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once upon a time in a small hillside community nestled in the southern reaches of Italy a child came into the
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world who would later emerge as one of the most pivotal names in the realm of
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organized crime This boy known from birth as Francesco Castiglia drew his
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first breath on the 26th of January 1891
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The area where he spent his earliest days a modest town perched near Casano Alono in Calabria echoed with the kind
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of rural poverty that was widespread throughout the region His father already
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approaching middle age at 45 when young Franchesco was born worked as a farmer
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with limited prospects whereas his mother occasionally assisted neighbors and local families by serving as a
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midwife Because of the family's precarious finances they often found themselves scrimping just to keep
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everyone fed They were not alone Almost no one in that corner of Italy at the
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turn of the century escaped the iron grip of poverty Life in Calabria was a
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constant test of endurance Many families saw immigration as the only hope for a
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better tomorrow So Italy found itself in the grip of a massive wave of departures
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Franchesco's father who saw the lure of distant shores decided to join thousands
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of others crossing the Atlantic In 1893 he traveled to the United States taking
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along some of his children while Francesco and a few others remained with their mother for a time This pattern of
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staggered immigration was entirely typical as families often split themselves between two continents hoping
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to build enough of a financial base so that those left behind could follow
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Eventually Francesco and his mother along with one of his sisters secured
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passage across the ocean and arrived in New York City He was far too young to
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pay for a ticket and thus sailed for free The rest of the family reunited in
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a cramped East Harlem tenement on East 108th Street At that time Harlem was
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still taking shape culturally Large waves of migration both from various
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parts of the world and from other regions of the United States had not yet fully transformed the area Instead
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little pockets of Italians clustered together forming micro communities where people shared the same language
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tradition and daily struggles Owning a meager grocery store Franchesco's father
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sold only the most essential goods: flour eggs milk bread Yet money remained
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so scarce that the boys Franchesco and his brother Eduardo sometimes felt
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compelled to piler push carts on the street just to keep enough food on the family table Watching how much labor and
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sacrifice went into every crumb of sustenance Young Francesco developed a
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fierce desire to break free of poverty Later in adulthood he frankly admitted
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that he despised the way his father seemed resigned to their plight Franchesco's schooling was sporadic
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complicated both by their financial troubles and his late arrival in New York which left him behind many other
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children in terms of English language skills But the lure of skipping class to
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make quick money soon eclipsed formal education By the time he hit his teenage
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years he like so many future notorious kingpins drifted into small-time
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offenses Rumors circulated years down the line that he ran amateur gambling
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games with other kids Indeed many who grew up amid the cramped streets and
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multithnic fireworks of early 20th century Harlem found that petty theft
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and illicit dealings were an everpresent temptation While some might slip into
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crime out of necessity others embraced it more fully Organized crime in the
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United States was not at all new The multithnic environment in major cities
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offered a rich breeding ground for these underworld secrets Irish gangs still
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held substantial turf symbolically controlling significant spheres of influence especially since Irish
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immigrants had arrived in overwhelming waves during the mid-9th century But the
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Italian diaspora was growing swiftly and the seeds of the Sicilian mafia and
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variants such as the Calabrian drangetta had already begun to germinate in
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American soil Francesco called Frank or Frankie by now
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gravitated to that budding criminal network Several arrests occurred in his
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youth At one point he was charged with robbing a coal merchant allegedly
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hitting the man with a hammer and also suspected in a burglary of a woman's
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jewelry If anyone asked for his name it was never quite the same He might
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present himself as Castello Costello or Seario whichever best camouflaged him
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that moment Before long he decided on Frank Costello That identity was
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destined to become famous in real mafia stories told for decades to come By the
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mid 19s Frank's everyday existence revolved around the hustle and bustle of
