The Mafia Encyclopedia (4 page)

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Authors: Carl Sifakis

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Page xvii
shifted major attention to the Bonannos. Clearly the family's growing strength also indicated organized crime's resilience.
Undoubtedly the law will continue to harass the mobs and imprison deserving criminals, and RICO (the 1970 Rackateer-Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act) will continue to offer the way to big-time sentences. On another level, the effect of confiscation of mob profits may be rather underwhelming. As wise guys themselves note, there are more riches where the previous came from.
It is doubtful that the war on the Mafia can simply be proclaimed won. The profit motive remains, and so do the romantic attractions of "the life." The Mafia's kill-or-be-killed ways continue to draw mobsters. Admittedly, each mobster believes he is Mr. Smart, the guy who will never be tripped up. And the blood lust is a hard temptation to resist.
After Sammy the Bull made his first hit he met with Junior Persico, soon to be anointed the head of the Colombo family. Persico was clearly impressed by how Gravano had handled the job. Later an intermediary informed Gravano that Persico thought he had done a fine piece of work and that "Junior loves you. He's real proud of you." One can only imagine Sammy's exhilaration. Certainly Persico was satisfied by the blood lust involved.
Some mafiosi are prepared to abide by the code of the life even unto death. After "Donnie Brasco" was revealed as an overwhelmingly effective undercover agent and Sonny Black was exposed as one of his chief victims, it was obvious to all that Sonny would have to die. He had introduced Brasco to such top bosses as Santo Trafficante in Tampa and Frank Balistrieri in Milwaukee. He had betrayed the mob, even if unwittingly. There was no way out for Black other than flipping and joining the witness protection program after aiding in the prosecution of other top mafiosi. Black refused to do this. When summoned, he went to a mob meeting, hardly ignorant about his ultimate fate. He was of course executed. But that again was "the life," the only life Sonny Black knew or understood.
The same can be said of John Gotti, doing life in 23hours-a-day solitary lockup in one of the government's toughest prisons. He tries to direct the Gambinos' affairs, with uncertain results. He remains doomed to his cell, doing, as age permits, his 1,000 push-ups a day. That now is his life, one that he can only escape by flipping, which hardly any observer thinks will happen. Gotti remains defiant, his motto still "Cosa Nostra forever." He is consumed by his chosen Cosa Nostra life. If Gotti ever thought he had godlike powers, he faces the fact, whether he grasps the idea or not, that the life controls him. He is a prisoner not only of the federal government, but of "the life."
John Gotti's personal fate is of minor moment (although it reportedly cost $75 million to convict him). The important question remains whether or not the life will continue to be the driving force of crime in America. So far the mobs remain and the players abound. The lure of huge profits and the exercise of unlimited power may be incentives unrivaled by any other motivations or fears.
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Entries
A
Accardo, Anthony Joseph (19061992): Chicago mob leader
Although known to Chicago crime intimates as Tony, to lesser lieutenants as "Mr. Accardo," to syndicate supporters as having "more brains before breakfast than Al Capone had all day," Anthony Joseph Accardo slugged his way to syndicate power as "Joe Batters."
That Accardo rose to such heights is rather amazing considering his comparatively humble mob beginning. A young tough, Accardo served as an enforcer for Capone and established an early notoriety for his proficient use of the baseball bat. But, brainy and adroit, he knew how to balance brute force and velvet glove, a talent not overlooked by Capone.
When Big Al went to jail for a brief time in 1929, he named a triumvirate to rule in his place: Jake Guzik in charge of administration, Frank Nitti in operations, and Accardo as head of enforcement. Under Accardo were such brutal worthies as Machine Gun Jack McGurn, Tough Tony Capezio, Sam "Golf Bag" Hunt, Screwy John Moore, Red Forsyth and Jimmy Belcastro, the King of the Bombers. Accardo's stature grew when Capone was put away for good. In 1943, when Nitti committed suicide rather than go to prison, Accardo became the acknowledged head of the mob.
Over the years, Accardo shared power with his good friend Paul Ricca, one of the few underworld relationships that never resulted in any doublecrosses. Accardo was a firm believer in power sharing at the top, but strict obedience in the lower ranks.
