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Kansas City crime family

The Kansas City crime family, also known as the Civella crime family or Kansas City Mafia, is an Italian-American Mafia family based in Kansas City, Missouri.

Kansas City crime family
Founded1912; 111 years ago (1912)
FounderJoseph DiGiovanni
Founding locationKansas City, Missouri, United States
Years active1912–present
TerritoryPrimarily the Kansas City metropolitan area, with additional territory in Omaha, Tulsa, Washington D.C. and Las Vegas
EthnicityItalians as "made men" and other ethnicities as associates
Membership (est.)15 made members
ActivitiesRacketeering, extortion, murder, gambling, loan sharking, narcotics, bookmaking, and bribery
Allies
RivalsVarious gangs over Kansas City, including their allies.

History

Early history

The Italian-American organized crime family began when two Sicilian mafiosi known as the DiGiovanni brothers fled Sicily to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1912. Joseph "Joe Church" DiGiovanni and Peter "Sugarhouse Pete" DiGiovanni began making money from a variety of criminal operations or rackets shortly after their arrival.[1]

Their fortunes greatly improved with the introduction of Prohibition, when they became the only group bootlegging alcohol in Kansas City.[1] Their rackets at this time were controlled by John Lazia, who later became the leading figure when the organisation expanded. The gang was given virtually a free hand to operate by their boss Tom Pendergast, head of the Pendergast Machine that controlled Kansas City's government at the time. Under Pendergast, Kansas City became a wide-open town, with absolutely no alcohol-related arrests being made within city limits during the entirety of Prohibition. The DiGiovanni family directly benefited from this lack of enforcement of prohibition laws.[1]

Post-Prohibition

When Prohibition ended in 1933, the family, although already involved in various rackets, allegedly began extorting bars. On July 10, 1934, Lazia was assassinated, probably on the orders of his underboss, Charles Carrollo, who ruled as boss until his arrest in 1939 for tax evasion. His underboss Charles Binaggio then became the new boss and expanded the family's areas of labor into racketeering. With the help of Binaggio, Forrest Smith was elected in the Missouri gubernatorial race of 1948, and he took office on January 10, 1949. Binaggio was seen as a liability to the Mafia's nationwide commission, and it was decided that Binaggio should be killed. He was assassinated on April 6, 1950, and his successor Anthony Gizzo died of a heart attack in 1953.

Nicholas Civella

The new boss was now Nicholas Civella, who greatly expanded the family's rackets and forged alliances with families from other cities, making the organization very powerful. Civella used the Teamsters to fund casinos in Las Vegas. In 1975, Civella was imprisoned on gambling charges for betting on the 1970 Super Bowl, played between the Minnesota Vikings and the Kansas City Chiefs. Around this time, there was a war in the family over control of the River Quay entertainment district, in which three buildings were bombed and several gangsters were killed.

Operation Strawman

The Kansas City FBI, suspecting mob involvement at the Tropicana Casino in Las Vegas, set up a broad investigation, known as Operation Strawman, which involved wiretapping phones of reputed mobsters and their associates in Kansas City. From the evidence collected by taps and other eavesdropping in the late 1970s, the FBI discovered a conspiracy to skim money from the Tropicana Casino.

Operation Strawman learned that Joe Agosto, head of the Tropicana's Folies Bergere show, controlled the skimming in the Tropicana. Agosto was secretly sending cash from the casino to Kansas City organized-crime chief Nick Civella and Joseph Aiuppa of Chicago, as well as Cleveland and Milwaukee mobsters.

In 1981, a grand jury in Kansas City indicted Agosto, Kansas City mob boss Nick Civella, Civella's brother Carl Civella, mob member Carl DeLuna, and Carl Thomas, who had directed the illegal skimming of cash at the Tropicana with two others. The defendants were convicted in 1983.[2]

In January 1992, Moretina pleaded guilty to a federal money laundering charge and was sentenced to 37 months. Moretina served as president of a firm that distributed illegal video gambling machines. He and his business partner, purported mob underboss Peter J. Simone, operated the Be Amused Vending and Amusement Co. Moretina is the son of Charles Moretina, who was convicted in the 1980s for skimming Las Vegas casino gambling receipts.

21st century

William "Willie the Rat" Cammisano, Sr., became the family's next boss until his death in 1995. Anthony Civella then became the new boss. He died in 2006.

The Kansas City family had an estimated 25 made members as of the late 1990s, according to the FBI.

