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Post by ~Wizeguy~ on Oct 8, 2003 10:31:52 GMT -5
Paul Castellano Tony Accardo - This guy is one of the most succesful mafia leaders ever.
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Sweets
Giovane D'Honore
Posts: 8
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Post by Sweets on Oct 8, 2003 21:43:34 GMT -5
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Post by ~Wizeguy~ on Oct 9, 2003 1:16:24 GMT -5
Heh...Al Pacino was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon
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Post by JOE BOTTA on Oct 10, 2003 15:51:44 GMT -5
PEEWEE, I THOUGHT THIS WAS A MOAFIA FORUM, THIS JOINT SUCKS! WHAT ARE YOU ALL, 13 YEARS OLD?
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Post by ~Wizeguy~ on Oct 10, 2003 19:24:32 GMT -5
PEEWEE, I THOUGHT THIS WAS A MOAFIA FORUM, THIS JOINT SUCKS! WHAT ARE YOU ALL, 13 YEARS OLD? You are right in which that thread (one pee wee) should be moved to the appropriate place (as it has). --However why don’t you comment on the mob pictures you see posted up? Or contribute? ...or approach the mater in a mature way...Rather then in CAPS, and misspelling your opinion (on everybody being 13), and using the word SUX...oh the irony. ~Wize~
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Post by ~$iciliano~ on Oct 12, 2003 7:11:53 GMT -5
New York mafia boss of the Gambino Family. Gotti died of throat cancer in a prison medical facility.
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Post by ~$iciliano~ on Oct 20, 2003 6:24:14 GMT -5
Tony Big Tuna Accardo Anthony “Big Tuna” Accardo bragged repeatedly to cohorts and friends that he had never spent a night in jail, though he was once busted on a vagrancy charge in 1945 while playing golf with Al Capone and “Machine Gun” Jack McGurn. A veteran mob boss once said of him “…Accardo has more brains before breakfast than Al Capone ever had all day.” A racketeer and enforcer in the Chicago mobs, Accardo’s careeer spanned 40 years, and saw him indicted by the Feds on tax and extortion charges, as well as counts relating to the union organization of the Hotel and Restaurant workers. None of the charges stuck, and Accardo lived out his years as the elder statesman of the Chicago mobs.
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Post by ~$iciliano~ on Oct 24, 2003 1:32:24 GMT -5
Carlo Gambino In 1969 Carlo Gambino a.k.a. Don Carlo who was the Mafia boss from 1957-1976 was charged with masterminding an armed robbery truck hijacking. Born in Palermo, Sicily, Gambino entered the U.S. illegally and never became a citizen. With that, the Feds tried to have him deported however, Gambino would always end up in the hospital for his bad health and his doctors proved he had heart trouble therefore would not be able to make the trip. By happenstance in October of 1976, Gambino died of a heart attack while watching the New York Yankees. It was rumored that Gambino’s family bought off two U.S. Senators (who have always remained unnamed) to allow him to remain in the United States. The payoff was for $25,000 a year for each of the Senators for life, if the deportation order was stopped.
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Post by Evangelion on Oct 24, 2003 13:25:27 GMT -5
Me... of course its kind of bad light
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Post by Sammy on Oct 29, 2003 2:31:27 GMT -5
Me... of course its kind of bad light ?what the hell? isn't that off a video game
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Post by ~$iciliano~ on Oct 30, 2003 6:22:21 GMT -5
John Gotti Jr. They just don’t make ‘em like they used to. No one really wanted John Gotti Jr. to take over the reins of what’s left of the Gambino crime family, but there was no one left to do the job. Papa Gotti, a.k.a. The Teflon Don, was in prison, where he would die; the other two likely candidates were indicted and pled guilty to charges of racketeering, so Junior was really the only one left. Dumb and low-brow, Junior didn’t last long as a crime boss – he was convicted of racketeering, loan sharking, tax evasion and fraud, among other things, and is serving a six year sentence. Aren’t there any mob bosses left with a little style?
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Post by Evangelion on Nov 3, 2003 14:00:42 GMT -5
nah its really me.
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Post by ~$iciliano~ on Nov 7, 2003 0:42:58 GMT -5
Al Capone Al Capone, born Alphonse Capone was born in Brooklyn, New York started working for Johnny Torrio in Chicago at the age of 22. Capone was responsible for getting proprietors to buy Torrio’s illegal alcohol. Capone took over and expanded the business by killing his competitors. The police could not get any evidence to convict Capone of murder so instead they arrested and charged him with tax evasion in 1931. He was released in 1939 but was unable to sell illegal alcohol. He died in 1947. Allegedly Capone had shown signs of the effects of syphilis and his mental strength had faded.
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Post by Sammy on Nov 13, 2003 21:17:57 GMT -5
Frank Sinatra his charges of 'seduction' got dismissed.
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Post by ~$iciliano~ on Nov 23, 2003 5:20:56 GMT -5
Albert Anastasia Albert Anastasia Albert Anastasia a.k.a. “Mad Hatter” or “Lord High Executioner” was the man who ran Murders Inc. Anastasia was arrested between 1920 and 1933 and questioned about five different murders. He was always released after questioning or acquitted at trial; he escaped the chair numerous times. However, his luck ran out in 1957 when he was gunned down by two men in a barber shop while getting his hair cut. No one was ever arrested for his murder. ~Siciliano~
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