Genovese crime family
Template:Short description Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox criminal organization The Genovese crime family (Template:IPA), 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. The Genovese family has generally maintained a varying degree of influence over many of the smaller mob families outside New York, including ties with the Philadelphia, Cleveland, Patriarca, and Buffalo crime families.
The modern family was founded by Charles "Lucky" Luciano and was known as the Luciano crime family from 1931 to 1957, when Vito Genovese became boss. Genovese was head of the family during the McClellan hearings in 1963, which gave the Five Families their current names. Originally in control of the waterfront on the West Side of Manhattan as well as the docks and the Fulton Fish Market on the East River waterfront, the family was run between 1981 and 2005 by "The Oddfather", Vincent "The Chin" Gigante, who feigned insanity by shuffling unshaven through New York's Greenwich Village wearing a tattered bath robe and muttering to himself incoherently to avoid prosecution.
The Genovese family is the oldest and the largest of the "Five Families". Finding new ways to make money in the 21st century, the family took advantage of lax due diligence by banks during the housing bubble with a wave of mortgage frauds. Prosecutors say loan shark victims obtained home equity loans to pay off debts to their mob bankers. The family found ways to use new technology to improve on illegal gambling, with customers placing bets through offshore sites via the Internet.
Although the leadership of the Genovese family seemed to have been in limbo after the death of Gigante in 2005, sources believe that Liborio "Barney" Bellomo is the current boss of the organization.<ref name="castff">The Frank And Fritzy Show: Cast Template:Webarchive - the wiretap network - wmob.com</ref> The FBI described the Genovese family as the largest and most powerful of the Five Families in December 2001.<ref name="top of five families">Genoveses 'top of five Mafia families' BBC (December 6, 2001) [1]</ref> The family is unique in today's Mafia, and has benefited greatly from members following omertà, a code of conduct emphasizing secrecy and non-cooperation with law enforcement and the justice system. While many mobsters from across the country have testified against their crime families since the 1980s, the Genovese family has had only eleven members and associates turn state's evidence in its history.<ref name=Rats>Template:Cite news</ref> Detective Joseph J. Coffey of the New York Organized Crime Task Force described the Genovese family as "the Ivy League of the underworld" in April 1998.<ref name="Who's Who">A Who's Who, and Who's Where, of Mafia Families Selwyn Raab, The New York Times (April 27, 1998) Template:Webarchive</ref>
History
Origins

The Genovese crime family originated from the Morello gang of East Harlem, the first Mafia family in New York City.<ref>Jerry Capeci The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia, 2nd Edition pg.59</ref> In 1892, Giuseppe Morello arrived in New York from the village of Corleone, Sicily, Italy. Morello's half-brothers Nicholas, Vincenzo, Ciro, and the rest of his family joined him in New York the following year. The Morello brothers formed the 107th Street Mob and began dominating the Italian neighborhood of East Harlem, parts of Manhattan, and the Bronx.
One of Giuseppe Morello's strongest allies was Ignazio "the Wolf" Lupo, a mobster who controlled Manhattan's Little Italy. In 1903, Lupo married Morello's half-sister, uniting both organizations. The Morello-Lupo alliance continued to prosper in 1903, when the group began a major counterfeiting ring with powerful Sicilian mafioso Vito Cascioferro, printing $5 bills in Sicily and smuggling them into the US.
New York police detective Joseph Petrosino, later assassinated while in Sicily seeking evidence to permit the deportation of Morello and other mafiosi, began investigating the Morello family's counterfeiting operation, the barrel murders, and the black hand extortion letters. On November 15, 1909, Morello, Lupo, and others were arrested on counterfeiting charges. In February 1910, Morello and Lupo were sentenced to twenty-five and thirty years in prison, respectively.<ref name="Capeci guide">Capeci, Jerry. The complete idiot's guide to the Mafia "The Mafia's Commission" (pp. 31–46)</ref>
In 1910 the Lomonte Brothers, cousins of Morello, ran East Harlem until 1915. Fortunato Lomonte was shot and killed in 1914 on East 108th st. Tomasso Lomonte and cousin Rose Lomonte were both shot and killed in 1915 on East 116th st.
Mafia-Camorra War
As the Morello family increased in power and influence, bloody territorial conflicts arose with other Italian gangs in New York. The Morellos had an alliance with Giosue Gallucci, a prominent East Harlem businessman and Camorrista with local political connections. On May 17, 1915, Gallucci was murdered in a power struggle between the Morellos and the Neapolitan Camorra organization, which consisted of two Brooklyn gangs run by Pellegrino Morano and Alessandro Vollero. The fight over Gallucci's rackets became known as the Mafia-Camorra War.
After months of fighting, Morano offered a truce. A meeting was arranged at a Navy Street cafe owned by Vollero. On September 7, 1916, Nicholas Morello and his bodyguard Charles Ubriaco were ambushed and killed upon arrival by five members of the Camorra gang.<ref name="Morello, Ubriaco dead">"2 Die In Pistol Fight in Brooklyn Street", The New York Times, September 8, 1916.</ref> In 1917, Morano was charged with Morello's murder after Camorrista Ralph Daniello implicated him in the murder. By 1918, law enforcement had sent many Camorra members to prison, decimating the Camorra in New York and ending the war. Many of the remaining Camorra members joined the Morello family.
The Morellos now faced stronger rivals than the Camorra. With the passage of Prohibition in 1920 and the ban of alcohol sales, the family regrouped and built a lucrative bootlegging operation in Manhattan. In 1920, both Morello and Lupo were released from prison and Brooklyn Mafia boss Salvatore D'Aquila ordered their murders. This is when Giuseppe "Joe" Masseria and Rocco Valenti, a former Brooklyn Camorra, began to fight for control of the Morello family.<ref>David Critchley The Origin of Organized Crime in America: The New York City Mafia, 1891–1931 pg.155</ref>
On December 29, 1920, Masseria's men murdered Valenti's ally, Salvatore Mauro. Then, on May 8, 1922, the Valenti gang murdered Vincenzo Terranova. Masseria's gang retaliated killing Morello member Silva Tagliagamba. On August 11, 1922, Masseria's men murdered Valenti, ending the conflict, as Masseria took over the Morello family.<ref name="crimelibrary1">Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(Page 1)By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref>
The Castellammarese era

During the mid-1920s, Masseria continued to expand his bootlegging, extortion, loansharking, and illegal gambling rackets throughout New York. To operate and protect these rackets, he recruited many ambitious young mobsters, including future heavyweights Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Frank Costello, Joseph "Joey A" Adonis, Vito Genovese, and Albert Anastasia. Luciano soon became a top aide in Masseria's organization.
By the late 1920s, Masseria's main rival was boss Salvatore Maranzano, who had come from Sicily to run the Castellammarese clan. Their rivalry eventually escalated into the bloody Castellammarese War. As the war turned against Masseria, Luciano, seeing an opportunity to switch allegiance, decided to eliminate him in 1931. In a secret deal with Maranzano, Luciano agreed to engineer Masseria's death in return for taking over his rackets and becoming Maranzano's second-in-command.<ref name="five families book">Template:Cite book</ref>
Adonis had joined the Masseria faction, and when Masseria heard about Luciano's betrayal, he approached Adonis about killing Luciano. However, Adonis instead warned Luciano about the murder plot.<ref name=Reppetto>Template:Cite book</ref>
On April 15, 1931, Masseria was killed at Nuova Villa Tammaro, a Coney Island restaurant, while playing cards with Luciano, who allegedly excused himself to the bathroom, when four gunmen (Anastasia, Genovese, Adonis, and Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel) shot Masseria to death then escaping in a car driven by Ciro "The Artichoke King" Terranova.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It was reported that Terranova was too nervous to drive, so Siegel took the driver's seat and drove the car out of the crime scene.<ref>Sifakis, (2005). pp. 87–88</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
With Maranzano's blessing, Luciano became his lieutenant and took over Masseria's gang, ending the Castellammarese War.<ref name="five families book"/> Between August 1 and 3, 1931, Maranzano called a meeting where crime bosses met at Nuova Villa Tammaro in Coney Island for a bacchanalian banquet to celebrate the death of Masseria right on the spot where he was murdered and another one on Washington Avenue at a hall in the Bronx. Maranzano called another meeting of crime bosses in Wappingers Falls, New York, where he declared himself capo di tutti capi ("boss of all bosses").<ref name="five families book"/> Under Maranzano rule the Italian-American gangs in New York City were reorganized into Five Families headed by Luciano, Joe Profaci, Tommy Gagliano, Vincent Mangano, and himself. Maranzano also whittled down the rival families' rackets in favor of his own. Luciano appeared to accept these changes, but was merely biding his time before removing Maranzano.<ref name=MafEnc>Sifakis</ref> Although Maranzano was slightly more forward-thinking than Masseria, Luciano had come to believe that Maranzano was even more greedy, power-hungry and hidebound than Masseria had been.<ref name="five families book"/>
By September 1931, Maranzano realized Luciano was a threat, and hired Vincent "Mad Dog" Coll, an Irish gangster, to kill him.<ref name="five families book"/> However, Tommy Lucchese alerted Luciano that he was marked for death.<ref name="five families book"/> On September 10, Maranzano ordered Luciano, Genovese, and Costello to come to his office at the 230 Park Avenue in Manhattan. Convinced that Maranzano planned to murder them, Luciano decided to take pre-emptive action.<ref name=Cohen>Template:Cite book</ref> He sent to Maranzano's office four Jewish gangsters, secured with the aid of Siegel and Meyer Lansky, whose faces were unknown to Maranzano's people.<ref name="Dec. 7, 1998">"Lucky Luciano: Criminal Mastermind", Time, December 7, 1998.</ref> Disguised as government agents, two of the gangsters disarmed Maranzano's bodyguards. The other two, aided by Lucchese, stabbed Maranzano multiple times before shooting him.<ref name=Saga>"Genovese family saga". Crime Library.</ref><ref>"The Genovese Family", Crime Library, Crime Library Template:Webarchive</ref>
Luciano and the Commission

After Maranzano's murder, Luciano called a meeting in Chicago with various bosses, where he proposed a Commission to serve as the governing body for organized crime.<ref name=origins>Template:Cite news</ref> Designed to settle all disputes and decide which families controlled which territories, the Commission has been called Luciano's greatest innovation.<ref name="five families book"/> Luciano's goals with the Commission were to quietly maintain his own power over all the families, and to prevent future gang wars; the bosses approved the idea of the Commission.<ref name="Capeci guide"/>
The Commission's first test came in 1935, when they ordered Dutch Schultz to drop his plans to murder Special Prosecutor Thomas E. Dewey. Luciano argued that an assassination of Dewey would precipitate a massive law enforcement crackdown. An enraged Schultz vowed to kill Dewey anyway and walked out of the meeting.<ref name="sch">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Anastasia, now the leader of Murder, Inc., approached Luciano with information that Schultz had asked him to stake out Dewey's apartment building on Fifth Avenue. Upon hearing the news, the Commission held a discreet meeting to discuss the matter. After six hours of deliberations, the Commission ordered Lepke Buchalter to eliminate Schultz.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Newark, p. 81</ref> On October 23, 1935, before he could kill Dewey, Schultz was shot in a tavern in Newark, New Jersey, and succumbed to his injuries the following day.<ref name="schultz murder article">Template:Cite newsTemplate:Subscription required</ref><ref name="schultz murder">Template:Cite news</ref>
On May 13, 1936, Luciano's pandering trial began.<ref>Stolberg, p. 133</ref> Dewey prosecuted the case that Eunice Carter had built against Luciano, accusing him of being part of a massive prostitution ring known as "the Combination".<ref name=":0" /> During the trial, Dewey exposed Luciano for lying on the witness stand through direct quizzing and records of telephone calls; Luciano also had no explanation for why his federal income tax records claimed he made only $22,000 a year, while he was obviously a wealthy man.<ref name="five families book"/>
Dewey's case against Luciano on the prostitution charges actually leveled in the indictment, on the other hand, rested on much shakier ground: first on the testimony of Joe Bendix, who was discredited by his own testimony as well as that of others, and then later on the testimony of three prostitutes, whom Dewey rewarded by either paying for a trip to Europe after the trial or arranging for lucrative film and magazine deals.<ref name="Nov. 1, 2015">Template:Cite journal</ref> All three witnesses subsequently recanted their testimony.
On June 7, 1936, Luciano was convicted on 62 counts of compulsory prostitution.<ref name="luciano convicted">Template:Cite news</ref> On June 18, he was sentenced to thirty to fifty years in state prison, along with David Betillo and others.<ref name="l_trial">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="luciano sentence">Template:Cite news</ref>
Luciano continued to run his crime family from prison, relaying his orders through Genovese, his acting boss. However, in 1937, Genovese fled to Naples to avoid an impending indictment for murder in New York.<ref name=Sifakis>Template:Cite book</ref> Luciano appointed Costello, his consigliere, as the new acting boss and overseer of Luciano's interests.
