Gennaro Angiulo
Gennaro Angiulo | |
---|---|
![]() Angiulo's May 31, 1947 mugshot | |
Born | Gennaro Joseph Angiulo March 20, 1919 Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | August 29, 2009 Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. | (aged 90)
Other names | "Jerry" |
Occupation | Crime boss |
Years active | 1963–1986 |
Criminal status | Paroled/released in 2007 |
Spouse | Barbara Lombard |
Children | 3 |
Parent(s) | Cesare Angiulo Giovannina Femiani |
Allegiance | Patriarca crime family |
Criminal charge | Racketeering, gambling, loan sharking, and obstruction of justice |
Penalty | Sentenced to 45 years in prison |
Military career | |
Allegiance | ![]() |
Service | ![]() |
Years of service | 1941–1945 |
Gennaro Joseph "Jerry" Angiulo Sr. (Italian pronunciation: [dʒenˈnaːro ˈandʒulo]; March 20, 1919 – August 29, 2009)[1][2] was an American mobster who rose to the position of underboss in the Patriarca crime family of New England under Raymond L. S. Patriarca. He and his brothers oversaw the Boston, Massachusetts faction of the Patriarca family. Angiulo was convicted of racketeering in 1986 and was imprisoned until being released in 2007.[3] According to Massachusetts State Police colonel Thomas J. Foley, Angiulo was "probably the last very significant Mafia boss in Boston’s history".[4]
Early life
[edit]Gennaro J. Angiulo was born in 1919 to Italian immigrants Cesare and Giovannina "Jeannie" (née Fimiani) Angiulo, who owned the "Dog House", a mom-and-pop convenience store and luncheonette on Prince Street in the North End of Boston.[5] He grew up with his siblings Nicolo, Donato, Francesco, Antonio, Michele and James.[4] Even though he was from the North End neighborhood, he graduated from Boston English High School in 1936, where his ambition was to attend Suffolk Law School and become a criminal lawyer.[6] Instead, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy at the beginning of World War II and served four years in the Pacific theater, achieving the rank of Chief Boatswain's Mate.[7] Upon completion of his service, he returned to the North End of Boston.
Criminal career
[edit]Gennaro's brothers, who by now were all involved in Boston's criminal underworld, recruited him into their circle. Efforts by local authorities to arrest and prosecute operators of the "Italian lottery" created an opening for them; the Angiulo brothers found local businesses willing to serve as fronts for their bookies and gave them "discounts" on the bets in return, then reinvested their profits into legitimate enterprises such as nightclubs to launder them. The dominant Patriarca crime family co-opted the brothers, inducting them as members of the family and taking a cut of their action.
After the Kefauver hearings began in 1950, Joseph Lombardi, a senior member of the Mafia in Boston, ordered all bookmaking operations in the city to cease or to operate without a central layoff bank and without police protection, fearing the publicity from the hearings may expose his rackets. As a result, bookmakers lost the protection of the Mafia but gained freedom to operate independently.[8] Angiulo obtained Lombardi's permission to enter the bookmaking rackets in 1951.[9] The Mafia's overreaction to the Kefauver hearings, which ultimately had little effect on organized crime in Boston, allowed Angiulo to take control of the city's newly independent gambling operations.[8]
By the late 1950s, Angiulo was being extorted by the mafioso Ilario "Larry Baione" Zannino.[10] To end the shakedown, Angiulo paid $50,000 to Raymond "the Man" Patriarca, the boss of the Patriarca crime family in Providence, Rhode Island, in exchange for being inducted as a "made" member of the family, agreeing to pay an additional $100,000 per year. The payment allowed Angiulo to become a full-fledged member of the Mafia without having to commit a murder, which is typically required for prospective mafiosi. The relationship between Angiulo and Patriarca was strictly financial. Although Angiulo was not popular or well-respected in Providence, he retained the protection of Patriarca due to his high-earning status.[8]
Underboss
[edit]The Angiulo brothers were first publicly named as members of the Mafia during the Valachi hearings in 1963.[11] Gennaro's reputation for being a shrewd businessman, along with his successful racketeering, led to Patriarca appointing him underboss of the Patriarca family.[4] From this perch, Angiulo headed up Boston's underworld from the 1960s to the 1980s.[3] As family underboss, he oversaw all Mafia rackets between Boston and Worcester.[4] Angiulo's closest caporegime was Zannino, who Angiulo relied on to provide "muscle" to the Boston faction of the family.[12]: 11
