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Tommy Lucchese

Thomas Gaetano Lucchese[1] (born Gaetano Lucchese; Italian: [ɡaeˈtaːno lukˈkeːse]; December 1, 1899 – July 13, 1967), sometimes known by the nicknames "Tommy", "Thomas Luckese", "Tommy Brown" or "Tommy Three-Finger Brown" was an Italian-American gangster and founding member of the Mafia in the United States, an offshoot of the Cosa Nostra in Sicily. From 1951 until 1967, he was the boss of the Lucchese crime family, one of the Five Families that dominate organized crime in New York City.

Tommy Lucchese
Born
Gaetano Lucchese

(1899-12-01)December 1, 1899
Palermo, Sicily, Kingdom of Italy
DiedJuly 13, 1967(1967-07-13) (aged 67)
Resting placeCalvary Cemetery, Queens, New York, U.S.
NationalityItalian
Other namesThomas Luckese, Tommy Brown, Tommy Three-Finger Brown, Thomas Arra
CitizenshipAmerican
OccupationCrime boss
PredecessorTommy Gagliano
SuccessorCarmine Tramunti
SpouseCatherine Lucchese
Children2
RelativesJoseph Lucchese (brother)
Thomas Gambino (son-in-law)
Carlo Gambino (co-father-in-law)
AllegianceLucchese crime family

Early life

Gaetano Lucchese was born on December 1, 1899, to Baldassarre and Francesca Lucchese in Palermo, Sicily.[2] The surname "Lucchese" suggests family origins from the Sicilian city of Lucca Sicula. In early 1911, the Lucchese family emigrated to the United States,[3] settling in Manhattan's Italian neighborhood of East Harlem.[4][5] The family first lived in a building at 213 East 106th Street before moving to 316 East 118th Street, both buildings were in the Italian East Harlem neighborhood.[6]

Lucchese's father worked hauling cement. As a teen Lucchese worked in a machine shop until 1915, when an industrial accident amputated his right thumb and forefinger.[7][8][9] In the early 1930s, Lucchese along with his family moved to an apartment at 100-18 Northern Boulevard in Corona, Queens, the area known as the “Little Italy of Queens".[6]

Lucchese was 5 feet 4 inches (162.56 cm).[6] He had three brothers Joseph, Vincent (Jimmy,) and Anthony (Nino) who all followed him into a life of organized crime.[6] In 1943, Lucchese became a naturalized citizen of United States.[6]

Lucchese married Catherine and they had two children, Frances and Baldesare. The family lived at 104 Parsons Blvd in Malba, Queens before moving in 1950 to 74 Royat Street in Lido Beach, Long Island.[10]

Lucchese's daughter, Frances would marry Tommy Gambino, the son of Carlo Gambino, the boss of the Gambino crime family, which formed a strong bond between the two crime families.[6]

107th Street gang

After his accident, Lucchese spent more time with members of the 107th Street gang. Members of the gang stole wallets, burglarized stores, and engaged in other illegal crimes. The 107th Street gang operated under the protection of Bronx-East Harlem family boss Gaetano "Tom" Reina. By the age of eighteen, Lucchese had started a window washing company in East Harlem; anyone refusing to use his window washing services would have their windows broken.[5][8] Lucchese sometimes operated from LaGuardia Political Club off East 106th Street in East Harlem.[6] By the early 1920s, Lucchese had become a strong ally of fellow mobster Charlie "Lucky" Luciano and became a top member of Gaetano Reina's crime family.[8]

During Lucchese's criminal career he was only arrested 6 times, his first arrest was in 1920 and the last arrest in 1935, he never served a lengthy prison sentence.[6] In 1920, Lucchese was arrested in Riverhead, Long Island, on grand larceny, after stealing a car.[6] During his booking, a police officer compared Lucchese's deformed hand with that of Mordecai "Three Finger" Brown, a popular Major League Baseball pitcher.[11] The officer nicknamed Lucchese "Three Finger Brown", an alias that Lucchese always disliked.[7] In January 1921, Lucchese was convicted[12] of auto theft and sentenced on March 27, 1922, to three years and nine months in prison.[3] Lucchese served thirteen months at Sing Sing Correctional Facility before he was paroled.[5] It would be Lucchese's only conviction.[8][9]

Lucchese was released from prison in 1923, three years into prohibition. His old friends Charlie Luciano, Frank Costello, and Meyer Lansky had become partners with Jewish gangster Arnold "the Brain" Rothstein selling bootleg alcohol.