During World War II, federal agents came to Luciano for help in preventing enemy sabotage on the New York waterfront and other activities. Luciano agreed to help, in return for a pardon from the State of New York, made contingent on Luciano's deportation to Italy.<ref name="Nov. 1, 2015"/> In reality Luciano provided insignificant assistance to the Allied cause.Template:Citation needed
After the end of the war, the arrangement with Luciano became public knowledge. To prevent further embarrassment, the government followed through on its plans to deport Luciano on condition that he never return to the U.S. In 1946, Luciano was taken from prison and deported to Italy, where he died in 1962.<ref name="luciano deported US">Template:Cite news</ref>
The Prime Minister

From May 1950 to May 1951, the U.S. Senate conducted a large-scale investigation of organized crime, commonly known as the Kefauver Hearings, chaired by Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee. Costello was convicted of contempt of the Senate and sentenced to eighteen months in prison.<ref name="costello coronary">Template:Cite news</ref> Kefauver concluded that New York politician Carmine DeSapio was assisting the activities of Costello, and that Costello had become influential in decisions made by the Tammany Hall political machine. DeSapio admitted to having met Costello several times, but insisted that "politics was never discussed".<ref name=ipqvz>Template:Cite news</ref>
In 1952, the federal government began proceedings to strip Costello of his U.S. citizenship and he was indicted for evasion of $73,417 in income taxes between 1946 and 1949. He was sentenced to five years in prison and fined $20,000.<ref name="costello coronary" /> In 1954, Costello appealed the conviction and was released on $50,000 bail; from 1952 to 1961, he was in and out of half a dozen federal and local prisons and jails, his confinement interrupted by periods when he was out on bail pending determination of appeals.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="costello coronary" />
The return of Genovese
Costello ruled for twenty peaceful years, but his quiet reign ended when Genovese was extradited from Italy to New York. During his absence, Costello demoted Genovese from underboss to caporegime, leaving Genovese determined to take control of the family. Soon after his arrival in the U.S., Genovese was acquitted of the 1936 murder charge that had driven him into exile.<ref>Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(Page 3) - By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref> Free of legal entanglements, he started plotting against Costello with the assistance of Mangano family underboss Carlo Gambino.
On May 2, 1957, Luciano mobster Vincent "the Chin" Gigante shot Costello in the side of the head as Costello returned to his apartment. Gigante's aim proved errant, however, and Costello survived the attack with no more than a flesh wound.<ref name="costello shot">Template:Cite news</ref> Costello claimed he could not identify his attacker; Gigante was later acquitted when prosecuted for the shooting.
Months later, Anastasia, the boss of the Mangano family and a powerful ally of Costello's, was murdered by Gambino's gunmen at the Park Central Hotel in Manhattan. With Anastasia's death, Carlo Gambino seized control of the Mangano family. Fearing for his life and isolated after the shootings, Costello quietly retired and surrendered control of the Luciano family to Genovese.<ref>Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(Page 4) - By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref>

Having taken control of what was renamed the Genovese crime family in 1957, Genovese decided to organize a Mafia conference to legitimize his new position. Held at mobster Joseph "Joe the Barber" Barbara's estate in Apalachin, New York, the Apalachin meeting attracted over 100 mobsters from around the nation. However, local law enforcement stumbled upon the meeting and quickly surrounded the estate. As the meeting broke up, the police stopped a car driven by Russell Bufalino, whose passengers included Genovese and three other men, at a roadblock as they left the estate.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=law>United States of America, Appellee v. Russell Bufalino et..</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Mafia leaders were chagrined by the public exposure and bad publicity from the Apalachin meeting, and generally blamed Genovese for the fiasco. All those apprehended were fined, up to $10,000 each, and given prison sentences ranging from three to five years, but all the convictions were overturned on appeal in 1960.<ref name=law/>
Wary of Genovese gaining more power in the Commission, Gambino used the Apalachin meeting as an excuse to move against his former ally. Gambino, Luciano, Costello, and Lucchese allegedly lured Genovese into a drug-dealing scheme that ultimately resulted in his conspiracy indictment and conviction. In 1959, Genovese was sentenced to fifteen years in prison on narcotics charges.<ref name="15 years">Template:Cite news</ref> Genovese, who was the most powerful boss in New York, had been effectively eliminated as a rival by Gambino.<ref>Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(Page 5) - By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref>
The Valachi Hearings


Genovese soldier Joe Valachi was convicted of narcotics violations in 1959, and sentenced to fifteen years in prison.<ref name=murder/> Valachi's motivations for becoming a government informant had been the subject of some debate; Valachi claimed to be testifying as a public service and to expose a powerful criminal organization that he had blamed for ruining his life, but it is possible he was hoping for government protection as part of a plea bargain in which he was sentenced to life imprisonment instead of the death penalty for a 1962 murder.<ref name=murder>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
While serving his sentence for heroin trafficking, Valachi came to fear that Genovese, also serving a sentence on the same charge, had ordered his murder.<ref>Jerry Capeci. (2002) "The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia", Alpha Books. p. 200. Template:ISBN</ref> On June 22, 1962, using a pipe left near some construction work, Valachi bludgeoned an inmate to death whom he had mistaken for Joseph DiPalermo, a Mafia member he believed had been contracted to kill him.<ref name=murder/> After time with FBI handlers, Valachi came forward with a story of Genovese giving him a kiss on the cheek, which he took as a "kiss of death".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=Kelly>Template:Cite news</ref> A $100,000 bounty for Valachi's death had been placed by Genovese.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Soon after, Valachi decided to cooperate with the U.S. Justice Department.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In October 1963, he testified before Arkansas Senator John L. McClellan's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of the US Senate Committee on Government Operations, known as the Valachi hearings, stating that the Italian-American Mafia actually existed, the first time a member had acknowledged its existence in public.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Valachi's testimony was the first major violation of omertà, breaking his blood oath. He is credited with popularization of the term cosa nostra.<ref name="time160863">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Although Valachi's disclosures never led directly to the prosecution of any Mafia leaders, he provided many details of history of the Mafia, operations, and rituals, aided in the solving of several unsolved murders, and named many Mafia members, as well as the names of the major crime families themselves. The trial exposed American organized crime to the world through Valachi's televised testimony.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>
Front bosses and the ruling panels
After Genovese was sent to prison in 1959, the family leadership secretly established a "Ruling Panel" to run the family in his absence. This first panel included acting boss Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli, underboss Gerardo "Jerry" Catena, and Catena's protégé Philip "Benny Squint" Lombardo. After Genovese died in 1969, Lombardo was named his successor.
However, the family appointed a series of "front bosses" to masquerade as the official family boss. The aim of these deceptions was to protect Lombardo by confusing law enforcement as to who the true leader of the family was.
In the late 1960s, Gambino lent $4 million to Eboli for a drug scheme in an attempt to gain control of the Genovese family. When Eboli failed to pay back his debt, Gambino, with Commission approval, had him murdered in 1972.<ref name="newton 115">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=funerals>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="gang figure">Template:Cite news</ref>
After Eboli's death, Genovese capo and Gambino ally Frank "Funzi" Tieri was appointed as the new front boss. In reality, the Genovese family created a new ruling panel to run the organization. This second panel consisted of Catena, Lombardo, and Michele "Big Mike" Miranda. In 1981, Tieri became the first Mafia boss to be convicted under the new RICO Act and died in prison later that year.<ref>Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(Page 7) - By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref>
After Tieri's imprisonment, the family reshuffled its leadership. The capo of the Manhattan faction, Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno, became the new front boss. Lombardo, the de facto boss of the family, soon retired and Gigante, the triggerman on the failed Costello hit, took actual control of the family.<ref name="cs8" />
In 1985, US Attorney General for the Southern District of New York, Rudolph Giuliani, set his sights on taking down the Mafia Commission through wiretaps, cooperating witnesses, and surveillance cameras.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1985, Salerno was convicted in the Mafia Commission Trial and sentenced to 100 years in federal prison.<ref name="judge sentences 8">Template:Cite news</ref> In 1986, shortly after Salerno's conviction, his longtime right-hand man, Vincent "The Fish" Cafaro, turned informant, and told the FBI that Salerno had been the front boss for Gigante. Cafaro also revealed that the Genovese family had been keeping up this ruse since 1969.<ref>Raab, pp. 556-557.</ref><ref>Lubasch, Arnold H. (March 21, 1987). "Major Mafia Leader Turns Informer, Secretly Recording Meetings of Mob". The New York Times.</ref>
After the 1980 murder of Philadelphia boss Angelo "Gentle Don" Bruno, Gigante and Lombardo began manipulating the rival factions in the war-torn Philadelphia family. They finally gave their support to Philadelphia mobster Nicodemo "Little Nicky" Scarfo, who in return gave the Genovese mobsters permission to operate in Atlantic City in 1982.<ref name="cs8">Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(Page 8) - By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref>
The Oddfather

Gigante built a vast network of bookmaking and loansharking rings, and from extortion of garbage, shipping, trucking, and construction companies seeking labor peace or contracts from carpenters', Teamsters, and laborers' unions, including those at the Javits Center, as well as protection payoffs from merchants at the Fulton Fish Market.<ref name=nyt191205/> Gigante also had influence in the Feast of San Gennaro in Little Italy, running illegal gambling operations, extorting payoffs from vendors, and pocketing thousands of dollars donated to a neighborhood church—until a crackdown in 1995 by New York City officials.<ref name=nyt191205/> During Gigante's tenure as boss of the Genovese family, after the imprisonment of John Gotti in 1992, Gigante came to be known as the figurehead capo di tutti capi, the "Boss of All Bosses", despite the position being abolished since 1931 with the murder of Salvatore Maranzano.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Gigante was reclusive, and almost impossible to capture on wiretaps, speaking softly, eschewing the phone, and even at times whistling into the receiver.<ref name="little fanfare"/> He almost never left his home unoccupied because he knew FBI agents would sneak in and plant a bug.<ref name="little fanfare"/> Genovese members were not allowed to mention Gigante's name in conversations or phone calls; when they had to mention him, members would point to their chins or make the letter "C" with their fingers.<ref name=nyt191205/><ref name="Raab">Template:Cite book</ref>
On May 30, 1990, Gigante was indicted along with other members of four of the Five Families for conspiring to rig bids and extort payoffs from contractors on multimillion-dollar contracts with the New York City Housing Authority to install windows.<ref>"Suspected New York Mob Leaders Are Indicted in Contract Rigging". The New York Times. May 31, 1990.</ref> Gigante attended his arraignment in pajamas and a bathrobe, and due to his defense stating that he was mentally and physically impaired, legal battles ensued for seven years over his competence to stand trial.<ref name=nyt191205/> In June 1993, Gigante was indicted again, charged with sanctioning the murders of six mobsters and conspiring to kill three others, including Gotti.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=nyt191205/>
At sanity hearings in March 1996, Sammy "The Bull" Gravano, former underboss of the Gambino family, who became a cooperating witness in 1991,<ref name="top aid">Template:Cite news</ref> and Alphonse "Little Al" D'Arco, former acting boss of the Lucchese family, testified that Gigante was lucid at top-level Mafia meetings and that he had told other gangsters that his eccentric behavior was a pretense.<ref name=nyt191205/> Gigante's lawyers presented testimony and reports from psychiatrists stating that, from 1969 to 1995, Gigante had been confined twenty-eight times in hospitals for treatment of hallucinations and that he suffered from "dementia rooted in organic brain damage".<ref name=nyt191205/>
In August 1996, Judge Eugene Nickerson of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York ruled that Gigante was mentally competent to stand trial; he pleaded not guilty and had been free for years on $1 million bail.<ref name=nyt191205/> Gigante had a cardiac operation in December 1996.<ref name=nyt191205/> On June 25, 1997, Gigante's trial started, which he attended in a wheelchair.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On July 25, after almost three days of deliberations, the jury convicted Gigante of conspiring in plots to kill other mobsters and of running rackets as head of the Genovese family, but acquitted him of seven counts of murder.<ref name=convicted>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Prosecutors stated that the verdict finally established that Gigante was not mentally ill as his lawyers and relatives had long maintained.<ref name=convicted/> On December 18, 1997, Gigante was sentenced to twelve years in prison and fined $1.25 million by Judge Jack B. Weinstein, a lenient sentence due to Gigante's "age and frailty", who declared that Gigante had been "finally brought to bay in his declining years after decades of vicious criminal tyranny".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
While in prison, Gigante maintained his role as boss of the Genovese family, while other mobsters were entrusted to run its day-to-day activities. Longtime capo Matthew "Matty the Horse" Ianniello became acting boss of the family.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Gigante relayed orders to the family through his son, Andrew, who visited him in prison.<ref name="snitch stole">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="chin up">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=nyt191205/>