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New York's shadow economy He tried to hold legitimate work once even hauling
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pianos for a factory but found it too grueling to tolerate A year behind bars
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on a gunpossession charge also did little to dissuade him from the underworld His disinterest in ordinary
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work and mounting frustration with meager wages pushed him along with
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countless others toward the more tempting though treacherous side of the street Then in 1920 everything changed
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drastically The introduction of prohibition a ban on the sale and
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distribution of alcohol throughout the nation proved an absolute gamecher in
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American history While intended to curb vice it inadvertently did the opposite
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gifting aspiring racketeers an unparalleled avenue for profit Seemingly
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overnight a wave of new opportunities arose for bootleggers rum runners and
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illicit distilleries Frank Costello who had thus far languished in smallcale hustles now
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had a chance to tap into a sphere that promised immense riches He began
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collaborating closely with others who would eventually be recognized as notorious kingpins in American crime
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families such as the legendary Charles Lucky Luchiano and Veto Genevi as well
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as Jewish associates like Myansky and Benjamin Bugsy Seagull Initially these
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young mob upstarts often sought funding from more established figures like
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Arnold Rothstein who possessed ample connections and enough capital to back
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ambitious newcomers In the early days of prohibition many bootleggers simply
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bribed their way into government warehouses extracting legitimate alcohol
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supposedly earmarked for medical purposes As these warehouses emptied
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illegal import routes became the next step This entailed meeting shipments
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along the deserted shores of New Jersey in a region nicknamed Rum Ralph or
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transporting hearty supplies down from Canada For Costello and his circle these
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clandestine distribution channels forged new alliances Soon Italians worked alongside or
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competed bitterly with Irish and Jewish crime syndicates In these underworld
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markets all manner of boundaries blurred In the rough and tumble climate of the
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1920s it was sometimes easier to build partnerships than to wage endless turf
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wars Though plenty of blood was still spilled to protect profits and territory
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Early in this era Costello deepened his alliance with Bill Dwire an influential
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Irish bootleger For years afterward speculation claimed that Frank picked
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Costello as an Irish sounding alias to better connect with Dwire In truth Frank
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had toyed with the name earlier Yet partnering with Dwire definitely boosted
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his fortunes Their enterprise soared reaping immense revenues from
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transporting and selling illicit liquor across New York According to police data
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DW alone may have rad in close to $10 million between 1922 and 1929 a
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staggering sum in that era Even a portion of that would easily place
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Costello among the city's wealthiest operators With these profits Frank invested in
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legitimate ventures real estate companies that built houses automobile
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dealerships and even an ice cream cone business These front enterprises
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provided a veneer of normaly making it less obvious to law enforcement where
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his wealth originated True crime historians often point to Costello's dual existence
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amiable gentleman in public cunning dealmaker behind closed doors as proof
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of his skill in juggling multiple identities Rumors swirled for years that
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Frank might have joined forces with Joseph Kennedy Senior the father of an eventual president Many bootleggers from
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New York famously claimed they had done business with the influential Boston figure fueling countless unsolved
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mysteries around the Kennedy family's rumored gain of wealth during
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prohibition Modern historians usually downplay these allegations but Costello
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himself was known to drop intriguing hints that he had indeed managed
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bootlegging deals with that Kennedy fellow Some chalked it up to storytelling flare Others pointed to it
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as a quiet acknowledgement of how far organized crimes links could stretch
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into the pantheon of American politics With prohibition in full swing
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everything seemed possible and everyone was looking to climb higher This era
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also witnessed the rise of Joe the boss Maseria who demanded steep tributes from
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smaller outfits Then in the fall of 1928 Arnold Rothstein often seen as a
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financial backer for so many illicit deals was murdered in a dispute over a
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massive unpaid gambling debt His death left a gaping power vacuum Crime
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families turned on one another more regularly each wanting to carve out their portion of the bootlegging empire
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Frank maintained relationships with major players including Joe the boss
