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New Orleans crime family

The New Orleans crime family or New Orlean Mafia was an Italian-American Mafia crime family based in the city of New Orleans. The family had a history of criminal activity dating back to the late nineteenth century.[5][6] The family reached its height of influence under bosses Silvestro Carollo and Carlos Marcello. In the 1960s, due to Marcello’s stubborn refusal of inducting new members into the family, they dwindled down to a paltry four or five made men with hundreds of associates throughout the United States. However, the Federal Bureau of Investigation believed there were a bit over 20 made men at the time, or 20+ associates so close to Marcello and to each other, that they were considered a formal part of the New Orleans’ family hierarchy.[7] A series of setbacks during the 1980s reduced its clout, and law enforcement dismantled most of what remained shortly after Marcello's death in 1993. In spite of this, it is believed that at least some elements of the American Mafia remain active in New Orleans today.[8][9]

New Orleans crime family
Foundedc. 1860 (BH)
1920s (LCN)
FounderBH: Raffaele Agnello
LCN: Silvestro Carollo
Founding locationNew Orleans, Louisiana
Years active1880s–present[1][2]
TerritoryAt its peak, all Louisiana state with rings in Texas, Las Vegas and Cuba
EthnicityItalians as Made Men, Arbereshe other ethnicities as associates
Membership4-5 made men, 100+ associates (1980s)[3]
Leader(s)Silvestro Carollo (1922–1947)
Carlos Marcello (1947–1983)
ActivitiesRacketeering, extortion, gambling, prostitution, narcotics, money laundering, loan sharking, fencing and murder
AlliesChicago Outfit
Los Angeles crime family
Genovese crime family
Gambino crime family
Cleveland crime family
Trafficante crime family
Dixie Mafia[4]
RivalsMinor gangs in New Orleans

History

Early history

The Matranga crime family, established by Charles (1857 - October 28, 1943) and Antonio (Tony) Matranga (d. 1890 ?), was one of the earliest recorded American Mafia crime families, operating in New Orleans during the late 19th century until the beginning of Prohibition in 1920.

Born of Arbëreshê descent and members of the Italo-Albanian Greek Catholic Church in Piana dei Greci, Sicily, Carlo and Antonio Matranga immigrated to New Orleans during the 1870s and eventually opened a saloon and brothel. Using their business as a base of operations, the Matranga brothers began establishing lucrative organized criminal activities including extortion and labor racketeering. Receiving tribute payments from Italian laborers and dockworkers, as well as from the Provenzano family (who came from the same village), they eventually began moving in on Provenzano fruit loading operations intimidating the Provenzanos with threats of violence.

Although the Provenzanos withdrew in favor of giving the Matrangas a cut of waterfront racketeering, by the late 1880s, the two families eventually went to war over the grocery and produce businesses held by the Provenzanos. As both sides began employing a large number of Sicilian mafiosi[citation needed] from their native Monreale, Sicily, the violent gang war began attracting police attention, particularly from New Orleans police chief David Hennessy who began investigating the warring organizations. Within months of his investigation, Hennessy was shot by several unidentified attackers while walking home on the night of October 15, 1890; he died of his wounds less than twelve hours later, having failed to identify his assailants beyond allegedly claiming "The Dagoes shot me".[10] The shooter was never positively identified and the assassination remains unsolved.

The murder of Hennessey created a huge backlash from the city and, although Charles and several members of the Matrangas were arrested, they were eventually tried and acquitted in February 1891 with Charles Matranga and a 14-year-old member acquitted midway through the trial as well as four more who were eventually acquitted and three others released in hung juries. The decision caused strong protests from residents, angered by the controversy surrounding the case (particularly in the face of incriminating evidence and jury tampering), and the following month a lynch mob stormed the jail killing 11 of the 19 defendants—five of whom had not been tried—on March 14, 1891. Since then, it has been a hard and fast rule in the American Mafia that law enforcement and prosecutors are not to be harmed. While it was common for gangsters to kill officials who got in their way, the Hennessey murder convinced American gangsters that it was not worth the backlash.

Matranga was able to escape from the vigilante lynchings and, upon returning to New Orleans, resumed his position as head of the New Orleans crime family[citation needed] eventually forcing the declining Provenzanos out of New Orleans by the end of the decade. Matranga would rule over the New Orleans underworld[citation needed] until shortly after Prohibition when he turned over leadership over to Sylvestro "Sam" Carollo in the early 1920s.

Silver Dollar Sam

 
Slot machines were installed in towns throughout Louisiana, generating a dependable stream of revenue for the "family".

"Silver Dollar Sam" Carollo led the New Orleans crime family transforming predecessor Charles Matranga's Black Hand gang into a modern organized crime group.

Born in Sicily, Carollo immigrated to the United States with his parents in 1904. By 1918, Carollo had become a high-ranking member of Matranga's organization, eventually succeeding him following Matranga's retirement in 1922. Assuming control of Matranga's minor bootlegging operations, Carollo waged war against rival bootlegging gangs, gaining full control following the murder of William Bailey in December 1930.