On January 23, 2002, Gigante was indicted with several other mobsters, including Andrew, on obstruction of justice charges due to his causing a seven-year delay in his previous trial by feigning insanity.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Raab, p. 597-599</ref> Several days later, Andrew was released on $2.5 million bail.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On April 7, 2003, the day the trial began, Prosecutor Roslynn R. Mauskopf had planned to play tapes showing Gigante "fully coherent, careful, and intelligent", running criminal operations from prison, but when Gigante pled guilty to obstruction of justice,<ref name=obstruction>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=nyt080403>Mob boss admits insanity an act, pleads guilty, The New York Times, April 8, 2003</ref> Judge I. Leo Glasser sentenced him to an additional three years in prison.<ref name=nyt191205>Vincent Gigante, Mob Boss Who Feigned Incompetence to Avoid Jail, Dies at 77, by Selwyn Raab, The New York Times, December 19, 2005</ref><ref>Raab, p. 598</ref> Mauskopf stated, "The jig is up ... Vincent Gigante was a cunning faker, and those of us in law enforcement always knew that this was an act ... The act ran for decades, but today it's over."<ref name=obstruction/> On July 25, 2003, Andrew Gigante was sentenced to two years in prison and fined $2.5 million for racketeering and extortion.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
On July 27, 2005, Matthew Ianniello was indicted on charges of racketeering related to extortion and loansharking.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On June 10, 2006, Ianniello was indicted once again for racketeering charges related to Genovese control of waste management businesses in Southwestern Connecticut.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Gigante died on December 19, 2005, at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri.<ref name="nyt191205" /> His funeral and burial were held four days later, on December 23, at Saint Anthony of Padua Church in Greenwich Village, largely in anonymity.<ref name="little fanfare">Template:Cite news</ref>
After Gigante's death
After Gigante's death, the leadership of the Genovese family went to capo Daniel "Danny the Lion" Leo, who was apparently running the day-to-day activities of the family by 2006.<ref name="Capeci">Capeci, Jerry, "Meet the Genovese Crime Family's New Boss Template:Webarchive, November 30, 2006, The New York Sun</ref> That same year, Cirillo was reportedly promoted to consigliere behind bars and Mangano was released from prison. By 2008, the family administration was believed to be whole again.<ref name="cs10">Epic saga of the Genovese Crime Family Template:Webarchive(page 10) - By Anthony Bruno - Crime Library on truTV.com</ref>
In March of that year, Leo was sentenced to five years in prison for loansharking and extortion. Former acting consigliere Lawrence "Little Larry" Dentico was leading the New Jersey faction of the family until convicted of racketeering in 2006; he was released from prison in 2009. In December 2008, Liborio Bellomo was paroled after serving twelve years; what role he plays in the Genovese hierarchy is open to speculation, but he likely has had a major say in the running of the family since his tight parole restrictions expired. The family continued to maintain influence in New York, New Jersey, Atlantic City and Florida and is recognized as the most powerful Mafia family in the U.S., a distinction brought about by their continued devotion to secrecy.<ref name="castff" />
On August 4, 2016, the United States Attorney of New York charged 46 Mafia leaders with racketeering conspiracy, arson, illegal trafficking in firearms, and conspiracy to commit assault throughout the East Coast of the United States, from Springfield, Massachusetts to Southern Florida.<ref name="East Coast Mafia charges 2016">Template:Cite news</ref> The 46 defendants were leaders, members, and associates of the Genovese, Gambino, Luchese, Bonanno, and Philadelphia crime families.<ref name="East Coast Mafia charges 2016"/> The charges stemmed from evidence obtained during an FBI Special Agent’s time undercover infiltrating Genovese family capo Pasquale Parrello's Bronx crew, who were operating from Parrello's restaurant, Rigoletto.<ref name="East Coast Mafia charges 2016"/><ref name="Indictment 46 mobsters 2016">Template:Cite news</ref> Cooperating witnesses who worked for Parrello began working with Joseph Merlino, the boss of the Philadelphia crime family, and Eugene “Rooster” O'Nofrio, a Genovese family acting capo with crews operating in Little Italy in New York as well as Springfield, Massachusetts.<ref name="East Coast Mafia charges 2016"/><ref name="Indictment 46 mobsters 2016"/> Other Genovese members charged were capo Conard Ianniello, who was using O'Nofrio as his acting capo to run his crews, soldier Ralph Balsamo, and associates Anthony Vazzano, Anthony Zinzi, Vincent Terracciano, Ronald Mastrovincenzo, Israel Torres and others.<ref name="East Coast Mafia charges 2016"/><ref name="Indictment 46 mobsters 2016"/>
In 2016, Onofrio was accused of operating a large multimillion-dollar enterprise that ran bookmaking offices, scammed medical businesses, and smuggled cigarettes and guns. He was also alleged to have run a loansharking operation from Florida to Massachusetts.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Other members of his reputed crew pleaded guilty to extortion and other crimes.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Gerald Daniele, an associate, was sentenced to two years in prison in March 2018.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On April 10, 2018, Ralph Santaniello, suspected of being a Genovese acting capo, was sentenced to five years in prison for extorting $20,000 from Craig Morel, the owner of one of the biggest towing and scrap-metal companies in Massachusetts, including threatening his life and assaulting him.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Morel managed to negotiate the extortion price from $100,000 to $20,000. Associate Giovanni "Johnny" Calabrese was sentenced to 3 years in prison.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In October 2017, thirteen Genovese and Gambino associates and soldiers were sentenced after being indicted following an NYPD operation in December 2016. Dubbed "Shark Bait", the investigation focused on a large-scale illegal gambling and loansharking ring. Prosecutors claimed 76-year-old Genovese soldier Salvatore DeMeo was in charge of the operation and had generated several million dollars from the enterprise. Soldier Alex Conigliaro was sentenced to four months in jail and four months house arrest in late October 2017, with a fine of $5,000, after admitting that he supervised and financed a $14,000-per-week illegal bookmaking and sports betting operation between 2011 and 2014.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Genovese associates Gennaro Geritano and Mario Leonardi were allegedly partners in selling untaxed cigarettes in New York, selling over 30,000 packs.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Current position and leadership
According to the FBI, the Genovese family had not had an official boss since Gigante's death and the leadership was in a state of limbo for some time.<ref name="mafianewstoday.com">"Family may soon have new Boss" Template:Webarchive By the start of the second decade on the 21st century the leadership appeared to still be strong however with Mafia News Today reporting on April 9, 2010</ref> Law enforcement considers Leo to be the acting boss, Mangano the underboss, and Cirillo the consigliere. The family is known for placing top capos in leadership positions to help the administration run day-to-day activities. At present, capos Bellomo, Muscarella, Cirillo, and Dentico hold the greatest influence within the family and play major roles in its administration.<ref name="Power">Template:Cite news</ref> The Manhattan and Bronx factions, the traditional powers in the family, still exercise that control today. By 2016 however the FBI considers Liborio Bellomo to most likely be the official boss of the Genovese family.
On January 10, 2018, five members and associates, including Gigante's son Vincent Esposito, were arrested and charged with racketeering, conspiracy, and several counts of related offenses by the NYPD and FBI.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The charges include extortion, labor racketeering conspiracy, fraud and bribery. Genovese associate and Brooklyn-based United Food and Commercial Workers officer Frank Cognetta was also charged.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Union official and associate Vincent D'Acunto Jr. was also involved and allegedly acted on behalf of Esposito to pass along threat messages and to also collect extortion money from the union, in particular from Vincent Fyfe, the president of a wine liquor and distillery union in Brooklyn. Fyfe was forced to pay $10,000 per year to keep his $300,000-a-year union job, which he obtained through the influence of the Genovese family. The labor union infiltration was alleged to have taken place for at least sixteen years. Esposito allegedly extorted several other union officials and an insurance agent. At his home during a warranted search, authorities recovered an unregistered handgun, $3.8 million in cash, brass knuckledusters, and a handwritten list of American Mafia members.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Vincent Esposito was granted bail for almost $10 million in April 2018, and pled not guilty.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In April 2019, Esposito pled guilty to conspiring to commit racketeering offenses with members and associates of the Genovese family.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Vincent Esposito was sentenced to 24 months in prison and forfeiture of $3.8 million for racketeering conspiracy.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
On August 13, 2020, an indictment charged soldier Christopher Chierchio along with Colombo family associate Frangesco "Frankie" Russo (the grandson of Colombo family boss Andrew Russo<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>), attorney Jason "Jay" Kurland and securities broker Frank Smookler with conspiracy, wire fraud and money laundering.<ref name="Lottery scheme Russo and Chierchio">Template:Cite news</ref> The indictment accused the "lottery attorney" Kurland along with Russo, Chierchio and Smookler with swindling $80 million from jackpot winners in an illegal scheme of siphoning money from the jackpot winners' investments.<ref name="Lottery scheme Russo and Chierchio"/>
On April 26, 2022, an indictment was served charging capos Nicholas Calisi and Ralph Balsamo, soldiers Michael Messina and John Campanella, and associates Michael Poli and Thomas Poli, with racketeering conspiracy involving illegal gambling and extortion.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Messina 26-04-2022 indictment">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Balsamo was previously arrested on April 12, and Calisi was detained in Boca Raton, Florida, and presented before a U.S. magistrate judge in the Southern District of Florida. According to the indictment, the defendants operated a criminal racketeering enterprise since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022"/><ref name="Messina 26-04-2022 indictment"/><ref name="Balsamo and Calisi charged 2022">Template:Cite news</ref> On February 9, 2023, it was announced that all six defendants in the case had pleaded guilty to the racketeering charges.<ref name=":2">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
On May 3, 2022, exactly a week after the Calisi and Balsamo indictments, another indictment was served that charged capo Anthony "Rom" Romanello, soldier Joseph Celso, and small-time actor and family associate Luan Bexheti with extortion and obstruction of justice.<ref name="Romanello busted 2022">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Romanello, who authorities state controls the family's Queens crew, oversaw the extortion and intimidation of a Brooklyn restaurant owner, which was carried out by Celso and Bexheti<ref name="Romanello busted 2022"/>
On August 16, 2022, acting capo Carmelo "Carmine" Polito along with family soldier Joseph Macario, Genovese family associates Salvatore Rubino and Joseph Rutigliano, Bonnano family capo Anthony Pipitone, Bonanno soldier Vito Pipitone, Bonanno associate Agostino Gabriele and Nassau County Police Detective Hector Rosario were indicted and charged with racketeering, money laundering, illegal gambling, conspiracy and obstruction of justice.<ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment"/> The Genovese family and the Bonanno family jointly operated several illegal gambling operations while using front businesses in Queens and Long Island to launder illegal profits.<ref name="Polito and Bonanno's"/> The indictment revealed that beginning in May 2012, the Genovese and Bonanno families jointly operated a lucrative illegal gambling operation in Lynbrook, New York called the Gran Caffe.<ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment"/> The Genovese family members Carmelo Polito, Joseph Macario and associates Salvatore Rutigliano and Joseph Rubino were charged with operating illegal gambling parlors at establishments called Sal's Shoe Repair, the Centro Calcio Italiano Club and running an illegal online gambling scheme.<ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment"/>
On November 30, 2022, Genovese family soldiers Elio Albanese and Carmine Russo were charged for their involvement in a scheme that involved obtaining oxycodone pills from a Midtown Manhattan doctor and having their associates sell the oxycodone on Staten Island.<ref name="Albanese - Russo bust 2022">Template:Cite news</ref>
On January 18, 2023, Genovese family soldier Christopher "Jerry" Chierchio was indicted along with Gambino family capo Frank "Calypso" Camuso, Gambino soldier Louis Astuto, Gambino associate Robert "Rusty" Baselice and 19 other defendants including 26 companies for a kickback scheme allegedly operated by Baselice, the vice president of the Grimaldi Group, a firm which allegedly received $4.2 million from contractors.<ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023 indictment">Template:Cite news</ref> In 2019, Chierchio along with Baselice stole over $300,000 from developer, the indictment states that Baselice allegedly used his position from April 2013 to July 2021, to steal from his firm's developer clients by providing inside information about competitors' bids to subcontractors, among other offenses.<ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023"/><ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023 indictment"/>
On June 6, 2023, five men with connections to the Genovese and Lucchese crime families were indicted for carrying out two brazen midday Manhattan jewelry heists. The robberies, committed on January 3, 2023, and May 20, 2023, respectively, netted the quintet around $2M. Arrested was Frank DiPietro, a Genovese associate, as well as Vincent Cerchio, Michael Sellick, Samuel Sore, and Vincent Spagnuolo.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Historical leadership
Boss (official and acting)
- c. 1890s–1909 — Giuseppe "the Clutch Hand" Morello — imprisoned
- 1909–1916 — Nicholas "Nick Morello" Terranova — murdered on September 7, 1916
- 1916–1920 — Vincenzo "Vincent" Terranova — stepped down becoming underboss
- 1920–1922 — Giuseppe "the Clutch Hand" Morello — stepped down becoming underboss to Masseria
- 1922–1931 — Giuseppe "Joe the Boss" Masseria — murdered on April 15, 1931
- 1931–1946 — Charles "Lucky" Luciano — imprisoned in 1936, deported to Italy in 1946
- Acting 1936–1937 — Vito Genovese — fled to Italy in 1937 to avoid murder charge
- Acting 1937–1946 — Frank "The Prime Minister" Costello — became official boss after Luciano's deportation
- 1946–1957 — Frank "The Prime Minister" Costello — resigned in 1957 after Genovese-Gigante assassination attempt<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- 1957–1969 — Vito "Don Vito" Genovese — imprisoned in 1959, died in prison in 1969
- Acting 1959–1962 — Anthony "Tony Bender" Strollo — disappeared in 1962
- Acting 1962–1965 — Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli — became front boss
- Acting 1965–1969 — Philip "Benny Squint" Lombardo — became the official boss
- 1969–1981 — Philip "Benny Squint" Lombardo<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro">Template:Cite book</ref> — retired in 1981, died of natural causes in 1987
- 1981–2005 — Vincent "Chin" Gigante<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — imprisoned in 1997, died in prison on December 19, 2005<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Acting 1989–1996 — Liborio "Barney" Bellomo — imprisoned
- Acting 1997–1998 — Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo — suffered a heart attack and stepped down
- Acting 1998–2005 — Matthew "Matty the Horse" Ianniello — resigned when indicted in July 2005
- Acting 2005 — Daniel "Danny the Lion" Leo<ref name="news.scotsman.com">"Charges against mob boss show Mafia alive and well in New York", June 1, 2007</ref> — imprisoned 2008–2013
- 2006–present — Liborio "Barney" Bellomo — released from prison on December 1, 2008.