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Maseria and Salvator Marenzano but soon found himself caught in a fearsome
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crossfire that would reshape the underworld By early 1930 the region's
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underworld carried an air of impending war Maseria who employed the likes of
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Luchiano Castello and Geneovves pitted himself against Maranzano a Sicilianborn
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upstart competing for dominance Tensions peaked when Maseria ordered the killing
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of a one-time ally who had joined Maranzano's orbit Then came the infamous
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Castellamaray's war so named for the Sicilian town from which Marenzano and
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many of his loyalists hailed Multiple factions jockeyed for superiority in a
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brutal contest that dragged on for well over a year Eventually Luchiano and his
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partners Costello included sided against Maseria orchestrating his assassination
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Once that was accomplished Maranzano proclaimed himself the boss of bosses
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and expected tribute from all corners of the city's mafia scene But his reign did
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not last Luchiano wary that he might be next on Marenzano's list hired Jewish
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hitmen to dispatch the self-proclaimed top boss thereby eradicating him only
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months after he rose to the pinnacle The subsequent reorganization of crime families was spearheaded by
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Luchiano Having observed the chaotic infighting he chose coexistence over
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dictatorial rule Instead of naming a single top man a commission formed
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comprised of key crime family leaders from across New York Buffalo Chicago and
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elsewhere This commission with Luchiano at its head served as a meeting place
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for all the significant voices in the American Kulsa Nostra Each family was
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meant to handle its own affairs while consulting collectively on larger underworld secrets Costello emerged from
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this restructure as the consiliier a vital adviser in the newly named
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Luchiano crime family Some recognized it as a tribute to Frank's skillful
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negotiations and his inclination towards stable business-like operation rather
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than endless violence Meanwhile historical currents were about to shift
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again Prohibition ended in 1933 removing the gold mine of illicit
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liquor The mafia families who had thrived in that climate needed fresh
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revenue streams Gambling enterprises quickly beckoned Illegal gambling dens
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and games of chance popped up in backrooms and the sale of slot machines
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soared Before long Castello took the lead in distributing these machines
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throughout New York Though he soon faced a stubborn opponent in Fiorella
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Laguardia the city's mayor who pledged a fierce crackdown on both speak easys and
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gambling devices Undeterred Frank found salvation through an alliance with a
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flamboyant politician from Louisiana named Huey Long While overshadowed by
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drama in the rest of the nation the deal they struck in the mid 1930s gave
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Costello a new domain for his gambling machines New Orleans in exchange for an
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annual sum that Costello paid to Long's handpicked charities His slot machines
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flooded that southern city's bars and back rooms The arrangement was an odd
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reflection of how seamlessly criminal enterprises could forge alliances with
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high-profile political figures Although the money from those slot machines would
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remain a major income source until authorities finally shut the operation
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down decades later Costello's position within the mafia soon climbed even
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higher In 1936 a fateful series of raids on illicit brothel brought intense legal
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heat on Luchiano Prosecutor Thomas Dwey led the effort effectively prosecuting Lucky for
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years of alleged wrongdoing Despite the questionable depth of the actual charges pandering it was enough to earn Luchiano
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a lengthy prison sentence of 30 to 50 years Even though he was boss in name his incarceration removed him from daily
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control Vto Genevves initially chosen as his replacement was forced to flee the
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country to dodge homicide charges Thus by 1937 Costello was left
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to assume total leadership of the Luchiano family effectively dictating
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the direction of one of the most influential crime syndicates in the entire city With the Great Depression
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raging and the world on the cusp of conflict Frank Costello's style as boss
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stood out He believed in forging alliances working quietly and minimizing
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violence A prime example was his stance on narcotics He feared the intense
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crackdown it would inevitably spark So he urged his associates to decrease or
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entirely avoid involvement in drug trafficking Yet inner strife and
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personal challenges would still arise Willie Moretti an old friend of Franks
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was named second in command But a few years later he began exhibiting erratic
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behavior tied to advanced syphilis In this dark history of mafia politics
