, quiet, dark. The breeze rustles the leaves. Birds flit and twitter. Its all so peaceful. Then I think about where those mobsters are now and wonder if they’re getting any respect...
And he’s an authority on all things Mafia?
What a joke.
You mean Litter Box?
I would go further than that. I suggest that ALL government - federal, state, local - has replaced the Mafia as organized crime. Government has perfected "shakedowns" and "insurance" in a way no private organization could ever do.
Just curious, though. We got rid of those nasty Italians but somehow that had no impact on the drugs, the girls, the numbers, nothing. Its almost like getting rid of those Italians didnt accomplish a goddam thing.
The article doesn’t mention Little Vinnie “Big Vinnie” Bannano or Vito “The Logical Positivist” Colombo.
Bingo. Cameras & DNA have made crime obsolete, aside from the Deep State Mafia with privilege to look the other way.
Look at a simple house or building, where a security alarm system is cheap and effective from Home Depot. Few people ever bump into a Mafia anymore that cheap cameras prevent.
KKK defeated.
Mafia defeated.
When my high school buddies and myself would drive into NYC from CT, we never had to worry about being stabbed, blown up, or run over... Many times, in a drunken stupor, we would simply park and sleep any where from Harlem to Greenwich Village...
Even after I got out of the Marines Corps I spent half my time int the city in Harlem and the other half in Greenwich Village... In those days, the only people that were frequently subjected to the half-filled sock were the queers...
Now that's creative writing.
Still alive and well in Italy.
Greenlawn or St. John’s?
He ignores the Clintoni crime family of Chappaqua
Pentangeli = five angels. Sheesh!
OOOPS
Make that Greenwood
Al Capone was a mobster, but he wasnt in the Mafia. He wasnt Sicilian.
For later
Frank Cali of Gambino crime family was killed in his driveway last week. Shot several times and then was run over..
As a teen at a “Christian” school, I was appalled how most of the student body relished and quoted The Godfather movies - with far more relish than they ever quoted Scripture.
I made a private vow I would boycott them for life.
I have so far kept that vow.
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