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Frankie Carbo

Paul John "Frankie" Carbo[1] (born Paolo Giovanni Carbo, Italian: [ˈpaːolo dʒoˈvanni ˈkarbo]; August 10, 1904[2] – November 9, 1976[3]) was an Italian-American New York City Mafia soldier in the Lucchese crime family who operated as a gunman with Murder, Inc. before transitioning into one of the most powerful promoters in professional boxing.

Frankie Carbo
Born
Paolo Giovanni Carbo

(1904-08-10)August 10, 1904
Agrigento, Sicily, Kingdom of Italy
DiedNovember 9, 1976(1976-11-09) (aged 72)
NationalityItalian
Other namesJohn Paul Carbo, Frank Russo, Frank Trucker, Jimmy the Wop, Mr. Gray, Mr. Fury, Czar of Boxing
AllegianceLucchese crime family
Murder, Inc.
Conviction(s)Assault, grand larceny, manslaughter (1924)
Managing boxers without licence (1950s)
Conspiracy, extortion (1961)
Criminal penalty2 to 4 years' imprisonment; served 20 months
2 years' imprisonment
25 years' imprisonment

Early years Edit

Carbo was born in Agrigento, Sicily, on August 10, 1904. Carbo was sent to the New York State Reformatory for juvenile delinquents at age eleven. Over the next ten years, Carbo would be in and out of prison on charges including assault and grand larceny. During this period, Carbo was arrested for the murder of a taxi driver who refused to pay protection money. Pleading not guilty, Carbo claimed self-defense. He eventually agreed to a plea bargain of manslaughter in exchange for a reduced sentence of two to four years in prison. After serving 20 months in prison, Carbo was released.[3]

Prohibition Edit

With the passage of Prohibition, he began working as a hired gunman for several bootlegger gangs. In 1931, Carbo was charged with the murder of Philadelphia mobster Michael "Mickey" Duffy in Atlantic City, New Jersey; however, Carbo was eventually released. During the early 1930s, Carbo began working for Murder, Inc. under boss Louis "Lepke" Buchalter.[3]

Murder record Edit

By the end of the 1930s, Carbo had been arrested 17 times and had been charged with five more murders. In 1939, Carbo allegedly participated in the murder of informant Harry "Big Greenie" Greenberg in California; he was arrested for it two years later.[3] This time, former Murder Inc. members Abe "Kid Twist" Reles and Allie "Tick Tock" Tannenbaum agreed to testify against Carbo. However, before the trial began, Reles, who was under police protection, fell to his death from a window of the Half Moon Hotel in Coney Island. His death was ruled a suicide, and the case against Carbo was eventually dismissed. Former Philadelphia crime family boss Ralph Natale has claimed that Carbo was responsible for murdering Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel in Beverly Hills, California, in 1947 at the behest of Meyer Lansky.[4]

Boxing promoter Edit

During the 1940s, Carbo became a boxing promoter, working along with Ettore "Eddie" Coco, James "Jimmy Doyle" Plumeri, Frank "Blinky" Palermo, Harry "Champ" Segal and Felix Bocchicchio.[5] The group was known as "The Combination", together they were highly successful in fixing high-profile boxing matches. Carbo eventually became known as the "Czar of Boxing".[5][6]

In a 2002 interview with The Observer, Budd Schulberg talked about Carbo and his partner Palermo and their involvement in a 1954 welterweight championship fight.

...Frankie Carbo, the mob's unofficial commissioner for boxing, controlled a lot of the welters and middles... Not every fight was fixed, of course, but from time to time Carbo and his lieutenants, like Blinky Palermo in Philadelphia, would put the fix in. When the Kid Gavilán-Johnny Saxton fight was won by Saxton on a decision in Philadelphia in 1954, I was covering it for Sports Illustrated and wrote a piece at that time saying boxing was a dirty business and must be cleaned up now. It was an open secret. All the press knew that one - and other fights - were fixed. Gavilan was a mob-controlled fighter, too, and when he fought Billy Graham it was clear Graham had been robbed of the title. The decision would be bought. If it was close, the judges would shade it the way they had been told.[7]