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mental or physical decline often led to lethal outcomes Moretti's fate would
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eventually reflect that pattern In the global arena the outbreak of war brought
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the mafia additional complications and surprising opportunities After the 1941 attack on
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American soil the nation entered the Second World War Government authorities
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anxious to implement strategic advantages turned to the Kosanostra for help monitoring labor unions
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safeguarding the country's largest seapports and even aiding allied invasions in Sicily Unofficially dubbed
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Operation Underworld this arrangement involved Castello facilitating contact
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between imprisoned Luchiano and American agents Whether the mafia's contributions
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genuinely swayed the war effort remains open to debate Still the government
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rewarded Luchiano by commuting his sentence provided he accept deportation
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once the war ended In 1946 he was transported back to Italy leaving
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Costello as the undisputed head of the family for the foreseeable future Back
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in New York Veto Genevves soon reappeared Having returned from Italy
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around 1946 he wriggled free of criminal charges by eliminating key witnesses
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then set his sights on reclaiming higher standing in the family This triggered a
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subtle but potent rivalry between him and Costello Underworld watchers
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recognized that Genevese believed power was rightfully his whereas Frank who had
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led the family for nearly a decade had no intention of stepping aside Meanwhile
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Luchiano briefly returned to the underworld fry from a distance He
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attempted to pull strings from Cuba in late 1946 convening major bosses
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including Costello Geneovvesa and powerful Jewish associates for a large
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meeting in Havana But that summit soon dissolved when American officials pressured the Cuban government to expel
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Luchiano He landed back in Italy and was never again a direct force in New York
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operations Despite Genevies's attempts to undermine Costello during the Havana
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gathering Costello retained overall leadership Part of the Havana
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discussions involved a flamboyant gangster named Benjamin Bugsy Seagull
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who had been entrusted with building the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas Widespread
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dissatisfaction with Seagull's mismanagement eventually led to his murder Afterward Costello participated
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heavily in expanding the mafia's presence in Vegas especially in
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constructing the Tropicana With such a broad portfolio of ventures from
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Louisiana slot machines to desert casinos he earned the moniker Prime
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Minister of the Underworld reflecting both his subtle statesmanship and broad
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influence in the criminal galaxy All the while he and his wife Bobby maintained a
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surprisingly lowkey lifestyle By midentury he was known to mingle with an
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odd assortment of high society figures and everyday people alike rarely
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flaunting his dark history to outsiders Some recalled him as polite
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sociable and gracious to hosts or staff in upscale New York venues However drama
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of a different kind loomed in the late 1940s when Costello like a fictional
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crime lord dealing with personal demons started seeing a prominent Park Avenue
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psychiatrist known for treating alcoholism and depression For about 2
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years Frank met with the doctor to address his mood swings But the
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arrangement imploded when the psychiatrist publicly revealed details of the therapy sessions Though it
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amounted to a minor scandal especially given the mafia creed of absolute secrecy Castello brushed it off denying
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any involvement Yet some likely wondered what he might have dulged in those
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sessions The risk of exposure multiplied sharply in 1951 when the government
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initiated the famous Keover hearings on organized crime families Costello was
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called to testify Although legally he could not incriminate himself the entire ordeal
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put him under the microscope Investigators questioned the labyrinth of aliases he once used the suspicious
22:44
route by which his slot machines landed in New Orleans and most notably his
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tangled connections to political operatives from Tam Hall At one point he
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walked out of the hearings and only returned under pressure When pressed about his contributions to society he
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mentioned that he had always been meticulous in paying taxes a statement
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that quickly came back to haunt him In echoing a scenario reminiscent of Al
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Capone's downfall two decades earlier the authorities homeed in on Costello's
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taxes Eventually he was charged with tax evasion That legal fiasco dragged on for
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years culminating in a sentence of 5 years behind bars in
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1954 He filed endless appeals but by 1956 discovered that staying out of