The current boss of the family is believed to be John Joseph Sciortino, also known as "Johnny Joe", godson of Anthony Civella. The current underboss is believed to be Peter Simone.

On July 21, 2008, Carl "Tuffy" DeLuna, former underboss to Nick Civella and brother-in-law to Anthony Civella, died.

On March 11, 2010, the FBI indicted Gerlarmo "Jerry" Cammisano, James Moretina, Michael Lombardo, and James DiCapo for allegedly operating a "multi-million-dollar internet gambling scheme". Jerry Cammisano, son of William "Willie the Rat" Cammisano, served as the "master agent" of the sports bookmaking operation, which was based in the Kansas City area. Jerry's brother, William D. Cammisano, Jr., pleaded guilty for his role in the sports bookmaking operation.

Prior to the indictment, six individuals pleaded guilty in connection with the investigation, including three – Vincent Civella and brothers Michael and Anthony Sansone – who are the son and grandsons of former Kansas City boss Anthony "Tony Ripe" Civella. According to Scott Burnstein's Gangster Report, the Kansas City mob is on its last legs with 12 made men or less. The family still has some gambling and loansharking with some extortion involving drugs and the strip club industry.[3]

Historical leadership

Bosses

Current family members

Administration

  • BossJohn "Johnny Joe" Sciortino – current boss of the family; Sciortino was formerly a capo and the godson and protégé of boss Anthony Civella.[3][4] He was named acting boss by Civella after he was imprisoned in 1995, and became the official boss after his death in 2006.[4][3] Sciortino is suspected of being involved in the murder of family associate Larry Strada, who was shot to death in the driveway of his home on May 16, 1990.[3] FBI agents testified that the two mobsters charged in the case, John Mandacina and Patrick McGuire, were seen meeting with Sciortino and Peter Simone at Simone's Social Avenue Club in the hours before Strada's murder.[3]
  • UnderbossPeter "Las Vegas Pete" Simone – longtime family member.[5]
  • ConsigliereFrank DeLuna – the FBI in Missouri believes he is the aide to Sciortino.

Caporegimes

  • William Cammisano Jr. – current captain and son of former Kansas City mob boss William "Willie the Rat" Cammisano Sr. His first conviction was in 1989 for obstruction of justice after he intimidated a witness involved in a murder trial; he was released three years later. He has been the suspect of numerous gangland executions during the 1980s. Cammisano is also blacklisted from every casino in Kansas City and Las Vegas.[6] In 2010, he pleaded guilty to running a massive illegal gambling operation which amounted to $3.5 million over the course of three years; he received one year.[7][8]

Soldiers

  • Vincent Civella – son of former boss "Tony Ripe" Civella. In 2010, Civella pleaded guilty to conducting an illegal gambling operation that utilized a computer system based in Costa Rica. He was also ordered to forfeit $40,000 to the federal government.[9] He was released from prison on September 23, 2011.[10]
  • James Moretina – In 2010, Moretina pleaded guilty to conducting an illegal gambling business alongside Vincent Civella.[11] He was released from prison on April 27, 2012.[12]
  • Vincent Pisciotta – A career criminal, Pisciotta was charged with second-degree murder in 1980 for a 1978 killing, but a mistrial was declared when a key witness vanished. The witness later reappeared and claimed that he was beaten out of testifying.[13] In 1988, he was indicted for another murder, but charges were reduced to manslaughter and he served 120 days in jail. In 2013, Pisciotta was convicted of arson in an incident where he helped burn down a restaurant for insurance money.[14] He has a projected release date of December 9, 2029.[15]
  • Peter J. "PJ" Ribaste – Kansas City soldier, Ribaste has been excluded from gambling in the state of Nevada.[16]

In media

In August 2008, retired FBI agent William Ouseley published his history of the KC crime family from 1900 to 1950 in a book titled Open City.

On March 20, 2009, Blackhand Strawman, a documentary of Kansas City's organized crime history, was released in theaters in Kansas City.

On March 1, 2011 retired FBI agent William Ouseley published his history of the KC crime family from 1950 to 2000 in a book titled Mobsters in Our Midst.