Gaining considerable political influence within New Orleans, Carollo is said to have used his connections when, in 1929, Al Capone supposedly traveled to the city demanding Carollo supply the Chicago Outfit (rather than Chicago's Sicilian Mafia boss Joe Aiello) with imported alcohol. Meeting Capone as he arrived at a New Orleans train station, Carollo, accompanied by several police officers, reportedly disarmed Capone's bodyguards and broke their fingers, forcing Capone to return to Chicago.

In 1930, Carollo was arrested for the shooting of federal narcotics agent Cecil Moore, which took place during an undercover drug buy. Despite support by several New Orleans police officers who testified Carollo was in New York at the time of the murder, he was sentenced to two years.

Released in 1934, Carollo negotiated a deal with New York mobsters Frank Costello and Phillip "Dandy Phil" Kastel, as well as Louisiana Senator Huey Long, to bring slot machines into Louisiana, following New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia's attacks on organized crime. Carollo, with lieutenant Carlos Marcello, would run illegal gambling operations undisturbed for several years.

Carollo's legal problems continued as he was scheduled to be deported in 1940, after serving two years in Atlanta Federal Penitentiary, following his arrest on a narcotics charge in 1938. His deportation was delayed following the U.S. entry into World War II, and Carollo would continue to control the New Orleans crime family for several years before a campaign, begun by reporter Drew Pearson, exposed an attempt by Congressman Jimmy Morrison to pass a bill awarding Carollo with American citizenship (thereby making deportation illegal). Carollo would be deported in April 1947.

Soon after returning to Sicily, Carollo organized a partnership with fellow exile Charles Luciano, establishing criminal enterprises in Mexico. Briefly returning to the United States in 1949, he was deported the following year as control of the New Orleans crime family reverted to Carlos Marcello. Living in Palermo, Sicily until 1970, Carollo once again returned to the US. According to Life Magazine,[5] he was asked to return by Marcello, who needed him to mediate disputes within the New Orleans Mafia. After a subsequent attempt to deport him failed, he died a free man in 1970.[11]

Carlos Marcello

 
FBI's 1963 La Cosa Nostra Commission Chart

By the end of 1947, Carlos Marcello had taken control of Louisiana's illegal gambling network. He had also joined forces with New York Mob associate Meyer Lansky in order to skim money from some of the most important casinos in the New Orleans area shortly after becoming associated with the Hotard family through marriage. According to former members of the Chicago Outfit, Marcello was also assigned a cut of the money skimmed from Las Vegas casinos, in exchange for providing "muscle" in Florida real estate deals. By this time, Marcello had been selected as "The Godfather" of the New Orleans Mafia, by the family's capos and the National Crime Syndicate after the deportation of Sylvestro "Silver Dollar Sam" Carollo to Sicily. He held this position for the next thirty years. In a 1975 extortion trial, two witnesses described Marcello as "The Godfather" of the New Orleans crime syndicate.[12] The New Orleans crime family frequently met at an Italian restaurant in the New Orleans suburb of Avondale, known as Mosca's, a building which Marcello had owned.[13]

Marcello appeared before the U.S. Senate's Kefauver Committee on organized crime on January 25, 1951. He pleaded the Fifth Amendment 152 times. The Committee called Marcello "one of the worst criminals in the country".[14]

On April 4, 1961, the U.S. Justice Department, under the direction of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, apprehended Marcello as he made what he assumed was a routine visit to the immigration authorities in New Orleans, then deported him to Guatemala.[15][16] Two months later, he was back in New Orleans. Thereafter, he successfully fought efforts by the government to deport him.[17][18]

In November 1963, Marcello was tried for "conspiracy to defraud the United States government by obtaining a false Guatemalan birth certificate" and "conspiracy to obstruct the United States government in the exercise of its right to deport Carlos Marcello". He was acquitted later that month on both charges. However, in October 1964, Marcello was charged with "conspiring to obstruct justice by fixing a juror [Rudolph Heitler] and seeking the murder of a government witness [Carl Noll]". Marcello's attorney admitted Heitler had been bribed but said that there was no evidence to connect the bribe with Marcello. Noll refused to testify against Marcello in the case. Marcello was acquitted of both charges.[19]

In September 1966, 13 members of the New York, Louisiana and Florida crime families were arrested for "consorting with known criminals" at the La Stella Restaurant in Queens, New York. However, the charges were later dropped. Returning to New Orleans a few days later, Marcello was arrested for assaulting an FBI agent. His first trial resulted in a hung jury, but he was retried and convicted. He was sentenced to two years but served less than six months.[20]

In its 1978 investigation of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the House Select Committee on Assassinations said that it recognized Jack Ruby's murder of Lee Harvey Oswald as a primary reason to suspect organized crime as possibly having involvement in the assassination.[21] In its investigation, the HSCA noted the presence of "credible associations relating both Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby to figures having a relationship, albeit tenuous, with Marcello's crime family or organization".[21] Their report stated: "The committee found that Marcello had the motive, means and opportunity to have President John F. Kennedy assassinated, though it was unable to establish direct evidence of Marcello's complicity".[21]

