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Albert Gallo

Albert "Kid Blast" Gallo, Jr. (born June 6, 1930) is a New York mobster of the Genovese crime family.

Albert Gallo
Born (1930-06-06) June 6, 1930 (age 92)
OccupationMobster
RelativesJoe Gallo (brother)

Biography

Albert Gallo was born on June 6, 1930, in Red Hook, Brooklyn. His parents were Albert (Umberto) and Mary Gallo (née Nunziata). His two older brothers were Lawrence "Larry" Gallo and Joe "Crazy Joey" Gallo.

A bootlegger during Prohibition, Albert Sr. did not discourage his three sons from becoming criminals. Albert Gallo joined his brothers Larry and Joey in a gang that controlled President street South Brooklyn.

At one point, Albert Gallo lived in the Greenwood section of Brooklyn. In the late 1970s, Gallo told the media that he owned a furniture company.[1] It is unknown if Gallo is married or has a family.

Profaci crime family

The three Gallo brothers became affiliated with capo Harry Fontana's crew in the Profaci crime family, then headed by boss Joseph Profaci.

In 1957, Profaci allegedly asked Joe Gallo and his crew to murder Albert Anastasia, the boss of the Gambino crime family. On October 25, 1957, Anastasia was murdered by two disguised men in the barber shop of a Manhattan hotel.[2] It is unknown if Albert Gallo participated in the Anastasia killing. Some say it was Colombo mobster Carmine Persico, who participated in the shooting of Anastasia.

Eventually, Larry and Joey both became inducted members of the Profaci family. However, Albert never achieved this status in the family.[3] Although Joey was the most explosive and strong-willed of the brothers, Larry was the organized thoughtful one who actually ran the crew. Younger brother Albert tended to stay in the background.

By the end of the 1950s, the Gallo brothers had become very dissatisfied with Profaci's leadership. Profaci was maintaining a lavish lifestyle by severely taxing everyone else in his crime family. In 1959, Profaci ordered the Gallos to murder fellow crew member Frank Abbatemarco, who ran lucrative bookmaking and loan sharking operations. Abbatemarco owed Profaci $50,000 in unpaid tribute and refused to pay it out of protest. On November 4, 1959, Abbatemarco was shot inside a tavern in the Carroll Gardens section of Brooklyn. Some accounts state that Albert, his brothers and Joseph "Joe Jelly" Gioelli killed Abbatemarco. Other reports say that Joey Gallo refused the assignment on behalf of the crew. After Abbatemarco's murder, Profaci took his rackets, leaving nothing for the Gallo crew.

First Colombo War

Albert and the Gallo crew now turned against Profaci. In February 1961, the Gallos kidnapped underboss Joseph Magliocco and capos Frank Profaci, John Scimone and Joseph Colombo. Profaci was a target also, but he managed to escape capture.[4] To obtain their release, Profaci negotiated an agreement with the Gallos. However, after the hostage were released, Profaci reneged on the agreement and went after the Gallo crew. On August 20, 1961, Scimone, now a Profaci loyalist, lured Larry Gallo into meeting him at a lounge, where several men, including Persico, tried to kill him. This was the start of the First Colombo War.

On December 21, 1961, Joey Gallo was sentenced seven to fourteen years in prison, but the conflict continued.[5] In June 1962, Profaci died of cancer and the family leadership passed to Magliocco.[6]

On January 29, 1962, Albert Gallo and six other crew members rescued six small children from an apartment filled with smoke by a mattress fire. None of the children or mobsters were injured.[7]

In 1963, with the conviction of two more Gallo crew members, both sides accepted a peace agreement brokered by Patriarca crime family boss Raymond L.S. Patriarca. The first war was over, with the Profaci crime family becoming the Colombo crime family.

Peacetime

On January 8, 1965, Albert and Larry Gallo, along with 13 other crew members, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault and were sentenced to six months in prison.[8]

In 1966, New York City's Youth Board requested that Albert Gallo and his brothers help them lower racial tensions between white and African-American youths in the East New York and Flatbush sections of Brooklyn. At one meeting with white youths, Albert Gallo sent a teenager sprawling for using a racial epithet. Brooklyn District Attorney Aaron Koota protested the use of the Gallo brothers, but New York Mayor John V. Lindsay defended the Youth Board's actions.[9]

On October 24, 1967, Albert Gallo was indicted on charges related to a ticket cashing racket at Roosevelt Raceway in Westbury, New York.[10]

In May 1968, Larry Gallo died of cancer.[11] Joe Gallo took control of the Gallo crew from prison.