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prison any longer would be nearly impossible In a final desperate gambit
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his attorneys tried to argue that he was too ill suffering from a severe ulcer
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and a fatal form of cancer to endure incarceration offering his voluntary exile from the
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country in exchange for a dismissal of charges This ploy failed and Frank was
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sent to a federal prison in Atlanta to serve his term He then switched
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attorneys eventually securing release after less than a year due to various
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technicalities During that uncertain period Veto Genevvesi sensed a golden
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opportunity With Costello convicted and presumably weakened Genevves prepared to
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seize ultimate control of the family When Frank unexpectedly regained his
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freedom sooner than anticipated Genevies resorted to violence On a May evening in
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1957 Costello drove up to the majestic apartments near Central Park only to be
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confronted by a gunman The hitman Vincent Gigante famously shouted that
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the following bullet was for you Frank before pulling the trigger By a slender
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twist of fate the shot only grazed Costello's head Frank refused to
25:03
identify Jigante in court and the asalent was eventually let off the hook
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Amazingly the survivor and the wouldbe assassin later patched things up enough
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to be on reasonable terms That was the cyclical nature of the underworld
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Business overshadowed personal grudges but it was a harbinger of a shift No
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longer feeling certain of his security Frank recognized that further confrontation with Genevies could easily
25:35
lead to a more successful murder attempt Another event that same year reinforced
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his misgivings Albert Anastasia who led another of the city's crime families and
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was an ally of Costello was brutally murdered in a hotel barber shop The many
25:52
unsolved mysteries surrounding these killings brought chilling clarity Genevves had no intention of sharing
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power Rather than risk final annihilation Costello chose to seed
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control Genevves rebranded the old Luchiano outfit under his own name
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Though ironically his glory was short Within a couple of years he was
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convicted and imprisoned on unrelated drug charges and sore out his final days
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behind bars dying toward the end of the 1960s That left Frank to navigate
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repeated legal wrangling over his tax cases Not long after the attempt on his
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life he returned to court and in 1958 received another blow The hearing ruled
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against him and he was placed back in the Atlanta Penitentiary There he spent some time
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incarcerated alongside the very man who had tried to overthrow him Both
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recognized that the fight was effectively concluded By
27:01
1961 with time credited for good behavior and the earlier portion of his
27:06
sentence Frank Costello walked out of prison for the last time prepared to
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embrace a quieter phase of life Once he genuinely stepped back from dayto-day
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intrigues Frank entered a mellow rhythm Now in his 60s with decades of dark
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history behind him he rose each morning to stroll near Central Park parttook in
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relaxed conversations with old friends some legitimate some not and occasionally indulged in lavish dining
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experiences where he was known to tip weight staff extremely well weekends
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found him and his wife retreating to a more tranquil suburban dwelling relaxing
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in a garden that he personally tended Years earlier he had confided that the
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endless bloodshed of the Castellamares war and the daily pressure of dominating
28:02
an underworld empire were not what he wanted for the rest of his days Now it
28:08
seemed he had found relative peace living off the considerable wealth
28:13
carefully masked through both legal and illicit operations If associates or
28:19
acquaintances from the crime families did track him down it was typically for advice or a fleeting handshake Those
28:27
behind the push to investigate organized crime including government committees
28:32
convened in the 1960s sometimes summoned Costello to testify But the old boss
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with little to hide anymore answered calmly In the early 1970s his health
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deteriorated When first hit by a heart attack in February of 1973 he ended up
28:52
in the hospital for several days Although doctors were optimistic the strain proved too great for the man in
28:59
his early 80s Another heart attack struck on the 18th of that month
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claiming his life News outlets announced the passing of the so-called prime
29:10
minister of the underworld The final service though modest and devoid of typical underworld fanfare marked the
29:18
quiet end to a life that spanned the dawn the zenith and the transformation
29:23
of the American mafia His widow wishing for no grand spectacle kept the ceremony
29:29
small Looking back on his era one sees that Frank Costello stood out for his
29:35
thoughtful blend of diplomacy and cunning in the realm of real mafia stories Figures like Luchiano and
29:42
Genevves might have begun with equal footing but Luchiano wound up deported
29:49
and Genevves died in jail Others ended up murdered in barber shops or on
29:55
bustling streets Costello was luckier or perhaps more discerning surviving an
30:02
assassination attempt departing gracefully from a life that often ended violently for many he managed to enjoy a
30:09
semblance of calm in old age By the time he died the shape of organized crime in
30:16
America was already shifting with forthcoming decades bringing more robust
30:22
federal investigations wiretaps and infiltration of the mafia's dominion
30:28
over labor unions Hearing Joseph Velace testify in 1963 about the commission and