In August 1927, Lucchese was arrested under the alias of "Thomas Arra" and charged with receiving stolen goods.[9][12] On July 18, 1928, Lucchese was arrested along with his brother-in-law, Joseph "Joe Palisades" Rosato, for the murder of Louis Cerasuolo; the charges were later dropped.[7][9][12] Lucchese was arrested on three other occasions in his lifetime: in 1930 for murder, in 1931 for an investigation, and in 1935 for vagrancy, but in all three arrests he was released and all charges were dropped.[6]

Castellammarese War

In early 1931, the Castellammarese War broke out between Joe Masseria and Salvatore Maranzano. In a secret deal with Maranzano, Luciano agreed to engineer the death of his boss, Masseria, in return for receiving Masseria's rackets and becoming Maranzano's second-in-command.[13] On April 15, 1931, Luciano had lured Masseria to a meeting where he was murdered at a restaurant called Nuova Villa Tammaro on Coney Island.[14][13] While they played cards, Luciano allegedly excused himself to the bathroom, with the gunmen reportedly being Vito Genovese, Albert Anastasia, Joe Adonis, and Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel;[15] Ciro "The Artichoke King" Terranova drove the getaway car, but legend has it that he was too shaken up to drive away and had to be shoved out of the driver's seat by Siegel.[16][17][18] Luciano took over Masseria's family, with Genovese as his underboss.

In September 1931, Luciano and Genovese planned the murder of Salvatore Maranzano after Lucchese had previously alerted Luciano that he was marked for death, and prepared a hit team to kill Maranzano first.[13] On September 10, 1931, when Maranzano summoned Luciano, Genovese, and Frank Costello to a meeting at his office, they knew Maranzano would kill them there. Instead, Luciano sent to Maranzano's office four Jewish gangsters whose faces were unknown to Maranzano's people. They had been secured with the aid of Lansky and Siegel.[19][20] Luciano subsequently created The Commission to serve as the governing body for organized crime.[21]

Underboss to Gagliano

Due to Luciano's reforms, the New York City underworld entered a long period of peace. Luciano was soon arrested in 1936, on compulsory prostitution charges and then deported in 1946. Tommy Gagliano would keep his family, formerly the Reina family, during a tough time, being outnumbered in the Commission by an alliance of the Bonanno, Magaddino, Profaci and Mangano families.

From 1932 onward, Gagliano kept a very low profile; almost nothing is known about him from then onward. He preferred to issue his orders through close allies, particularly Lucchese, who was his underboss and the family's public face. In 1946, Lucchese attended the mob's Havana Conference in Cuba as Gagliano's representative.

On January 25, 1943, Lucchese became a naturalized United States citizen in Newark, New Jersey.[2][3]

Lucchese formed an alliance with Louis Buchalter and together they controlled the garment district.[22]

Boss of the family

 
Tommy Lucchese, boss of the Lucchese family in 1958

In 1951, Gagliano died of natural causes. As underboss and de facto street boss for two decades, Lucchese was the obvious successor, and the family was quickly renamed the Lucchese crime family. Lucchese appointed mobsters Stafano LaSalle as underboss and Vincenzo Rao as consigliere. That same year, Lucchese formed an alliance with Luciano crime family underboss Vito Genovese and Anastasia crime family underboss Carlo Gambino with the long-term goal of gaining control of the Commission.

Lucchese became one of the most well-respected Cosa Nostra bosses of the Post-War era. He maintained close relationships with New York City politicians, including Mayors William O'Dwyer and Vincent Impellitteri. Lucchese concentrated on the core Cosa Nostra values of making money, keeping a low public profile, and avoiding criminal prosecution. The Lucchese family came to dominate Manhattan's garment district and the related trucking industry by gaining control of key unions and trade associations.

During the 1950s, Lucchese controlled a narcotic trafficking network with Santo Trafficante Jr., the boss of the Tampa crime family.[23] Lucchese had maintained a longtime alliance with Trafficante Jr.'s father Santo Trafficante Sr., the former boss of the Tampa mafia family and during the 1940s, helped train Trafficante Jr., in the mafia traditions.[23] Trafficante Jr. would frequently meet with Lucchese in New York City for dinner.[23]

Alliance with Gambino and Genovese

On November 17, 1952, U.S. Attorney General James P. McGranery initiated denaturalization proceedings against Lucchese. In its filing, the government claimed that Lucchese did not reveal his entire arrest record when applying for citizenship in the 1930s.[3]

In 1957, Lucchese and his allies decided to attack the bosses of the Luciano and Anastasia crime families to gain Commission control. On May 3, 1957, gunman Vincent Gigante wounded Luciano's street boss Frank Costello. Shaken by the assassination attempt, Costello soon retired, leaving Genovese as boss.[24] On October 25, 1957, Albert Anastasia was assassinated in a hotel barbershop; Carlo Gambino became the new family boss.[25]

In 1957, Genovese called a national mob meeting to legitimize his control of the Luciano family. The meeting was held at rural home of mobster Joseph "Joe the Barber" Barbara in Apalachin, New York. On November 14, 1957, the New York State Police raided the meeting and arrested 61 fleeing gangsters.[26] Lucchese had not yet arrived in Apalachin and therefore avoided arrest. However, his consigliere Vincenzo Rao, Gambino, Genovese and other mob leaders were detained. Genovese's humiliation motivated the new alliance of Luciano, Costello, Lansky, Gambino and Lucchese to set up Genovese's later elimination. Two years later, with the help of the alliance, Genovese was arrested on narcotics trafficking charges. Genovese was convicted and sent to prison, where he died in 1969.[26] With the alliance backing him, Gambino now controlled the Commission.