Second Colombo War

In 1971, Joe Gallo was released from prison. Later that year, boss Joseph Colombo was shot and paralyzed. Former Gallo crew member Carmine Persico now took control of the family through a series of front bosses. Convinced that the Gallos had tried to kill Colombo, the Colombo leadership went after Joey Gallo.

On April 7, 1972, gunmen murdered Joey Gallo in Umberto's Clam House in Manhattan's Little Italy, starting the Second Colombo War.[12] John "Mooney" Cutrone, a made man and close confidant of both Larry and Joey, was seen as Joey's logical successor. However, to maintain harmony in the crew, Cutrone supported Albert for capo. The untested and less experienced Albert now became boss of the Gallo crew.[1]

In August 1972, Albert Gallo learned that several members of the Colombo leadership, including Alphonse Persico (Carmine Persico's brother) and Gennaro Langella would be meeting at the Neapolitan Noodle restaurant on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. The Gallo crew hired a hitman from Las Vegas to ambush and murder the Colombo leaders. However, at the restaurant, the confused hitman shot four innocent meat wholesalers instead of the mobsters. Two of his victims died.[3][13] In the following months, an uneasy truce prevailed between the Colombos and the Gallos.

Cutrone defection

In 1974, the truce was shattered when Cutrone and his followers defected back to the Colombo family. Cutrone, Gerry Basciano, Sammy Zahralbam, and other Gallo members had become dissatisfied with their lack of income under Albert's leadership.

Almost immediately, violence broke out between the Gallo and Cutrone factions. Gallo loyalist James Geritano wiretapped Basciano's phone, allowing them to plan an ambush. On July 1, 1974, Basciano and Zahralbam were shot and wounded on a Brooklyn sidewalk, but escaped serious injury.[14] On August 1974, the Cutrone faction shot and killed Gallo loyalist Stevie Cirillo while he was playing craps at a charity benefit in a Brooklyn synagogue.[15] On September 11, 1974, a sniper shot and seriously wounded Gallo loyalist Frank "Punchy" Illiano, Albert's lieutenant, near the Gallo headquarters on President street.[16]

Leaving the Colombo crime family

In the autumn of 1974, the Mafia Commission intervened in the Gallo/Cutrone conflict. The family bosses believed that the violence was interfering with business and bringing public attention to their activities. The Commission negotiated an agreement under which Albert and his followers would join the crew of Vincent Gigante, then a powerful capo in the Genovese Family.[17] Cutrone and his rebels would remain with the Colombo Family. Losing members, running out of money and virtually besieged in their President Street headquarters, the Gallo crew had no other choice.[18] The Second Colombo War was over.

In February 1976, the peace agreement was violated when a sniper fired two gunshots into the Gallo headquarters, slightly wounding crew member Steven Boriello. Now part of Genovese family, Albert immediately filed a formal protest to the Colombo leadership. The Colombo bosses responded by summoning Cutrone and Basciano to a "sitdown" to explain their actions. Neither man attended the meeting; they also ignored attempts by the Colombo leadership.[19]

At this point, the mob families lost patience with Cutrone and Basciano. On June 16, 1976, a gunman shot and killed Basciano while he was eating at a luncheonette.[19] Cutrone went into hiding, but the Colombos convinced him that Basciano's death ended the problem. On October 5, 1976, a gunman shot and killed Cutrone while he was eating breakfast at a diner.[19][20] Revealingly, the Colombo family did not show any signs of displeasure at the killing of Cutrone, a made man.

Genovese crime family

With all threats now extinguished, Gallo peacefully rose through the ranks of the Genovese family, most likely being officially inducted into the New York Mafia in 1976, when the books were open once again after roughly 20 years.

Gallo is still listed as an acting captain. He is, however, retired, remaining a highly respected elder statesman.