- Acting 2006–2008 — Daniel "Danny the Lion" Leo<ref name="news.scotsman.com"/> — imprisoned 2008–2013
- Acting 2025–present — Daniel Pagano <ref name="Bellomo admin 2025">Template:Cite news</ref>
Street boss (front boss)
The position of "front boss" was created by boss Philip Lombardo in efforts to divert law enforcement attention from himself. The family maintained this "front boss" deception for the next 20 years. Even after government witness Vincent Cafaro exposed this scam in 1988, the Genovese family still found this way of dividing authority useful. In 1992, the family revived the front boss post under the title of "street boss". This person served as day-to-day head of the family's operations under Gigante's remote direction.
- 1965–1972 — Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli — murdered in 1972<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/>
- 1972–1974 — Carmine "Little Eli" Zeccardi<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — disappeared (presumed killed) in 1977
- 1975–1980 — Frank "Funzi" Tieri<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — indicted under RICO statutes and resigned, died in 1981
- 1981–1987 — Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — imprisoned in 1987, died in prison in 1992
- 1992–1996 — Liborio "Barney" Bellomo — imprisoned from 1996 to 2008
- 1998–2001 — Frank Serpico<ref name="snitch stole"/><ref name="chin up"/> – in 2001 was indicted,<ref name="Serpico, Muscarella">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> in 2002 died of cancer<ref>Jerry Capeci. Jerry Capeci's Gang Land. (view)</ref>
- 2001–2002 — Ernest Muscarella — indicted in 2002<ref name="Serpico, Muscarella"/>
- 2002–2006 — Arthur "Artie" Nigro — indicted in 2006
- 2008–2013 — Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo — also served as the consigliere, stepped down
- 2013–2014 — Daniel "Danny" Pagano — indicted August 2014
- 2014–2015 — Peter "Petey Red" DiChiara — stepped down, became consigliere
- 2015–2021 — Michael "Mickey" Ragusa <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> — stepped down
- 2021–2025 — Daniel Pagano<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024">Template:Cite news</ref> — became acting boss <ref name="Bellomo admin 2025">Template:Cite news</ref>
- 2025–present — Michael "Hippie" Zanfardino<ref name="Zanfardino SB and Larca capo">Template:Cite news</ref>
Underboss (official and acting)
- 1903–1909 — Ignazio "The Wolf" Lupo — imprisoned
- 1910–1916 — Vincenzo "Vincent" Terranova — became boss
- 1916–1920 — Ciro "The Artichoke King" Terranova — stepped down
- 1920–1922 — Vincenzo "Vincent" Terranova — murdered on May 8, 1922
- 1922–1930 — Giuseppe "Peter the Clutch Hand" Morello — murdered on August 15, 1930
- 1930–1931 — Joseph Catania — murdered on February 3, 1931<ref name="NY Magazine 1972">Template:Cite news</ref>
- 1931 — Charles "Lucky" Luciano — became boss April 1931
- 1931–1936 — Vito Genovese — promoted to acting boss in 1936, fled to Italy in 1937
- Acting 1936–1937 – Anthony "Tony Bender" Strollo – demoted
- 1937–1951 — Guarino "Willie" Moretti — murdered in 1951
- 1951–1957 — Vito Genovese<ref>Bonanno, Joseph. A Man of Honor: The Autobiography of Joseph Bonanno pg.170-185</ref> — second time as underboss
- 1957–1970 — Gerardo "Jerry" Catena — also boss of the New Jersey faction; jailed from 1970 to 1975<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- 1970–1972 — Thomas "Tommy Ryan" Eboli — also served as front boss, murdered in 1972<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/>
- 1972–1975 — Frank "Funzi" Tieri — also served as front boss<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/>
- 1975–1981 — Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — promoted to front boss in 1980
- 1981–1987 — Saverio "Sammy" Santora<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — died of natural causes
- 1987–2017 — Venero "Benny Eggs" Mangano — imprisoned in 1993, released December 2006, died August 18, 2017, of natural causes.
- Acting 1990–1997 — Michael "Mickey Dimino" Generoso — imprisoned from 1997 to 1998<ref name="face">The Changing Face of ORGANIZED CRIME IN NEW JERSEY - A Status Report(May 2004)State of New Jersey Commission of Investigation</ref>
- Acting 1997–2003 — Joseph Zito
- Acting 2003–2005 — John "Johnny Sausage" Barbato — imprisoned from 2005 to 2008
- 2017–2025 — Ernest "Ernie" Muscarella <ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/><ref name="Bellomo admin 2025"/> retired
- Acting 2021–2025 — Michael "Mickey" Ragusa
- 2025–present — Ralph "The Undertaker" Balsamo <ref name="Balsamo underboss">Template:Cite news</ref>
Consigliere (official and acting)
- 1931–1937 — Frank Costello — promoted to acting boss in 1937
- 1937–1957 — Alessandro "Sandino" Pandolfo — mysterious figure mentioned once by Valachi
- 1957–1972 — Michele "Mike" Miranda — retired in 1972
- 1972–1975 — Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno — promoted to underboss in 1975<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/>
- 1975–1978 — Antonio "Buckaloo" Ferro<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/>
- 1978–1980 — Dominick "Fat Dom" Alongi<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- 1980–1981 — Vincent "Chin" Gigante — promoted to boss
- 1981–1990 — Louis "Bobby" Manna<ref name="Affidavit Vincent Cafaro"/> — imprisoned in 1990
- Acting 1989–1990 — James "Little Guy" Ida — became official consigliere
- 1990–1997 — James "Little Guy" Ida — imprisoned in 1997
- 1997–2009 — Lawrence "Little Larry" Dentico<ref name="face"/> — imprisoned from 2005 to 2009, retired.
- Acting 2005–2009 — Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo – became official consigliere.
- 2009–2015 – Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo — reportedly stepped down
- 2015–2018 – Peter "Petey Red" DiChiara – died on March 2, 2018
- 2018–2022 – Anthony "Tough Tony" Federici – died on November 9, 2022<ref name="Tough Tony died">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- 2022–present – Pasquale "Patsy" Parrello <ref name="Parrello consigiere">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/><ref name="Bellomo admin 2025"/>
Messaggero
Messaggero – The messaggero (messenger) functions as liaison between crime families. The messenger can reduce the need for sit-downs, or meetings, of the mob hierarchy, and thus limit the public exposure of the bosses.
- 1957–1969 — Michael "Mike" Genovese — the brother of Vito Genovese.<ref name="Block, Alan A.">Block, Alan A. "East Side, West Side: organized crime in New York, 1930–1950" (1999)
[2]</ref><ref name="Raab, Selwyn">Raab, Selwyn "Five Families: The Rise, Decline and Resurgence of Americas Most Powerful Mafia Empires". St. Martin Press. 2005 (pg 61) [3]</ref>
- 1997–2002 — Andrew V. Gigante — the son of Vincent Gigante, indicted 2002
- 2002–2005 — Mario Gigante<ref>"'Buster' Ardito Hunts for Bugs" Template:Webarchive. by Jerry Capeci (June 22, 2006) The New York Sun.</ref><ref>"The Mobster and the Failed Polygraph" Template:Webarchive. by Jerry Capeci (July 13, 2006) The New York Sun.</ref>
Administrative capos
If the official boss dies, goes to prison, or is incapacitated, the family may assemble a ruling committee of capos to help the acting boss, street boss, underboss, and consigliere run the family, and to divert attention from law enforcement.
- 1996–1997 — (five-man committee) — Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo, Lawrence "Larry Fab" Dentico, Alan "Baldie" Longo, Mario Gigante and John "Johnny Sausage" Barbato — in 1997, Cirillo became acting boss
- 1997–1998 — (five-man committee) — Lawrence Dentico, Frank "Punchy" Illiano,<ref name="Dentico and Illiano">Template:Cite news</ref> Alan Longo, Mario Gigante and John Barbato
- 1998–2001 — (five-man committee) — Dominick Cirillo, Consigliere Lawrence Dentico, Alan Longo, Mario Gigante, and John Barbato — in 2001, Longo was imprisoned.
- 2001–2002 — (four-man committee) — Lawrence Dentico, Mario Gigante, John Barbato, and Ernie Muscarella — in 2001, Muscarella became Street Boss and in 2002, Muscarella was indicted.
- 2002–2003 — (four-man committee) — Lawrence Dentico, Mario Gigante, John Barbato, and Arthur "Artie" Nigro — in 2002, Nigro became Street Boss.
- 2002–2005 — (four-man committee) — Lawrence Dentico, Mario Gigante, John Barbato, and Daniel "Danny the Lion" Leo — in April and August 2005, Dentico was indicted. In July 2004 and April 2005, Barbato was indicted.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- 2005–2007 — (three-man committee) — Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo, Ernie Muscarella, and Daniel Leo — in 2005, Leo became acting boss
- 2007–2010 — (three-man committee) — Tino "The Greek" Fiumara (died 2010)<ref>Escaping the Law, One Last Time...: An Elusive Mobster's End, Double-Checked by William K. Rashbaum February 1, 2011, The New York Times.</ref> Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo, and Ernie Muscarella
Current members
Administration
- Boss – Liborio "Barney" Bellomo – born January 8, 1957. He served in the 116th Street Crew of Saverio "Sammy Black" Santora and was initiated in 1977. His father was a soldier and close to Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno. In 1990, Kenneth McCabe, then-organized crime investigator for the United States attorney's office in Manhattan, identified Bellomo as "acting boss" of the crime family following the indictment of Vincent Gigante in the "Windows Case".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In June 1996, Bellomo was indicted on charges of extortion, labor racketeering and for ordering the deaths of Ralph DeSimone in 1991 and Anthony "Hickey" DiLorenzo in 1988; DeSimone was found shot five times in the trunk of his car at LaGuardia Airport and DiLorenzo was shot and killed in the backyard of his home.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Since around 2016, Bellomo was recognized, most likely, to be the official boss of the Genovese family. As of 2024, Bellomo's inner circle includes Underboss Ernie Muscarella, Street boss Danny Pagano, Consigliere Pasquale Parello, captain Pasquale Falcetti, acting underboss Micheal Ragusa, captain Ralph Balsamo and captain Anthony Palumbo.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/>
- Acting boss – Daniel "Danny" Pagano – current acting boss of the family.<ref name="Bellomo admin 2025"/> He served as Street boss of the family before.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/> Pagano was a capo operating from the Bronx, Westchester, Rockland and New Jersey. During the 1980s, Pagano was involved in the bootleg gasoline scheme with Russian mobsters.<ref>5 Are Indicted As Participants In Rackets RingTemplate:Dead link - By James Feron, Published: June 13, 1989 The New York Times</ref> On July 10, 2015, Pagano was sentenced to 27 months in prison on racketeering conspiracy charges.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Street boss – Michael "Hippy" Zanfardino – new street boss of family for Danny Pagano.<ref name="Zanfardino SB and Larca capo"/> Former acting capo of the 116th Street Crew. Zanfardino has been a soldier in the Bronx faction, and reportedly very close to family Boss Liborio Bellomo. In 2004, Zanfardino pleaded guilty to counts of racketeering and extortion. Additionally, he pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of two gangland figures. In 1990, he shot gangster Armond Dragone, who survived the attempt. In 1995, he shot Tanglewood Boys crew member Darin Mazzarella 14 times, but Mazzarella also survived his murder attempt. Zanfardino was released from prison on May 6, 2016.
