Talking to the Feds
The chief of the FBI's organized crime unit on the history of La Cosa Nostra
- By Eric Jaffe
- Smithsonian.com, April 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Do you watch "The Sopranos"?
No. I've never watched it. I've lived and breathed this stuff for 20 years, and I don't feel the need to watch it.
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Comments (2)
The Italian-American Mafia emerged in New York's Lower East Side and other areas of the East Coast of the United States during the late 19th century following waves of Italian immigration, especially from Sicily.
The term cosa nostra or ‘our thing’ is preferred by Sicilian mafia members. Like all mafia groups in Italy, the Sicilian Mafia operates a code of honour and has a strict hierarchical structure. Recruits to the Mafia are sworn in to the family through secret ceremonies, after which point they become mafia members and are expected to stay so for life.
Although the Italian-American Cosa Nostra is currently active in the New York metropolitan area, Philadelphia, New England, Detroit and Chicago, for most of the 20th century there were 26 cities around the United States with Cosa Nostra families, with many more offshoots, splinter groups and associates in other cities.
There are several groups currently active in the U.S.: the Sicilian Mafia; the Camorra or Neapolitan Mafia; the ’Ndrangheta or Calabrian Mafia; and the Sacra Corona Unita or United Sacred Crown.
Charles “Lucky” Luciano, a Mafioso from Sicily, came to the U.S. during this era and is credited for making the American La Cosa Nostra what it is today. Luciano structured the La Cosa Nostra after the Sicilian Mafia. When Luciano was deported back to Italy in 1946 for operating a prostitution ring, he became a liaison between the Sicilian Mafia and La Cosa Nostra.
He lives and breaths it haha we do Roy right! I think they left out the some important points. The Turks took over because they were more gutty and got the money.
Al Capone was not even in the Mafia he paid the mob to and other gangs to run his gang.
Posted by Brian B on February 10,2011 | 09:01 PM
The chief of the FBI's Organized Crime Unit needs a history lesson. Eric Jaffe writes ..."When Torrio got killed, that created Al Capone's moment of opportunity" - WRONG ! Johnny Torrio died in 1957 of a heart attack. Nobody killed him. Al Capone died in 1947 - 10 years earlier.
Posted by Roy Kline on November 27,2010 | 02:10 AM