Saxton was managed by Blinky Palermo. After losing his title to Tony DeMarco in 1955, he would regain it in a 1955 title match against welterweight champ Carmen Basilio, another fight considered to be fixed.[8]

Sonny Liston Edit

By 1959, Carbo and his partner Blinky Palermo owned a majority interest in the contract of heavyweight boxer Sonny Liston, who went on to win the World Heavyweight Championship in 1962. From the start of his pro career in 1953, Liston had been "owned" by St. Louis mobster John Vitale, who continued to own a stake in the boxer. At the time Palermo and Carbo acquired their interest in Liston, the notorious Carbo was imprisoned on Rikers Island, having been convicted of the undercover management of prizefighters and unlicensed matchmaking.

According to both FBI and newspaper reports, Vitale and other mobsters "reportedly controlled Liston's contract",[9] with Vitale owning approximately twelve percent.[10] Liston fought 12 fights under the control of Carbo and Palermo.

Further legal troubles and death Edit

In the late 1950s, Carbo started running into legal troubles. First, he was convicted of managing boxers without a license and was sentenced to two years in the New York City jail on Riker's Island. Following his release in 1960, Carbo was subpoenaed to appear before a Senate investigating committee to testify on his involvement in professional boxing. Carbo took the Fifth Amendment 25 times, answering "I cannot be compelled to be a witness against myself".

Former world welterweight and middleweight champion Carmen Basilio testified before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly during its investigation of professional boxing, giving evidence on Carbo, Carbo's partner Frank "Blinky" Palermo (a member of the St. Louis crime family, and Carbo's aide, Gabriel Genovese, a cousin of Mafia Don Vito Genovese who was convicted in 1959 of being an unlicensed boxing manager. Calling for a house cleaning of professional boxing, Basilio's testimony revealed that his former managers had to pay off organized crime for his title shots and that he essentially had a behind the scenes manager in Genovese.[11]

Evidence submitted to the subcommittee showed that Basilio's on-the-record managers, John DeJohn and Joseph Netro, paid Gabriel Genovese $39,334.41 and approximately $25,000, respectively, during the time Basilio fought for and defended his welterweight and middleweight titles. Genovese was a frontman for Carbo.[12]

In 1961, Carbo and boxing promoter Frank "Blinky" Palermo were charged with conspiracy and extortion against the National Boxing Association welterweight Champion Don Jordan. After a three-month trial in which U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy served as prosecutor, Carbo was sentenced to 25 years in prison, serving his sentence at Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary in California, McNeil Island in Washington state and United States Penitentiary, Marion in Illinois.[13][3]

Granted early parole due to ill health, Carbo was released from prison. He died in Miami Beach, Florida, on November 9, 1976.[3]

In popular culture Edit

Character Tommy Como (Nicholas Colasanto) in the Martin Scorsese film Raging Bull, which stars Robert DeNiro as boxer Jake LaMotta, is based on Carbo.[14] Carbo is also the inspiration for boxing promoter Nick Benko, played by Rod Steiger in the 1956 film The Harder They Fall. In the 2016 film Hands of Stone, Carbo is portrayed by actor John Turturro.