Accardo and Ricca, a brilliant leader until his last senile years, extended Chicago's influence far beyond the Windy City, something Capone showed no inclination to do. It was Accardo as much as any one man who proclaimed Chicago's influence as far west and south of the city as California, Arizona, Colorado, Texas and Nevada, among other sunny sites. And the Eastern mobs made no protest, asking only that they also be
Tony Accardo, nicknamed Joe Battes
for his proficient use of a baseball bat
in the service of Al Capone, became
the most enduring boss of the
Chicago Outfit.
Page 2
granted rights in Nevada and California. In exchange Chicago got juicy rewards in Florida, Cuba and the Bahamas.
Some writers have tended to downplay Chicago's importance, noting that it frequently does not have membership on the national commission that supposedly runs organized crime. What they fail to understand is that there are
two
national crime syndicates in the United StatesChicago and the rest. This influence was the achievement of Accardo and Ricca and has been extended by their successors, Sam Giancana and, especially, Joey Aiuppa.
Never one to concern himself too much with day-today matters, Accardo gladly brought a Ricca favorite, Sam Giancana, into a leadership role in the 1940s. Whenever he wished, Accardo stepped back in to take control. Eventually, Giancana became too hot and Accardo and Ricca had to return to active leadership in the mid-1960s. With Ricca's death in 1972, Accardo brought in an old gunman buddy, Joe Aiuppa, boss of the Cicero rackets, to run things, thus allowing Accardo a life of leisure in his 22-room mansion with its indoor pool, two bowling alleys, pipe organ and gold-plated bathroom fixtures (described as being worth a half a million dollars).
It would be wrong, however, to believe that his aloof ministering meant Accardo ever lost any of his hardness. Never forgetting his enforcer past, Accardo presided over the Chicago Outfit's relentless reign of brutality.
The fate of one William ''Action" Jackson, a collector for the mob who forgot who he was collecting for, bore the Accardo trademark. Found stripped naked and hanging by his chained feet from a meat hook in a Cicero basement, he had been beaten on the lower body and genitals with Accardo's trusty old weapon, a baseball bat, then carved up with a razor, his eyes burned out with a blowtorch. Following those tortures he was further dissected; he died, the coroner reported, not of his wounds but of shock. Pictures of the body were distributed later in mob circles as an admonishment against theft within the organization.
When Sam Giancana was assassinated in 1975, it was obvious that the move could only have been made with Accardo's approval, if it were a mob operation. A number of gangsters earnestly informed the press that Accardo was not behind the murder, that the Giancana killing was "a CIA operation all the way" to prevent him from revealing details of the agency's use of the underworld in a bizarre and childish Castro assassination plot.
Accardo, who looked upon the death sentence as a solution to pesky problems, was nonetheless known for his fairness, a characteristic that won him considerable affection from gangsters. Once, Jackie the Lackey Cerone complained to him that an old hit man buddy of his, Johnny Whales, had gone soft in the head and that the "Dagos" in the mob would knock him off. Cerone said he tried to reassure Whales that he had nothing to fear from Italians, that the mob had a great many "Jews and Pollacks also. I told him this but he was still afraid." Accardo, a firm believer in the old Capone tenet of multi-ethnic membership, was sympathetic and asked Cerone if he wanted Whales killed. Cerone said he liked Whales too much for that but assured Accardo he would have no more to do with Whales in the future. Accardo was said to have magnanimously accepted this view.
Noted as an excellent pool player, Accardo was once victimized in a $1,000 game by a pool hustler who had wedged up the table and then adjusted his technique accordingly to win the match. When the trick was spotted, Accardo accorded all the blame to himself. "Let the bum go," he ordered. "He cheated me fair and square."
By the late 1970s, Accardo had returned to a multimillionaire semi-retirement in which Joey Aiuppa was said to be joining in with Cerone to take over active leadership. However, there was no doubt that if the circumstances warranted, old Joe Batters would come back.
And he did return when the Outfit's Las Vegas empire fell apart and the top leadership went to prison. Accardo proceeded to juggle the remaining leaders' roles and gave mobsters new assignments as he saw fit, with never a word of objection from the admiring ranks. He continued to administer control right up till his death of natural causes in 1992.
He never served a night in jail.