- Underboss – Ralph "The Undertaker" Balsamo – current underboss of the family.<ref name="Balsamo underboss"/> Balsamo is a former capo with operations in the Bronx, Manhattan and Westchester. His nickname "The Undertaker" comes from him owning funeral homes in the Bronx. In 2007, Balsamo pled guilty to narcotics trafficking, firearms trafficking, extortion, and union-related fraud and was sentenced to 97 months in prison.<ref name="bronx racket">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Members">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Balsamo was held in detention until trial.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Balsamo was arrested on April 12, 2022, on racketeering charges. According to an indictment unsealed on April 26, 2022, Balsamo and five other codefendants, including capo Nicholas Calisi, operated a criminal racketeering enterprise since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022" /><ref name="Messina 26-04-2022 indictment" /><ref name="Balsamo and Calisi charged 2022" /><ref name="Balsamo and Calisi">Template:Cite news</ref> Balsamo pled guilty to racketeering on February 9, 2023.<ref name=":2" /> Balsamo is a member of Bellomo's inner circle and is possible successor to an administration position.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/>
- Consigliere – Pasquale "Patsy" Parrello – current consigliere of the family.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/> Parrello was born in 1945. He was a longtime capo operating in the Bronx. Parrello owns a restaurant on Arthur Avenue called Pasquale's Rigoletto Restaurant. In 2004, Parrello was found guilty of loansharking and embezzlement along with capo Rosario Gangi, and was sentenced to 88 months.<ref name="fight fixing">Template:Cite news</ref> In August 2016, Parrello was indicted along with Genovese family capo Conrad Ianniello and Genovese family acting capo Eugene O'Norfio and Philadelphia family boss Joseph Merlino and forty two other mobsters on gambling and extortion charges.<ref name="Genovese Philly 2016">Template:Cite news</ref> In May 2017, he pled guilty to three counts of conspiracy to commit extortion and was sentenced to seven years in federal prison in September 2017. Prosecutors at his trial alleged that in June 2011 he ordered two of his soldiers to break the kneecaps of a man who annoyed female patrons at his restaurant.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Caporegimes
The Bronx faction
- Nicholas "Nicky Slash" Calisi – capo of a Bronx crew, while operating in Florida.<ref name="Balsamo and Calisi" /> On April 26, 2022, Calisi and five other codefendants, including capo Ralph Balsamo, soldiers Michael Messina and John Campanella, and associates Michael Poli and Thomas Poli were indicted for operating a criminal racketeering enterprise of illegal gambling and extortion since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022" /><ref name="Messina 26-04-2022 indictment" /> Calisi was detained in Boca Raton, Florida.<ref name="Balsamo and Calisi charged 2022" /> Calisi pled guilty to racketeering on February 8, 2023.<ref name=":2" /> On June 27, 2023, Calisi was sentenced to serve 24 months in prison. On December 2, 2024, the 66 year old Calisi was released from prison.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Pasquale "Uncle Patty" Falcetti – capo of the 116th Street Crew with operations in the Bronx and Manhattan. In September 2014, Falcetti was sentenced to 30 months in prison for loansharking.<ref name="Falcetti 2014">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> During Falcetti's trial former Genovese family associate Anthony Zoccolillo testified against Falcetti and claimed that Falcetti gave him a $34,000 loan for a marijuana trafficking operation.<ref name="Falcetti 2014" /> Falcetti is a member of Bellomo's inner circle and is possible successor to the consigliere position.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/> On January 13, 2017, Falcetti was released from prison.
- Salvatore "Sally KO" Larca Jr. – capo of a crew operating from the Bronx, East Harlem and Manhattan.<ref name="Zanfardino SB and Larca capo"/> During the early 2000's, Larca was a member of Ernest Muscarella's East Harlem-Bronx crew. In 2006, Larca was indicted along with Genovese family acting boss Liborio Bellomo, Capo John Ardito, soldier Ralph Balsamo and 26 other members of the Genovese family on racketeering charges.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Manhattan faction
- John "Johnny Hollywood" Brescio – capo operating in Manhattan. Brescio owns "Lombardi's", a Manhattan-based pizzeria, which he runs with his step-son, Michael Giammarino. Brescio and Giammarino were denied a request to open a Lombardi's location inside of Parx Casino in Bensalem Township in Pennsylvania.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 2017, Brescio was identified a capo in the Genovese family during the investigation of Angelo Ruggiero's ALJ waterfront application.<ref name="Brescio capo and DePiro soldier">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Thomas "Figgy" Ficarotta – capo operating from Manhattan and Brooklyn. In 1983, Ficarotta was indicted for operating a national burglary ring, the indictment stated that Ficarotta was a made member of the Genovese family and paid tribute to Genovese member Thomas Greco.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1985, Ficarotta served five years in prison for extortion.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1986, Ficarotta was convicted of RICO offense involving Local 814.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1995, his son Tom Ficarotta was identified along with other in the Javits Center carpenters racketeering investigation of Anthony Fiorino.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Conrad Ianniello – capo operating in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, Connecticut, Long Island, New Jersey, Springfield and Florida. On April 18, 2012, Ianniello was indicted along with members of his crew and was charged with illegal gambling and conspiracy.<ref name="C Ianniello">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The conspiracy charge dates back to 2008, when Ianniello along with Robert Scalza and Ryan Ellis tried to extort vendors at the annual Feast of San Gennaro in Little Italy.<ref name="C Ianniello" /> Conrad Ianniello is related to Robert Ianniello Jr., who is the nephew to Matthew Ianniello and the owner of Umberto's Clam House.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In August 2016 Ianniello was indicted along with Genovese family capo Pasquale Parrello and Genovese family acting capo Eugene O'Norfio and Philadelphia family boss Joseph Merlino and forty two other mobsters on gambling and extortion charges. On October 2, 2017, Iannieloo was released from prison.
Brooklyn faction
- Rocco "Rocky" DiPietro – capo operating from Brooklyn.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> His brother Frank DiPietro is Genovese family soldier. DiPietro's father was Genovese family capo Carlo "Collie" DiPietro who was murdered in 1981, by Genovese soldier Joseph Galizia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In August 1983, DiPietro during an argument shot and killed Billy Jenks at the Red Barn Tavern in Brooklyn.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Barry Joseph "Nickels" Nichilo – also known as "Bartolomeo Nichola", is a capo operating from Brooklyn. Nichilo began his criminal career as an associate to Genovese family capo Salvatore "Sally Dogs" Lombardi.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In July 1992, Nichilo was indicted along with DeCavalcante crime family soldier Virgil Alessi, boss John Riggi and underboss John D'Amato for plotting to murder the DeCavalcante family's acting boss Gaetano "Corky" Vastola.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Queens faction
- Anthony "Rom" Romanello – capo of the Queens-based "Federici crew", which operates from Corona Avenue in Corona, Queens.<ref name="Romanello">Template:Cite news</ref> In January 2012, he pleaded guilty to illegal gambling after the cooperating witness died from a heart attack before testifying in the case.<ref name="Romanello" /> On May 3, 2022, Romanello was indicted with soldier Joseph Celso and family associate Luan Bexheti were charged with extorting the owner of a Brooklyn Italian restaurant.<ref name="Romanello busted 2022"/> Romanello pleaded not guilty and was released on bail. Romanello was released from prison on April 25, 2025.
Staten Island faction
- James "Jimmy T" Tenaglia - capo overseeing operations in Staten Island. <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Tenaglia served time in prison in 1978 for racketeering, loan sharking, and fencing stolen goods. His captain and sponsor, Anthony Palumbo and Genovese heavyweight Danny Pagano were having disagreements over a defense strategy in court involving a racketeering case naming both Pagano and Palumbo at the time, resulting in the denial of Tenaglia's induction and other members of Palumbo's crew. With the help of then consigliere Dominick Cirillo, issues were resolved, and Tenaglia was inducted soon after. Now reported to be close with Pagano, the current acting boss and acts as his top lieutenant or right-hand man. <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Westchester County faction
- Salvatore Gigante – capo of the "Westchester-Gigante crew", and the son of former capo Mario "The Shadow" Gigante.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In June 1996, Gigante was indicted along with his father Mario and five others on charges of using violence to keep control of the garbage collection businesses in Westchester, Orange, Rockland, Ulster and Dutchess Counties in New York, southwestern Connecticut and Mahwah and Edison in New Jersey.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On July 2, 1999, Gigante was released from prison.
New Jersey faction {{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}
- Stephen Depiro – capo of the "Fiumara crew" controlling illegal operations from the New Jersey Newark/Elizabeth Seaport.<ref name="DeVita and ILA connection"/> In 2005, Depiro began leading the crew with Tino Fiumara controlling illegal operations in the New Jersey piers and docks.<ref name="Capeci Tino 2010">Jerry Capeci. Tino looks for Christmas past. April 12, 2010. The Huffington Post. Jerry Capeci: Tino Looks For Chrismas Past</ref> During 2010, Depiro was overseeing the illegal operations in the New Jersey Newark/Elizabeth Seaport<ref name="Capeci Tino 2010" /> before Fiumara's death. In 2017, Depiro was identified a soldier in the Genovese family during the investigation of Mark Caruso, Jr.'s ALJ waterfront application.<ref name="Brescio capo and DePiro soldier"/>
- Silvio P. DeVita <ref name="New Jersey Organized Crime Report">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> – capo controlling the Newark area for the Genovese family.<ref name="Gatto 2004 wire">Template:Cite news</ref> DeVita is Sicilian born mobster operating in Essex County. In 1951, DeVita was convicted of first-degree murder during and robbery, he received a death sentence, until his conviction was reversed on appeal.<ref name="DeVita and ILA connection">Template:Cite news</ref> At DeVita's new trail in 1958, he was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison but released on parole during the 1970s.<ref name="DeVita and ILA connection"/> Members of DeVita's crew include soldiers Salvatore Cetrulo and Joseph Cetrulo who have many family relatives working in the New Jersey docks.<ref name="DeVita and ILA connection"/>
- Anthony "Tony D." Palumbo – capo in the New Jersey faction.<ref name="Ryan 2009">Template:Cite news</ref> Palumbo previously served as acting boss of the New Jersey faction, a position given to him by close ally and then acting boss Daniel Leo. In 2009, Palumbo was arrested and charged with racketeering and murder along Daniel Leo and others.<ref name="Ryan 2009" /><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In August 2010, Palumbo pled guilty to conspiracy murder charges. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison and was released on November 22, 2019.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Palumbo is a member of Bellomo's inner circle and is a powerful capo with operation in New Jersey and Staten Island with significant influence on the waterfront.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/>
Soldiers
New York
- Elio "Chinatown" Albanese – soldier. In November 2022, he was charged along with soldier Carmine Russo for their involvement in a scheme that involved obtaining oxycodone pills from a Midtown Manhattan doctor and having their associates sell the oxycodone on Staten Island.<ref name="Albanese - Russo bust 2022"/>
- Vito Alberti – soldier. On October 21, 2014, he was indicted along with captain Charles "Chucky" Tuzzo in New Jersey on charges of loansharking, gambling and money laundering charges.<ref name=":1" />
- Anthony "Tico" Antico – former capo who was involved in labor and construction racketeering in Brooklyn and Manhattan. In 2005, Antico along with capos John Barbato and Lawrence Dentico were convicted of extortion charges. In 2007, he was released from prison.<ref>Press Release: Genovese Family Acting Boss Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo and Three Captains Indicted for Racketeering Template:Webarchive(April 5, 2005)The United States Attorney's Office Eastern District of New York</ref> On March 6, 2010, Antico was charged with racketeering in connection with the 2008, robbery and murder of Staten Island jeweler Louis Antonelli.<ref>"Mobster charged in jeweler's slaying" by Frank Donnelly Silive March 6, 2010</ref>
- Liborio T. "Benny" Bellomo – reputed made member and first cousin of family boss, Liborio "Barney" Bellomo.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- John Campanella – soldier. On April 26, 2022, Campanella and five other codefendants, including capos Ralph Balsamo and Nicholas Calisi, soldier Michael Messina, and associates Michael Poli and Thomas Poli were indicted for operating a criminal racketeering enterprise of illegal gambling and extortion since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022" />Campanella pled guilty to racketeering on February 8, 2023.<ref name=":2" />
- Joseph Celso – soldier. On May 3, 2022, Celso was indicted with capo Anthony Romanello and associate Luan Bexheti and charged with extorting the owner of a Brooklyn Italian restaurant, and was formerly acquitted of murdering a 19-year-old man in 1993.<ref name="Romanello busted 2022"/>
- Christopher "Jerry" Chierchio – On January 18, 2023, Chierchio was indicted along with Gambino family members capo Frank "Calypso" Camuso, soldier Louis Astuto and associate Robert "Rusty" Baselice along with 19 other defendants for a kickback scheme allegedly operated by Baselice.<ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023"/><ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023 indictment"/> The indictment claimed that in 2019, Chierchio who used his position as an executive of RCI PLBG Inc, a plumbing and sprinkler subcontractor based in Staten Island to work along with Baselice to steel over $300,000 from other developers.<ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023"/><ref name="Genovese and Gambino 2023 indictment"/>
- Carmine "Little Carm" Dellacava – soldier. In the late 2000s, Dellacava was involved in a lawsuit involving his company, Cava Construction, in which workers fought for fair wages.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Joseph "Joe D" Denti Jr. – (sometimes spelled Dente) a former capo operating in the Bronx and New Jersey. On December 5, 2001, Denti Jr. along with capo Rosario Gangi, capo Pasquale Parrello and 70 other associates were indicted in Manhattan on racketeering charges.<ref name="Parrello Denti Gangi NYT">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> The charges were brought against Denti Jr. and the others after it had been revealed that an undercover NYPD detective had infiltrated Parrello's Arthur Avenue crew.<ref name="Parrello Denti Gangi 2001">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On March 16, 2016, Denti Jr. along with Joseph Giardina, Ralph Perricelli Jr., and Heidi Francavilla were indicted and charged with defrauding investors in medical ventures out of $350,000.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Carmelo "Carmine Pizza" Polito – former acting capo of the "Brescio crew" operating in Manhattan and Queens. In June 2005, Polito along with Mario Fortunato were arrested for the murder of Genovese mafia associate Sabatino Lombardi in November 1994, during a card game.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> On August 16, 2022, Polito was indicted along with Genovese family soldier Joseph Macario, Genovese family associates Salvatore Rubino and Joseph Rutigliano, Bonnano family capo Anthony "Little Anthony" Pipitone, Bonanno family soldier Vito Pipitone, Bonanno family associate Agostino Gabriele and Nassau County Police Detective Hector Rosario.<ref name="Polito and Bonanno's">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The indictment charged the group with racketeering, money laundering, illegal gambling, conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and other charges.<ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment"/> Federal authorities allege the group used front businesses in Queens and Long Island to launder illegal profits.<ref name="Polito and Bonanno's"/> In a wiretapped conversation from October 2019, Polito was caught telling an underling that he was going to "put [a debtor] under the f--king bridge." Polito was released on $1.1 million bond.<ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment"/> In March 2024, prosecutors claim that Polito violated his bail conditions meeting with associate Joseph "Joe Box" Rutigliano at a Whitestone, Queens "members only" social club on February 6, 2024, and communicating with numerous other Genovese mobsters on the phone including capo Anthony "Rom" Romanello and boss Liborio "Barney" Bellomo.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Lawrence "Little Larry" Dentico – former capo operating in South Jersey and Philadelphia. Dentico was consigliere in the late 1990s through the 2000s, when he was imprisoned on extortion, loansharking and racketeering charges.<ref>Lawrence Dentico Indicted Template:Webarchive - US Attorney's Office: Fourteen Arrested with Unsealing of RICO Indictment Against Genovese Crime Family Members, Associates. - 2005/08/17 -- Dentico, Lawrence et al. -- Indictment -- News Release</ref>
- Louis DiNapoli – soldier with his brother Vincent DiNapoli's 116th Street crew.