Gennaro and his brothers ran the criminal organization out of their headquarters, the "Dog House", located at 98 Prince Street in the North End,[3] which was the location of the Angiulo family home and former premises of the luncheonette operated by their parents in the 1940s.[13][14] Gennaro and his brothers were popular figures in the Italian enclave.[15]
A period of gang warfare erupted in Boston beginning in September 1961 and involving the rival Irish mob groups, the McLaughlin Gang of Charlestown and Somerville's Winter Hill Gang.[16] The feud resulted in over 50 murders.[17] Many gangsters went into hiding to avoid the bloodshed, resulting in their illicit operations being neglected and Patriarca receiving less money from the Boston rackets. Patriarca threatened to "declare martial law" and ordered the leaders of both gangs to hold peace talks in January 1965, but the negotiations failed.[16] Angiulo and Patriarca sought advice from the New York crime boss Vito Genovese, who advised them to cede some territory to appease the Irish gangs.[17] Determined to end the war, Patriarca decided to back the Winter Hill Gang to eliminate the McLaughlin Gang.[16] Angiulo claimed to have killed twenty Irish mobsters to quell the gang war, saying he and his brothers "buried 20 fucking Irishmen to take this fucking town over".[17]
On August 8, 1967, Angiulo was indicted by the Suffolk County Grand Jury on charges of conspiracy to murder Rocco DiSiglio, a Mafia associate and former boxer who was shot five times and left in a sports car in Topsfield in June 1966. Angiulo allegedly incited three others—Richard DeVincent, Marino LePore, and Bernard "Bernie" Zinna, who were each charged with first-degree murder—to kill DiSiglio. The indictments were the result of the Grand Jury testimony of former hit man Joseph "the Animal" Barboza.[18] Angiulo utilized two underlings, Stephen "the Rifleman" Flemmi and Francis "Cadillac Frank" Salemme, to ensure he was acquitted by jury tampering.[19] In 1968, Anguilo and his co-defendants were found not guilty.[20]
Angiulo recruited the Winter Hill Gang for assistance in a war against the Somerville-based Notarangeli crew, headed by Alfred "Indian Al" Notarangeli.[21][22] Notarangeli's gang had begun extorting bookmakers who were under the protection of the Patriarca family,[23] and while on furlough from prison in 1972, Notarangeli murdered one of Angiulo's bookies, Paulie Folino.[22][24] Folino disappeared in September 1972 and his remains were discovered in a shallow grave in Boxford a month later.[25]
In March and April 1973, the Winter Hill Gang carried out a series of hits, resulting in the deaths of mobsters Michael Milano, Al Plummer, William O'Brien, James Leary, and Joseph "Indian Joe" Notarangeli.[26] After several failed attempts on his life,[27] Al Notarangeli was shot in the head and left in the trunk of his car by the Winter Hill Gang on February 22, 1974 at the request of the Patriarca family.[28][29]
Angiulo became a multimillionaire.[30] He lived in a beachfront mansion in the suburb of Nahant and drove a Jeep with "Italian Stallion" inscribed on the license plate.[31]
Capture
[edit]Arrest
[edit]In 1981, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) placed wiretaps in the headquarters and at a nearby social club, located at 51 North Margin Street, for three months.[4] It was later revealed in a federal court that rival gangsters Whitey Bulger[32] and Stephen Flemmi (the latter of whom was a longtime friend of the Angiulo brothers) drew a diagram for FBI agents telling them where to plant the bugs.[4] During one taped conversation between Angiulo and Zannino, Angiulo said: "I wouldn't be in legitimate business for all the fucking money in the world. We're shylock. We're a fucking bookmaker. We're selling marijuana. We're illegal here, illegal there. Arsonists! We're every fucking thing".[13]
On September 19, 1983, following a three-year federal investigation, Angiulo was arrested alongside his brothers Francesco and Michele at Francesco's Restaurant in the North End. Donato Angiulo was arrested nearby.[33] As Angiulo was being taken in handcuffs from the restaurant, he yelled, "I'll be back before my pork chops get cold."[4] The four, along with a fifth Angiulo brother, Vittore, as well as Ilario Zannino and Samuel Granito were indicted on racketeering charges involving murder, loan sharking, obstruction of justice, obstruction of law enforcement, interstate travel involving racketeering and illegal gambling.[33] The indictment listed six murders, including that of Joseph Barboza.[34] Angiulo and his associates allegedly made $250,000 per week from the rackets.[35]