On April 8, 1958, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the 1952 denaturalization ruling against Lucchese on a legal technicality. However, the next day, U.S. Attorney General William P. Rogers brought a new case against Lucchese.[27]

Lucchese and Gambino

In 1962, Carlo Gambino's oldest son, Thomas Gambino, married Lucchese's daughter Frances.[28] Over 1,000 guests attended the wedding, at which Carlo Gambino presented Lucchese with a $30,000 gift. In return, Lucchese gave Gambino a part of his rackets at Idlewild Airport (now called John F. Kennedy Airport).[29] Lucchese exercised control over airport management security and all the airport unions. As a team, Lucchese and Gambino now controlled the airport, the Commission, and most organized crime in New York City.[30][31][32]

Commission plot

In 1963, Joseph Magliocco and Bonanno boss Joseph Bonanno hatched an audacious plan to murder Commission bosses Carlo Gambino, Lucchese, and Stefano Magaddino, as well as Frank DeSimone, and take over the Mafia Commission.[33] Joseph Magliocco gave the murder contract to Joseph Colombo. Colombo either feared for his life, or sensed an opportunity for advancement, and instead reported the plot to The Commission. The Commission, realizing that Bonanno was the real mastermind, ordered both Magliocco and Bonanno to explain. Bonanno went into hiding in Montreal, but a badly shaken Magliocco appeared and confessed everything; he was fined $50,000 and forced into retirement.[33]

Death and burial

 
Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal

On July 13, 1967, Lucchese died of a brain tumor at his home in the Lido Beach area of Long Island. The funeral service was held at Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Church in Point Lookout, New York. Lucchese is buried at Calvary Cemetery in Queens, New York. Over 1,000 mourners, including politicians, judges, policemen, racketeers, drug pushers, pimps, and hitmen attended the ceremony. Undercover policemen photographed the attendees.[34] At the time of his death, he had not spent a day in prison in 44 years.

Lucchese's first choice as a successor had been Antonio "Tony Ducks" Corallo, but Corallo was in prison when Lucchese died. Lucchese's second choice, Ettore Coco, was also in legal trouble and served a short time as boss. Another possible candidate was consigliere Vincenzo Rao, but he too was dealing with criminal charges. The Commission finally selected capo Carmine Tramunti as temporary acting boss until Corallo was released from prison.