In 1981, Marcello, Aubrey W. Young (a former aide to Governor John J. McKeithen), Charles E. Roemer, II (former commissioner of administration to Governor Edwin Edwards), and two other men were indicted in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana in New Orleans with conspiracy, racketeering, and mail and wire fraud in a scheme to bribe state officials to give the five men multimillion-dollar insurance contracts.[22] The charges were the result of a Federal Bureau of Investigation probe known as BriLab.[23] U.S. District Judge Morey Sear allowed the admission of secretly-recorded conversations that he said demonstrated corruption at the highest levels of state government.[24] Marcello and Roemer were convicted, but Young and the two others were acquitted.[25]

Anthony Carollo

In May 1994, following an FBI sting dubbed "Operation Hard Crust", New Orleans crime family acting boss Anthony Carollo with 16 members of the Marcello, Gambino and Genovese families were arrested on charges of infiltrating the newly legalized Louisiana video poker industry, racketeering, illegal gambling and conspiracy.[26] In September 1995, Carollo pleaded guilty to a single count of racketeering conspiracy, with associates Frank Gagliano, Joseph Gagliano, Felix Riggio III, and Cade Carber.[27]

Historical leadership

Boss (official and acting)

  • c. 1860-1869: Raffaele Agnello – murdered on April 1, 1869
  • 1869-1872: Joseph Agnello – murdered on April 20, 1872
  • 1872-1891: Joseph P. Macheca – lynched on March 14, 1891
  • 1891-1922: Charles Matranga – retired, died on October 28, 1943
  • 1922-1944: Corrado Giacona - died on July 25, 1944
  • 1944-1947: Silvestro "Silver Dollar Sam" Carollo – deported to Italy in 1947
  • 1947-1983: Carlos "Little Man" Marcello – imprisoned in 1983–1991
  • 1983-1990: Joseph Marcello Jr. – stepped down due to inability to control his organization
  • 1990-2007: Anthony Carollo – imprisoned in 1995-1998; died on February 1, 2007

Underboss

  • c. 1860-1869: Joseph Agnello – became boss
  • 1869-1880: vacant/unknown
  • 1880-1881: Vincenzo Rebello – deported to Italy in 1881.
  • 1881-1891: Charles Matranga – became boss
  • 1891-1896: Salvatore Matranga – died on November 18, 1896[28]
  • 1896-1915: Vincenzo Moreci – murdered on November 19, 1915[29]
  • 1915-1944: Frank Todaro - died on November 29, 1944
  • 1944-1953: Joseph Poretto – stepped down
  • 1953-1983: Joseph Marcello Jr. – became boss
  • 1983-2006: Frank "Fat Frank" Gagliano Sr. – died on April 16, 2006

Consigliere

  • c. 1950s-1972: Vincenzo "Jimmy" Campo – died in 1972

In popular culture

  • The John Grisham novel and film The Client feature a fictionalized New Orleans Mafia family, which is trying to cover up its involvement in a Senator's murder.
  • The 1999 HBO movie Vendetta, starring Christopher Walken and directed by Nicholas Meyer, is based on the true story of the March 14, 1891, lynchings of 11 Italians in New Orleans. Charles Matranga (also spelled "Mantranga" in some documents) was one of the intended victims, but managed to survive by hiding from the mob. In the Journal of American History, historian Clive Webb calls the movie a "compelling portrait of prejudice".[30]
  • The Marcano Crime Family are a fictionalized version of the New Orleans Crime Family in the 2016 video game Mafia III, which takes place in a fictional version of New Orleans called New Bordeaux, appearing as the main antagonists of the game.