After the death of Patriarca in July 1984, Angiulo sought the leadership of the family. His closest lieutenant, Zannino, instead lent his support to Patriarca's son, Raymond Patriarca Jr., however, who promoted Zannino to consigliere after he was appointed the successor to his father.[11] Following Angiulo's arrest, and amid newspaper reports that revealed his carelessness in allowing the FBI to infiltrate the Boston mob, the Patriarca family formally demoted him to the rank of soldier as a symbolic rebuke.[4] Francesco "Paul" Intiso succeeded Angiulo as underboss.[36]
Trial
[edit]At the highly publicized trial, which lasted eight months, jurors heard hours of taped conversations of Angiulo and his associates discussing and planning numerous illegal activities, including murder, gambling, loan sharking and extortion. In one conversation, Angiulo ordered the murder of a bartender employed in one of his clubs after learning that he had agreed to testify to having overheard incriminating details of Angiulo crimes. The FBI thwarted the plot by warning the witness.[4]
While sitting in court, the mobster often sarcastically commented on the evidence presented and cracked jokes, prompting District Court Judge David Nelson to repeatedly reprimand him for contemptible behavior.[3]
Sentence and later life
[edit]On February 27, 1986, Angiulo and his co-defendants were convicted of "an avalanche of charges".[37] On April 3, 1986, he was sentenced to 45 years in prison on 12 counts of racketeering, gambling, loan sharking, and obstruction of justice.[38] As his own lawyer, Angiulo argued numerous times, unsuccessfully, to have his conviction overturned. One argument claimed that he was framed by the FBI, Bulger, and Flemmi.[4]
In an affidavit filed in federal court in 2004, he wrote that he was in poor health and his term was "tantamount to an illegal death sentence". Angiulo, who had been incarcerated at the federal prison hospital in Devens, was paroled on September 10, 2007. He had been undergoing dialysis treatment since his release while living at his waterfront home in Nahant. Prior to his death, he was spending time with his wife, Barbara,[39] with whom he had three children.
Angiulo died on August 29, 2009, at the Massachusetts General Hospital of kidney failure from kidney disease.[4]
In popular culture
[edit]In the Whitey Bulger biopic Black Mass (2015), Angiulo is portrayed by Bill Haims.
References
[edit]- ^ Reppetto, Bringing Down the Mob, p. 247
- ^ "Former mob underboss Gennaro Angiulo dies". The Associated Press. August 30, 2009. Archived from the original on September 1, 2009. Retrieved September 2, 2009.
- ^ a b c d Brown, Steve (August 30, 2009). "One-Time Boston Mafia Boss Gennaro Angiulo Dead At 90". wbur.org. Retrieved September 1, 2009. Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Murphy, Shelly (August 31, 2009). "Gennaro 'Jerry' Angiulo, 90, New England mob underboss". The Boston Globe. The New York Times Company. Retrieved September 1, 2009. Archived November 17, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Angiulo brothers, Whitey Bulger’s family, other mobsters appear in newly released 1950 census records Emily Sweeney, The Boston Globe (April 5, 2022) Archived April 5, 2022, at archive.today
- ^ Lehr and O'Neill, Black mass, p. 113
- ^ Gennaro Angiulo’s military burial raises eyebrows, ire O'Ryan Johnson, Boston Herald (September 3, 2009) Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ a b c The Providence Mob: Succession of Power Allan May, Crime Library Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ The Providence Mob: New England Crime Family Allan May, Crime Library Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Whitey World A-Z: Ilario Zannino (1920-1995) Howie Carr, Boston Herald (September 6, 2009) Archived April 19, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ a b U.S. Prosecutors Hope To Expose A 'Mafia' At Coming Boston Trial Fox Butterfield, The New York Times (February 18, 1985) Archived March 8, 2024, at archive.today
- ^ Lehr, Dick; O'Neill, Gerard (2000). "Chapter One: 1975" (PDF). Black Mass: The Irish Mob, the FBI, and a Devil's Deal. New York: PublicAffairs. pp. 3–34. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 12, 2025 – via Waterstones.