On November 25, 2013, the documentary film Gangland Wire was released. This film uses audio clips from FBI wiretaps to tell the story of how law enforcement uncovered a massive conspiracy to control Las Vegas casinos.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Ouseley, William (12 June 2008). Open City: True Story of the KC Crime Family 1900-1950. Leathers Publishing. ISBN 978-1585974801.
  2. ^ "Tropicana | ONE". www.onlinenevada.org.
  3. ^ a b c d e "State Of The Syndicate: The Kansas City Mafia Today". The Gangster Report.
  4. ^ a b Stephens, Joe (July 15, 1992). "Anthony Civella sentenced". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved September 1, 2022.
  5. ^ "Kansas City mafia continues to dwindle". About the Mafia. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  6. ^ "William Dominick Cammisano, Jr". Nevada Gaming Control Board. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  7. ^ "Remembering Kansas City's mob past". Kansas City Business Journal. Steve Vockrodt. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  8. ^ "William 'Willie' Cammisano Jr. pleads guilty to running illegal gambling operation; son of 'Willie the Rat' Cammisano". The Pitch. Justin Kendall. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  9. ^ "Kansas City Man is Sixth to Plead Guilty to Illegal Gambling". FBI. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  10. ^ "Inmate Locator". www.bop.gov. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  11. ^ "Parkville Man Sentenced for Trafficking Over $400,000 in Counterfeit Goods, Illegal Gambling Operation". FBI. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  12. ^ "BOP: Federal Inmates By Name". www.bop.gov. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  13. ^ www.bizjournals.com https://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/news/2012/10/11/hereford-house-witnesses-have-ties-to.html. Retrieved 2022-06-24. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  14. ^ "Hereford House Owner, Two Others Sentenced for Fire that Destroyed Landmark Restaurant". www.justice.gov. 2015-01-07. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  15. ^ "BOP: Federal Inmates By Name". www.bop.gov. Retrieved 2022-06-24.
  16. ^ "Nevada Gaming Control Board : Ribaste, Peter, Joseph". gaming.nv.gov. Retrieved 2022-06-24.

Sources

  • AmericanMafia.com - 26 Mafia cities - Kansas City
  • Crime Magazine - The History of the Kansas City Family