References

  1. ^ Rawson, Donald (August 3, 2017). "Bust Card in Biloxi: The Fall of the New Orleans Mafia". Louisiana Mafia. With the upper echelon of the New Orleans Mafia in jail with enormous restitution to repay, it would be an organization struggling to make it into the new millennium. While the FBI has said modern Italian organized crime still exists in some limited capacity in New Orleans, Anthony Carollo, Frank Gagliano, and Philip Rizzuto would all pass away in the early to mid 2000s with little fanfare. It seems like the New Orleans Mafia, the oldest Mafia organization in the United States, would die with these men.
  2. ^ "The Resurgence of the New Orleans Mafia?". Louisiana Mafia. March 12, 2015. If there are any remnants of the New Orleans Mafia left, and more than likely there is, this incident is probably not an indication of the organization’s resurgence.
  3. ^ "Mafia on the Bayou — The Marcello Family of New Orleans". Button Guys of the New York Mafia. July 2, 2021.
  4. ^ Dixie Mafia Russell McDermott, Texarkana Gazette (December 12, 2013)
  5. ^ a b Chandler, David (10 April 1970). "The Little Man is Bigger than Ever: Louisiana Still Jumps for Mobster Marcello". Life. No. 68. pp. 30–37.
  6. ^ Raab 2005, p. 18
  7. ^ "Mafia on the Bayou — The Marcello Family of New Orleans". Button Guys of the New York Mafia. July 2, 2021.
  8. ^ Dan Lawton and Jim Mustian, "'Assassin's van' suggests organized crime elements" "The New Orleans Advocate", July 23, 2014. Retrieved 2020-02-17
  9. ^ Andy Grimm,"'Sniper van' found in Metairie leads to mystery with mob ties""The Times-Picayune", July 18, 2014. Retrieved 2015-12-22
  10. ^ Baiamonte, John V. Jr. (Spring 1992). ""Who Killa de Chief" Revisited: The Hennessey Assassination and Its Aftermath, 1890-1991". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 33 (2): 117–146. JSTOR 4232935.
  11. ^ "Sylvestro Carollo". The San Francisco Examiner. June 29, 1970. Retrieved April 10, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ "Marcello is tagged as 'Godfather'". Minden Press-Herald. Minden, Louisiana. January 17, 1975. p. 1.
  13. ^ Trillin, Calvin (November 15, 2010). "No Daily Specials". The New Yorker. pp. 60–65. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  14. ^ . The American Mafia. December 20, 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-12-20. Retrieved March 9, 2020 – via Wayback Machine.
  15. ^ "Racketeer's Deportation Ruled Valid". Meriden Record. May 20, 1961. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  16. ^ Pearson, Drew (April 10, 1961). "JFK, Macmillan Got Along Famously, Finally". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  17. ^ "Marcello: Underworld's Man Without a Country". The Owosso Argus-Press. August 2, 1965. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  18. ^ "Carlos Marcello, 83, Reputed Crime Boss In New Orleans Area". The New York Times. March 3, 1993. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  19. ^ "HSCA Report, Volume IX". Mary Ferrell Foundation. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  20. ^ "Carlos Marcello". jfkassassination.net. December 23, 2011. from the original on December 23, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  21. ^ a b c "I.C. The committee believes, on the basis of the evidence available to it, that President John F. Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy. The committee was unable to identify the other gunmen or the extent of the conspiracy". Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office. 1979. pp. 149, 171.
  22. ^ "AROUND THE NATION; Trial Opens in New Orleans For Reputed Mafia Leader". The New York Times. March 31, 1981. p. 16. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  23. ^ "ALLEGED UNDERWORLD LEADER IS ASSAILED AT BRIBERY TRIAL". The New York Times. April 22, 1981. p. 17. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  24. ^ "U.S. TO PLAY MORE TAPES AT LOUISIANA BRIBERY TRAIL". The New York Times. May 18, 1981. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  25. ^ "Ex-Louisiana Aide Acquitted in Bribery Trial". The New York Times. July 8, 1981. p. 18. Retrieved March 9, 2020.
  26. ^ "Charges in Louisiana on video poker probe". UPI. May 31, 1994. Retrieved May 12, 2020. NEW ORLEANS, May 31 -- Federal and state authorities said Tuesday a federal grand jury indicted 17 members of the Marcello, Gambino and Genovese organized crime families on charges of infiltrating the video poker industry in Louisiana. [...] All 17 defendants were charged with violations of the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act, mail fraud, wire fraud, interstate travel and communications in aid of racketeering, conducting an illegal gambling business and conspiracy.
  27. ^ "LOUISIANA 'CRIME FAMILY' MEMBERS PLEAD GUILTY IN VIDEO POKER CASE". Chicago Tribune. September 12, 1995. Retrieved May 12, 2020. Pleading guilty Tuesday to a single count of racketeering conspiracy were Anthony Carollo, [...]; Frank J. Gagliano Sr., [...]; Joseph Gagliano, Gagliano's son; and alleged associates Felix Riggio III and Cade Farber.
  28. ^ The Times and Democrat, ed. (1896). "Salvatore Matranga, New Orleans 1896 Nov 15". Newspapers.com.
  29. ^ Critchley, David (2008). Routledge (ed.). The Origin of Organized Crime in America: The New York City Mafia, 1891–1931. pp. 59–60. ISBN 9781135854935.
  30. ^ Webb, Clive (2000). "Review". The Journal of American History. Oxford University Press. 87 (3): 1155–1156. doi:10.2307/2675451. JSTOR 2675451.

Further reading

  • Steece, David. "david steece's Paradox, The True Narrative of a Real Street Man" Paradox Sales, www.davidsteece.com 2009 ISBN 1-4392-6351-5
  • Brouillette, Frenchy. Mr. New Orleans: The Life of a Big Easy Underworld Legend, Phoenix Books, 2009.
  • Davis, John H. Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy. New York: Signet, 1989. ISBN 0-520-08410-1
  • Fentress, James. Rebels and Mafiosi: Death in a Sicilian Landscape. New York: Cornell University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-8014-3539-0
  • Kelly, Robert J. Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United States. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2000. ISBN 0-313-30653-2
  • Kurtz, Michael L. (Autumn 1983). "Organized Crime in Louisiana History: Myth and Reality". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 24 (4): 355–376. JSTOR 4232305.
  • Raab, Selwyn (2005). Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. New York, N.Y.: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1429907989.
  • Reppetto, Thomas. American Mafia: A History of Its Rise to Power. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 2004. ISBN 0-8050-7798-7
  • Scott, Peter Dale and Marshall, Jonathan. Cocaine Politics: Drugs, Armies, and the CIA in Central America. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991. ISBN 0-520-07312-6
  • Sifakis, Carl. The Mafia Encyclopedia. New York: Da Capo Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8160-5694-3
  • Sifakis, Carl. The Encyclopedia of American Crime. New York: Facts on File Inc., 2001. ISBN 0-8160-4040-0
  • Summers, Anthony. Conspiracy. New York: McGraw & Hill, 1989.
  • Rappleye, Charles. All American Mafiosi. New York: Doubleday, 1991.

