Lucchese crime family

Lucchese crime familyFormer New York City police detective Stephen Caracappa (centre) exiting federal court in Brooklyn, where he was charged in 2005 with having acted as a hit man for the Lucchese crime family.

Lucchese crime family, New York-based organized crime syndicate. The Lucchese crime family is one of New York City’s Five Families, along with the Gambino, Bonanno, Genovese, and Colombo organizations. Historically, organized crime in most U.S. cities has been controlled by single criminal organizations, but in New York City several prominent organizations have shared territory; they are known as the Five Families. These families constitute an important segment of organized crime in America. The nationwide alliance is collectively referred to as La Cosa Nostra (“Our Affair” or “Our Thing”) or the Mafia.

The Five Families emerged at the end of the Castellammarese War, a Mafia power struggle in the early 1930s named for the Sicilian hometown of many of the participants. It occurred in a time of heightened tension between some older Mafia members—many of whom had immigrated to the United States and clung to the customs of Italy or, more specifically, Sicily—and the younger generation, who mostly grew up in the U.S. and were more willing to embrace American customs and business opportunities. As many as 60 mobsters died, upending the hierarchy of several powerful criminal groups.

In the aftermath, mob boss Salvatore Lucania, who is better known by the Americanized alias Charles (“Lucky”) Luciano, founded the Commission, a criminal board of directors composed of bosses from the Five Families plus the heads of other crime factions throughout the country, including Chicago’s Al Capone. The Commission’s purpose was to democratically mediate between members and serve as judges and executioners. This structure provided a backbone for organized crime in America, and it strengthened the power of the Five Families by awarding them permanent seats on the board.

The Lucchese family originally bore the name Gagliano for Thomas (“Tommy”) Gagliano, who was named the boss of one of the Five Families. Gagliano had been the underboss (second in command) of the crime family led by Gaetano (“Tommy”) Reina, a casualty of the Castellammarese War, murdered by Vito Genovese, who would go on to control another of the families. Thomas (“Tommy” or “Three-Finger Brown”) Lucchese served as Gagliano’s underboss until Gagliano’s death (probably in 1951), at which time Lucchese was promoted, and the family took his name.

The Lucchese family controlled the trucking industry (which it sometimes used to manipulate other businesses by limiting their shipping options) and the garment industry in New York, often in association with Carlo Gambino. Lucchese aided Gambino’s ascent to boss of another family, an alliance that continued between the two families well after Lucchese’s 1967 death and included the marriage of Lucchese’s daughter and Gambino’s son. Reportedly one of the most profitable of the Five Families, the Lucchese family controlled trade organizations, unions, and Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport) in Queens, where in 1978 it perpetrated the Lufthansa heist, then the largest cash theft on American soil. The stolen cash and jewelry amounted to nearly $6 million. No associates of the family were ever convicted for any role they may have played in the crime.

Other criminal pursuits were gambling and narcotics trafficking, including involvement with a major smuggling operation that was responsible for millions of dollars worth of heroin being imported into the U.S. Unlike some of the other families, whose ranks were wracked by turnovers in leadership and internal wars, the Lucchese family remained profitable, stable, and relatively peaceful until the 1980s. Anthony (“Tony Ducks”) Corallo, Lucchese’s handpicked successor, was one of the targets of a 1985 FBI investigation that led to his conviction, along with those of the bosses of the Genovese and Colombo families, on charges that included racketeering, extortion, loan-sharking, and murder. At that time the Lucchese family reportedly consisted of about 110 members, and the Mafia Commission trial, as it came to be known, resulted in the conviction of Corallo, his underboss, and the third in command of the Lucchese family, which left the family bereft of leaders and set in motion a chaotic period unlike any other in the family’s prior history.

There were several choices for replacement leaders. Eventually, Vittorio (“Little Vic”) Amuso took over as boss, and Anthony (“Gaspipe”) Casso became underboss. They ushered in a violent new era, at one point trying to put out a hit on the entire New Jersey faction of the family, referred to as the “whack Jersey” order. Amuso and Casso were reported to have ordered the murders of anyone who opposed them, even violating the mob’s code by perpetrating violence against mobsters’ wives, children, and other relatives. This escalation led them to rule in secrecy from an unknown location, with Alphonse (“Little Al”) D’Arco becoming their representative as acting boss for eight months in 1991. When they made D’Arco himself one of their targets, he became the first acting boss of a family to become a government informant. His testimony at 16 trials helped convict of a score of associates, including Amuso in 1992 and two NYPD detectives in 2005 who were accused of moonlighting as hit men for the family.

Casso was captured in 1993. By that point, Amuso, operating as boss from prison while serving a life sentence, had removed Casso as underboss, and Casso turned informant and entered witness protection. He was expelled from the program for attempted bribery and assault a number of years later. He was then convicted of numerous crimes—including racketeering, extortion, murder, and conspiracy to commit murder—and sentenced to 455 years in prison. Amuso continued to lead the family into the 21st century, making him one of the longest-serving family leaders, with several men filling in as acting boss on the outside. The family continues to engage in racketeering, gambling, and narcotics and retains operations in the Garment District and labour unions.

As with the other families and organized crime in general, depictions of the Lucchese family in popular culture are many, with varying degrees of accuracy. Popular film portrayals of the family include The Godfather (1972) and GoodFellas (1990).

Michele Metych