- Albert "Kid Blast" Gallo – former capo operating in Brooklyn neighborhoods of Carroll Gardens, Red Hook, and Cobble Hill and parts of Staten Island. In the mid-1970s, Gallo and Frank Illiano transferred from the Gallo crew of the Colombo crime family to the Genovese family. Gallo's co-capo Illiano died of natural causes in 2014.
- Rosario "Ross" Gangi – former capo operating in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and New Jersey. Gangi was involved in extortion activities at Fulton Fish Market.<ref>Allan May's Mob Report current mob stuff Oct 28, 2002, Rick Porrello's AmericanMafia.com</ref>
- John "Little John" Giglio (born April 11, 1958) – also known as "Johnny Bull" is a soldier involved in loansharking.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Daniel "Danny the Lion" Leo – a former acting boss and member of the Purple Gang of East Harlem in the 1970s. In the late 1990s, Leo joined Vincent Gigante's circle of trusted capos. With Gigante's death in 2005, Leo became acting boss. In 2008, Leo was sentenced to five years in prison on loansharking and extortion charges. In March 2010, Leo received an additional 18 months in prison on racketeering charges and was fined $1.3 million. He was released on January 25, 2013.<ref>"Former Acting Boss of Genovese Crime Family Sentenced in Manhattan Court to 18 Additional Months in Prison" Template:Webarchive US Attorney's Office March 23, 2010</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Alan "Baldie" Longo - former capo of a Brooklyn crew who formerly served under "Allie Shades" Malangone and ran rackets out of a social club that he owned in Brooklyn. Longo was involved in stock fraud and white-collar crimes in Manhattan and Brooklyn. On April 25, 2001, Longo was indicted on racketeering charges, along with Colombo acting boss Alphonse Persico, based on the work of undercover informant Michael D'Urso. Longo was convicted and sentenced to 11 years.<ref>12-Year Term in Largest Securities Fraud (May 31, 2001) (A version of this article appeared in print on Thursday, May 31, 2001, on section C page 17 of the New York edition.) The New York Times.</ref> He was released on November 24, 2010.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Joseph "Joe Fish" Macario – soldier. Macario was indicted on August 16, 2002, along with several members of the Genovese and Bonnano families, including Genovese acting capo Carmelo Polito and Bonanno capo Anthony Pipitone.<ref name="Polito with Bonanno indictment"/><ref name="Polito and Bonanno's"/>
- Alphonse "Allie Shades" Malangone – former capo operating in Manhattan and Brooklyn. Malangone during the 1990s, controlled gambling, loansharking, waterfront rackets and extorting the Fulton Fish Market. He also controlled several private sanitation companies in Brooklyn through Kings County Trade Waste Association and Greater New York Waste Paper Association. Malagone was arrested in 2000 along with several Genovese and Gambino family members for their activities in the private waste industry.<ref>THE MOB ON WALL STREET--PART 2 Template:Webarchive(December 16, 1996)BusinessWeek</ref><ref>Two Convicted as Leaders Of New York Trash Cartel - By Selwyn Raab Published: October 22, 1997 - The New York Times.</ref>
- James "Jimmy from 8th Street" Messera – former capo of the "Little Italy Crew" operating in Manhattan and Brooklyn. In the 1990s, Messera was involved in extorting the Mason Tenders union and was imprisoned on racketeering charges.<ref>Corruption Haunts Laborers International Union Template:Webarchive 1998.</ref><ref>USA Bulletin. November 1997 Volume 45, Number 6</ref>
- Michael Messina – family soldier, on April 26, 2022, Messina and five other codefendants, including capos Ralph Balsamo and Nicholas Calisi, soldier John Campanella, and associates Michael Poli and Thomas Poli were indicted for operating a criminal racketeering enterprise of illegal gambling and extortion since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022" /> Messina pled guilty to racketeering on February 9, 2023.<ref name=":2" />
- Ernest "Ernie" Muscarella – former underboss of the family before retiring in 2025.<ref name="Balsamo underboss"/> Served as the underboss for many years.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/> Muscarella is a former acting boss and former capo of the 116th Street crew. In January 2002, Muscarella serving as acting boss of the family was indicted, along with capo Charles Tuzzo, members Liborio Bellomo, Thomas Cafaro, Pasquale Falcetti, Michael Ragusa and associate Andrew Gigante, for the infiltration of the International Longshoreman's Association.<ref name="acting boss Muscarella"/>
- Joseph Olivieri – soldier, operating in the "116th Street Crew" under capo Louis Moscatiello. Olivieri has been involved in extorting carpenters unions and is tied to labor racketeer Vincent DiNapoli.<ref>Kates, Brian. "Genovese crime soldier Joseph (Rudy) Olivieri to finger contracting big, prosecutors say". October 19, 2010. New York Daily News.</ref> He was convicted of perjury.<ref name="guilty perjury">Template:Cite news</ref>
- Eugene "Rooster" Onofrio – a mobster from East Haven, Connecticut. O'Nofrio served as acting capo of the "Mulberry Street crew" in Manhattan's Little Italy and acting capo of the "Springfield, Massachusetts, crew".<ref name="Genovese Philly 2016" /> In 2016 Onofrio was indicted along with Genovese family capo's Pasquale Parrello and Conrad Ianniello and Philadelphia family boss Joseph Merlino and Springfield gangsters Ralph Santaniello and Francesco Depergola and 40 other mobsters on gambling and extortion charges.<ref name="Genovese Philly 2016" />
- Michael "Mickey" Ragusa – former acting underboss, reports directly to acting boss Danny Pagano.<ref name="Balsamo underboss"/> born June 22, 1965. Ragusa is a former soldier in Bellomo's Harlem/Bronx crew. In January 2002, Ragusa was indicted, along with acting boss Ernest Muscarella, capo Charles Tuzzo, members Liborio Bellomo, Thomas Cafaro, Pasquale Falcetti and associate Andrew Gigante, for the infiltration of the International Longshoreman's Association.<ref name="acting boss Muscarella">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Ragusa is a member of Bellomo's inner circle and is possible successor to the underboss position.<ref name="Bellomo's inner circle 2024"/>
- Carmine "Baby Carmine" Russo - soldier. Russo was charged in November 2022, along with soldier Elio Albanese for their involvement in a scheme that involved obtaining oxycodone pills from a Midtown Manhattan doctor and having their associates sell the oxycodone on Staten Island.<ref name="Albanese - Russo bust 2022"/>
- Charles Salzano – soldier/ Salzano was released from prison in 2009 after serving 37 months on loansharking charges.<ref name="Members"/>
New Jersey
- (Imprisoned) Michael "Mikey Cigars" Coppola – former capo of the "Fiumara-Coppola crew",<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> although he is currently imprisoned, Coppola is still seen by law enforcement and experts as a leading captain in the New Jersey faction. He is currently serving his time at the United States Penitentiary, Atlanta for two counts of racketeering and his projected release date is March 4, 2024.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Imprisoned members
- Frank DiPietro – soldier. Born in July 1957. In June 2023, DiPietro and associates of the Lucchese and Gambino families, Michael Sellick, Vincent Spagnuolo, Vincent Cerchio, and Samuel Sore, were arrested for stealing $2 million worth of jewellery, targeting Manhattan jewellery stores, between January and May 2023.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was charged with conspiracy, robbery and brandishing a firearm. DiPietro along with, Cerchio, Spagnuolo and Sellick had allegedly stolen at least three diamond pieces, including a 73-carat necklace, a six-carat ring and a 17-carat pair of earrings.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> DiPietro has had 12 prior arrests, including racketeering, and in September 1998, he was indicted for participating in the murder of George “Booty” Van Name in November 1990, along with Lucchese family soldier Anthony “Tony Bones” Loffredo, DiPietro was sentenced to 19 years in prison, and he was released in August 2016.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> DiPietro has a release date of August, 24, 2031.