External links

  • LAM: A Site Dedicated to the History of the Louisiana Mafia by Dexter Babin II
  • David "Blackie" Steece - The True Narrative of a Real Street Man - New Orleans Gangster Turned Law Enforcer Autobiography
  • by Thomas L. Jones
  • Sylvestro Carollo: Will the Real "Silver Dollar Sam" Please Stand Up by Allan May
  • The American "Mafia": Who Was Who ? – Charles Matranga
  • The American "Mafia" – New Orleans Crime Bosses

orleans, crime, family, matranga, family, matranga, crime, family, redirect, here, gang, angeles, angeles, crime, family, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, uns. Matranga family and Matranga crime family redirect here For the gang in Los Angeles see Los Angeles crime family This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources New Orleans crime family news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The New Orleans crime family or New Orlean Mafia was an Italian American Mafia crime family based in the city of New Orleans The family had a history of criminal activity dating back to the late nineteenth century 5 6 The family reached its height of influence under bosses Silvestro Carollo and Carlos Marcello In the 1960s due to Marcello s stubborn refusal of inducting new members into the family they dwindled down to a paltry four or five made men with hundreds of associates throughout the United States However the Federal Bureau of Investigation believed there were a bit over 20 made men at the time or 20 associates so close to Marcello and to each other that they were considered a formal part of the New Orleans family hierarchy 7 A series of setbacks during the 1980s reduced its clout and law enforcement dismantled most of what remained shortly after Marcello s death in 1993 In spite of this it is believed that at least some elements of the American Mafia remain active in New Orleans today 8 9 New Orleans crime familyFoundedc 1860 BH 1920s LCN FounderBH Raffaele AgnelloLCN Silvestro CarolloFounding locationNew Orleans LouisianaYears active1880s present 1 2 TerritoryAt its peak all Louisiana state with rings in Texas Las Vegas and CubaEthnicityItalians as Made Men Arbereshe other ethnicities as associatesMembership4 5 made men 100 associates 1980s 3 Leader s Silvestro Carollo 1922 1947 Carlos Marcello 1947 1983 ActivitiesRacketeering extortion gambling prostitution narcotics money laundering loan sharking fencing and murderAlliesChicago OutfitLos Angeles crime familyGenovese crime familyGambino crime familyCleveland crime familyTrafficante crime familyDixie Mafia 4 RivalsMinor gangs in New Orleans Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Silver Dollar Sam 1 3 Carlos Marcello 1 4 Anthony Carollo 2 Historical leadership 2 1 Boss official and acting 2 2 Underboss 2 3 Consigliere 3 In popular culture 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit The Matranga crime family established by Charles 1857 October 28 1943 and Antonio Tony Matranga d 1890 was one of the earliest recorded American Mafia crime families operating in New Orleans during the late 19th century until the beginning of Prohibition in 1920 Born of Arbereshe descent and members of the Italo Albanian Greek Catholic Church in Piana dei Greci Sicily Carlo and Antonio Matranga immigrated to New Orleans during the 1870s and eventually opened a saloon and brothel Using their business as a base of operations the Matranga brothers began establishing lucrative organized criminal activities including extortion and labor racketeering Receiving tribute payments from Italian laborers and dockworkers as well as from the Provenzano family who came from the same village they eventually began moving in on Provenzano fruit loading operations intimidating the Provenzanos with threats of violence Although the Provenzanos withdrew in favor of giving the Matrangas a cut of waterfront racketeering by the late 1880s the two families eventually went to war over the grocery and produce businesses held by the Provenzanos As both sides began employing a large number of Sicilian mafiosi citation needed from their native Monreale Sicily the violent gang war began attracting police attention particularly from New Orleans police chief David Hennessy who began investigating the warring organizations Within months of his investigation Hennessy was shot by several unidentified attackers while walking home on the night of October 15 1890 he died of his wounds less than twelve hours later having failed to identify his assailants beyond allegedly claiming The Dagoes shot me 10 The shooter was never positively identified and the assassination remains unsolved The murder of Hennessey created a huge backlash from the city and although Charles and several members of the Matrangas were arrested they were eventually tried and acquitted in February 1891 with Charles Matranga and a 14 year old member acquitted midway through the trial as well as four more who were eventually acquitted and three others released in hung juries The decision caused strong protests from residents angered by the controversy surrounding the case particularly in the face of incriminating evidence and jury tampering and the following month a lynch mob stormed the jail killing 11 of the 19 defendants five of whom had not been tried on March 14 1891 Since then it has been a hard and fast rule in the American Mafia that law enforcement and prosecutors are not to be harmed While it was common for gangsters to kill officials who got in their way the Hennessey murder convinced American gangsters that it was not worth the backlash Matranga was able to escape from the vigilante lynchings and upon returning to New Orleans resumed his position as head of the New Orleans crime family citation