The Mafia Encyclopedia (97 page)

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Authors: Carl Sifakis

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BOOK: The Mafia Encyclopedia
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Page 282
Calabrian background were hardly less prevalent in America than were the early mafiosi. Onorta brigands settled especially in the southern United States, principally in New Orleans, and then moved north to St. Louis, Kansas City and Chicago. Others settled in New York. But Onorta bonds weakened quickly here, and society members tended instead to merge readily into whichever Mafia or Camorra gangs held supremacy. By about 1918 when the Mafia-Camorra wars in the United States had petered out, the Onorta was already integrated into the new, combined underworld.
Oddly, the Onorta appears to have disappeared at the same time in Calabria. Calabria still has secret societies, but they are better described as a network of Mafia crime families with close working relationships to Sicily.
Open Territories: Organized crime's apportionment plan
While the public argument may go on about whether or not the Mafia exists or if organized crime has divvied up the country, the question of territory is always settled firmly and forcibly when outsiders try to muscle in on a crime family's domain. In some two dozen-odd cities around the country, certain crime families are, by common consent, recognized as being preeminent. As such they must police their own areas and guarantee, with violence if necessary, to repel invaders. All the national syndicate or the ruling commission will do is, perhaps, order the intruder out to prevent a bloody war over what is regarded as a "closed territory."
However, certain areastoo lush and profitable to be controlled by a single family and thus constantly subjected to incursionshave had to be declared "open territories," available for plucking by any family with the know-how and the will to mine its riches. If Las Vegas had not been declared open territory, it would doubtlessly look today like Dresden after World War II. No single family would ever have the strength and, equally important, the financial and political muscle needed to fight off the other crime families angling for a stake in legal gambling.
There are today at least two other open territories. One is the Miami area of Florida, partly under the influence of the new "Cuban Mafia," but really still a syndicate stronghold. In the 1930s, the mobs declared Miami and its surroundings "open" when an overly ambitious New York mobster, Little Augie Pisano, fostered the illusion he could take over the town and start his own crime family there. Unfortunately for Pisano, an oldtime Lower East Side gunman, crime genius Meyer Lansky, was already ensconced in Hallandale, where he operated the fantastically profitable Colonial Inn, invested in dog racing and gained control of a bookmaker wire. For a time, Lansky tolerated Pisano's presence, and they shared Florida's East Coast gambling rackets. But finally Lansky demanded that the commission declare Miami and Miami Beach open territories. Pisano screamed, but Lansky, predictably, won out. Efficient exploitation of the Miami market required more finesse than Pisano could hope to possess. Even the Trafficante family of Tampa did not try to swallow Miami whole, realizing the task of fighting Lansky, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and several other families from points north would be impossible.
The other notable open territory is California. While the police in that state often speak disparagingly of the local crime families and call them the "Mickey Mouse Mafia," the state is hardly free of important organized crime forces. Chicago has always been involved in Hollywood, everything from shakedown rackets and labor extortion, to promoting an acting career now and then, to even producing some B-movies. And Meyer Lansky sent in Bugsy Siegel to mine what he knew to be enormous, unexplored gambling opportunities. When Siegel got there, he rumpled the feathers of L.A. crime boss Jack Dragna, one of the few toughs on the local scene. Anticipating complications, Lansky visited Lucky Luciano, then incarcerated in Dannemora prison, and got him to agree that California was so big and wide open that everybody had to be allowed in. Luciano sent an edict to Dragna "requesting" his "full cooperation" with Siegel, who was "coming West for the good of his health and the health of all of us.'' In such diplomatic language are open territories made.
One crime area that never became open territory was Havana, Cuba, during the reign of Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista. Lansky had its vice operations especially its casino trade, sewed up tight. When the Trafficante forces from Florida tried to muscle in, he had Batista inform them: "You have to get approval from the 'Little Man' [Lansky] before you can get a license on this island." Of course, Lansky did not try to swallow all the profits himself, knowing he too would then have to battle all the crime families, and he set about putting several underworld powers in his debt. He turned around and gave Trafficante a piece, and he cut in the Chicago people as well and Moe Dalitz and certain other Cleveland mafiosi.
One he refused to allow in, probably as much for personal reasons as any other, was Albert Anastasia who in the late 1950s moved aggressively, trying to get in after Lansky turned him down. Anastasia kept pressing, trying to work through some local Cuban businessmen and with Trafficante, who must have informed Lansky. Lansky, in the meantime, learned of a Vito Genovese-Carlo Gambino plot to kill Anastasia, and he immediately sent word he would support the hit, even though on a personal level he hated the anti-Semitic
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Genovese far more than Anastasia. But Genovese had no designs on Cuba, and the shining principle of territorial integrity won out yet again when Anastasia was killed.