References Edit

  1. ^ Murphy, Mildred (July 25, 1958). "Carbo Is Indicted on Ten Counts Of Undercover Ties to Boxing; CARBO IS INDICTED ON BOXING COUNTS". The New York Times. Retrieved February 1, 2020.
  2. ^ Bureau of Narcotics, Sam Giancana, The United States Treasury Department. Mafia: The Government’s Secret File on Organized Crime. 2007. (pg. 85)
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Frankie Carbo, Underworld Figure Once Known as the 'Czar' of Boxing". The New York Times. November 11, 1976.
  4. ^ Serranti, Seth (15 March 2017). "The Story of the First Mob Boss to Turn Rat". Vice Media. Retrieved 21 March 2017.
  5. ^ a b Bureau of Narcotics, Sam Giancana, The United States Treasury Department. Mafia: The Government's Secret File on Organized Crime (2007) (pg 399)
  6. ^ My Rugged Education in Boxing by Robert K. Christenberry (May 26, 1952) Life Magazine pg.114-116, 118, 120, 123-124, 126, 129-130
  7. ^ Hagerty, Bill. "Budd the wiser". Observer. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  8. ^ Acevedo, Carlos. "STRANGE DAYS: The Johnny Saxton Story". The Cruelest Sport. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
  9. ^ Associated Press. "Probers Search for Underworld Ties with Boxers, undated newspaper clipping. FBI file" Retrieved July 18, 2011.
  10. ^ Picou, Tommy. "The Sonny Liston Story: He Always Had Cop Trouble". Chicago Daily Defender, September 11, 1962, pp. 22
  11. ^ Professional Boxing: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-sixth Congress, Second Session, Pursuant to S. Res. 238. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1960. pp. 471–484. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  12. ^ "Ex-Managers of Basilio Tell of Payments; DeJohn and Netro Say Title Fights Came Only Then" (PDF). Washington Evening Star. 3 December 1960. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  13. ^ A Report on Chicago crime. Chicago Crime Commission (1961) pg.67
  14. ^ Ecksel, Robert. "Raging Bull: A Tragedy in Three Acts". Boxing.com. Retrieved 11 September 2016.

Further reading Edit

  • Rosen, Charley (2001). The Wizard of Odds: How Jack Molinas Nearly Destroyed the Game of Basketball. New York: Seven Stories Press. ISBN 1-58322-562-5.
  • Nack, William (2003). My Turf: Horses, Boxers, Blood Money, and the Sporting Life. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81250-9.
  • Scott, Peter Dale (1993). Deep Politics and the Death of JFK. Berkeley: University of California. ISBN 0-520-08410-1.
  • Sifakis, Carl (2005). The Mafia Encyclopedia. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-8160-5694-3.
  • Mitchell, Kevin (2012). Jacobs Beach: The Mob, the Fights, the Fifties. U.S.: Open Road Media. p. 102. ISBN 978-1605982731..
  • Anderson, Anne Margaret; Binder, John J. (2014). Philadelphia Organized Crime in the 1920s and 1930s. U.S.: Arcadia Publishing. p. 47. ISBN 978-1467121170.