References

  1. ^ a b Pace, Eric (August 17, 1972). "Albert Gallo, the 'Kid Brother', Picks Up Mantle for 'Honor' of Mafia Family" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  2. ^ "Anastasia Slain in a Hotel Here. Led Murder, Inc". The New York Times. October 26, 1957.
  3. ^ a b Gage, Nicholas (July 7, 1975). "Key Mafia Figure Tells of Wars and Gallo-Colombo Peace Talks" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  4. ^ Earley, Pete; Shur, Gerald (2003). WITSEC inside the Federal Witness Protection Program. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 0-307-43143-6.
  5. ^ Roth, Jack (December 22, 1961). "Gallo Sentenced to 7 to 14 Years". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  6. ^ "Profaci Dies of Cancer; Led Feuding Brooklyn Mob". The New York Times. June 8, 1961. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  7. ^ "Gallo Gang Saves 6 Children in Fire in Brooklyn Flat" (PDF). The New York Times. February 1, 1962. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  8. ^ "15 in Gallo Gang Jailed, 2 Others Fined" (PDF). The New York Times. January 9, 1965. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  9. ^ Kifner, John (August 27, 1966). "Lindsay Defends Gallo Peace Roll" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 27 October 2010.
  10. ^ Silver, Roy R. (October 24, 1967). "A Gallo Arrested in Coercion Case" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  11. ^ "Larry Gallo Dies in Sleep at 41" (PDF). The New York Times. May 19, 1968. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  12. ^ Gage, Nicholas (May 3, 1972). "Story of Joe Gallo's Murder". The New York Times. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  13. ^ Montgomery, Paul L (August 13, 1972). "Hunt Pressed for Gunman Who Killed 3 in an Eastside Restaurant" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  14. ^ "Gallo Reprisal Held Motive in Shooting" (PDF). The New York Times. July 3, 1974. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  15. ^ Kihss, Peter (August 5, 1974). "Gallo Aide Slain at a Dice Table" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  16. ^ Treaster, Joseph B. (September 12, 1974). "A Member of Gallo Gang Shot by Brooklyn Sniper" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  17. ^ Capeci, Jerry (2004). The complete idiot's guide to the Mafia (2nd ed.). Indianapolis, IN: Alpha Books. ISBN 1-59257-305-3.
  18. ^ Breasted, Mary (November 10, 1974). "Gallo Factions Declare a Truce After a Series of Shootings" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  19. ^ a b c Gage, Nicholas (November 7, 1976). "Colombo Family Seeking Peace in Classic Style By More Killing" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 11 November 2011.
  20. ^ Perlmutter, Emanuel (October 6, 1976). "Cutrone, Organized-Crime Figure, is Robbed and Killed in Brooklyn" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved 10 November 2011.

Further reading

  • Raab, Selwyn. Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. New York: St. Martin's Press 2005. ISBN 0-312-30094-8