Atlantic City, the newest legalized casino city in America, is yet to be determined a truly open territory. When gambling was first legalized there, Angelo Bruno, the Philadelphia crime boss, felt it should remain part of his domain. The other crime families had had little interest in impoverished Atlantic City and its numbers rackets, but casino gambling was a new ballgame. Bruno proved stubborn and was promptly assassinated. According to knowledgeable sources, the Gambino family from New York moved in. Others followed. Over the next decade or so Atlantic City will become totally open or it will, as one investigator put it, become known as "the city of corpses by the seashore."
Operation Mongoose: CIA-Mafia plan to kill Fidel Castro
Few plots to kill a government leader have received more publicity than Operation Mongoose, a "super secret" CIA initiative to use the Mafia to assassinate Cuba's Fidel Castro. In time the CIA admitted allor so the agency said. CIA heads later acknowledged that the plot should never have involved organized crime, but the fact is that the CIA's confession was itself a form of cover-up.
While the CIA had been advocating the "elimination of Fidel Castro" as early as 1959, it was the mobsters themselves who volunteered to come aboard for such good works. Actually, the mobsters were more interested in getting the intelligence agency in their hip pockets for their own reasons. Most important of all, most mafiosi involved in the plotting actually engaged in a scam, never really trying to kill Castro and instead robbing the CIA of untold sums of money.
There are to this day strong underworld claims that a number of later alleged gangland slayings were actually CIA hits aimed at covering up the agency's embarrassment at being so easily suckered.
The first mobster to propose underworld participation in a Castro hit appears to have been Meyer Lansky, who felt Castro's assassination was the only way to get the mob back in the casino business in Cubadespite the fact that Castro indicated a willingness to let Lansky back in to run things provided the government shared in the profits, presumably on a 50-50 basis. Lansky was not overly interested, even though he sent his brother Jake to carry on negotiations, because he doubted that skimming the profits would be possible under Castro's watch. On a more philosophical, if not dominant, level, Lansky was very anti-communist. It was Lansky who contacted the CIA and explained that some of his people still on the island could carry out the assassination.
Meanwhile, via Moe Dalitz, a syndicate power in the Las Vegas casino business, Howard Hughes learned of this proposal, and as one of the grand exponents of "the Communist threat to America" he ordered Robert Maheu, his chief of staff, to find suitable "Mafia killers" to carry out the operation. Maheu recruited Johnny Roselli and his boss, Chicago syndicate leader Sam Giancana, into the operation. Apparently through them, although possibly independently, Tampa, Florida, crime boss Santo Trafficante Jr. also signed up.
It was then that the grand mafioso scam began. The CIA was involved in all sorts of ludicrous plots, including such bizarre ploys as blowing the Cuban leader off the ocean floor while he was satisfying his passion for skin diving, injecting deadly poison into him with a specially prepared "pen," letting him puff on some poisoned cigars, or contaminating his clothes with tubercle bacilli and fungus spores. Other zany plots were also abandoned, including one to infect Castro so that his beard would fall out, ruining his macho image.
The first scheme the CIA suggested to Roselli was a nice, simple, Capone-style ambush with machine guns blazing. Greatly amused but maintaining a straight face, Roselli said he doubted such Chicago tactics would work in Cuba, and it would present recruitment difficulties because chances of the machine gunners getting away would be virtually nil. (The survival instinct for hit men has always been a bit higher than that of political assassins.) Then the CIA was taken down the garden path as the mobsters fed them one phony story after another. Whatever wild plots the CIA came up with, Trafficante sat on, in the meantime conning the intelligence agents with thrilling tales of his men risking their livesslipping into Cuba and having their boats shot out from under them. The stories, Roselli was later to tell informer Jimmy "the Weasel" Fratianno, were "all bullshit."
The CIA scientists came up with a liquid poison that would kill in two or three days and turned it over to Trafficante for transmittal to his phantom Cuban rebels. The stuff was simply flushed down a toilet. There is certainly no record that any of the CIA money and equipmentall kinds of guns, detonators, explosives, poison, boat radar and radiosever got to Cuba. Some government aides even developed the theory that Trafficante had sold out to Castro and was feeding him all sorts of information about the anti-Castro movement in Florida, as well as the scoop on CIA plots. It should be remembered that Trafficante had always jockeyed for a more important slice of the Cuban gambling business but that Lansky had cut him short. If Castro ever allowed the mob back in, Trafficante, it was said,
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would be in a better position to get a major portion of the take.