- Emilio Fusco – soldier.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Born in October 1968. Law enforcement allege Fusco was initiated into the Genovese family during the 1990s. Fusco was accused of extorting a business owner from the early 2000s to 2008 and received around $12,000 per month. In 2006, he was released from prison after serving almost 3 years, for racketeering, extortion and money laundering.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In May 2012, Fusco was convicted of extorting several restaurants and strip clubs within the Springfield, Massachusetts area, and one count of interstate travel in aid of racketeering. In October 2012, Fusco was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment for racketeering, marijuana distribution conspiracy and extortion.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At sentencing Fusco was accused of participating in the November 2003 murders of Adolfo Bruno and Gary Westerman.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- James "The Little Guy" Ida – born in July 1940. According to government and law enforcement agencies, it is believed Ida was initiated into the Genovese family during the 1970s, as a soldier he allegedly reported to then-capo Matthew Ianniello, and allegedly took over the crew in 1988 following Ianniello's conviction of racketeering.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Prosecutors alleged Ida helped oversee the collection of rent from vendors during the Mulberry Street fair earning around $4,000 per booth.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Ida was accused of participating in 3 murders during 1988, 1991 and 1995.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Around 1994 and 1995, Ida was involved in the extortion of La Toya Jackson, the sister of Michael Jackson; it is believed her husband paid Ida approximately $1,000 per month for the protection of the Genovese family, in particular for the use of Genovese family soldier John Schenone as a bodyguard. In June 1996, Ida was indicted for racketeering, he was offered a plea deal and sentence of 15-year imprisonment but refused. In October 1997, Ida was sentenced to life imprisonment and a $1 million forfeiture.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Joseph "Joe Fish" Macario – soldier. Born in August 1954. In April 2024, Macario pleaded guilty to racketeering and was accused of operating several illegal gambling parlours with Genovese family soldier, Carmelo “Carmine” Polito, who was sentenced to over 2 years in prison in December 2024, and since at least May 2012, he was the head of a lucrative illegal gambling operation in Lynbrook, New York in association with the Bonanno family, with capo Anthony "Little Anthony" Pipitone on behalf of the Bonanno family.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Associates
- Frank "Frankie Ariana" DiMattina – an associate convicted January 6, 2014, on extortion and a firearms charge and sentenced to 6 years in prison.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Michael Poli – family associate, on April 26, 2022, Poli and five other codefendants, including capos Ralph Balsamo and Nicholas Calisi, soldiers Michael Messina and John Campanella, and associate Thomas Poli were indicted for operating a criminal racketeering enterprise of illegal gambling and extortion since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022" /> Poli pled guilty to racketeering on February 8, 2023.<ref name=":2" />
- Thomas Poli – family associate, on April 26, 2022, Poli and five other codefendants, including capos Ralph Balsamo and Nicholas Calisi, soldiers Michael Messina and John Campanella, and associate Michael Poli were indicted for operating a criminal racketeering enterprise of illegal gambling and extortion since at least 2011.<ref name="Messina 26-04-2022" /> Poli pled guilty to racketeering on September 29, 2022.<ref name=":2" />
Former members
- Dominick "Fat Dom" Alongi – former member of Vincent Gigante's Greenwich Village Crew.<ref name="Capeci last Dom">Jerry Capeci's Gang Land By Jerry Capeci "Chin's last Dom runs the show"</ref>
- Salvatore "Sammy Meatballs" Aparo – a former acting capo. His son Vincent is also a made member of the Genovese family.<ref>Meet the Genovese Crime Family's New Boss Template:Webarchive by Jerry Capeci (November 30, 2006) New York Sun</ref> In 2000, Aparo, his son Vincent, and Genovese associate Michael D'Urso met with Abraham Weider, the owner of an apartment complex in Flatbush, Brooklyn.<ref name="Robbins 2002">Cleaning Lessons for Dirty Bosses Template:Webarchive by Tom Robbins (9-24-2002)</ref> Weider wanted to get rid of the custodians union (SEIU Local 32B-J) and was willing to pay Aparo $600,000, but Aparo's associate D'Urso was an FBI informant and had recorded the meeting.<ref name="mob money">Template:Cite news</ref> In October 2002, Aparo was sentenced to five years in federal prison for racketeering.<ref name="oldfella">Template:Cite news</ref>
- John "Johnny Sausage" Barbato – former capo and former driver of Venero Mangano, he was involved in labor and construction racketeering with capos from the Brooklyn faction. Barbato was imprisoned in 2005 on racketeering and extortion charges, and released in 2008.<ref>PRESS RELEASE:Genovese Family Acting Boss Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo and Three Captains Indicted for Racketeering Template:Webarchive(April 5, 2005)</ref><ref>"John Barbato" Template:Webarchive Inmate Locator Federal Bureau of Prisons</ref> Barbato died May 11, 2025.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Michael A. "Tona" Borelli – was a New Jersey mobster and former acting co-capo of Tino Fiumara's crew, along with Lawrence Ricci. Borelli controlled construction and illegal gambling rackets in NJ, and formerly oversaw the family's activities in the Teamsters.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> On March 21, 2020, Borelli died.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Ludwig "Ninni" Bruschi – former capo operating in South Jersey Counties of Ocean, Monmouth, Middlesex, and North Jersey Counties of Hudson, Essex, Passaic and Union. Bruschi was indicted in June 2003 and paroled in April 2010.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> On April 19, 2020, Bruschi died.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Dominick "Quiet Dom" Cirillo – former capo and former trusted aide to boss Vincent Gigante. Cirillo belonged to the West Side Crew and was known as one of the Four Doms; capos Dominick "Baldy Dom" Canterino, Dominick "The Sailor" DiQuarto and Dominick "Fat Dom" Alongi. Cirillo served as acting boss from 1997 to 1998, but resigned due to heart problems. In 2003, Cirillo became acting boss, resigned in 2006 due to his imprisonment on loansharking charges. In August 2008, Cirillo was released from prison, upon which he served as family consigliere. Cirillo died on January 14, 2024.
- Vincent "Vinny" DiNapoli – soldier and former capo with the 116th Street Crew. DiNapoli was heavily involved in labor racketeering and had reportedly earned millions of dollars from extortion, bid rigging and loansharking rackets. DiNapoli dominated the N.Y.C. District Council of Carpenters and used them to extort other contractors in New York. DiNapoli's brother, Joseph DiNapoli, is the former consigliere of the Lucchese crime family.<ref name="nlpc781">PLASTERERS Union Racketeer Sentenced in NY Fed. Court Template:Webarchive Union Corruption Update - January 31, 2005 -- Vol. 8, Issue 3, National Legal and Policy Center -- Organized Labor Accountability Project Template:Webarchive</ref><ref name="bite">Template:Cite news</ref>
- Dominick "Dom The Sailor" DiQuarto – former member of Vincent Gigante's Greenwich Village Crew.<ref name="Capeci last Dom"/>
- Giuseppe Fanaro – was a member of the Morello family, who was involved in the Barrel murder of 1903.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> In November 1913, Fanaro was murdered by members of the Lomonte and Alfred Mineo's gangs.<ref>Critchley pg.44</ref>
- Anthony "Tough Tony" Federici – was a former capo of the Queens crew. Federici was the owner of a restaurant in Corona, Queens. In 2004, Federici was honored by Queens Borough President Helen Marshall for his community service.<ref>"Judge Is Charged in Money-Laundering Case" By William K. Rashbaum August 31, 2005. The New York Times.</ref> While an active capo, Federici installed Anthony Romanello as acting capo to help control the illicit mob activities.<ref name="Romanello" /> Federici the family's consigliere died on November 9, 2022.<ref name="Tough Tony died" />
- Federico "Fritzy" Giovanelli – soldier who was heavily involved in loansharking, illegal gambling and bookmaking in the Queens/Brooklyn area. Giovanelli was charged with the January 1986 killing of Anthony Venditti, an undercover NYPD detective, but was acquitted. One known soldier in Giovanelli's crew was Frank "Frankie California" Condo. In 2001, Giovanelli worked with soldier Ernest "Junior" Varacalli in a car theft ring. On January 19, 2018, Giovanelli died at the age of 84.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Joseph N. "Pepe" LaScala – former New Jersey capo operating from Hudson County waterfronts cities of Bayonne and Jersey City. LaScala had been Angelo Prisco's acting capo before he took over the crew.<ref name="face" /> In May 2012, LaScala and other members of his crew were arrested and charged with illegal gambling in Bayonne.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> LaScala died on February 3, 2019, at the age of 87.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Rosario "Saro" Mogavero – A hitman by the age of 15,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Mogavero was a powerful capo and close ally of Vito Genovese.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He was the vice president of the International Longshoreman's Association until his arrest for extortion and drug dealing in 1953.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Mogavero controlled gambling, loan sharking and drug smuggling along the Lower East Side of Manhattan waterfront in the 1950s and 1960s along with Tommy "Ryan" Eboli, Michael Clemente and Carmine "The Snake" Persico.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Arthur "Artie" Nigro – former member who served as the family's Street Boss from 2002 to 2006, Nigro was sentenced to life in prison in 2011 for ordering the 2003 murder of Adolfo Bruno. Nigro died on April 24, 2019, at the age of 74<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Ciro Perrone – a former capo. In 1998, Perrone was promoted to captain taking over Matthew Ianniello's old crew. In July 2005, Perrone along with Ianniello and other members of his crew were indicted on extortion, loansharking, labor racketeering and illegal gambling.<ref>"U.S. Indicts Numerous Genovese Family Members and Associates, Including an Acting Boss of the Family"Template:Dead link (July 28, 2005) United States Attorney Southern District of New York</ref> Perrone ran his crew from a social club and Don Peppe's restaurant in Ozone Park, Queens.<ref name="Perrone 2008">"Mob Capo, 87, Gets A Break" by Kati Cornell (February 23, 2008) New York Post</ref> In 2009, Perrone lost his retrial and was sentenced to five years for racketeering and loan sharking.<ref>"Weighing Prison When the Convict Is Over 80" by John Eligon and Benjamin Weiser (October 9, 2009) The New York Times.</ref>
- John "Zackie" Savino – born in 1898 in Bari, Southern Italy. He immigrated to the United States in 1912 and settled into Upper Manhattan, Harlem. He later moved to the Bronx area. Savino reportedly served under Genovese capo Jimmy Angelina. He died in the late 1970s or 1980s.
- Frank "Farby" Serpico – born in 1916 in Corona, Queens. Serpico was a member of the 116th Street Crew of the Genovese family. He was promoted to acting boss or street boss by Vincent Gigante from 1998 to 2001 He died in 2002.
- Charles "Chuckie" Tuzzo – capo operating in New Jersey, Brooklyn and Manhattan. In 2002, Tuzzo was indicted with Liborio Bellomo, Ernest Muscarella and others for infiltrating the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA) local in order to extort waterfront companies operating from New York, New Jersey, and Florida.<ref>LONGSHOREMEN (ILA) / TEAMSTERS (IBT) / CARPENTERS (UBC) Longshore Union Allegedly Infiltrated by Genovese Template:Webarchive UNION CORRUPTION UPDATE - February 4, 2002 -- Vol. 5, Issue 3, National Legal and Policy Center -- Organized Labor Accountability Project Template:Webarchive</ref><ref>Vincent "Chin" Gigante, Boss of the Genovese Crime Family, Together with Genovese Acting Boss, Former Acting Boss, Family Captain, 2 Soldiers and 2 Associates Indicted and Charged with Infiltration of Longshoreman's Union Template:Webarchive(January 23, 2002)Press Release - Organized Crime & Political Corruption by John Flood & Jim McGough</ref> On October 21, 2014, Tuzzo along with soldier Vito Alberti were indicted in New Jersey on loansharking, gambling and money laundering charges.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite news</ref>
- Eugene "Charles" Ubriaco – was a member of the Morello family, who lived on East 114th Street.<ref name="Morello, Ubriaco dead"/> Ubriaco was arrested in June 1915 for carrying a revolver and was released on bail. On September 7, 1916, Ubriaco along with Nicholas Morello meet with the Navy Street gang in Brooklyn and they both were shot to death on Johnson Street in Brooklyn.<ref name="Morello, Ubriaco dead"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Joseph Zito – soldier in the Manhattan faction (the West Side Crew) under capo Rosario Gangi. Zito was involved in bookmaking and loansharking business.<ref>"383 F. 3d 65 - United States v. Bruno" Open Jurist</ref> Law enforcement labeled Zito as acting underboss from 1997 through 2003, but he was probably just a top lieutenant under official underboss Venero Mangano. In the mid-1990s, Zito frequently visited Mangano in prison after his conviction in the Windows Case. Zito relayed messages from Mangano to the rest of the family leadership. On April 7, 2020, Joseph Zito died at the age of 83.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Government informants and witnesses
- Joseph "Joe Cargo" Valachi – he exposed the inner workings of the American Mafia in 1963. Valachi was active since the Castellammarese War during the early 1930s, as an associate of the Lucchese crime family; however; after the murder of Salvatore Maranzano in 1931, he joined the Genovese family. Valachi was a soldier in the crew of Anthony Strollo. In 1959, Valachi was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment for narcotics involvement. He feared that crime family boss and namesake, Vito Genovese, ordered a murder-contract on him in 1962. Valachi and Genovese were both serving prison sentences for heroin trafficking. On June 22, 1962, he murdered another prisoner in the yard, whom he mistook for Joseph DiPalermo, a Mafia member he believed was tasked to kill him. Facing the death penalty, Valachi testified before the United States Senate Committee in 1963. He died in 1971 of a heart attack while imprisoned at FCI La Tuna.