frankie, carbo, paul, john, frankie, carbo, born, paolo, giovanni, carbo, italian, ˈpaːolo, dʒoˈvanni, ˈkarbo, august, 1904, november, 1976, italian, american, york, city, mafia, soldier, lucchese, crime, family, operated, gunman, with, murder, before, transit. Paul John Frankie Carbo 1 born Paolo Giovanni Carbo Italian ˈpaːolo dʒoˈvanni ˈkarbo August 10 1904 2 November 9 1976 3 was an Italian American New York City Mafia soldier in the Lucchese crime family who operated as a gunman with Murder Inc before transitioning into one of the most powerful promoters in professional boxing Frankie CarboBornPaolo Giovanni Carbo 1904 08 10 August 10 1904Agrigento Sicily Kingdom of ItalyDiedNovember 9 1976 1976 11 09 aged 72 Miami Beach Florida U S NationalityItalianOther namesJohn Paul Carbo Frank Russo Frank Trucker Jimmy the Wop Mr Gray Mr Fury Czar of BoxingAllegianceLucchese crime familyMurder Inc Conviction s Assault grand larceny manslaughter 1924 Managing boxers without licence 1950s Conspiracy extortion 1961 Criminal penalty2 to 4 years imprisonment served 20 months2 years imprisonment25 years imprisonment Contents 1 Early years 2 Prohibition 3 Murder record 4 Boxing promoter 4 1 Sonny Liston 5 Further legal troubles and death 6 In popular culture 7 References 8 Further readingEarly years EditCarbo was born in Agrigento Sicily on August 10 1904 Carbo was sent to the New York State Reformatory for juvenile delinquents at age eleven Over the next ten years Carbo would be in and out of prison on charges including assault and grand larceny During this period Carbo was arrested for the murder of a taxi driver who refused to pay protection money Pleading not guilty Carbo claimed self defense He eventually agreed to a plea bargain of manslaughter in exchange for a reduced sentence of two to four years in prison After serving 20 months in prison Carbo was released 3 Prohibition EditWith the passage of Prohibition he began working as a hired gunman for several bootlegger gangs In 1931 Carbo was charged with the murder of Philadelphia mobster Michael Mickey Duffy in Atlantic City New Jersey however Carbo was eventually released During the early 1930s Carbo began working for Murder Inc under boss Louis Lepke Buchalter 3 Murder record EditBy the end of the 1930s Carbo had been arrested 17 times and had been charged with five more murders In 1939 Carbo allegedly participated in the murder of informant Harry Big Greenie Greenberg in California he was arrested for it two years later 3 This time former Murder Inc members Abe Kid Twist Reles and Allie Tick Tock Tannenbaum agreed to testify against Carbo However before the trial began Reles who was under police protection fell to his death from a window of the Half Moon Hotel in Coney Island His death was ruled a suicide and the case against Carbo was eventually dismissed Former Philadelphia crime family boss Ralph Natale has claimed that Carbo was responsible for murdering Benjamin Bugsy Siegel in Beverly Hills California in 1947 at the behest of Meyer Lansky 4 Boxing promoter EditDuring the 1940s Carbo became a boxing promoter working along with Ettore Eddie Coco James Jimmy Doyle Plumeri Frank Blinky Palermo Harry Champ Segal and Felix Bocchicchio 5 The group was known as The Combination together they were highly successful in fixing high profile boxing matches Carbo eventually became known as the Czar of Boxing 5 6 In a 2002 interview with The Observer Budd Schulberg talked about Carbo and his partner Palermo and their involvement in a 1954 welterweight championship fight Frankie Carbo the mob s unofficial commissioner for boxing controlled a lot of the welters and middles Not every fight was fixed of course but from time to time Carbo and his lieutenants like Blinky Palermo in Philadelphia would put the fix in When the Kid Gavilan Johnny Saxton fight was won by Saxton on a decision in Philadelphia in 1954 I was covering it for Sports Illustrated and wrote a piece at that time saying boxing was a dirty business and must be cleaned up now It was an open secret All the press knew that one and other fights were fixed Gavilan was a mob controlled fighter too and when he fought Billy Graham it was clear Graham had been robbed of the title The decision would be bought If it was close the judges would shade it the way they had been told 7 Saxton was managed by Blinky Palermo After losing his title to Tony DeMarco in 1955 he would regain it in a 1955 title match against welterweight champ Carmen Basilio another fight considered to be fixed 8 Sonny Liston Edit By 1959 Carbo and his partner Blinky Palermo owned a majority interest in the contract of heavyweight boxer Sonny Liston who went on to win the World Heavyweight Championship in 1962 From the start of his pro career in 1953 Liston had been owned by St Louis mobster John Vitale who continued to own a stake in the boxer At the time Palermo and Carbo acquired their interest in Liston the notorious Carbo was imprisoned on Rikers Island having been convicted of the undercover management of prizefighters and unlicensed matchmaking According to both FBI and newspaper reports Vitale and other mobsters reportedly controlled Liston s contract 9 with Vitale owning