The Mafia Encyclopedia (94 page)

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Authors: Carl Sifakis

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Page 272
get on top, and they don't give a damn who gets it in the back."
In this context Nitti was valuable as a man to take the heat and, for that matter, even assassins' bullets. In that gem of prairie corruption, even Chicago mayor, Anton Cermak, could dispatch his own police "hit men" to try to knock off Nitti so he could replace him and other Caponeites with his own more subservient gangsters. Yet other mobsters, including Lucky Luciano and Meyer Lansky, when establishing the national crime syndicate in the early 1930s, dealt with Paul "the Waiter" Ricca as the leader of the Capones. They gave no thought to Nitti; he didn't even know what was going on.
Born in 1884, Nitti started out as a barber with a goodly clientele of petty crooks who came to him to fence their stolen goods. This underworld work put him in touch with the Capones at the start of Prohibition; he had ways of peddling some hijacked booze, no questions asked. Within a few years, Capone tabbed him as an efficient organizer and relied on him to see that his orders were carried out.
After Capone went to prison, the newspapers had to have a new Mr. Big. Nitti was very visible. They hailed him as the new head of the Capone mob, and Nitti probably even believed it himself. But it was ludicrous to expect the likes of the Fischetti brothers, Jake Guzik, Tony Accardo, Paul Ricca, Murray Humphreys and others to follow his orders. Only his front-man role made Nitti important.
In 1932 two police officers invaded Nitti's headquarters and shot and severely wounded him. They were acting, later testimony indicated, under orders of the new mayor, Cermak, who was determined to take over from the Capone mob and redistribute its territories to more favored criminals, especially those bossed by Cermak's favorite gangster, Teddy Newberry. Nitti lingered near death for a time but finally recovered, a feat that added to his legend.
When the mob under Willie Bioff and George Browne got into its shakedown rackets against the movie industry, Nitti's name was used as a terror tactic against the film moguls, who were threatened with his personal vengeance. However, federal investigators succeeded in getting evidence against the Chicago gangsters and with Bioff and Browne both talking, Nitti and Ricca were indicted along with several others. Ricca had by this time more obviously taken charge of the mob, often countermanding a Nitti order by saying, "We'll do it this way. Now let's hear no more about it."
Ricca decided the movie indictments made the time perfect to call in Nitti's cards as a front man. At a meeting of the top leaders of the mob he ordered Nitti to plead guilty and take the rap for all of them. The thought terrified Nitti who had served 18 months in the early 1930s on an income tax charge. He got the "shakes" at the idea of returning behind bars. That sort of reaction made Nitti a logical candidate to seek mercy from the prosecution by confessing and naming all the others.
"Frank, you're asking for it," Ricca raged at him, still demanding he be a "stand-up guy" and take the rap for all. Nitti recognized Ricca's words as a death sentence. The next day, March 19, 1943, Nitti was seen walking along some railroad tracks. He drew a pistol from his pocket and put a bullet in his brain.
No Hands Rule: Mob code of conduct
Adopted by various mafioso leaders since about 1930, the "no hands rule" forbids any mob member from physically attacking another. The purpose of the ruleapparently first propounded by Salvatore Maranzano and later insisted upon by Lucky Lucianowas to prevent needless outbreaks of gang warfare.
The rule was especially important in New York where five crime families operated in the city. Inevitably there was friction between family members about racket rights in certain spots or the exclusivity of a certain shakedown, gambling or loan shark victim. Crime family leaders reserved to themselves the right to decide such matters and did not approve the actions of a hit-happy low echelon hoodlum in provoking a situation in which "honor" would require all-out warfare.
Thus the rule was set. The mere laying of one's hands on another gangster was cause enough for even the death penalty to be imposed on the offender. While such a "Cosa Nostra code" would seem to guarantee civilized behavior, such was seldom the case. The late Joe Valachi was noted for using violence to keep other Cosa Nostra members from treading on his financial interests, and, on one occasion, he knocked out fellow racketeer Frank Luciano (no relation to Lucky) when he caught him appropriating some of their joint monies.
Taken to the "table"a Mafia trialValachi was tried by Murder, Inc., boss Albert Anastasia, noted for his unpredictable actions. He could have ordered Valachi's death with a snap of the finger. However, Anastasia went the other way, declaring Valachi to be more in the right than his victim and giving what amounted to an award of damages to Valachi.
In actual practice, the no hands rule does not seem to have been rigidly enforced. When it was, most likely it represented a family boss's method of achieving some end of his own.
No Narcotics Rule: Alleged Mafia code
There has long been a myth that most or all organized crime bosses eschewed the "dirty business" of drug traf-
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ficking. Giving added credibility to such nonsense was the famous, if not always lucid, testimony of informer Joe Valachi. He told one tale that, as former Chicago Crime Commission head Virgil Peterson has noted, "was viewed with skepticism by many knowledgeable law-enforcement officers."
Valachi declared that under Tony Accardo the Chicago Cosa Nostra paid its soldiers $200 a week to stop dealing in narcotics. Later, apparently in light of inflation, this weekly stipend was increased to $250. According to Valachi, this caused considerable problems in New York City where mobsters were ordered out of the racket with no compensation whatsoever.
In fact many New York mobsters in various of the five crime families were deeply involved in drug trafficking with and without approval from above. Many members of the Lucchese and Bonanno family engaged in narcotics dealings. Joe Bonanno insisted in his autobiography,
A Man of Honor
