from:
http://ganglandnews.com/gambino.htm




 By Andy

 BECOMING boss of the Gambino Crime Family is a mixed
 blessing. If, like Carlo Gambino, you last long enough, there are
 untold riches to be had. On the other hand, as Paul Castellano and
 John Gotti discovered, there is an excellent chance you will end up
 murdered or in jail. With the fates of Castellano and Gotti so fresh
 in the minds of Gambino family mobsters, it will not be surprising
 if less and less of them push for the leadership of the family in the
 future. With that thought in mind, here is a brief look at the first
 hundred years of the Gambino Crime Family.

 Our first real knowledge of this group does not begin until the late
 1920's when Al Mineo was the boss. At this time Joe Masseria
 was the dominant figure in La Cosa Nostra and Mineo was closely
 allied to him. This partnership would end unhappily for Mineo
 during the early stages of the Castellammarese War of 1930.

 The Castellammarese War was the biggest of a seemingly never
 ending series of conflicts between families in the New York area.
 This particular upheaval has become famous because it involved all
 five families in New York and others, especially Chicago and Detroit.
Eventually, it lead to the formation of the Commission
 which dominated La Cosa Nostra on the east coast for the next sixty years.

 The main combatants in the war were Masseria (Genovese Family) and Sal
Maranzano (Bonanno Family). In order to
 undercut Masseria, Maranzano decided that Mineo had to go. He had become
Masseria's chief strategist after the death of
 Masseria's underboss a short time before. Mineo was gunned down in an ambush
in November of 1930. Also killed was his
 underboss Steve Ferrigno.

 Chief beneficiary of this hit was an early defector to the Maranzano forces
- capo Frank Scalise. He was elected boss by the
 family which was more an indication of a desire to not anger Maranzano than
faith in Scalise's leadership. It was to be a very
 short time at the top for Scalise, however. When Maranzano was killed just
months after his victory, suddenly, Scalise
 became a liability to his family. He was seen to be too close to Maranzano
and the family did not want to incur the wrath of
 Lucky Luciano, (right) who had engineered Maranzano's death. Scalise stepped
down and Vince Mangano was elected in his
 place. He too had been a defector to Maranzano but was seen to be a more
neutral choice than Scalise.

 Mangano, as boss his New York Crime Family, became one of the seven original
members of
 the Commission. According to Joe Bonanno, Mangano served as chair of the
group, most likely
 in recognition of the status of his powerful family, which was the largest
of all. Mangano's
 selection of Albert Anastasia as his underboss was probably not only an
acknowledgement of
 Anastasia's power but more importantly his friendship with Lucky Luciano. In
hindsight it was a
 choice that Mangano probably wished he didn't have to make.

                      An indication of the differences in personality of the
two men can be
                      seen in the mid thirties when the mob was discussing
the looming
                      threat possed by Thomas Dewey, the famous rackets
buster.
                      Anastasia's solution to the problem was to kill Dewey!
This would
                      have been a shocking change to the modus operandi of La
Cosa
                      Nostra. Mangano, as boss, quickly vetoed the idea which
no doubt
                      embarrassed the volatile Anastasia. (left)

                      By 1951 the animosity between the two came to a head.
Anastasia emerged the winner with the
                      disappearance of Mangano and the discovery of the body
of his brother Philip. Anastasia's
                      alliance with Frank Costello, who headed the Genovese
Family, was the key factor in his victory.

 Anastasia took over the top position with a justified reputation of
ferocious killer. However, we now know that this reputation
 was greatly exaggerated due to the myth of Murder Incorporated. Serious
historical research has established that there was
 no such thing as Murder Incorporated with hired killers sitting around
waiting for killing assignments. Unfortunately, the
 legend lives on, distorting a real understanding of Cosa Nostra history.