In popular culture

Notes

  1. ^ "Thomas Luchese, Rackets Boss Called 3-Finger Brown, Is Dead; Leader in Underworld Was Said to Be the Head of a Cosa Nostra 'Family'". The New York Times. July 14, 1967. Retrieved February 10, 2020.
  2. ^ a b Bureau of Narcotics, Sam Giancana (2009) pg.510
  3. ^ a b c d Feinberg, Alexander (November 18, 1952). "M'Granery Acts to Deport Luchese to his Native Italy" (PDF). New York Times. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  4. ^ Harrell (2009) pg. 99-101
  5. ^ a b c Volkman (1998) pg. 8-37
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Tommy (Tommy Brown) Lucchese – Family Boss". The New York Mafia. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  7. ^ a b c Hunt, Thomas. "White-Collar Mafioso: Tommy Lucchese (1899–1967)". 2007. The American Mafia.com
  8. ^ a b c d Biography Channel. Tommy Lucchese 2015-07-24 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b c d United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Improper Activities in the Labor or Management Field. "Investigation of improper activities in the labor or management field". Testimony of Thomas Lucchese, Accompanied by Counsel, Richard J. Burke. (July 1958) Washington : U.S. Govt. Print. Off. Boston Public Library
  10. ^ Lucania, Salvatore. "Tommy Lucchese's home -1952- 104 Parsons Blvd Queens NY". Gangsters Inc. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  11. ^ Ragano, Raab (1994) pg. 219
  12. ^ a b c United States of America v. Gaetano Lucchese (247 F.2d 123) 2012-05-17 at the Wayback Machine United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit (Docket #24424) Argued March 15, 1957 — Decided June 17, 1957 Justia.com (US Law)
  13. ^ a b c Raab, Selwyn. Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. New York: St. Martin Press, 2005. ISBN 0-312-30094-8
  14. ^ "Racket Chief Slain By Gangster Gunfire. Giuseppe Masseria, Known as Joe the Boss, Shot Mysteriously in Coney Island Cafe. Police Say He Was Leader in Every Kind of Racket. He Escaped Death Many Times. Shooting Still a Mystery" (PDF). New York Times. April 16, 1931. Retrieved November 23, 2011. It took ten years and a lot of shooting to kill Giuseppe Masseria—he was Joe the Boss to the underworld—but his enemies found him with his back turned yesterday in a little Italian restaurant in Coney Island, and when they walked out into
  15. ^ Pollak, Michael (June 29, 2012). "Coney Island's Big Hit". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 October 2012.
  16. ^ Sifakis, (2005). pp. 87–88
  17. ^ Martin A. Gosch; Richard Hammer; Lucky Luciano (1975). The Last Testament of Lucky Luciano. Little, Brown. pp. 130–132. ISBN 978-0-316-32140-2.
  18. ^ Davis, John H. (1994). Mafia dynasty : the rise and fall of the Gambino crime family (1st Harper paperbacks ed.). New York, N.Y.: HarperPaperbacks. p. 40. ISBN 0-06-109184-7.
  19. ^ "Lucky Luciano: Criminal Mastermind," Time, Dec. 7, 1998
  20. ^ Cohen, Rich (1999). Tough Jews (1st Vintage Books ed.). New York: Vintage Books. pp. 65–66. ISBN 0-375-70547-3.
  21. ^ "The Commission's Origins". The New York Times. 1986. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  22. ^ Ryan, p.118
  23. ^ a b c Raab, Selwyn (4 October 2016). Five Families The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. St. Martin's Publishing Group. pp. 105–106. ISBN 9781250101709. Retrieved 26 December 2022.
  24. ^ "Costello is Shot Entering Home; Gunman Escapes" (PDF). New York Times. May 3, 1957. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  25. ^ Dunlap, David W. (October 25, 2007). "Hint: It Wasn't the Orange Crème Frappucino". New York Times. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  26. ^ a b Grutzner, Charles (February 16, 1959). "Ruled 'Family' of 450. Genovese Dies in Prison at 71. 'Boss of Bosses' of Mafia Here". New York Times. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  27. ^ "Attorney General Acts" (PDF). New York Times. April 9, 1958. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  28. ^ The Gambino Crime Family — A Squirrel of a Man — Crime Library on truTV.com 2013-05-20 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Raab, Selwyn (March 20, 1990). "Police Say Their Chinatown Sting Ties Mob to the Garment Industry". The New York Times.
  30. ^ Sullivanfirst=Ronald (February 5, 1992). "Gambino Gained 'Mob Tax' With Fear, Prosecutor Says". The New York Times.
  31. ^ Barron, James (December 2, 1992). "Thomas Gambino: It's All in the Name". The New York Times.
  32. ^ . New York Daily News. New York. Archived from the original on June 8, 2009.
  33. ^ a b Staff (September 1, 1967) "The Mob: How Joe Bonanno Schemed to kill – and lost" Life p.15-21
  34. ^ Clines, Francis X. (July 16, 1967). "L.I. Police Record A Mafia Funeral. Mourners at Services for Luchese Are Photographed". New York Times. Retrieved August 15, 2012. A quiet funeral mass was celebrated here this morning for Thomas Luchese, the reputed underworld leader, as police detectives in sports clothes photographed the mourners and jotted down limousine license numbers.
  35. ^ IMDb: The Gangster Chronicles (1981)
  36. ^ IMDb: Gangster Wars (1981)

Sources

  • Bureau of Narcotics, Sam Giancana, United States Treasury Department. Mafia: The Government's Secret File on Organized Crime. Skyhorse Publishing, 2009.
  • Harrell, G. T. (2009). For Members Only: The Story of the Mob's Secret Judge. Arthur House Publishing.
  • Volkman, Ernest (1998). Gangbusters: The Destruction of America's Last Great Mafia Dynasty. New York: Avon Books.
  • Ragano, Frank; Raab, Selwyn (1994). Mob Lawyer. Charles Scribner's Sons.