, that "My Tradition outlaws narcotics. It had always been understood that 'men of honor' don't deal in narcotics. However, the lure of high profits had tempted some underlings to freelance in the narcotics trade." In point of fact, Bonanno's underboss, Carmine Galante, was convicted on a narcotics charge.
In 1948 Frank Costello, the caretaker-head of the Luciano family after Charlie Lucky was deported, ordered the family to stay out of drugs. Of all the bosses, probably Costello was the most genuinely opposed to dealing in dope. Since he operated mainly through cooperation with the political power structure on such matters as gambling, he understood that narcotics was the one activity he often could not squarethe politicians would be too frightened of public outrage. However, Costello's edict applied only to the Luciano family while others ignored it or paid it no more than lip service. Vito Genovese, who finally wrested control of the family from Costello, issued the same edict while actually keeping up a lifelong activity in dope. Genovese did have a few underlings murdered for violating the no drugs rule, but took a different attitude if he himself was cut in for a major portion of the profits. Indeed, Genovese died in jail for narcotics dealing.
It was estimated by informers and law enforcement officials in the 1970s that of the 450-some members of the Genovese crime family at least 100 remained, many to this day, involved in the dope racket. The statistics are probably similar in other crime familieswith or without a no narcotics rule.
See also:
Narcotics Racket
.
Normandie, S.S.: Mafia wartime sabotage
On February 11, 1942, not long after the United States entered World War II, the night skies over New York's Hudson River piers turned crimson in a spectacular fire. Ablaze was the former French liner
Normandie
, renamed the
Lafayette
, which was being converted to a troop carrier. It would have made a most efficient troopship since its high speed would have made it an extremely difficult target for German wolfpack submarines then decimating Atlantic shipping.
The fire gutted the
Normandie
. Flames burned fiercely all over the ship, and it was clearly arson. Officially, the government inferred it was not sure what had happened. It might have been Nazi sabotage or it might simply have been due to worker carelessness. At U.S. Navy headquarters in Washington, "carelessness" was not taken seriously; that possibility had been raised simply to prevent civilian panic. But what had happened to the
Normandie
?
The truth was not revealed for almost three decades until the posthumous memoirs of Lucky Luciano explained that the ship had been sabotaged by the Mafia. That explanation was later confirmed by the usually tight-lipped Meyer Lansky who, still later, revealed the same basic facts to his Israeli biographers.
It was the Mafia that struck the match to the
Normandie
. The purpose was to light a tire under the military authorities so that they could be panicked into enlisting the imprisoned Lucky Luciano into efforts to stop sabotage on the docks. Even before the
Normandie
fire, naval intelligence was convinced that German-or Italian-speaking dock workers were signaling information to off-shore enemy subs. It was clear to these intelligence operatives that they did not have the power to prevent this and neither did the New York police. The only force capable of doing so was the underworld.
The first man to see the opening this gave the Mafia was Albert Anastasia, a longtime Luciano loyalist. Albert conferred with his brother, Tough Tony Anastasio, who then took a plan to Frank Costello, acting head of Luciano's crime family. Costello journeyed to Dannemora Prison to present the idea of burning the
Normandie
to Luciano who saw it would give him tremendous leverage with the government. Officials would have to deal with him to keep the docks safe.
With a nod from Luciano, the
Normandie
burned. Later, Luciano would gloat: "That god-damn Anastasiahe really done a job. Later on, Albert told me not to feel too bad about what happened to the ship. He said that as a sergeant in the Army he hated the fuckin' Navy anyway."
The
Normandie
's fate galvanized official Washington to action. Almost instantly an emergency plan called Operation Underworld came into being, calling for utilizing the Mafia to help the war effort. The Navy approached Joseph "Socks" Lanza, the racket boss of the Fulton Fish Market, with the idea. Lanza explained
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The burning of the S.S.
Normandie
in 1942-sabotage or a Mafia act of war?
he was a small fish in the matter and passed the Navy on to Costello and Meyer Lansky. They let it be known that only Luciano could give the okay.
The mob had won their war. Officials fell all over themselves trying to please Charley Lucky. Costello said he was unhappy being in Dannemora, the ''Siberia" of the New York penal system, and maybe he should be transferred to Sing Sing. Officials went one better and moved him to Great Meadow Prison, the most pleasant institution in the system.
Luciano passed the word that the mob had to do all possible on the docks to aid the war effort. Lansky personally lectured Anastasia, telling him that he and his brother mustn't burn any more ships. "He was sorry," Lansky recalled, "not sorry he'd had the
Normandie
burned but sorry he couldn't get at the Navy again."
From Great Meadow Luciano issued many orders, ostensibly concerning the war effort, but in conversations with Costello and Lansky he spent most of his time exerting active control once more over the national crime syndicate. And after the war of course Governor Thomas E. Dewey, who had put Luciano in prison for 30 to 50 years on a charge of compulsory prostitution, agreed to his release because of his patriotic services to the government.
See also:
Anastasio, Anthony "Tough Tony"; Luciano, Charles "Lucky
."
Numbers Racket
The numbers racket in various forms has been known to the world since at least 1530 when the Italian national lottery started (well before the political unification of Italy, indicating perhaps that gambling may have been more of a driving force than nationalism). Through the centuriesand certainly in our time under Mafia rule in the United Statesthe numbers game has been without doubt the biggest and most profitable gambling racket of all. According to recent estimates, at least 20 million people a day engage in this illegal pastime, and the total annual take is in the billions, with organized crime reaping a quarter billion in profits in New York City alone. Even state lotteries have not crippled the

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