                        Six years after his successful coup, Anastasia's
connection to Costello
                        came back to haunt him. Vito Genovese had been
conspiring with
                        Anastasia underboss, Carlo Gambino and Tommy
Lucchese. The first
                        objectives were to overthrow Costello and replace
Anastasia with
                        Gambino. Within a few months both goals were
achieved. After being
                        shot and wounded by up-and-coming gangster Vince
Gigante (left)
                        on May 2, 1957, Costello (right) stepped down and
left Anastasia
                        without his trusted ally. In June, Anastasia
underboss, Frank Scalise,
                        the same person who briefly had been boss of this
family in 1931,
                        was gunned down in a scene that was recreated in The
Godfather. On
                        October 25, 1957, Anastasia was murdered in a hotel
barbershop thus
                        completing the initial part of the
Genovese\Gambino\Lucchese plot.

                        In order to solidify what they had accomplished, the
three leaders successfully lobbied other
                        influential bosses to hold a National Meeting of La
Cosa Nostra. Speculation has it that they
 wanted to get formal recognition of Gambino and Genovese from the other
family leaders. This would "legitimize" what had
 been accomplished in fact. This meeting was the infamous Apalachin fiasco of
November 14, 1957. Beginning in 1931,
 National Meetings of the bosses of La Cosa Nostra, were held every five
years with the main agenda being to confirm
 members of the Commission for the next five year term. In 1956, a regularly
scheduled gathering had been held at the estate
 of Joe Barbara, boss of the northeastern Pennsylvania crime family (now
called the



 Bufalino Family). Shortly after that assembly had ended, Bonanno underboss
Carmine Galante was arrested for
 misrepresenting his identity after being stopped for speeding. Galante
brought enormous political pressure to bear in order
 to obtain his release on a relatively minor charge. A Detective Sergeant
Crosswell became curious as to why Galante was in
 the vicinity and began checking various hotels to see where Galante had
stayed. It was then that Crosswell discovered that a
 large number of men with criminal records had recently been in the area. The
next year Crosswell was on the alert when
 known criminals began to gather at Barbara's place. Panicked at the sight of
State Troopers copying down licence plates,
 most of those in attendance fled. Fifty eight were arrested including
Gambino and Genovese. Whether or not the two had
 been formally recognized became academic after the fiasco. Both continued to
act as bosses and were not seriously
 challenged.

                       After three years of lying low to avoid more
publicity, the plotters
                       began their ultimate successful undermining of both
Joe Bonanno
                       (right) and Joe Profaci. (left) These two veteran
leaders were not blind
                       to the machinations against them but were seriously
hampered by the
                       long illness and then death of Profaci. Joe Magliocco,
the new Profaci
                       (Colombo) boss was unable to unite the family under
his leadership. In
                       desperation the two plotted the deaths of Lucchese and
Gambino but
                       were discovered. Ultimately Magliocco died and Bonanno
lost his
                       position of power and was no longer a factor in Cosa
Nostra. Lucchese
                       succumbed to cancer in 1967 leaving Gambino on top.

                                           For the next eight years Gambino
was as near to being "Boss of
                                           Bosses" as was possible. Not only
did he control his own family but
                                           leaders beholding to him sat on
the thrones of the other 4 New York
                                           Cosa Nostra organizations. There
were blips such as when Joe
                                           Colombo (left) began asserting his
independence with his
                                           Italian-American Civil Rights
League. Fortunately for Gambino, a lone
                                           gunman assassinated Colombo,
preventing a serious disagreement
                                           from turning into a mob war. Since
the killer was executed at the
                                           scene, his motives and
associations were never determined.

                                           By 1976 Gambino was seriously
fading and
                                           made it known that he preferred
that Paul
 Castellano be his replacement. It was an astute move in that no one would
dare openly oppose his
 wishes while he was still alive. His underboss and potential replacement,
Aniello Dellacroce,
 acquiesced. On October 15, 1976 Gambino (right) became the only formal
leader of the family to
 die of natural causes while a free man.