- ^ a b "A Deal with the Devil". Bloody Boston. Season 1. Episode 2. April 5, 2022. Reelz.
- ^ Carr: Last link to epic Boston mob family gone Howie Carr, Boston Herald (June 2, 2015) Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ 'The Two Dons Are Dead' David Boeri, WBUR-FM (September 3, 2009) Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ a b c The Boston Irish Gang Wars Terrify a City New England Historical Society Archived April 13, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ a b c Angiulo talks about gang warfare on FBI tapes United Press International (September 4, 1985) Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Angiulo Indictment Gives Boston A Break in Gang-Busting Attempt The Harvard Crimson (August 11, 1967) Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Former mob boss tells of access to FBI Shelley Murphy, The Boston Globe (February 13, 2004) Archived February 16, 2004, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Mobster of the Week: Bernard Zinna Howie Carr, Boston Herald (August 12, 2007) Archived April 19, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Trail of corpses and grief Boston Herald (June 2, 2013) Archived February 20, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ a b Testimony: Rival Gang Leader Killed After Altercation With Patriarca Crime Family WCVB-TV (August 9, 2011) Archived March 7, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ James ‘Whitey’ Bulger linked to 11 murders CNN (August 12, 2013) Archived February 17, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Joe Notarangeli, 1937-1973 Howie Carr, Boston Herald (May 22, 2011) Archived March 7, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Surviving Killeen ready to quit gambling The Boston Globe (October 5, 1972)
- ^ Winter Hill Gang Leader Pleads Guilty Drug Enforcement Administration (October 14, 2003) Archived July 15, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ A Look At The 19 Murder Victims In Bulger Trial CBS News (August 12, 2013) Archived February 17, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Caught In Santa Monica, Mobster Appears Addled Tampa Bay Times (June 24, 2011) Archived February 17, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Ex-hit man John Martorano ties Whitey Bulger to murder as federal trial continues in Boston Boston.com (June 17, 2013) Archived February 17, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Mobster keeps truckin’ at 88: Bigmouth set to get out of big house Howie Carr, Boston Herald (July 8, 2007) Archived April 25, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Boston indictments give glimpse into mob Ed Lion, United Press International (September 25, 1983) Archived February 20, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ "Bulger's FBI Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitive Alert". Federal Bureau of Investigation. Archived from the original on September 1, 2009. Retrieved September 2, 2009.
- ^ a b U.S. Investigation of Boston Mob Yields Indictments Against 7 Men The New York Times (September 21, 1983) Archived February 19, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Reputed head of Boston underworld and five deputies arraigned William Poole, United Press International (September 20, 1983) Archived February 20, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Authorities hope arrest of Boston 'godfather' will crack mob Ed Lion, United Press International (September 26, 1983) Archived February 20, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Mob War in Beantown Allan May, American Mafia (September 4, 2000) Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ 4 Convicted By U.S. Jury In Boston Rackets Trial Matthew L. Wald, The New York Times (February 27, 1986) Archived February 20, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ Reputed Mafia boss Angiulo sentenced Karin Davies, United Press International (April 3, 1986) Archived February 20, 2025, at archive.today
- ^ "Boston mafia leader, 88, to be freed from prison". The Worcester Telegram & Gazette. Retrieved March 22, 2024. Archived April 18, 2025, at archive.today
Sources
[edit]- Dick Lehr, Gerard O'Neill (2000). Black mass: the Irish mob, the FBI, and a devil's deal. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-891620-40-9. Retrieved September 2, 2009.
Gennaro Angiulo racketeering.
- Reppetto, Thomas (2007). Bringing Down the Mob: The War Against the American Mafia (reprint ed.). Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-8050-8659-1. Retrieved September 2, 2009.
- 1919 births
- 2009 deaths
- 20th-century American criminals
- American gangsters of Italian descent
- American male criminals
- American prisoners and detainees
- Deaths from kidney failure in the United States
- Gangsters from Boston
- Military personnel from Boston
- Patriarca crime family
- People convicted of racketeering
- People from North End, Boston
- Prisoners and detainees of the United States federal government
- United States Navy chiefs
- United States Navy personnel of World War II