External links

    albert, gallo, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, especially, potent. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately especially if potentially libelous or harmful Find sources Albert Gallo news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Albert Kid Blast Gallo Jr born June 6 1930 is a New York mobster of the Genovese crime family Albert GalloBorn 1930 06 06 June 6 1930 age 92 Red Hook BrooklynOccupationMobsterRelativesJoe Gallo brother Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Profaci crime family 1 2 First Colombo War 1 3 Peacetime 1 4 Second Colombo War 1 5 Cutrone defection 1 6 Leaving the Colombo crime family 1 7 Genovese crime family 2 References 3 Further reading 4 External linksBiography EditAlbert Gallo was born on June 6 1930 in Red Hook Brooklyn His parents were Albert Umberto and Mary Gallo nee Nunziata His two older brothers were Lawrence Larry Gallo and Joe Crazy Joey Gallo A bootlegger during Prohibition Albert Sr did not discourage his three sons from becoming criminals Albert Gallo joined his brothers Larry and Joey in a gang that controlled President street South Brooklyn At one point Albert Gallo lived in the Greenwood section of Brooklyn In the late 1970s Gallo told the media that he owned a furniture company 1 It is unknown if Gallo is married or has a family Profaci crime family Edit The three Gallo brothers became affiliated with capo Harry Fontana s crew in the Profaci crime family then headed by boss Joseph Profaci In 1957 Profaci allegedly asked Joe Gallo and his crew to murder Albert Anastasia the boss of the Gambino crime family On October 25 1957 Anastasia was murdered by two disguised men in the barber shop of a Manhattan hotel 2 It is unknown if Albert Gallo participated in the Anastasia killing Some say it was Colombo mobster Carmine Persico who participated in the shooting of Anastasia Eventually Larry and Joey both became inducted members of the Profaci family However Albert never achieved this status in the family 3 Although Joey was the most explosive and strong willed of the brothers Larry was the organized thoughtful one who actually ran the crew Younger brother Albert tended to stay in the background By the end of the 1950s the Gallo brothers had become very dissatisfied with Profaci s leadership Profaci was maintaining a lavish lifestyle by severely taxing everyone else in his crime family In 1959 Profaci ordered the Gallos to murder fellow crew member Frank Abbatemarco who ran lucrative bookmaking and loan sharking operations Abbatemarco owed Profaci 50 000 in unpaid tribute and refused to pay it out of protest On November 4 1959 Abbatemarco was shot inside a tavern in the Carroll Gardens section of Brooklyn Some accounts state that Albert his brothers and Joseph Joe Jelly Gioelli killed Abbatemarco Other reports say that Joey Gallo refused the assignment on behalf of the crew After Abbatemarco s murder Profaci took his rackets leaving nothing for the Gallo crew First Colombo War Edit Albert and the Gallo crew now turned against Profaci In February 1961 the Gallos kidnapped underboss Joseph Magliocco and capos Frank Profaci John Scimone and Joseph Colombo Profaci was a target also but he managed to escape capture 4 To obtain their release Profaci negotiated an agreement with the Gallos However after the hostage were released Profaci reneged on the agreement and went after the Gallo crew On August 20 1961 Scimone now a Profaci loyalist lured Larry Gallo into meeting him at a lounge where several men including Persico tried to kill him This was the start of the First Colombo War On December 21 1961 Joey Gallo was sentenced seven to fourteen years in prison but the conflict continued 5 In June 1962 Profaci died of cancer and the family leadership passed to Magliocco 6 On January 29 1962 Albert Gallo and six other crew members rescued six small children from an apartment filled with smoke by a mattress fire None of the children or mobsters were injured 7 In 1963 with the conviction of two more Gallo crew members both sides accepted a peace agreement brokered by Patriarca crime family boss Raymond L S Patriarca The first war was over with the Profaci crime family becoming the Colombo crime family Peacetime Edit On January 8 1965 Albert and Larry Gallo along with 13 other crew members pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault and were sentenced to six months in prison 8 In 1966 New York City s Youth Board requested that Albert Gallo and his brothers help them lower racial tensions between white and African American youths in the East New York and Flatbush sections of Brooklyn At one meeting with white youths Albert Gallo sent a teenager sprawling for using a racial epithet Brooklyn District Attorney Aaron Koota protested the use of the Gallo brothers but New York Mayor John V Lindsay defended the Youth Board s actions 9 On October 24 1967 Albert Gallo was indicted on charges related to a ticket cashing racket at Roosevelt Raceway in Westbury New York 10 In May 1968 Larry Gallo died of cancer 11 Joe Gallo took control of the Gallo crew from prison Second Colombo War Edit In 1971 Joe Gallo was released from prison Later that year boss Joseph Colombo was shot and paralyzed Former Gallo crew member Carmine Persico now took control of the family through a series of front bosses Convinced that the Gallos had tried to kill Colombo the Colombo leadership went after Joey Gallo On April 7 1972 gunmen murdered Joey Gallo in Umberto s Clam House in Manhattan s Little Italy starting the Second Colombo War 12 John Mooney Cutrone a made man and close confidant of both Larry and Joey was seen as Joey s logical successor However to maintain harmony in the crew Cutrone supported Albert for capo The untested and less experienced Albert now became boss of the Gallo crew 1 In August 1972 Albert Gallo learned that several members of the Colombo leadership including Alphonse Persico Carmine Persico s brother and Gennaro Langella