30:36
the National Network of Crime Families would only accelerate that downfall
30:41
Nevertheless for a long stretch Costello and his circle loomed large over
30:47
gambling rings bootlegging roots and every corner of the underworld where
30:52
money flowed Reflecting on Costello's story prompts plenty of debate among
30:59
afficionados of true crime and dark history Some suspect that if this
31:05
rational persuasionfocused boss had kept his hold on power the mafia might have
31:11
prolonged its golden era Others argue that the unstoppable tide of federal
31:16
enforcement would have crippled those infamous syndicates ambitions sooner or
31:21
later To this day the saga of Costello's improbable rise from the impoverished
31:28
hills of Calabria to the absolute apex of New York's crime families remains a
31:33
cautionary tale about the capacity for reinvention secrecy and survival His
31:40
experience revealed many of the underworld secrets that shaped the legends of gangster law After all in a
31:48
realm defined by violent vendettas and constant betrayals his path exiting the
31:54
stage while still alive was the exception rather than the rule It is
31:59
intriguing to imagine what might have occurred if fate had gone a bit differently Suppose that solitary bullet
32:07
on West 72nd Street had struck another inch inward Would Costello have
32:13
disappeared from the annals of real mafia stories right then and there Or
32:18
perhaps if Genevves had never fled to Italy in the 1930s Frank might never
32:24
have risen to preeeminent authority Ultimately the interplay of personal decisions legislative surprises like
32:31
prohibition and major historical events such as the Second World War shaped the mafia's transformation and Castello's
32:37
personal destiny Such a figure does not easily vanish from collective memory Even now decades later people still
32:45
recount the name Frank Costello in the same breath as other fabled mob lords
32:50
who once guided the direction of the American underworld His public persona
32:56
an unassuming gentleman in tailored suits hid a formidable mind that clenched deals and commanded loyalty He
33:04
swapped out the brazen approach of some contemporaries for a measured style of
33:09
leadership that strove to minimize chaos among his own rank and file Rather than
33:16
turning trust into paranoia he excelled at compromise and backroom negotiation
33:23
Indeed his membership in many circles from city politicians to the owners of late night recreation spots attest to
33:31
how integrated these crime families were within broader society Did that
33:37
pragmatic approach ensure the mob's longevity or merely postpone the inevitable crackdown historians and fans
33:45
of unsolved mysteries still argue the point Certain observers believe that
33:51
direct confrontation with law enforcement was not going to undo the mafia so much as internal competition
33:57
for status and territory Others see it as unstoppable in a changing America no
34:04
matter who wore the crown If Frank harbored opinions on all of this toward the end he kept them extremely private
34:12
He had already gambled big and come out alive something few peers accomplished
34:19
In the grand tapestry of notorious kingpins one rarely finds an end point
34:24
quite like Costello's Many fade out in a swirl of bullets or suffer final humiliations
34:32
from endless court trials that systematically dismantle their networks By contrast Frank managed to step away
34:41
while still retaining plenty of capital enough that even in his twilight years
34:46
he retained comfortable homes a circle of acquaintances and a measure of local
34:51
influence though certainly less than in his heyday The fact that a man so deeply
34:58
entwined with real mafia stories once spent afternoons quietly pruning his
35:04
prized garden plants or socializing with newspaper publishers at the Waldorf
35:09
Atoria shows how complicated personal identities can be especially in the
35:15
swirling unpredictable environment of dark history's underworld To many Frank
35:21
Costello epitomizes a paradox A gangster who disliked unnecessary violence A
35:28
gambler who quietly paid off politicians An immigrant who rose to commanding
35:34
heights of an infamous syndicate His life encapsulates how the unstoppable
35:40
forces of mass migration economic struggle political corruption and
35:45
evolving laws shape the fate of those who choose or feel driven to survive in
35:53
the shadows Perhaps the final irony is the obituary that featured him in major
35:59
newspapers He lived to an old age His once powerful name recognized by a
36:05
relatively small circle of mourers at his funeral A far cry from the
36:10
ostentatious gangster culture often portrayed in Hollywood And still people
36:16
who track the transitions of the American underworld cannot study the era of bootleggers slot machines and the
36:23
five crime families without seeing Costello's fingerprint on nearly every
36:29
significant development Even the surviving glimpses of him gliding into
36:34
high-end restaurants wearing his unassuming expression tipping waiters
36:39
extravagantly offer a tantalizing snapshot of an era that has since passed
36:44
into legend Some followers of real mafia stories speculate that had certain
36:50
events gone another way Frank might have found himself wielding additional
36:55
influence in later years possibly bridging new alliances or cutting deals
37:02
with crooked politicians Others muse that his business sense particularly his
37:07
ability to legitimize wealth through real estate and gambling ventures made
37:12
him partly responsible for how thoroughly crime families embedded themselves in mainstream America In any
37:20
case the tapestry of Costello's life is a swirling saga of underworld secrets
37:26
cunning alliances and success balanced against lethal risk There's also a
37:32
broader moral complexity in watching Franchesco Castilia once a hungry child
37:39
who hated struggling transform into Frank Costello the prime minister of the
37:44
underworld One can trace that path from the earliest recollections of swiping
37:50
food off carts in East Harlem to forging back alley poker rings and finally to
37:55
orchestrating milliondoll deals And while many of his associates ended up behind bars for decades or lying face
38:04
down in their own blood Costello cultivated enough connections political
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savvy and subtlety to walk away breathing That survival resonates with
38:15
watchers of true crime It's the very essence of cunning in the face of adversity Returning to that question was
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Frank Costello an anomaly who might have maintained the mafia's fortunes if Genevves had not undermined him or did
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changing law enforcement tactics evolving social norms and shifting economic conditions portend the mafia's
38:39
diminishing hold anyway photographs of Costello in federal hearings or stepping
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lightly out of a court building show a man of restraint and composure perhaps
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not prone to flamboyant acts that attract unnecessary headlines Even the
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final confrontation with a bullet to his head concluded with him refusing to name
39:02
the shooter Some note that this code of silence matched by a readiness to