Further reading

  • Davis, John H. (1993). Mafia Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the Gambino Crime Family. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-06-016357-7.
  • Kwitny, Jonathan (1979). Vicious Circles: The Mafia in the Marketplace. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-01188-7.
  • Moldea, Dan E. (1978). The Hoffa Wars. New York: Charter Books. ISBN 0-441-34010-5.
  • Raab, Selwyn (2005). Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. New York: St. Martin Press. ISBN 0-312-30094-8.
  • Tommy Lucchese, the quiet don in Malba by Ron Marzlock (November 23, 2011) Queens Chronicle
  • by Thom L. Jones. Real deal mafia.com

External links

American Mafia
Preceded by Lucchese crime family
Underboss

1930-1951
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lucchese crime family
Boss

1951-1967
Succeeded by

tommy, lucchese, thomas, gaetano, lucchese, born, gaetano, lucchese, italian, ɡaeˈtaːno, lukˈkeːse, december, 1899, july, 1967, sometimes, known, nicknames, tommy, thomas, luckese, tommy, brown, tommy, three, finger, brown, italian, american, gangster, foundin. Thomas Gaetano Lucchese 1 born Gaetano Lucchese Italian ɡaeˈtaːno lukˈkeːse December 1 1899 July 13 1967 sometimes known by the nicknames Tommy Thomas Luckese Tommy Brown or Tommy Three Finger Brown was an Italian American gangster and founding member of the Mafia in the United States an offshoot of the Cosa Nostra in Sicily From 1951 until 1967 he was the boss of the Lucchese crime family one of the Five Families that dominate organized crime in New York City Tommy LuccheseBornGaetano Lucchese 1899 12 01 December 1 1899Palermo Sicily Kingdom of ItalyDiedJuly 13 1967 1967 07 13 aged 67 Lido Beach New York U S Resting placeCalvary Cemetery Queens New York U S NationalityItalianOther namesThomas Luckese Tommy Brown Tommy Three Finger Brown Thomas ArraCitizenshipAmericanOccupationCrime bossPredecessorTommy GaglianoSuccessorCarmine TramuntiSpouseCatherine LuccheseChildren2RelativesJoseph Lucchese brother Thomas Gambino son in law Carlo Gambino co father in law AllegianceLucchese crime family Contents 1 Early life 2 107th Street gang 3 Castellammarese War 4 Underboss to Gagliano 5 Boss of the family 6 Alliance with Gambino and Genovese 7 Lucchese and Gambino 8 Commission plot 9 Death and burial 10 In popular culture 11 Notes 12 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life EditGaetano Lucchese was born on December 1 1899 to Baldassarre and Francesca Lucchese in Palermo Sicily 2 The surname Lucchese suggests family origins from the Sicilian city of Lucca Sicula In early 1911 the Lucchese family emigrated to the United States 3 settling in Manhattan s Italian neighborhood of East Harlem 4 5 The family first lived in a building at 213 East 106th Street before moving to 316 East 118th Street both buildings were in the Italian East Harlem neighborhood 6 Lucchese s father worked hauling cement As a teen Lucchese worked in a machine shop until 1915 when an industrial accident amputated his right thumb and forefinger 7 8 9 In the early 1930s Lucchese along with his family moved to an apartment at 100 18 Northern Boulevard in Corona Queens the area known as the Little Italy of Queens 6 Lucchese was 5 feet 4 inches 162 56 cm 6 He had three brothers Joseph Vincent Jimmy and Anthony Nino who all followed him into a life of organized crime 6 In 1943 Lucchese became a naturalized citizen of United States 6 Lucchese married Catherine and they had two children Frances and Baldesare The family lived at 104 Parsons Blvd in Malba Queens before moving in 1950 to 74 Royat Street in Lido Beach Long Island 10 Lucchese s daughter Frances would marry Tommy Gambino the son of Carlo Gambino the boss of the Gambino crime family which formed a strong bond between the two crime families 6 107th Street gang EditAfter his accident Lucchese spent more time with members of the 107th Street gang Members of the gang stole wallets burglarized stores and engaged in other illegal crimes The 107th Street gang operated under the protection of Bronx East Harlem family boss Gaetano Tom Reina By the age of eighteen Lucchese had started a window washing company in East Harlem anyone refusing to use his window washing services would have their windows broken 5 8 Lucchese sometimes operated from LaGuardia Political Club off East 106th Street in East Harlem 6 By the early 1920s Lucchese had become a strong ally of fellow mobster Charlie Lucky Luciano and became a top member of Gaetano Reina s crime family 8 During Lucchese s criminal career he was only arrested 6 times his first arrest was in 1920 and the last arrest in 1935 he never served a lengthy prison sentence 6 In 1920 Lucchese was arrested in Riverhead Long Island on grand larceny after stealing a car 6 During his booking a police officer compared Lucchese s deformed hand with that of Mordecai Three Finger Brown a popular Major League Baseball pitcher 11 The officer nicknamed Lucchese Three Finger Brown