When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pittsburgh crime family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pittsburgh_crime_family

    The Pittsburgh crime family, [4] also known as the LaRocca crime family [5] or the Pittsburgh Mafia, was an Italian-American Mafia crime family based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. [ 1 ] [ 6 ] The LaRocca family is one of the original twenty-six Mafia families in the United States. [ 7 ]

  3. Cleveland crime family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleveland_crime_family

    By 1932, Milano had become one of the top Mafia bosses in the country and a charter member of The Commission, the Mafia's governing body. [ 30 ] On February 25, 1932, Milano finished off the Porrello brothers by having Raymond and Rosario Porrello, along with their bodyguard Dominic Gueli, murdered in a smoke shop on East 110th Street and ...

  4. Kill the Irishman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kill_the_Irishman

    Producer Tommy Reid heard that Rick Porrello, an Ohio policeman, was about to publish a book about Greene called To Kill the Irishman. Reid flew to Ohio and met with Porrello, who told Reid his grandfather was a high-ranking Mafia figure in Cleveland during the Prohibition era. On March 17, 1998, they signed a deal for the film rights to the ...

  5. Danny Greene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danny_Greene

    Rick Porrello, a former Cleveland-area police lieutenant, wrote To Kill The Irishman: The War that Crippled the Mafia (1998), about Greene's engagement with the Mafia. He won a national non-fiction award for the book. [32] Porrello's book was adapted as a movie first entitled The Irishman: The Legend of Danny Greene. [33]

  6. Genovese crime family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genovese_crime_family

    The Genovese crime family (pronounced [dʒenoˈveːze,-eːse]), also sometimes referred to as the Westside, is an Italian-American Mafia crime family and one of the "Five Families" that dominate organized crime activities in New York City and New Jersey as part of the American Mafia.

  7. Salvatore Todaro (mobster) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvatore_Todaro_(mobster)

    The Porrello brothers were the only significant corn sugar suppliers other than Lonardo, who eliminated nearly all other competitors. Lonardo tolerated the Porrello operation only because they were lifelong friends. [31] Todaro and the Porrello brothers provided the critical support that enabled Lonardo to become boss of the Cleveland mafia. [32]

  8. Alfred Polizzi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Polizzi

    Cleveland mafia historian Rick Porrello has written that The Commission made it clear to Polizzi that Syndicate leader Moe Dalitz was the real authority in Cleveland. [ 74 ] [ i ] Dalitz and Polizzi also stayed in routine touch with Frank Milano in Mexico, occasionally traveling to see and consult with him.

  9. Angelo Lonardo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelo_Lonardo

    After his father was murdered by a member of the Porrello crime family on October 13, 1927, 16-year-old Lonardo swore revenge. On June 11, 1929, the 18-year-old Lonardo and his cousin, Dominic Sospirato, shot and killed Salvatore "Black Sam" Todaro at a cigar store owned by the Porrellos at the corner of East 110th Street and Woodland Avenue. [ 2 ]