Ace of Diamonds: Mafioso "bad luck" card
Newspaper photos captured the macabre scene of Joe the Boss Masseria slumped over the table, six bullet holes in his body streaming blood onto the white tableclothand the ace of diamonds dangling from his right hand. Assassinated in April 1931 in a Coney Island, Brooklyn, restaurant, he had been playing cards with his top aide, Lucky Luciano, who had set him up for death. Luciano excused himself from the table and went to the men's room. In the ensuing moments, four armed gunmen rushed in and shot Masseria to death. Since that time the ace of diamonds has been dubbed the Mafia's hard-luck card.
The legend is strictly manufactured. As newsman Leonard Katz revealed in his book,
Uncle Frank, The Biography of Frank Costello
, "Irving Lieberman, a veteran reporter for the
New York Post
, covered the murder of Joe the Boss and was at the scene. An imaginative
Page 3
reporter from a rival newspaper, he said, decided to make the story even better. He surveyed things and then picked up the ace of diamonds from the floor and stuck it in Joe's hand. He reported the extra-added ingredient to his newspaper."
Adonis, Joe (19021972): Syndicate leader
One of the most powerful members of the national crime syndicate, Joe Adonis had been a longtime associate of such stalwart racket bosses as Lucky Luciano, Frank Costello and Meyer Lansky. He headed up the Broadway Mob, the most powerful Prohibition bootleg gang in Manhattan.
While Adonis always claimed to have been born in the United States, he was, as the law finally determined in deportation hearings, actually born in Montemarano, Italy, on November 22, 1902. He had entered the country illegally and taken the name of Adonis (his real name was Doto) to pay himself proper homage for what he regarded as his handsome looks.
Like many of his youthful associatesLuciano, Vito Genovese and Albert Anastasiahe soared up the criminal ladder of success during the get-rich-quick days of Prohibition. By the late 1920s Adonis had moved the center of his operations to Brooklyn. He became the virtual boss of much of that borough's criminal activities, taking over the Frankie Yale interests after that leading gangster was assassinated in 1928. The key to Adonis's success appears to have been his loyalty and modest ambitions. He was one of the gunners who killed Joe the Boss Masseria, the murder that put Luciano only one killing away from becoming the foremost Italian-American syndicate leader in the nation.
In Brooklyn, Adonis moved on two fronts. He was a trusted member of the board of the syndicate, settling disputes between various criminal factions and issuing murder contracts. While Albert Anastasia, Lord High Executioner of Murder, Inc., carried out tasks assigned by Louis Lepke, Adonis was also Anastasia's superior and kept a tight rein on him. Otherwise the mad-hatter murder boss could well have run amok, ordering too many hits. Abe Reles, the informer in the Murder, Inc., case, told authorities: "Cross Joey Adonis and you cross the national combination."
While Adonis was active in purely criminal matters, he was also becoming a very influential figure in Brooklyn's political life. A restaurant he owned in downtown Brooklyn, Joe's Italian Kitchen, became a rendezvous point for the most eminent political figures in Brooklynas well as members of the underworld. Among those he courted was a county judge, William O'Dwyer, later district attorney and mayor of New York. Adonis was often seen conferring with O'Dwyer and James J. Moran, a venal assistant, later regarded as O'Dwyer's bagman.
Joe Adonis, longtime power in
organized crime and sidekind of Lucky
Luciano and Meyer Lansky, takes
"voluntary deportation" to Italy in
aftermath of revelations at Kefauver
hearings. He abandoned his real name.
Joseph Doto, for the Adonis moniker
in honor of his self-proclaimed
good looks.
When Luciano was sent away in prison, he left Frank Costello in charge of his own crime family and Adonis in nominal charge of the combination's affairs, but he told Adonis, "Cooperate with Meyer." Meyer was Meyer Lansky, who was to become the guiding genius of the syndicate. Adonis understood both his role and Lansky's and proved smart enough to take orders.
After the end of Prohibition, Adonis extended his interests over waterfront rackets both in Brooklyn and New Jersey and became a power in syndicate gambling enterprises as well. Despite the fact he had moved up to multimillionaire class, Adonis also masterminded a string of jewelry thefts. For a man in his position, it was foolhardy and an activity his bigwig associates viewed with considerable amusement. But Adonis was a thief at heart and happiest when handling an old-fashioned heist.
In 1944 Adonis moved the center of his activities to New Jersey and there presided over the affairs of the syndicate in what was to become a famous mob

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