approximately twelve percent 10 Liston fought 12 fights under the control of Carbo and Palermo Further legal troubles and death EditIn the late 1950s Carbo started running into legal troubles First he was convicted of managing boxers without a license and was sentenced to two years in the New York City jail on Riker s Island Following his release in 1960 Carbo was subpoenaed to appear before a Senate investigating committee to testify on his involvement in professional boxing Carbo took the Fifth Amendment 25 times answering I cannot be compelled to be a witness against myself Former world welterweight and middleweight champion Carmen Basilio testified before the U S Senate Judiciary Committee s Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly during its investigation of professional boxing giving evidence on Carbo Carbo s partner Frank Blinky Palermo a member of the St Louis crime family and Carbo s aide Gabriel Genovese a cousin of Mafia Don Vito Genovese who was convicted in 1959 of being an unlicensed boxing manager Calling for a house cleaning of professional boxing Basilio s testimony revealed that his former managers had to pay off organized crime for his title shots and that he essentially had a behind the scenes manager in Genovese 11 Evidence submitted to the subcommittee showed that Basilio s on the record managers John DeJohn and Joseph Netro paid Gabriel Genovese 39 334 41 and approximately 25 000 respectively during the time Basilio fought for and defended his welterweight and middleweight titles Genovese was a frontman for Carbo 12 In 1961 Carbo and boxing promoter Frank Blinky Palermo were charged with conspiracy and extortion against the National Boxing Association welterweight Champion Don Jordan After a three month trial in which U S Attorney General Robert Kennedy served as prosecutor Carbo was sentenced to 25 years in prison serving his sentence at Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary in California McNeil Island in Washington state and United States Penitentiary Marion in Illinois 13 3 Granted early parole due to ill health Carbo was released from prison He died in Miami Beach Florida on November 9 1976 3 In popular culture EditCharacter Tommy Como Nicholas Colasanto in the Martin Scorsese film Raging Bull which stars Robert DeNiro as boxer Jake LaMotta is based on Carbo 14 Carbo is also the inspiration for boxing promoter Nick Benko played by Rod Steiger in the 1956 film The Harder They Fall In the 2016 film Hands of Stone Carbo is portrayed by actor John Turturro References Edit Murphy Mildred July 25 1958 Carbo Is Indicted on Ten Counts Of Undercover Ties to Boxing CARBO IS INDICTED ON BOXING COUNTS The New York Times Retrieved February 1 2020 Bureau of Narcotics Sam Giancana The United States Treasury Department Mafia The Government s Secret File on Organized Crime 2007 pg 85 a b c d e f Frankie Carbo Underworld Figure Once Known as the Czar of Boxing The New York Times November 11 1976 Serranti Seth 15 March 2017 The Story of the First Mob Boss to Turn Rat Vice Media Retrieved 21 March 2017 a b Bureau of Narcotics Sam Giancana The United States Treasury Department Mafia The Government s Secret File on Organized Crime 2007 pg 399 My Rugged Education in Boxing by Robert K Christenberry May 26 1952 Life Magazine pg 114 116 118 120 123 124 126 129 130 Hagerty Bill Budd the wiser Observer Retrieved 16 May 2012 Acevedo Carlos STRANGE DAYS The Johnny Saxton Story The Cruelest Sport Retrieved 16 May 2012 Associated Press Probers Search for Underworld Ties with Boxers undated newspaper clipping FBI file Retrieved July 18 2011 Picou Tommy The Sonny Liston Story He Always Had Cop Trouble Chicago Daily Defender September 11 1962 pp 22 Professional Boxing Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate Eighty sixth Congress Second Session Pursuant to S Res 238 Washington D C U S Government Printing Office 1960 pp 471 484 Retrieved 25 May 2023 Ex Managers of Basilio Tell of Payments DeJohn and Netro Say Title Fights Came Only Then PDF Washington Evening Star 3 December 1960 Retrieved 25 May 2023 A Report on Chicago crime Chicago Crime Commission 1961 pg 67 Ecksel Robert Raging Bull A Tragedy in Three Acts Boxing com Retrieved 11 September 2016 Further reading EditRosen Charley 2001 The Wizard of Odds How Jack Molinas Nearly Destroyed the Game of Basketball New York Seven Stories Press ISBN 1 58322 562 5 Nack William 2003 My Turf Horses Boxers Blood Money and the Sporting Life New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81250 9 Scott Peter Dale 1993 Deep Politics and the Death of JFK Berkeley University of California ISBN 0 520 08410 1 Sifakis Carl 2005 The Mafia Encyclopedia New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0 8160 5694 3 Mitchell Kevin 2012 Jacobs Beach The Mob the Fights the Fifties U S Open Road Media p 102 ISBN 978 1605982731 Anderson Anne Margaret Binder John J 2014 Philadelphia Organized Crime in the 1920s and 1930s U S Arcadia Publishing p 47 ISBN 978 1467121170 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frankie Carbo amp oldid 1177916370, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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