got four and one-half years for conspiring to bribe former New York City Water Commissioner James L. Marcus who was in deep financial trouble and agreed to cash payments from Corallo in exchange for certain emergency cleaning contracts to be awarded to a party named by the mobster. The first such contract was for $835,000.
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Also implicated in the case, which later expanded a planned shakedown of the Consolidated Edison utility company was ex-Tammany Hall boss Carmine DeSapio. Marcus as commissioner of the Department of Water Supply, Gas, and Electricity had iron-listed power over permits Consolidated Edison needed. DeSapio was to act as contact man with certain representatives of the utility. Marcus testified on the Consolidated Edison plothe got 15 months for the reservoir conspiracywhich the conspirators figured could involve millions of dollars. Marcus said the pressures put on him were so intense that at times he considered suicide. Eventually DeSapio and Corallo were convicted and the former Tammany Hall leader got a two-year prison term.
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In the 1980s Corallo was facing charges of bidrigging schemes concerning garbage disposals on New York's Long Island and involving political figures "on both sides of the aisle." Then there were federal charges that Corallo was a member of the national commission of the Mafia. Part of the government's case came from a sophisticated bug placed in a Jaguar in which Corallo was often driven. It was said that other mafiosi both in the Lucchese and especially in the other crime families were upset not only that Corallo had been so careless as to let the bug go undetected but also by what he had said disparagingly about other Mafia men.
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Immediately following the December 1985 assassination of Gambino family boss Paul Castellano, there was considerable word out of the underworld that Corallo could also be in very serious trouble. In fact, it appeared that in the late 1980s Corallo would really be "ducking" for his life. In 1986, he was sentenced to 100 years for being a member of the commission.
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See also: Lucchese Crime Family .
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Corleone, Sicily: Mafia spawning ground It is fitting that the crime family boss in Mario Puzo's The Godfather is named Don Corleone, since that town in Sicily has long been regarded as one of the hotbeds of the Mafia and, for many years, one of the main suppliers of Mafia manpower to the United States.
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Many of today's mobsters, especially in the New York-New Jersey area, trace their roots back to Corleone. As a matter of historical dispute it might be said that the west coast town of Castellammare del Golfo may have produced more big-time American mafiosi but for sheer numbers Corleone remains unmatched.
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A once-prosperous town with a modern population of 18,000, Corleone was virtually denuded of male inhabitants through various Mafia wars. In the period between 1944 and 1948 the town suffered 153 Mafia murders. Estimates at various times placed the number of the town's adult males who had been convicted of crimes and were serving prison sentences or awaiting sentencing at upwards of 80 percent; in recent years working-age males have made up only 10 percent of the population.
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Among the Corleonians who transferred to America were such worthies as the murderous Lupo the Wolf (Ignazio Saietta), Ciro Terranova and the Morello family, a huge band of brothers, half-brothers and brothers-in-law who were so numerous that they composed a "crime family" on their own. Antonio Morello, the eldest brother in this nuclear family, was described by police as being responsible for between 30 and 40 murders on his own, and Joe Morello was for a time regarded the Mafia boss of New York City.
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Cosa Nostra It is remarkable to consider that, until the appearance of Joe Valachi as an informer in 1963, the public had never heard of the term Cosa Nostra . Even the exhaustive Kefauver hearings of about a decade earlier had failed to uncover the term. And though seemingly a household expression today, crime family circles outside New York seemed to have had no knowledge of the term Cosa Nostra . In Buffalo the crime family was called "the Arm," in Chicago "the Outfit," in New England "the Office."
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When and where, then, Cosa Nostra? Valachi didn't invent the term, but it was carefully nurtured by federal authorities in reviews of his testimony. In a literal sense, it means nothing more than "our thing." But for FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover who insisted for decades that there was no such thing as organized crime or the Mafia, Cosa Nostra meant "save face." Says crime historian Richard Hammer, "In order to get Hoover off the hook, a new name had to be created, hence Costa Nostra." This allowed Hoover to say in effect, ''Oh, yes, we've always known about that."
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Actually the FBI had been aware of the term in the previous year or two when it finally made efforts to probe Mafia business. All they had to go on were passing comments picked up in wiretaps and the like in which various mafiosi made comments in Italian about "cosa nostra," or "this thing of ours."
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It was enough for the FBI, which attempted to carry its save-Hoover program even further by adding a la to the name so that it could offer the press a convenient
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