needed eventually forcing the declining Provenzanos out of New Orleans by the end of the decade Matranga would rule over the New Orleans underworld citation needed until shortly after Prohibition when he turned over leadership over to Sylvestro Sam Carollo in the early 1920s Silver Dollar Sam Edit Slot machines were installed in towns throughout Louisiana generating a dependable stream of revenue for the family Silver Dollar Sam Carollo led the New Orleans crime family transforming predecessor Charles Matranga s Black Hand gang into a modern organized crime group Born in Sicily Carollo immigrated to the United States with his parents in 1904 By 1918 Carollo had become a high ranking member of Matranga s organization eventually succeeding him following Matranga s retirement in 1922 Assuming control of Matranga s minor bootlegging operations Carollo waged war against rival bootlegging gangs gaining full control following the murder of William Bailey in December 1930 Gaining considerable political influence within New Orleans Carollo is said to have used his connections when in 1929 Al Capone supposedly traveled to the city demanding Carollo supply the Chicago Outfit rather than Chicago s Sicilian Mafia boss Joe Aiello with imported alcohol Meeting Capone as he arrived at a New Orleans train station Carollo accompanied by several police officers reportedly disarmed Capone s bodyguards and broke their fingers forcing Capone to return to Chicago In 1930 Carollo was arrested for the shooting of federal narcotics agent Cecil Moore which took place during an undercover drug buy Despite support by several New Orleans police officers who testified Carollo was in New York at the time of the murder he was sentenced to two years Released in 1934 Carollo negotiated a deal with New York mobsters Frank Costello and Phillip Dandy Phil Kastel as well as Louisiana Senator Huey Long to bring slot machines into Louisiana following New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia s attacks on organized crime Carollo with lieutenant Carlos Marcello would run illegal gambling operations undisturbed for several years Carollo s legal problems continued as he was scheduled to be deported in 1940 after serving two years in Atlanta Federal Penitentiary following his arrest on a narcotics charge in 1938 His deportation was delayed following the U S entry into World War II and Carollo would continue to control the New Orleans crime family for several years before a campaign begun by reporter Drew Pearson exposed an attempt by Congressman Jimmy Morrison to pass a bill awarding Carollo with American citizenship thereby making deportation illegal Carollo would be deported in April 1947 Soon after returning to Sicily Carollo organized a partnership with fellow exile Charles Luciano establishing criminal enterprises in Mexico Briefly returning to the United States in 1949 he was deported the following year as control of the New Orleans crime family reverted to Carlos Marcello Living in Palermo Sicily until 1970 Carollo once again returned to the US According to Life Magazine 5 he was asked to return by Marcello who needed him to mediate disputes within the New Orleans Mafia After a subsequent attempt to deport him failed he died a free man in 1970 11 Carlos Marcello Edit FBI s 1963 La Cosa Nostra Commission Chart By the end of 1947 Carlos Marcello had taken control of Louisiana s illegal gambling network He had also joined forces with New York Mob associate Meyer Lansky in order to skim money from some of the most important casinos in the New Orleans area shortly after becoming associated with the Hotard family through marriage According to former members of the Chicago Outfit Marcello was also assigned a cut of the money skimmed from Las Vegas casinos in exchange for providing muscle in Florida real estate deals By this time Marcello had been selected as The Godfather of the New Orleans Mafia by the family s capos and the National Crime Syndicate after the deportation of Sylvestro Silver Dollar Sam Carollo to Sicily He held this position for the next thirty years In a 1975 extortion trial two witnesses described Marcello as The Godfather of the New Orleans crime syndicate 12 The New Orleans crime family frequently met at an Italian restaurant in the New Orleans suburb of Avondale known as Mosca s a building which Marcello had owned 13 Marcello appeared before the U S Senate s Kefauver Committee on organized crime on January 25 1951 He pleaded the Fifth Amendment 152 times The Committee called Marcello one of the worst criminals in the country 14 On April 4 1961 the U S Justice Department under the direction of Attorney General Robert F Kennedy apprehended Marcello as he made what he assumed was a routine visit to the immigration authorities in New Orleans then deported him to Guatemala 15 16 Two months later he was back in New Orleans Thereafter he successfully fought efforts by the government to deport him 17 18 In November 1963 Marcello was tried for conspiracy to defraud the United States government by obtaining a false Guatemalan birth certificate and conspiracy to obstruct the United States government in the exercise of its right to deport Carlos Marcello He was acquitted later that month on both charges However in October 1964 Marcello was charged with conspiring to obstruct justice by fixing a juror Rudolph Heitler and seeking the murder of a government witness Carl Noll Marcello s attorney admitted Heitler had been bribed but said that there was no evidence to connect the bribe with Marcello Noll refused to testify against Marcello in the case Marcello was acquitted of both charges 19 In September 1966 13 members of the New York Louisiana and Florida crime families were arrested