In time, the CIA agents involved in the plotting became rather discouraged about the chances of Mongoose succeeding. There must have been a flurry of joy when Giancana reported to themconversations by Giancana were monitored by the FBI who at the time knew nothing of the CIA's activitiesthat, as an FBI report said, ''Castro is in advanced stages of syphilis and is not completely rational." That joy must have given way to severe depression when Castro did not go the blithering way of Al Capone.
Perhaps the only mobster who thought the assassination of Castro was a viable option was Giancana, the mooner of the underworld as his nickname "Mooney" indicated. According to Roselli, Giancana was angry about Trafficante's foot-dragging. Giancana felt if the mob pulled it off it would have the U.S. government by "the short hairs," and there would have been little the underworld could not do thereafter with impunity. Whether his guess was right or not, Giancana soon involved the CIA in some very ''X-rated" activities. In the midst of all the anti-Castro plots, Giancana put the CIA's indebtedness to the underworld to the test. He had, he informed the agency, a little problem requiring CIA assistance. The agency was in no position to refuse the small favor.
However, the favor went wrong when sheriff's deputies in Las Vegas arrested two men, supposedly in the act of burglarizing the rooms of comedian Dan Rowan. Actually they were planting CIA bugging devices. It turned out that Rowan was going around with singer Phyllis McGuire of the McGuire Sisters, and Giancana wanted a bug placed in Rowan's room just to see how cozy matters were between the comedian and the woman Giancana considered his private property. The CIA had okayed the venture and then had to engage in a massive coverup, not to mention feeling the heat of embarrassment when the rival FBI learned the details of the caper.
The lid was kept on Operation Mongoose for a few years, but it was a plot that wouldn't disappear even after it was officially abandoned. In the 1970s there were congressional inquiries, and in 1975 Giancana was slated to go before a Senate committee headed by Senator Frank Church of Idaho. Instead he was murdered. In
Mafia Princess
Antoinette Giancana, Sam's daughter, declares, "I've always felt very strongly that the subpoena requiring Sam to appear before the committee was the death warrant that led to his murder."
John Roselli did testify shortly after Giancana's death. He told of some CIA plots, but led congressional investigators on a merry-go-round by insisting he had no recollection of the key events. Unfortunately, Roselli talked differently in private with gangland friends. He told them of Giancana's words to him when he had gotten his subpoena: "Santo's shitting in his pants, but you can't keep his name out of it. I introduced the guy to the CIA.... This Santo's crazy to think we can stop his name from surfacing." Roselli was also known to be dropping around the office of columnist Jack Anderson, sometimes having lunch or dinner with him. It was not an activity to inspire confidence in Tampa (Trafficante's bailiwick), in Chicago, or for that matter in Langley, Virginia, CIA headquarters. The old and sickly Roselli's severed body ended up floating ashore inside a 55-gallon oil drum in Florida's Biscayne Bay.
To the day he died Roselli firmly held that the CIA had not had Giancana murdered, that it was done on orders of Chicago crime boss Tony Accardo and Joey "Ha Ha" Aiuppa. There is some evidence that Giancana and Aiuppa had had a major falling out over the division of family gambling revenues. It is not known whom Roselli would have blamed for his own murder.
One thing was apparent after Operation Mongoose and the CIA's forays with the underworld. In a showdown, the Mafia could get the better of America's top intelligence brains.
See also:
CIA-Mafia Connection; Giancana, Sam; Roselli, John; Trafficante, Santo, Jr
.
Orgen, Jacob "Little Augie" (18941927): Labor racketeer and syndicate victim
Much is made of the elimination of the Mustache Petes, the old-line mafiosi, by Lucky Luciano as a vital prelude to the establishment of the national crime syndicate. But the same sort of purge had to be carried out against Jewish gangsters who would not fit the emerging scheme of things.
Jacob "Little Augie" Orgen, one of the last big-time, pre-syndicate Jewish mobsters, had no place in organized crime. When Little Augie was murdered in 1927, his garment industry rackets fell logically to the notorious Louis Lepke, a protégé of Arnold Rothstein, considered to be the greatest criminal mastermind of his day and the spiritual godfather to Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano's national crime syndicate. Rothstein viewed Little Augie as a mindless criminal who only thought of extracting the biggest profit at the moment, not of what was best in the long run. Such a failing proved the death of Little Augie.
Orgen had been schooled as a labor slugger in the years before the outbreak of World War I in the organization of Dopey Benny Fein, the foremost labor racketeer of that period. Fein worked both sides of the street, carrying out sluggings and murders for employers seeking to stop the unions or introduce strikebreakers, or

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