                   Gambino's brother-in-law, Paul Castellano (left) ruled the
family for the
                   next nine years. Economically, for the hierarchy of the
organization it was
                   boom times with both the blue and white collar rackets
flourishing.
                   Castellano's power grew. He appeared invulnerable, but it
was an illusion. A
                   number of factors would ultimately lead to Castellano
lying in his own
                   blood outside Sparks Steak House in December of 1985 .
Years earlier, he had withdrawn from the
                   streets and conducted his family business from his huge
house on Staten Island. This only
                   heightened the sense of detachment usually felt by troops
toward their leader. The crews which
                   reported to underboss Aniello Dellacroce, began to feel
they were a separate entity which in fact they
                   nearly were. The government's attack on LCN, tied up not
only Castellano, but the bosses of the other
                   families. This created a power vacuum which was exploited
by a ruthless capo named John Gotti.

                    As has been well documented, Gotti (left) began to feel
that he and his close
                    associates were in some jeopardy due to the revelations
on government tapes
                    which exposed their drug dealing. With mentor and
protector Dellacroce not
                    expected to live long, Gotti was soon to be at the mercy
of Castellano who did
                    not like him. Faced with the possibility of his own
demise, Gotti initiated a
                    daring plan to overthrow his boss. With the death of
Dellacroce, (right) the
                    planning accelerated. No one, outside that life, would
have given him a remote
                    chance of succeeding had they known of his plot.

                    Gotti brought other family powers into his scheme and in
addition obtained
                    unofficial approval from three of the other four
families. The reasons the others
                    joined Gotti are varied but it is safe to say they were
all looking ahead and were
 gambling that Castellano was probably finished due to the legal cases
against him. If they didn't join up
 with Gotti now, they would be left by the wayside if he succeeded. No doubt,
Gotti's charisma and fearlessness played a
 large role as well. In any case, the net result was Castellano was dead and
Gotti was shortly thereafter elected boss.

                                        Gotti instantly became a media
darling, and he loved it. With his manner
                                        and clothing, he played the part
perfectly and was quickly dubbed the
                                        Dapper Don by the New York media. His
successes in three prosecutions
                                        only heightened the mystique and led
to him being called the Teflon Don.
                                        Behind the scenes, he was ruthlessly
cementing his position by
                                        establishing a fearsome reputation.
Anyone showing even the slightest
                                        disapproval was in great danger.
Surrounded by sycophants such as
                                        Sammy Gravano and Frank Locascio,
Gotti had no wise consigliere to
                                        reign in his giant ego and urge a
disciplined use of violence rather than it's
 wholesale implementation. In addition, he was constantly battling the
justice system and was under fire from the Genovese
 crew lead by Vincent Gigante. It is little wonder Gotti was not thinking
straight and let himself be taped discussing various
 murders and rackets. When the feds finally convicted him in 1992, and he
began a life sentence, an incredible era came to a
 close.

                                 Gotti's son, John A. (Junior) Gotti, (left)
his
                                 brother Peter, (right) and capos Nick Corozzo
                                 and Jackie D'Amico, ran the family while
                                 Gotti appealed his conviction. By late 1996,
                                 with most of his appeals lost, the Commission
                                 pressured Gotti to officially step down and
be
                                 permanently replaced by someone other than
                                 Junior or Peter Gotti when his final appeal
                                 was resolved. FBI reports indicate that
                                 Corozzo was picked as the new point man.
                                 But before his official election, he was
caught
                                 up in an FBI sting, hit with racketeering
                                 charges, and jailed to await trial. Junior
Gotti,
                                 who  showed little evidence of possessing the
                                 cunning and intelligence that served Carlo
                                 Gambino so well, continued to serve as acting
                                 boss until shortly after he was indicted on
                                 racketeering charges in 1998. He began a
                                 federal prison sentence for racketeering in
                                 October, 1999. As the new Millennium began,
 the family was headed by the onetime Dapper Don's older brother Peter, a
former
 sanitation worker.





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