- Vincent "Fish" Cafaro – former capo and close associate of Tony Salerno. Cafaro was a heroin dealer before joining the Genovese family. He was a protegee of Genovese high-ranking member Anthony Salerno.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Cafaro was inducted into the Genovese crime family in 1974. He was assigned to Salerno's crew and operated out of East Harlem. For over a decade, Cafaro had influence within the N.Y.C. District Council of Carpenters. Along with Genovese and Gambino members, he received kickback payments. After fellow conspirator and Genovese capo Vincent DiNapoli was sentenced to prison, Cafaro became even more powerful and wealthy; however, he was eventually forced to give DiNapoli some custom within the Carpenter Council. After his 1986 indictment, he wore a wire for five months for the FBI.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1990, he testified against Gambino boss John Gotti, who ordered the shooting of a Carpenter Council official in 1986.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- George Barone – He was allegedly a founding member of the real-life Jets street gang. In February 1954 while working as a longshoreman recruiter, Barone and a few friends caught and cornered William Torres, who was dissatisfied that he was not hired. Barone repeatedly hit Torres with a metal bar. Police charged him with felonious assault; however, it was later dropped to disorderly conduct. At a meeting with the Gambino crime family in the late 1960s, it was agreed upon that the Gambino family would own the Brooklyn and Staten Island waterfronts, and the Genovese family would control the Manhattan and New Jersey waterfronts.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> By the early 1970s, Barone was the official Genovese representative for the Genovese-owned waterfronts and was a soldier for the family.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> By the late 1970s, he controlled the Florida waterfront. In 1979, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison for racketeering; however, he only served seven years behind bars. Shortly after his 2001 indictment for extortion and racketeering, Barone decided to cooperate in April 2001 after being "put on the shelf" by the Genovese hierarchy. He testified against Gambino captain Anthony Ciccone in 2003. He had participated in nearly 20 murders. In 2009, he testified against Genovese capo Mikey Coppola.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Barone died in December 2010 at the age of 86.
- Louis Moscatiello Sr. – former acting capo and soldier active in the Bronx.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He was in charge of the Genovese infiltration of the drywall and construction industry. In 1991, he was convicted of bribing a labor official. He took a plea deal in 2004 and cooperated with the government. He was set to testify against Joseph Olivieri, a Genovese family soldier;<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> however, he died in February 2009.
- John "JB" Bologna – former associate.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He began cooperating in 1996 as a tipster for the FBI. He was primarily active in the Springfield, Massachusetts, area and served as an associate to Genovese capo Adolfo Bruno. Bologna was sentenced to eight years in prison; some of his charges included murder conspiracy, illegal gambling, extortion and racketeering. He died in prison on January 17, 2017.
- Michael "Cookie" D’Urso – former associate involved in loansharking, fraud, loansharking and murder. He wore a Rolex with a recording wire from 1998 to 2001 after he was arrested for driving the getaway car and supplying the gun in the 1996 murder of John Borelli. By 2007, his testimony has led to over 70 convictions. In March 2007, he was sentenced to 5 years probation and a $200 fine for the murder. D’Urso reportedly informed on the Genovese family after he was shot in the head over a gambling debt and his cousin Tino Lombardi was shot dead.
- Renaldi Ruggiero – former captain who headed the South Florida crew.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It is noted that in 2003, he gave the approval to extort $1.5 million from a South Florida businessman, who was held for ransom in the office of Genovese associate, Francis J. O'Donnell, and a gun was held to his head, in October 2003. The South Florida businessman was beaten up and had all of his fingers broken; one of his hands were severely damaged and he was then threatened to pay the money by the following week, implying that he would be murdered if he failed to follow through. It was also noted that Ruggiero was active in loan sharking, and was charging 40 of his customers between 52 and 156 percent interest. He was arrested in 2006 alongside six other Genovese members and associates, including Albert Facchiano who was aged 96 at the time, for several crimes, including extortion, armed robbery and money laundering. He faced 120 years in prison, if convicted. Ruggiero cooperated with the government in February 2007 and broke his omerta by admitting his involvement with the American Mafia and that he served as a capo for the Genovese family, as part of his plea deal.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> In February 2012, he was sentenced to 14 years' imprisonment; however, prosecutors recommended that Ruggiero should serve half of the sentence because of his cooperation, which the judge accepted.
- Felix Tranghese – former capo and soldier. Tranghese was proposed for membership into the Genovese family in 1982 by Adolfo Bruno. He cooperated with the government in 2010, as a result of being "shelved" in the year of 2006.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He admitted to receiving the message of the murder contract on Western Massachusetts capo Adolfo Bruno from high-ranking members of the Genovese family in New York, and to delivering the message to Bruno's crew. He also admitted to carrying out extortion and several shootings on behalf of former Genovese street boss, Arthur Nigro. In 2011 and 2012, he returned to New York to testify in 2 separate murder trials, alongside Anthony Arillotta.
- Anthony "Bingy" Arillotta – former soldier who became a government witness in 2010, alongside Felix Tranghese, a fellow Genovese-Springfield crew member. He admitted to his involvement in the 2003 murders of capo Adolfo Bruno and Gary Westerman, his brother-in-law. He also pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of a New York union boss, which also occurred in 2003. Like Tranghese, he was sentenced to 4 years' imprisonment and both had relocated to Springfield after their release.
- Anthony Zoccolillo – former associate of the Genovese and Bonanno families, Zoccolillo was arrested in 2013 and charged with running an illegal gambling scheme and distributing marijuana and oxycodone.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Anthony "Tony Lodi" Cardinalle – former associate. In 2013, he was one out of 32 mob members and associates in a crackdown over commercial waste hauling in New York and New Jersey. Cardinalle pleaded guilty in December to the two counts in which he was charged with racketeering conspiracy and conspiracy to commit extortion, admitting his role in a plot to shake down a cooperating witness who owned a waste hauling company.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Factions and territories
The Genovese family operates primarily in the New York City area; their main rackets are illegal gambling and labor racketeering.
- New York City – The Genovese family operates in all five boroughs of New York as well as in Suffolk, Westchester, Rockland, and Orange Counties in the New York suburbs. The family controls many businesses in the construction, trucking and waste hauling industries. It also operates numerous illegal gambling, loansharking, extortion, and insurance rackets. Small Genovese crews or individuals have operated in Albany, Delaware County, and Utica. The Buffalo, Rochester and Utica crime families or factions traditionally controlled these areas. The family also controls gambling in Saratoga Springs.<ref>Organized Crime By Howard Abadinsky p.80</ref>
- Connecticut – The Genovese family has long operated trucking and waste hauling rackets in New Haven, Connecticut. In 2006, Genovese acting boss Matthew "Matty the Horse" Ianniello was indicted for trash hauling rackets in New Haven and Westchester County, New York. In 1981, Gustave "Gus" Curcio and his brother were indicted for the murder of Frank Piccolo, a member of the Gambino crime family.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref>
- Massachusetts – Springfield, Massachusetts has been a Genovese territory since the family's earliest days. The most influential Genovese leaders from Springfield were Salvatore "Big Nose Sam" Curfari, Francesco "Frankie Skyball" Scibelli, Adolfo "Big Al" Bruno, and Anthony Arillotta (turned informant 2009).<ref>Genovese crime family Springfield Representatives Template:Webarchive</ref> In Worcester, Massachusetts, the most influential capos were Frank Iaconi and Carlo Mastrototaro. In Boston, Massachusetts, the New England or Patriarca crime family from Providence, Rhode Island, has long dominated the North End of Boston, but has been aligned with the Genovese family since the Prohibition era. In 2010, the FBI convinced Genovese mobsters Anthony Arillotta and Felix L. Tranghese to become government witnesses.<ref name="Rats"/><ref name="Tranghese">"Lawyers: Mobster becomes informant" Template:Webarchive By STEPHANIE BARRYMassLive September 7, 2010</ref> They represent only the fourth and fifth Genovese made men to have cooperated with law enforcement.<ref name="Rats"/> The government used Arillotta and Tranghese to prosecute capo Arthur "Artie" Nigro and his associates for the murder of Adolfo "Big Al" Bruno.<ref name="Tranghese"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Florida – The family is active in South Florida
Crews
- 116th Street Crew – led by Pasquale "Uncle Patty" Falcetti (operates in the East Bronx)
- Broadway Mob – operated in Manhattan
- Greenwich Village Crew – former crew of Vincent Gigante (operates in Greenwich Village, Lower Manhattan)
- New Jersey faction – operates in New Jersey
- Springfield faction – operates in Springfield, Massachusetts
List of murders committed by the Genovese crime family
{{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B=Template:AmboxTemplate:Main other }}
| Name | Date | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Vincent Capone | July 1, 1976 | 39-year-old loan shark Capone was shot fifteen times by two gunmen in his Cadillac when he stopped at a red light in Hoboken, New Jersey.<ref name="3 Killings">3 Killings Linked to Same Gun Joy McIntyre, New York Daily News (July 4, 1977) Template:Webarchive</ref> He had been expected to turn state's evidence in an investigation against Genovese mobster John DiGilio.<ref name="New Mafia Killer">New Mafia Killer: A Silenced .22 Time (April 18, 1977) Template:Webarchive</ref> |
| Thomas "Tommy D" Devaney | July 20, 1976 | Devaney was killed during a dispute between the Genovese family and the Hell's Kitchen Irish mob, led by Mickey Spillane, for control of rackets on the West Side of Manhattan.<ref name="Top Irish Mob Murders">Mafia Hit List – Top Irish Mob Murders Scott Burnstein, The Gangster Report (August 4, 2014) Template:Webarchive</ref> Set up by George Barone,<ref name="Top 5 Westies Murders">Mafia Hit List: The Top 5 NYC “Westies” Irish Mob Murders Scott Burnstein, The Gangster Report (April 22, 2019) Template:Webarchive</ref> Devaney was shot by hitman Joseph Sullivan in a bar on Lexington Avenue.Template:Sfn |
| Edward "Eddie the Butcher" Cummiskey | August 20, 1976 | Cummiskey, an enforcer for Spillane, was shot in the back of the head by Sullivan while drinking in a bar in Hell's Kitchen.<ref name="Top Irish Mob Murders"/><ref name="Top 5 Westies Murders"/>Template:Sfn |
| Frank Chin | January 20, 1977 | Chin, a 48-year-old wiretap expert, had been hired by DiGilio to screen his offices for listening devices and to build wiretaps which were planted in the offices of several defense attorneys.<ref name="3 Killings"/> He was shot six times in the head in the basement of his Manhattan apartment building because he was scheduled to testify against DiGilio in a federal case.<ref name="New Mafia Killer"/> |
| Thomas "Tommy the Greek" Kapatos | January 22, 1977 | A member of Spillane's gang, Kapatos was gunned down by Sullivan while walking along 34th Street.<ref name="Top Irish Mob Murders"/><ref name="Top 5 Westies Murders"/> |
| Thomas Palermo | March 25, 1977 | 36-year-old Palermo was shot three times and left in the trunk of a rented car at Kennedy Airport over a $45,000 debt owed to Anthony Salerno.<ref name="3 Killings"/> |
| Anthony "Hickey" DiLorenzo | November 25, 1988 | Genovese soldier DiLorenzo was shot in the backyard of his home in West New York, New Jersey.<ref name="Genovese Counselor Is Convicted">Genovese Family Counselor Is Convicted of Racketeering Jan Hoffman, The New York Times (April 24, 1997) Template:Webarchive</ref> His murder was ordered by James Ida after he was suspected of becoming an informant.<ref name="Wiseguy convicted">Wiseguy convicted of racketeering United Press International (April 23, 1997) Template:Webarchive</ref> |
| Ralph DeSimone | June 13, 1991 | Ida ordered Genovese associate DeSimone killed because he suspected him of being an informant.<ref name="Wiseguy convicted"/> DeSimone was allegedly killed in New Jersey.<ref name="U.S. Arrests Mafia Group’s Bosses">U.S. Arrests Top Mafia Group’s Reputed Bosses John L. Goldman, Los Angeles Times (June 12, 1996) Template:Webarchive</ref> He was found shot to death in the trunk of his car at LaGuardia Airport.<ref name="Genovese Counselor Is Convicted"/> |
| Ralph Anthony Coppola | September 16, 1998 | 41-year-old Genovese capo Coppola disappeared and was last seen near an associate's business on Stillwater Avenue in the Bronx.<ref name="Cold Case Tuesday">Cold Case Tuesday: New York State Police continue to investigate the 1998 disappearance of Lewisboro resident, Ralph A. Coppola Hamlet Hub Template:Webarchive</ref> Liborio Bellomo allegedly sanctioned the murder of Coppola.<ref name="Quiet Talk">Quiet Talk Leads to Genovese Capo's Killer Jerry Capeci, The New York Sun (August 17, 2006) Template:Webarchive</ref> Bollomo was charged in 2006 with ordering Coppola's murder.<ref name="32 Indicted">32 Indicted on Racketeering Charges in Manhattan Julia Preston, The New York Times (February 24, 2006) Template:Webarchive</ref> |
In popular culture
The Genovese crime family has a long history of portrayal in Hollywood as the subject of film and television.
Television
- Boardwalk Empire (2010-2014)
- Godfather of Harlem (2019)
Film
- Mobsters (1991)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- The Alto Knights (2025)
References
Sources
Books
External links
Template:Genovese crime family Template:Genovese crime family (1963) Template:Murder, Incorporated Template:American Mafia Template:Organized crime groups in the United States Template:Organized crime groups in Atlantic City Template:Organized crime groups in New York City