for consorting with known criminals at the La Stella Restaurant in Queens New York However the charges were later dropped Returning to New Orleans a few days later Marcello was arrested for assaulting an FBI agent His first trial resulted in a hung jury but he was retried and convicted He was sentenced to two years but served less than six months 20 In its 1978 investigation of the assassination of John F Kennedy the House Select Committee on Assassinations said that it recognized Jack Ruby s murder of Lee Harvey Oswald as a primary reason to suspect organized crime as possibly having involvement in the assassination 21 In its investigation the HSCA noted the presence of credible associations relating both Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby to figures having a relationship albeit tenuous with Marcello s crime family or organization 21 Their report stated The committee found that Marcello had the motive means and opportunity to have President John F Kennedy assassinated though it was unable to establish direct evidence of Marcello s complicity 21 In 1981 Marcello Aubrey W Young a former aide to Governor John J McKeithen Charles E Roemer II former commissioner of administration to Governor Edwin Edwards and two other men were indicted in the U S District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana in New Orleans with conspiracy racketeering and mail and wire fraud in a scheme to bribe state officials to give the five men multimillion dollar insurance contracts 22 The charges were the result of a Federal Bureau of Investigation probe known as BriLab 23 U S District Judge Morey Sear allowed the admission of secretly recorded conversations that he said demonstrated corruption at the highest levels of state government 24 Marcello and Roemer were convicted but Young and the two others were acquitted 25 Anthony Carollo Edit In May 1994 following an FBI sting dubbed Operation Hard Crust New Orleans crime family acting boss Anthony Carollo with 16 members of the Marcello Gambino and Genovese families were arrested on charges of infiltrating the newly legalized Louisiana video poker industry racketeering illegal gambling and conspiracy 26 In September 1995 Carollo pleaded guilty to a single count of racketeering conspiracy with associates Frank Gagliano Joseph Gagliano Felix Riggio III and Cade Carber 27 Historical leadership EditBoss official and acting Edit c 1860 1869 Raffaele Agnello murdered on April 1 1869 1869 1872 Joseph Agnello murdered on April 20 1872 1872 1891 Joseph P Macheca lynched on March 14 1891 1891 1922 Charles Matranga retired died on October 28 1943 1922 1944 Corrado Giacona died on July 25 1944 1944 1947 Silvestro Silver Dollar Sam Carollo deported to Italy in 1947 1947 1983 Carlos Little Man Marcello imprisoned in 1983 1991 1983 1990 Joseph Marcello Jr stepped down due to inability to control his organization 1990 2007 Anthony Carollo imprisoned in 1995 1998 died on February 1 2007Underboss Edit c 1860 1869 Joseph Agnello became boss 1869 1880 vacant unknown 1880 1881 Vincenzo Rebello deported to Italy in 1881 1881 1891 Charles Matranga became boss 1891 1896 Salvatore Matranga died on November 18 1896 28 1896 1915 Vincenzo Moreci murdered on November 19 1915 29 1915 1944 Frank Todaro died on November 29 1944 1944 1953 Joseph Poretto stepped down 1953 1983 Joseph Marcello Jr became boss 1983 2006 Frank Fat Frank Gagliano Sr died on April 16 2006Consigliere Edit c 1950s 1972 Vincenzo Jimmy Campo died in 1972In popular culture EditThe John Grisham novel and film The Client feature a fictionalized New Orleans Mafia family which is trying to cover up its involvement in a Senator s murder The 1999 HBO movie Vendetta starring Christopher Walken and directed by Nicholas Meyer is based on the true story of the March 14 1891 lynchings of 11 Italians in New Orleans Charles Matranga also spelled Mantranga in some documents was one of the intended victims but managed to survive by hiding from the mob In the Journal of American History historian Clive Webb calls the movie a compelling portrait of prejudice 30 The Marcano Crime Family are a fictionalized version of the New Orleans Crime Family in the 2016 video game Mafia III which takes place in a fictional version of New Orleans called New Bordeaux appearing as the main antagonists of the game References Edit Rawson Donald August 3 2017 Bust Card in Biloxi The Fall of the New Orleans Mafia Louisiana Mafia With the upper echelon of the New Orleans Mafia in jail with enormous restitution to repay it would be an organization struggling to make it into the new millennium While the FBI has said modern Italian organized crime still exists in some limited capacity in New Orleans Anthony Carollo Frank Gagliano and Philip Rizzuto would all pass away in the early to mid 2000s with little fanfare It seems like the New Orleans Mafia the oldest Mafia organization in the United States would die with these men The Resurgence of the New Orleans Mafia Louisiana Mafia March 12 2015 If there are any remnants of the New Orleans Mafia left and more than likely there is this incident is probably not an indication of the organization s resurgence Mafia on the Bayou The Marcello Family of New Orleans Button Guys of the New York Mafia July 2 2021 Dixie Mafia Russell McDermott Texarkana Gazette December 12 2013 a b Chandler David 10 April 1970 The Little Man is Bigger than Ever Louisiana Still Jumps for Mobster Marcello Life No 68 pp 30 37 Raab 2005 p 18 Mafia on the Bayou The Marcello Family of New Orleans Button Guys of the New York Mafia July 2 2021 Dan Lawton and Jim Mustian Assassin s van suggests organized crime elements The New Orleans Advocate July 23 2014 Retrieved 2020 02 17 Andy Grimm Sniper