an alias that Lucchese always disliked 7 In January 1921 Lucchese was convicted 12 of auto theft and sentenced on March 27 1922 to three years and nine months in prison 3 Lucchese served thirteen months at Sing Sing Correctional Facility before he was paroled 5 It would be Lucchese s only conviction 8 9 Lucchese was released from prison in 1923 three years into prohibition His old friends Charlie Luciano Frank Costello and Meyer Lansky had become partners with Jewish gangster Arnold the Brain Rothstein selling bootleg alcohol In August 1927 Lucchese was arrested under the alias of Thomas Arra and charged with receiving stolen goods 9 12 On July 18 1928 Lucchese was arrested along with his brother in law Joseph Joe Palisades Rosato for the murder of Louis Cerasuolo the charges were later dropped 7 9 12 Lucchese was arrested on three other occasions in his lifetime in 1930 for murder in 1931 for an investigation and in 1935 for vagrancy but in all three arrests he was released and all charges were dropped 6 Castellammarese War EditIn early 1931 the Castellammarese War broke out between Joe Masseria and Salvatore Maranzano In a secret deal with Maranzano Luciano agreed to engineer the death of his boss Masseria in return for receiving Masseria s rackets and becoming Maranzano s second in command 13 On April 15 1931 Luciano had lured Masseria to a meeting where he was murdered at a restaurant called Nuova Villa Tammaro on Coney Island 14 13 While they played cards Luciano allegedly excused himself to the bathroom with the gunmen reportedly being Vito Genovese Albert Anastasia Joe Adonis and Benjamin Bugsy Siegel 15 Ciro The Artichoke King Terranova drove the getaway car but legend has it that he was too shaken up to drive away and had to be shoved out of the driver s seat by Siegel 16 17 18 Luciano took over Masseria s family with Genovese as his underboss In September 1931 Luciano and Genovese planned the murder of Salvatore Maranzano after Lucchese had previously alerted Luciano that he was marked for death and prepared a hit team to kill Maranzano first 13 On September 10 1931 when Maranzano summoned Luciano Genovese and Frank Costello to a meeting at his office they knew Maranzano would kill them there Instead Luciano sent to Maranzano s office four Jewish gangsters whose faces were unknown to Maranzano s people They had been secured with the aid of Lansky and Siegel 19 20 Luciano subsequently created The Commission to serve as the governing body for organized crime 21 Underboss to Gagliano EditDue to Luciano s reforms the New York City underworld entered a long period of peace Luciano was soon arrested in 1936 on compulsory prostitution charges and then deported in 1946 Tommy Gagliano would keep his family formerly the Reina family during a tough time being outnumbered in the Commission by an alliance of the Bonanno Magaddino Profaci and Mangano families From 1932 onward Gagliano kept a very low profile almost nothing is known about him from then onward He preferred to issue his orders through close allies particularly Lucchese who was his underboss and the family s public face In 1946 Lucchese attended the mob s Havana Conference in Cuba as Gagliano s representative On January 25 1943 Lucchese became a naturalized United States citizen in Newark New Jersey 2 3 Lucchese formed an alliance with Louis Buchalter and together they controlled the garment district 22 Boss of the family Edit Tommy Lucchese boss of the Lucchese family in 1958 In 1951 Gagliano died of natural causes As underboss and de facto street boss for two decades Lucchese was the obvious successor and the family was quickly renamed the Lucchese crime family Lucchese appointed mobsters Stafano LaSalle as underboss and Vincenzo Rao as consigliere That same year Lucchese formed an alliance with Luciano crime family underboss Vito Genovese and Anastasia crime family underboss Carlo Gambino with the long term goal of gaining control of the Commission Lucchese became one of the most well respected Cosa Nostra bosses of the Post War era He maintained close relationships with New York City politicians including Mayors William O Dwyer and Vincent Impellitteri Lucchese concentrated on the core Cosa Nostra values of making money keeping a low public profile and avoiding criminal prosecution The Lucchese family came to dominate Manhattan s garment district and the related trucking industry by gaining control of key unions and trade associations During the 1950s Lucchese controlled a narcotic trafficking network with Santo Trafficante Jr the boss of the Tampa crime family 23 Lucchese had maintained a longtime alliance with Trafficante Jr s father Santo Trafficante Sr the former boss of the Tampa mafia family and during the 1940s helped train Trafficante Jr in the mafia traditions 23 Trafficante Jr would frequently meet with Lucchese in New York City for dinner 23 Alliance with Gambino and Genovese EditOn November 17 1952 U S Attorney General James P McGranery initiated denaturalization