would be meeting at the Neapolitan Noodle restaurant on the Upper East Side of Manhattan The Gallo crew hired a hitman from Las Vegas to ambush and murder the Colombo leaders However at the restaurant the confused hitman shot four innocent meat wholesalers instead of the mobsters Two of his victims died 3 13 In the following months an uneasy truce prevailed between the Colombos and the Gallos Cutrone defection Edit In 1974 the truce was shattered when Cutrone and his followers defected back to the Colombo family Cutrone Gerry Basciano Sammy Zahralbam and other Gallo members had become dissatisfied with their lack of income under Albert s leadership Almost immediately violence broke out between the Gallo and Cutrone factions Gallo loyalist James Geritano wiretapped Basciano s phone allowing them to plan an ambush On July 1 1974 Basciano and Zahralbam were shot and wounded on a Brooklyn sidewalk but escaped serious injury 14 On August 1974 the Cutrone faction shot and killed Gallo loyalist Stevie Cirillo while he was playing craps at a charity benefit in a Brooklyn synagogue 15 On September 11 1974 a sniper shot and seriously wounded Gallo loyalist Frank Punchy Illiano Albert s lieutenant near the Gallo headquarters on President street 16 Leaving the Colombo crime family Edit In the autumn of 1974 the Mafia Commission intervened in the Gallo Cutrone conflict The family bosses believed that the violence was interfering with business and bringing public attention to their activities The Commission negotiated an agreement under which Albert and his followers would join the crew of Vincent Gigante then a powerful capo in the Genovese Family 17 Cutrone and his rebels would remain with the Colombo Family Losing members running out of money and virtually besieged in their President Street headquarters the Gallo crew had no other choice 18 The Second Colombo War was over In February 1976 the peace agreement was violated when a sniper fired two gunshots into the Gallo headquarters slightly wounding crew member Steven Boriello Now part of Genovese family Albert immediately filed a formal protest to the Colombo leadership The Colombo bosses responded by summoning Cutrone and Basciano to a sitdown to explain their actions Neither man attended the meeting they also ignored attempts by the Colombo leadership 19 At this point the mob families lost patience with Cutrone and Basciano On June 16 1976 a gunman shot and killed Basciano while he was eating at a luncheonette 19 Cutrone went into hiding but the Colombos convinced him that Basciano s death ended the problem On October 5 1976 a gunman shot and killed Cutrone while he was eating breakfast at a diner 19 20 Revealingly the Colombo family did not show any signs of displeasure at the killing of Cutrone a made man Genovese crime family Edit With all threats now extinguished Gallo peacefully rose through the ranks of the Genovese family most likely being officially inducted into the New York Mafia in 1976 when the books were open once again after roughly 20 years Gallo is still listed as an acting captain He is however retired remaining a highly respected elder statesman References Edit a b Pace Eric August 17 1972 Albert Gallo the Kid Brother Picks Up Mantle for Honor of Mafia Family PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Anastasia Slain in a Hotel Here Led Murder Inc The New York Times October 26 1957 a b Gage Nicholas July 7 1975 Key Mafia Figure Tells of Wars and Gallo Colombo Peace Talks PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Earley Pete Shur Gerald 2003 WITSEC inside the Federal Witness Protection Program New York Bantam Books ISBN 0 307 43143 6 Roth Jack December 22 1961 Gallo Sentenced to 7 to 14 Years The New York Times Retrieved 11 November 2011 Profaci Dies of Cancer Led Feuding Brooklyn Mob The New York Times June 8 1961 Retrieved 11 November 2011 Gallo Gang Saves 6 Children in Fire in Brooklyn Flat PDF The New York Times February 1 1962 Retrieved 11 November 2011 15 in Gallo Gang Jailed 2 Others Fined PDF The New York Times January 9 1965 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Kifner John August 27 1966 Lindsay Defends Gallo Peace Roll PDF The New York Times Retrieved 27 October 2010 Silver Roy R October 24 1967 A Gallo Arrested in Coercion Case PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Larry Gallo Dies in Sleep at 41 PDF The New York Times May 19 1968 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Gage Nicholas May 3 1972 Story of Joe Gallo s Murder The New York Times Retrieved 11 November 2011 Montgomery Paul L August 13 1972 Hunt Pressed for Gunman Who Killed 3 in an Eastside Restaurant PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Gallo Reprisal Held Motive in Shooting PDF The New York Times July 3 1974 Retrieved 10 November 2011 Kihss Peter August 5 1974 Gallo Aide Slain at a Dice Table PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Treaster Joseph B September 12 1974 A Member of Gallo Gang Shot by Brooklyn Sniper PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Capeci Jerry 2004 The complete idiot s guide to the Mafia 2nd ed Indianapolis IN Alpha Books ISBN 1 59257 305 3 Breasted Mary November 10 1974 Gallo Factions Declare a Truce After a Series of Shootings PDF The New York Times Retrieved 11 November 2011 a b c Gage Nicholas November 7 1976 Colombo Family Seeking Peace in Classic Style By More Killing PDF The New York Times Retrieved 11 November 2011 Perlmutter Emanuel October 6 1976 Cutrone Organized Crime Figure is Robbed and Killed in Brooklyn PDF The New York Times Retrieved 10 November 2011 Further reading EditRaab Selwyn Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires New York St Martin s Press 2005 ISBN 0 312 30094 8External links EditBlood in the Streets Subculture of Violence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Albert Gallo amp oldid 1138678469, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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