Colombo crime family

Colombo crime family, New York-based organized crime syndicate. Along with the Gambino, Genovese, Lucchese, and Bonanno families, the Colombo family is one of New York City’s Five Families, prominent criminal organizations that share the territory. The Five Families comprise an important segment of the nationwide alliance of organized crime, collectively referred to as La Cosa Nostra (“Our Affair” or “Our Thing”) or the Mafia.

Lucky LucianoLucky Luciano, a mafioso in New York City who, in the Castellammarese War of 1930–31, betrayed his boss, Joe Masseria, to rival Salvatore Maranzano. Luciano killed Maranzano in turn to assume leadership of the Mafia in New York.

The Colombo crime family emerged with the other four families at the end of the Castellammarese War, a Mafia power struggle in 1930–31. It left as many as 60 mobsters, many high-ranking, dead. During this tense time Salvatore Lucania, better known by the Americanized alias Charles (“Lucky”) Luciano, formed the Commission, a criminal board of directors. It was composed of representatives from the recently sorted Five Families plus leaders from other organized crime factions in the United States, including Al Capone’s Chicago outfit. The Commission’s purpose was to mediate disputes, to serve as judges and executioners, and to bring order to organized crime. The bosses of the Five Families were given permanent seats on the board, which helped to enshrine the families in a permanent place of power.

Joseph Profaci was put in charge of the group that would become the Colombo family. Profaci had emigrated from Sicily to the United States in 1921, when he was in his early 20s. He created an olive oil empire and rose through the ranks of the mob, earning a reputation for being a personable individual and a shrewd businessman. Profaci ruled the family for nearly 30 years, during which time they were active in loan-sharking, racketeering, and gambling. Profaci aligned himself closely with the boss of the Bonanno family, Joseph Bonanno.

In 1960 an internal war broke out in the Profaci family. Joseph (“Crazy Joe”) Gallo and his brothers, members of the family, felt that they weren’t getting a fair share of the profits or rewards. They opposed Profaci’s leadership, and men loyal to each side traded hits for a few years, leaving nearly a dozen dead. Profaci died of cancer in 1962, and Joseph Magliocco, Profaci’s brother-in-law, took over with a tenuous grasp on power.

Magliocco inherited and honoured Profaci’s commitment to aid Bonanno, despite some misgivings. About this time Bonanno was attempting to position himself as boss of bosses by assassinating the leaders of two of the other Five Families, Carlo Gambino and Thomas Lucchese. Magliocco assigned Joseph Colombo, one of his top assassins, to carry out the murders. Colombo, however, double-crossed Magliocco and Bonanno by exposing the plot instead. The Commission’s justice was meted out swiftly: Bonanno went into hiding, Magliocco was forced to retire, and Colombo was given control of the family that would come to bear his name. At his peak, Colombo reportedly commanded up to 200 men. Some of their criminal activities included loan-sharking, extortion of local trade unions and restaurants, and narcotics dealings.

In April of 1970 Colombo accused the FBI of racial profiling Italian Americans and picketed the New York FBI headquarters. He also founded the Italian American Civil Rights League to deflect government investigations of his activities, and membership quickly swelled to 125,000 members. In response to the public spectacle and potential political fallout, the FBI ceased to use the words Mafia and Cosa Nostra, terms that were deemed potentially offensive. In 1971 Colombo even went so far as to have the script for The Godfather (1972) remove these words before shooting of the film was to begin.

Colombo was shot and paralyzed in 1974, and Carmine J. (“The Snake”) Persico, one of Profaci’s soldiers from the 1960 Gallo War, took over as boss. In 1986 Persico was convicted on extortion and federal racketeering charges. Despite serving concurrent prison sentences with no hope of release—139 years combined—Persico maintained his leadership. He intended for his role to pass to his son, but he was also serving a prison sentence at the time, so Persico appointed Victor J. Orena interim boss. In 1991, however, Orena tried to wrest control entirely. An internal war waged for about three years and left 10 dead. A truce was arranged by the Commission in the mid-1990s with Persico’s cousin Joseph Russo becoming interim boss of the now substantially weakened family.

The power of the family was further diminished with the introduction of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act in 1970 and the FBI’s pursuit of organized crime. Law enforcement convictions peaked in the 1980s and ’90s, but a 21st-century spate of arrests landed many current members in prison on charges ranging from extortion to murder. A day in 2011 saw the arrest of 119 individuals with reputed ties to organized crime (34 with alleged connections to the Colombo family) and is considered by the FBI to be the single largest action against the mob to that date. The fractured Colombo family nonetheless continued to break the law. After Persico died in jail (2019), another one of his cousins, Andrew (“Andy Mush”) Russo, reputedly took over as boss of the Colombo family. He and other leaders, however, were arrested in 2021 on extortion charges, and Russo died in 2022 while awaiting trial.

Michele Metych