proceedings against Lucchese In its filing the government claimed that Lucchese did not reveal his entire arrest record when applying for citizenship in the 1930s 3 In 1957 Lucchese and his allies decided to attack the bosses of the Luciano and Anastasia crime families to gain Commission control On May 3 1957 gunman Vincent Gigante wounded Luciano s street boss Frank Costello Shaken by the assassination attempt Costello soon retired leaving Genovese as boss 24 On October 25 1957 Albert Anastasia was assassinated in a hotel barbershop Carlo Gambino became the new family boss 25 In 1957 Genovese called a national mob meeting to legitimize his control of the Luciano family The meeting was held at rural home of mobster Joseph Joe the Barber Barbara in Apalachin New York On November 14 1957 the New York State Police raided the meeting and arrested 61 fleeing gangsters 26 Lucchese had not yet arrived in Apalachin and therefore avoided arrest However his consigliere Vincenzo Rao Gambino Genovese and other mob leaders were detained Genovese s humiliation motivated the new alliance of Luciano Costello Lansky Gambino and Lucchese to set up Genovese s later elimination Two years later with the help of the alliance Genovese was arrested on narcotics trafficking charges Genovese was convicted and sent to prison where he died in 1969 26 With the alliance backing him Gambino now controlled the Commission On April 8 1958 the U S Supreme Court overturned the 1952 denaturalization ruling against Lucchese on a legal technicality However the next day U S Attorney General William P Rogers brought a new case against Lucchese 27 Lucchese and Gambino EditIn 1962 Carlo Gambino s oldest son Thomas Gambino married Lucchese s daughter Frances 28 Over 1 000 guests attended the wedding at which Carlo Gambino presented Lucchese with a 30 000 gift In return Lucchese gave Gambino a part of his rackets at Idlewild Airport now called John F Kennedy Airport 29 Lucchese exercised control over airport management security and all the airport unions As a team Lucchese and Gambino now controlled the airport the Commission and most organized crime in New York City 30 31 32 Commission plot EditIn 1963 Joseph Magliocco and Bonanno boss Joseph Bonanno hatched an audacious plan to murder Commission bosses Carlo Gambino Lucchese and Stefano Magaddino as well as Frank DeSimone and take over the Mafia Commission 33 Joseph Magliocco gave the murder contract to Joseph Colombo Colombo either feared for his life or sensed an opportunity for advancement and instead reported the plot to The Commission The Commission realizing that Bonanno was the real mastermind ordered both Magliocco and Bonanno to explain Bonanno went into hiding in Montreal but a badly shaken Magliocco appeared and confessed everything he was fined 50 000 and forced into retirement 33 Death and burial Edit Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal On July 13 1967 Lucchese died of a brain tumor at his home in the Lido Beach area of Long Island The funeral service was held at Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal Church in Point Lookout New York Lucchese is buried at Calvary Cemetery in Queens New York Over 1 000 mourners including politicians judges policemen racketeers drug pushers pimps and hitmen attended the ceremony Undercover policemen photographed the attendees 34 At the time of his death he had not spent a day in prison in 44 years Lucchese s first choice as a successor had been Antonio Tony Ducks Corallo but Corallo was in prison when Lucchese died Lucchese s second choice Ettore Coco was also in legal trouble and served a short time as boss Another possible candidate was consigliere Vincenzo Rao but he too was dealing with criminal charges The Commission finally selected capo Carmine Tramunti as temporary acting boss until Corallo was released from prison In popular culture EditIn the television miniseries The Gangster Chronicles Lucchese is portrayed by Jon Polito 35 In Gangster Wars 1981 Lucchese is portrayed by Jon Polito 36 He is portrayed by Michael Rispoli on the 2022 TV series The Offer He is portrayed by Bo Dietl on the Epix TV Series Godfather of HarlemNotes Edit Thomas Luchese Rackets Boss Called 3 Finger Brown Is Dead Leader in Underworld Was Said to Be the Head of a Cosa Nostra Family The New York Times July 14 1967 Retrieved February 10 2020 a b Bureau of Narcotics Sam Giancana 2009 pg 510 a b c d Feinberg Alexander November 18 1952 M Granery Acts to Deport Luchese to his Native Italy PDF New York Times Retrieved 30 November 2011 Harrell 2009 pg 99 101 a b c Volkman 1998 pg 8 37 a b c d e f g h i j Tommy Tommy Brown Lucchese Family Boss The New York Mafia Retrieved 25 March 2023 a b c Hunt Thomas White Collar Mafioso Tommy Lucchese 1899 1967 2007 The American Mafia com a b c d Biography Channel Tommy Lucchese Archived 2015 07 24 at the Wayback Machine a b c d United States Congress Senate Select Committee on Improper Activities in the Labor or Management Field Investigation