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compromise for self-preservation was the hallmark of a man who considered the big picture not
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merely short-term vengeance Opinions will always diverge but nobody
39:20
can doubt that his story is woven into the American tapestry of organized crime
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overshadowing many subsequent generations who attempted to replicate his clims and cunning In time the swirl
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of public fascination moved on to other dark legends but professionals who
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follow the progression of infamous syndicates continue to bring up Frank's legacy After all here was an individual
39:48
who possessed the breadth of an empire spanning everything from shaft farmland
39:54
origins in Calabria to the bright lights of mid-century Manhattan's nightclub
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scene From the fiasco of being thrown in prison to the hush- hush meetings with
40:05
psychiatrists to forging political deals with flamboyant southern senators It's a
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roller coaster of alliances and close calls that only real mafia stories can
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deliver When reflecting on the final chapters of his life one might be
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surprised at the calm tone that emerges For a man who pioneered business over
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bloodshed the quiet coder to his journey heart trouble small funeral subdued
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farewell seems almost fitting No final desperate flight across the Atlantic No
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last revenge from an old enemy No lavish spectacle By then the world was
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different The era of big band music and flamboyant speak easys had faded The
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rackets were more scattered Criminal families more carefully scrutinized In
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that shifting landscape Frank Costello retreated into relative normaly as if
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content to let others scramble for what remained of the underworld's fading
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empire The question "What do you think of Frank Costello?" beckons the curious
41:18
to unravel the full scope of his influence Was he a cunning magnate who saw how to run a mafia empire without
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turning it into a war zone or a self-serving manipulator who simply adapted to the times Whichever
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conclusion one draws his legacy remains a cornerstone of true crime folklore an
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emblem of how cunning and power can intersect with survival For those who
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seek to explore unsolved mysteries about how politics and crime intermingle his
41:52
anecdote about speaking briefly to that Kennedy guy remains an irresistible side
41:58
note Whether or not any shady deals truly took place the claim underscores
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the bridging nature of gangster and politician in 20th century America Amid
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the swirling changes of the Great Depression the Second World War and beyond men like Costello found ways to
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thrive forging hidden networks that teased open the seams of legitimate
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society Many are fascinated by that thread questioning just how many hush-
42:32
hush partnerships remain undocumented and how many more skeletons might be rattling inside old closets across the
42:40
nation Despite all the speculation the verifiable truth is that Frank Costello
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was there at each twist and turn of the mafia's growth From the bootlegging of
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prohibition to the slot machine expansions in New Orleans from the power
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jockeying after the Castellamares war to the quiet infiltration of life in Las
43:03
Vegas He conversed with powerful executives bought influence among Tamony
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Hall politicians helped shape the commission and weathered every major federal crackdown from the 1930s forward
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And in his final years he chose to do something rare for a figure so entangled
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in the dark history of infamous syndicates He walked away with his life
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That fact alone cementss his place in the pantheon of underworld
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survivors Many observers have tried again and again to unearth hidden dimensions of Frank Costello's
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personality Some proposed that his intelligence overshadowed an underlying
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ruthlessness Others see him as the brains of a criminal empire that needed
43:54
cunning tacticians more than brute enforcers However one interprets him the saga of
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Frank Costello from a humble origin in an impoverished Italian village to a
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leading manipulator in the American underworld continues to captivate Even
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time and distance have not diminished the thrill of retelling how a boy who
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resented his father's poverty managed to amass immense wealth and still slip into
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a mostly calm retirement outliving that so many cutthroat rivals And so as the
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final curtain closed in 1973 the prime minister of the underworld took his leave No doubt
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certain corners of Manhattan offered a quiet toast to a man who reigned over
44:44
organized crime without letting it swallow him completely Others might have
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shaken their heads in disbelief that he survived so long However one weighs the
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good and bad of such a figure his narrative stands as a testament to how an individual through audacity cunning
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and constant adaptation can sculpt entire chapters of American underworld
45:09
secrets The reverberations of Frank Costello's life story remain vital to
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understanding a distinctive era when the five crime families commanded colossal
45:20
fortunes manipulated political alliances and spread their influence across state
45:26
lines Whenever conversations arise about the structure and transformation of the
45:32
American mob his name inevitably resurfaces A reminder that sometimes the
45:38
subtlest approach can prove the most enduring path to