kansas, city, crime, family, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message 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 Kansas City crime family news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Kansas City crime family also known as the Civella crime family or Kansas City Mafia is an Italian American Mafia family based in Kansas City Missouri Kansas City crime familyFounded1912 111 years ago 1912 FounderJoseph DiGiovanniFounding locationKansas City Missouri United StatesYears active1912 presentTerritoryPrimarily the Kansas City metropolitan area with additional territory in Omaha Tulsa Washington D C and Las VegasEthnicityItalians as made men and other ethnicities as associatesMembership est 15 made membersActivitiesRacketeering extortion murder gambling loan sharking narcotics bookmaking and briberyAlliesChicago Outfit Cleveland crime family Los Angeles crime family St Louis crime family Five FamiliesRivalsVarious gangs over Kansas City including their allies Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Post Prohibition 1 3 Nicholas Civella 1 4 Operation Strawman 1 5 21st century 2 Historical leadership 2 1 Bosses 3 Current family members 3 1 Administration 3 2 Caporegimes 3 3 Soldiers 4 In media 5 See also 6 References 7 SourcesHistory EditEarly history Edit The Italian American organized crime family began when two Sicilian mafiosi known as the DiGiovanni brothers fled Sicily to Kansas City Missouri in 1912 Joseph Joe Church DiGiovanni and Peter Sugarhouse Pete DiGiovanni began making money from a variety of criminal operations or rackets shortly after their arrival 1 Their fortunes greatly improved with the introduction of Prohibition when they became the only group bootlegging alcohol in Kansas City 1 Their rackets at this time were controlled by John Lazia who later became the leading figure when the organisation expanded The gang was given virtually a free hand to operate by their boss Tom Pendergast head of the Pendergast Machine that controlled Kansas City s government at the time Under Pendergast Kansas City became a wide open town with absolutely no alcohol related arrests being made within city limits during the entirety of Prohibition The DiGiovanni family directly benefited from this lack of enforcement of prohibition laws 1 Post Prohibition Edit When Prohibition ended in 1933 the family although already involved in various rackets allegedly began extorting bars On July 10 1934 Lazia was assassinated probably on the orders of his underboss Charles Carrollo who ruled as boss until his arrest in 1939 for tax evasion His underboss Charles Binaggio then became the new boss and expanded the family s areas of labor into racketeering With the help of Binaggio Forrest Smith was elected in the Missouri gubernatorial race of 1948 and he took office on January 10 1949 Binaggio was seen as a liability to the Mafia s nationwide commission and it was decided that Binaggio should be killed He was assassinated on April 6 1950 and his successor Anthony Gizzo died of a heart attack in 1953 Nicholas Civella Edit The new boss was now Nicholas Civella who greatly expanded the family s rackets and forged alliances with families from other cities making the organization very powerful Civella used the Teamsters to fund casinos in Las Vegas In 1975 Civella was imprisoned on gambling charges for betting on the 1970 Super Bowl played between the Minnesota Vikings and the Kansas City Chiefs Around this time there was a war in the family over control of the River Quay entertainment district in which three buildings were bombed and several gangsters were killed Operation Strawman Edit The Kansas City FBI suspecting mob involvement at the Tropicana Casino in Las Vegas set up a broad investigation known as Operation Strawman which involved wiretapping phones of reputed mobsters and their associates in Kansas City From the evidence collected by taps and other eavesdropping in the late 1970s the FBI discovered a conspiracy to skim money from the Tropicana Casino Operation Strawman learned that Joe Agosto head of the Tropicana s Folies Bergere show controlled the skimming in the Tropicana Agosto was secretly sending cash from the casino to Kansas City organized crime chief Nick Civella and Joseph Aiuppa of Chicago as well as Cleveland and Milwaukee mobsters In 1981 a grand jury in Kansas City indicted Agosto Kansas City mob boss Nick Civella Civella s brother Carl Civella mob member Carl DeLuna and Carl Thomas who had directed the illegal skimming of cash at the Tropicana with two others The defendants were convicted in 1983 2 In January 1992 Moretina pleaded guilty to a federal money laundering charge and was sentenced to 37 months Moretina served as president of a firm that distributed illegal video gambling machines He and his business partner purported mob underboss Peter J Simone operated the Be Amused Vending and Amusement Co Moretina is the son of Charles Moretina who was convicted in the 1980s for skimming Las Vegas casino gambling receipts 21st century Edit William Willie the Rat Cammisano Sr became the family s next boss until his death in 1995 Anthony Civella then became the new boss He died in 2006 The Kansas City family had an estimated 25 made members as of the late 1990s according to the FBI The current boss of the family is believed to be John Joseph Sciortino also known as Johnny Joe godson of Anthony Civella The current underboss is believed to be Peter Simone On July 21 2008 Carl Tuffy DeLuna former underboss to Nick Civella and brother in law to Anthony Civella died On March 11 2010 the FBI indicted Gerlarmo Jerry Cammisano James Moretina Michael Lombardo and James DiCapo for allegedly operating a multi million dollar internet gambling scheme Jerry Cammisano son of William Willie the Rat Cammisano served as the master agent of the sports bookmaking operation which was based in the Kansas City area Jerry s brother William D Cammisano Jr pleaded guilty for his role in the sports bookmaking operation Prior to the indictment six individuals pleaded guilty in connection with the investigation including three