Lucky Luciano
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Lucky Luciano (Charles Luciano), 1896-1962, American crime boss, b. near Palermo, Sicily, as Salvatore Luciana. His family emigrated in 1906, settling in New York City, where he almost immediately embarked on a life of crime. Jailed briefly (1916) for narcotics sales, he was soon associated with Meyer Lansky, "Bugsy" Siegel, and Frank Costello. In 1920 he entered the crime family of "Joe the Boss" Masseria and within five years was overseeing bootlegging, prostitution, and other illegal enterprises. A gang war with Salvatore Maranzano's crime family ended in 1931 when Luciano had both older gangsters murdered. Thereafter, he helped bring a corporate structure and approach to organized crime as a leader of the newly formed Syndicate. Luciano lived up to his nickname until 1935 when reformer Thomas E. Dewey targeted him. A year later he was convicted of prostitution charges and imprisoned, but he continued as a mob boss from his cell. During World War II he helped U.S. naval intelligence end waterfront sabotage in New York, and in 1946 his sentence was commuted. Deported to Italy, he maintained considerable control over American drug traffic until his death.
Bibliography: See biographies by H. Powell (1939, repr. 2000) and S. Feder and J. Joesten (1954, repr. 1994); M. A. Gosch, The Last Testament of Lucky Luciano (1975).
Author not available, LUCIANO, LUCKY.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
MORGENTHAU LINKS N.Y. POST, CRIME FAMILY
The Record (Bergen County, NJ); 6/26/1992; 242 words
; The Record (Bergen County, NJ) 06-26-1992 MORGENTHAU LINKS N.Y. POST, CRIME FAMILY Date: 06-26-1992, Friday Section: BUSINESS Edition: All Editions -- 3 Star, 2 Star P, 2 Star B, 1 Star Late, 1 Star Early Column: BRIEFLY NEW YORK -- The New York Post's loading docks and circulation department were
Read more
|
|
N.Y. Crime Family Members Indicted; U.S. Sweep Arrests Leaders of Bonannos
The Washington Post; 1/21/2004; Michael Powell and Michelle Garca; 536 words
; The FBI and federal prosecutors swung a legal ax Tuesday at the Bonannos, one of the nation's oldest crime families, indicting a boss, an underboss, eight present or retired capos and more than a dozen mafia soldiers. Dozens of FBI agents and police fanned out across Staten Island, Brooklyn and
Read more
|
|
Interview: Jerry Capeci discusses the recent betrayal and trial in New York's Bonnano crime family
NPR Special; 2/1/2005; ALEX CHADWICK; 601 words
; ... Mafia." Jerry, thanks for being with us on DAY TO DAY to explain the characters. Mr. CAPECI: It's a pleasure, Alex. CHADWICK: And this is DAY TO DAY from NPR News. Content and Programming copyright 2005 National Public Radio, Inc. All rights reserved.
Read more
|
|
New York Organized Crime Family Stung in Police Arrests
All Things Considered (NPR); 6/11/1996; 776 words
; 00-00-0000 Nineteen members of the notorious Genovese family have been arrested in New York after a two-year-long sting operation. Witnesses have been placed under protection to testify against the oldest Mafia clan. ROBERT SIEGEL, Host: In New York today, the U.S. Attorney's office indicted 19 men
Read more
|
|
N.Y. crime family reportedly moving in on N.E. Mob's turf.
The Boston Herald; 5/19/1997; Ranalli, Ralph; 369 words
; Mafia investigators are seeing the first signs that wiseguys from western Massachusetts with connections to New York's Genovese crime family are edging onto the troubled New England Patriarca family's turf, law enforcement sources say. A major bookmaker whose network spreads from Leominster to the
Read more
|
|
Bonanno was leader of New York crime family
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 5/12/2002; 331 words
; Bonanno was leader of New York crime family Associated Press Sunday, May 12, 2002 Tucson, Ariz. -- Joseph Bonanno, the notorious gangster who ran one of the most powerful Mafia groups in the 1950s and '60s, has died. He was 97. Bonanno, who retired to Arizona in 1968, died Saturday of heart
Read more
|
|
PRISON TERM ENDED, A MEMBER OF CRIME FAMILY FACES NEW CHARGES
The Boston Globe; 10/15/2005; Shelley Murphy, Globe Staff; 462 words
; An ailing organized crime figure who once allegedly headed the Sicilian faction of New York's Gambino family thought he was going home yesterday when he finished a 15-year prison term for drug trafficking and murder. But instead of a planned reunion with his wife and daughters, who were at the
Read more
|
|
U.S. officials say Gigante runs Genovese crime family from Texas prison.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 5/17/2001; Heinzl, Toni; 1427 words
; ... violence came directly from Gigante: You're always doing it for the boss. No matter who you are killing, it's from the boss. In a news release, U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch and New York law enforcement officials said, The government's investigation revealed that ...
Read more
|
|
FBI moves in on Gambino crime family Reputed boss arrested in South Florida, indicted on racketeering charges
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 12/19/1996; 259 words
; FBI agents moved to shut down the Gambino crime family's South Florida operation Wednesday, nabbing John Gotti's apparent successor on a Key Biscayne beach as he climbed out of the surf. Nicholas "Little Nick" Corozzo, 56, was indicted on racketeering charges along with eight other alleged members
Read more
|
|
73 charged in crackdown on Genovese crime family
Chicago Sun-Times; 12/6/2001; Larry Neumeister; 159 words
; NEW YORK--More than 70 people were charged Wednesday in a crackdown on New York's biggest mob family--a case built largely on the heroics of a detective who infiltrated the Genovese operation. In all, 73 people were charged in federal indictments, including 34 alleged capos, members or associates
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Lucky Luciano
Encyclopedia of World Biography
Lucky Luciano Although he was once called "one of ... titans of the 20th century,"Charles "Lucky" Luciano (1897-1962) was a mobster. His advice ... vicious beating, he earned the nickname "Lucky." Luciano realized that the war had to end ...
Read more
|
|
Rosi, Francesco
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
... over the City , The Mattei Affair , Lucky Luciano , and Chronicle of a Death Foretold ... the thriller or the gangster film (in Lucky Luciano , for instance), his interests, as ... social context of individual lives. Lucky Luciano , for example, is not (unlike The Godfather ...
Read more
|
|
Bandits and Gangsters
American Decades
... were Johnny Torrio, Meyer Lansky, "Lucky" Luciano, Alphonse Capone, and Frank Nitti ... New York mobsters Meyer Lansky and "Lucky" Luciano. In 1933 Lansky would conclude negotiations ... Dutch Schultz (who was murdered by "Lucky" Luciano's triggermen for his plan to kill Dewey ...
Read more
|
|
Meyer Lansky
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... organized the murder of crime boss Joe Masseria and joined Lucky Luciano in forming a national crime syndicate. By 1936 he had developed ... Though convicted of income-tax evasion in 1973, he remained free on appeals. Meyer Lansky Meyer Lansky Meyer Lansky
Read more
|
|
Steiger, Rod
International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
... Madonna XXX ) (Sarafian) (as Laban Feather); A proposito Lucky Luciano ( Re: Lucky Luciano ; Lucky Luciano ) (Rosi) (as Gene Giannini) 1974 Mussolini: ultimo atto ... Sargent Steiner ) (McLagen) (as Gen. Webster) 1980 The Lucky Star (Fischer) (as Col. Gluck); Klondike Fever ( ...
Read more
|