van found in Metairie leads to mystery with mob ties The Times Picayune July 18 2014 Retrieved 2015 12 22 Baiamonte John V Jr Spring 1992 Who Killa de Chief Revisited The Hennessey Assassination and Its Aftermath 1890 1991 Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 33 2 117 146 JSTOR 4232935 Sylvestro Carollo The San Francisco Examiner June 29 1970 Retrieved April 10 2020 via Newspapers com Marcello is tagged as Godfather Minden Press Herald Minden Louisiana January 17 1975 p 1 Trillin Calvin November 15 2010 No Daily Specials The New Yorker pp 60 65 Retrieved March 9 2020 Third Interim Report Part B U S Senate Special Committee to Investigate Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce The American Mafia December 20 2016 Archived from the original on 2016 12 20 Retrieved March 9 2020 via Wayback Machine Racketeer s Deportation Ruled Valid Meriden Record May 20 1961 Retrieved March 9 2020 Pearson Drew April 10 1961 JFK Macmillan Got Along Famously Finally St Petersburg Times Retrieved March 9 2020 Marcello Underworld s Man Without a Country The Owosso Argus Press August 2 1965 Retrieved March 9 2020 Carlos Marcello 83 Reputed Crime Boss In New Orleans Area The New York Times March 3 1993 Retrieved March 9 2020 HSCA Report Volume IX Mary Ferrell Foundation Retrieved March 9 2020 Carlos Marcello jfkassassination net December 23 2011 Archived from the original on December 23 2011 Retrieved March 9 2020 a b c I C The committee believes on the basis of the evidence available to it that President John F Kennedy was probably assassinated as a result of a conspiracy The committee was unable to identify the other gunmen or the extent of the conspiracy Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U S House of Representatives Washington D C United States Government Printing Office 1979 pp 149 171 AROUND THE NATION Trial Opens in New Orleans For Reputed Mafia Leader The New York Times March 31 1981 p 16 Retrieved March 9 2020 ALLEGED UNDERWORLD LEADER IS ASSAILED AT BRIBERY TRIAL The New York Times April 22 1981 p 17 Retrieved March 9 2020 U S TO PLAY MORE TAPES AT LOUISIANA BRIBERY TRAIL The New York Times May 18 1981 Retrieved March 9 2020 Ex Louisiana Aide Acquitted in Bribery Trial The New York Times July 8 1981 p 18 Retrieved March 9 2020 Charges in Louisiana on video poker probe UPI May 31 1994 Retrieved May 12 2020 NEW ORLEANS May 31 Federal and state authorities said Tuesday a federal grand jury indicted 17 members of the Marcello Gambino and Genovese organized crime families on charges of infiltrating the video poker industry in Louisiana All 17 defendants were charged with violations of the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act mail fraud wire fraud interstate travel and communications in aid of racketeering conducting an illegal gambling business and conspiracy LOUISIANA CRIME FAMILY MEMBERS PLEAD GUILTY IN VIDEO POKER CASE Chicago Tribune September 12 1995 Retrieved May 12 2020 Pleading guilty Tuesday to a single count of racketeering conspiracy were Anthony Carollo Frank J Gagliano Sr Joseph Gagliano Gagliano s son and alleged associates Felix Riggio III and Cade Farber The Times and Democrat ed 1896 Salvatore Matranga New Orleans 1896 Nov 15 Newspapers com Critchley David 2008 Routledge ed The Origin of Organized Crime in America The New York City Mafia 1891 1931 pp 59 60 ISBN 9781135854935 Webb Clive 2000 Review The Journal of American History Oxford University Press 87 3 1155 1156 doi 10 2307 2675451 JSTOR 2675451 Further reading EditSteece David david steece s Paradox The True Narrative of a Real Street Man Paradox Sales www davidsteece com 2009 ISBN 1 4392 6351 5 Brouillette Frenchy Mr New Orleans The Life of a Big Easy Underworld Legend Phoenix Books 2009 Davis John H Mafia Kingfish Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of John F Kennedy New York Signet 1989 ISBN 0 520 08410 1 Fentress James Rebels and Mafiosi Death in a Sicilian Landscape New York Cornell University Press 2000 ISBN 0 8014 3539 0 Kelly Robert J Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United States Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 2000 ISBN 0 313 30653 2 Kurtz Michael L Autumn 1983 Organized Crime in Louisiana History Myth and Reality Louisiana History The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association 24 4 355 376 JSTOR 4232305 Raab Selwyn 2005 Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires New York N Y St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1429907989 Reppetto Thomas American Mafia A History of Its Rise to Power New York Henry Holt amp Co 2004 ISBN 0 8050 7798 7 Scott Peter Dale and Marshall Jonathan Cocaine Politics Drugs Armies and the CIA in Central America Berkeley University of California Press 1991 ISBN 0 520 07312 6 Sifakis Carl The Mafia Encyclopedia New York Da Capo Press 2005 ISBN 0 8160 5694 3 Sifakis Carl The Encyclopedia of American Crime New York Facts on File Inc 2001 ISBN 0 8160 4040 0 Summers Anthony Conspiracy New York McGraw amp Hill 1989 Rappleye Charles All American Mafiosi New York Doubleday 1991 External links EditLAM A Site Dedicated to the History of the Louisiana Mafia by Dexter Babin II David Blackie Steece The True Narrative of a Real Street Man New Orleans Gangster Turned Law Enforcer Autobiography Carlos Marcello Big Daddy in the Big Easy by Thomas L Jones Sylvestro Carollo Will the Real Silver Dollar Sam Please Stand Up by Allan May The American Mafia Who Was Who Charles Matranga The American Mafia New Orleans Crime Bosses Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New Orleans crime family amp oldid 1130183821, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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