Vincent Civella and brothers Michael and Anthony Sansone who are the son and grandsons of former Kansas City boss Anthony Tony Ripe Civella According to Scott Burnstein s Gangster Report the Kansas City mob is on its last legs with 12 made men or less The family still has some gambling and loansharking with some extortion involving drugs and the strip club industry 3 Historical leadership EditBosses Edit 1912 1931 Joseph Joe Church DiGiovanni 1931 1934 John Brother John Lazia murdered in 1934 1934 1939 Charles Charlie the Wop Carrollo convicted in 1939 1939 1950 Charles Binaggio murdered in 1950 1950 1953 Anthony Gizzo 1953 1983 Nicholas Civella convicted in 1977 and 1980 deceased in 1983 Acting 1977 1979 Carl Tuffy DeLuna imprisoned in 1979 Acting 1979 1983 Carl Cork Civella became official boss 1983 1984 Carl Cork Civella convicted in 1984 1984 1995 William Willie the Rat Cammisano 1995 2006 Anthony Tony Ripe Civella arrested in 1992 Acting 1995 2006 John Johnny Joe Sciortino 2006 present John Johnny Joe SciortinoCurrent family members EditAdministration Edit Boss John Johnny Joe Sciortino current boss of the family Sciortino was formerly a capo and the godson and protege of boss Anthony Civella 3 4 He was named acting boss by Civella after he was imprisoned in 1995 and became the official boss after his death in 2006 4 3 Sciortino is suspected of being involved in the murder of family associate Larry Strada who was shot to death in the driveway of his home on May 16 1990 3 FBI agents testified that the two mobsters charged in the case John Mandacina and Patrick McGuire were seen meeting with Sciortino and Peter Simone at Simone s Social Avenue Club in the hours before Strada s murder 3 Underboss Peter Las Vegas Pete Simone longtime family member 5 Consigliere Frank DeLuna the FBI in Missouri believes he is the aide to Sciortino Caporegimes Edit William Cammisano Jr current captain and son of former Kansas City mob boss William Willie the Rat Cammisano Sr His first conviction was in 1989 for obstruction of justice after he intimidated a witness involved in a murder trial he was released three years later He has been the suspect of numerous gangland executions during the 1980s Cammisano is also blacklisted from every casino in Kansas City and Las Vegas 6 In 2010 he pleaded guilty to running a massive illegal gambling operation which amounted to 3 5 million over the course of three years he received one year 7 8 Soldiers Edit Vincent Civella son of former boss Tony Ripe Civella In 2010 Civella pleaded guilty to conducting an illegal gambling operation that utilized a computer system based in Costa Rica He was also ordered to forfeit 40 000 to the federal government 9 He was released from prison on September 23 2011 10 James Moretina In 2010 Moretina pleaded guilty to conducting an illegal gambling business alongside Vincent Civella 11 He was released from prison on April 27 2012 12 Vincent Pisciotta A career criminal Pisciotta was charged with second degree murder in 1980 for a 1978 killing but a mistrial was declared when a key witness vanished The witness later reappeared and claimed that he was beaten out of testifying 13 In 1988 he was indicted for another murder but charges were reduced to manslaughter and he served 120 days in jail In 2013 Pisciotta was convicted of arson in an incident where he helped burn down a restaurant for insurance money 14 He has a projected release date of December 9 2029 15 Peter J PJ Ribaste Kansas City soldier Ribaste has been excluded from gambling in the state of Nevada 16 In media EditIn August 2008 retired FBI agent William Ouseley published his history of the KC crime family from 1900 to 1950 in a book titled Open City On March 20 2009 Blackhand Strawman a documentary of Kansas City s organized crime history was released in theaters in Kansas City On March 1 2011 retired FBI agent William Ouseley published his history of the KC crime family from 1950 to 2000 in a book titled Mobsters in Our Midst On November 25 2013 the documentary film Gangland Wire was released This film uses audio clips from FBI wiretaps to tell the story of how law enforcement uncovered a massive conspiracy to control Las Vegas casinos See also EditAnthony J Biase operated in Omaha NebraskaReferences Edit a b c Ouseley William 12 June 2008 Open City True Story of the KC Crime Family 1900 1950 Leathers Publishing ISBN 978 1585974801 Tropicana ONE www onlinenevada org a b c d e State Of The Syndicate The Kansas City Mafia Today The Gangster Report a b Stephens Joe July 15 1992 Anthony Civella sentenced The Kansas City Star Retrieved September 1 2022 Kansas City mafia continues to dwindle About the Mafia Retrieved 17 May 2016 William Dominick Cammisano Jr Nevada Gaming Control Board Retrieved 17 May 2016 Remembering Kansas City s mob past Kansas City Business Journal Steve Vockrodt Retrieved 17 May 2016 William Willie Cammisano Jr pleads guilty to running illegal gambling operation son of Willie the Rat Cammisano The Pitch Justin Kendall Retrieved 17 May 2016 Kansas City Man is Sixth to Plead Guilty to Illegal Gambling FBI Retrieved 2022 06 24 Inmate Locator www bop gov Retrieved 2022 06 24 Parkville Man Sentenced for Trafficking Over 400 000 in Counterfeit Goods Illegal Gambling Operation FBI Retrieved 2022 06 24 BOP Federal Inmates By Name www bop gov Retrieved 2022 06 24 www bizjournals com https www bizjournals com kansascity news 2012 10 11 hereford house witnesses have ties to html Retrieved 2022 06 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Hereford House Owner Two Others Sentenced for Fire that Destroyed Landmark Restaurant www justice gov 2015 01 07 Retrieved 2022 06 24 BOP Federal Inmates By Name www bop gov Retrieved 2022 06 24 Nevada Gaming Control Board Ribaste Peter Joseph gaming nv gov Retrieved 2022 06 24 Sources EditAmericanMafia com 26 Mafia cities Kansas City Crime Magazine The History of the Kansas City Family Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kansas City crime family amp oldid 1133216260, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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