of improper activities in the labor or management field Testimony of Thomas Lucchese Accompanied by Counsel Richard J Burke July 1958 Washington U S Govt Print Off Boston Public Library Lucania Salvatore Tommy Lucchese s home 1952 104 Parsons Blvd Queens NY Gangsters Inc Retrieved 23 January 2021 Ragano Raab 1994 pg 219 a b c United States of America v Gaetano Lucchese 247 F 2d 123 Archived 2012 05 17 at the Wayback Machine United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit Docket 24424 Argued March 15 1957 Decided June 17 1957 Justia com US Law a b c Raab Selwyn Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires New York St Martin Press 2005 ISBN 0 312 30094 8 Racket Chief Slain By Gangster Gunfire Giuseppe Masseria Known as Joe the Boss Shot Mysteriously in Coney Island Cafe Police Say He Was Leader in Every Kind of Racket He Escaped Death Many Times Shooting Still a Mystery PDF New York Times April 16 1931 Retrieved November 23 2011 It took ten years and a lot of shooting to kill Giuseppe Masseria he was Joe the Boss to the underworld but his enemies found him with his back turned yesterday in a little Italian restaurant in Coney Island and when they walked out into Pollak Michael June 29 2012 Coney Island s Big Hit The New York Times Retrieved 31 October 2012 Sifakis 2005 pp 87 88 Martin A Gosch Richard Hammer Lucky Luciano 1975 The Last Testament of Lucky Luciano Little Brown pp 130 132 ISBN 978 0 316 32140 2 Davis John H 1994 Mafia dynasty the rise and fall of the Gambino crime family 1st Harper paperbacks ed New York N Y HarperPaperbacks p 40 ISBN 0 06 109184 7 Lucky Luciano Criminal Mastermind Time Dec 7 1998 Cohen Rich 1999 Tough Jews 1st Vintage Books ed New York Vintage Books pp 65 66 ISBN 0 375 70547 3 The Commission s Origins The New York Times 1986 Retrieved 22 February 2017 Ryan p 118 a b c Raab Selwyn 4 October 2016 Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires St Martin s Publishing Group pp 105 106 ISBN 9781250101709 Retrieved 26 December 2022 Costello is Shot Entering Home Gunman Escapes PDF New York Times May 3 1957 Retrieved 30 November 2011 Dunlap David W October 25 2007 Hint It Wasn t the Orange Creme Frappucino New York Times Retrieved 30 November 2011 a b Grutzner Charles February 16 1959 Ruled Family of 450 Genovese Dies in Prison at 71 Boss of Bosses of Mafia Here New York Times Retrieved 30 November 2011 Attorney General Acts PDF New York Times April 9 1958 Retrieved 1 December 2011 The Gambino Crime Family A Squirrel of a Man Crime Library on truTV com Archived 2013 05 20 at the Wayback Machine Raab Selwyn March 20 1990 Police Say Their Chinatown Sting Ties Mob to the Garment Industry The New York Times Sullivanfirst Ronald February 5 1992 Gambino Gained Mob Tax With Fear Prosecutor Says The New York Times Barron James December 2 1992 Thomas Gambino It s All in the Name The New York Times Jailed Capo Out 2m Stuck In Stock Scam Gambino Charges New York Daily News New York Archived from the original on June 8 2009 a b Staff September 1 1967 The Mob How Joe Bonanno Schemed to kill and lost Life p 15 21 Clines Francis X July 16 1967 L I Police Record A Mafia Funeral Mourners at Services for Luchese Are Photographed New York Times Retrieved August 15 2012 A quiet funeral mass was celebrated here this morning for Thomas Luchese the reputed underworld leader as police detectives in sports clothes photographed the mourners and jotted down limousine license numbers IMDb The Gangster Chronicles 1981 IMDb Gangster Wars 1981 Sources EditBureau of Narcotics Sam Giancana United States Treasury Department Mafia The Government s Secret File on Organized Crime Skyhorse Publishing 2009 Harrell G T 2009 For Members Only The Story of the Mob s Secret Judge Arthur House Publishing Volkman Ernest 1998 Gangbusters The Destruction of America s Last Great Mafia Dynasty New York Avon Books Ragano Frank Raab Selwyn 1994 Mob Lawyer Charles Scribner s Sons Further reading EditDavis John H 1993 Mafia Dynasty The Rise and Fall of the Gambino Crime Family New York HarperCollins ISBN 0 06 016357 7 Kwitny Jonathan 1979 Vicious Circles The Mafia in the Marketplace New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 01188 7 Moldea Dan E 1978 The Hoffa Wars New York Charter Books ISBN 0 441 34010 5 Raab Selwyn 2005 Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires New York St Martin Press ISBN 0 312 30094 8 Tommy Lucchese the quiet don in Malba by Ron Marzlock November 23 2011 Queens Chronicle A Death in the Family by Thom L Jones Real deal mafia comExternal links EditMobsters Tommy Lucchese Tommy Lucchese at Find a GraveAmerican MafiaPreceded byTommy Gagliano Lucchese crime familyUnderboss1930 1951 Succeeded byStefano LaSallePreceded byTommy Gagliano Lucchese crime familyBoss1951 1967 Succeeded byCarmine Tramunti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tommy Lucchese amp oldid 1146562495, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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