New Lucchese acting boss After Amuso's
indictment in 1991 with the testimony provided by former
acting boss Alphonse "Little Al" D'Arco, Amuso promoted his
caporegime Joseph "Little Joe" DeFede, to
acting boss, with the help of the
Ruling Panel members,
Steven "Wonderboy" Crea,
Anthony "Bowat" Baratta,
Salvatore "Sal" Avellino and consigliere
Frank "Big Frank" Lastorino in 1991. It was around this time that Lastorino used the indictments of Amuso and
Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso to take advantage of the situation and gained much of the authority in the family when he aligned himself with
Brooklyn faction leaders
George "Georgie Neck" Zappola, Frank "Bones" Papagni,
Frank Gioia Jr. and George Conte.
Fearing rivalry from Bronx In early 1992, Amuso feared that rivalry was being developed in the
Lucchese crime family, as some mobsters thought, with Amuso out of the way, that they could take over. The rivals were the old
Bronx faction of the family, and Amuso felt he had to prove that he was still in charge. On April 3, 1992,
Aniello "Neil" Migliore, one of the most powerful capos of the family, was celebrating the birthday of a friend's granddaughter in a
Westbury, New York restaurant on
Long Island. During the party, a gunman in a passing car fired one or two
shotgun blasts through the restaurant window, hitting Migliore in the head and chest. Despite his wounds, Migliore survived. The attempt on his life did not sway Migliore away from the crime family, though, as he kept operating throughout the 1990s.
Bronx & Brooklyn rivalry As Amuso allegedly attempted to kill
Aniello "Neil" Migliore from the
Bronx faction in 1992, he chose another Bronx faction-leader named
Steven "Wonderboy" Crea as the new and powerful
underboss of the
Lucchese crime family to keep rivals from the Bronx in line. However, this decision almost triggered a new war within the crime family, as Crea, along with
Joseph "Little Joe" DeFede decided to turn the family's power center away from Brooklyn, New York, and back to the Bronx faction where it had been for decades. This, however, didn't please the imprisoned boss Vic Amuso and his supporters within the Brooklyn faction. Crime family consigliere,
Frank "Big Frank" Lastorino sought to organize the murder of
Steven Crea using capos
George Zappola, Frank Papagni and Frank Gioia Jr., and would further plan to use the death of acting boss Steve Crea to gain the control of the
Lucchese crime family. U.S. law enforcement also recognized these members as the actual leaders of the family at the time, and even picked them up on
wires and
bugs saying they were going to kill
Gambino crime family boss
John "Junior" Gotti, son of
John Gotti, and his rival
Nicholas "Little Nick" Corozzo to split up the Gambinos. This
conspiracy also included
Genovese crime family boss
Vincent "Chin" Gigante and on-the-lam leader,
Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso before he was apprehended. But due to massive indictments of the time, slashing all members of the three families involved in the conspiracy, the plot never succeeded, and Amuso continued to run the family from prison as most of the conspirators themselves were sent to prison.
Restructure of the family During the mid-1990s, the majority of the Brooklyn faction leaders, many of whom were known Amuso's rivals, were sent to prison on various charges. To keep some sense of stability within the
Lucchese crime family, Amuso promoted his loyal friend and Brooklyn capo
Louis "Louie Bagels" Daidone to the position of consigliere, replacing
Frank Lastorino. Amuso also kept
Joseph "Little Joe" DeFede as the crime family's
acting boss. DeFede oversaw important crime family operations such as those in the
Garment District, which brought in between $40,000 to $60,000 a month. Amuso kept
Stephen "Wonderboy" Crea of the Bronx as the underboss, overseeing the construction and union
racketeering operations that made the crime family between $300,000 and $500,000 a month. Daidone was put in control of the crews and street soldiers that took care of all the debt collection and muscle work, basically the collection of
gambling and
loansharking debts, the extortion operations and allegedly
murder for hire. After Daidone was promoted to the number three spot,
Long Island caporegime
Joseph "Joe C." Caridi stepped up to run Daidone's former crew.
Joe DeFede's imprisonment On April 28, 1998, DeFede was indicted on nine counts of racketeering stemming from his supervision of the crime family rackets in New York's Garment District from 1992 to 1997. The prosecution reported that since the mid-1980s the Lucchese crime family had been grossing between $40,000 and $60,000 per month from the Garment District rackets they controlled. In December 1998, DeFede pleaded guilty to the charges and received five years in prison. Angry at his guilty plea, Amuso became uncertain of DeFede's loyalty to the crime family and, in the future, Amuso would regard DeFede as a traitor and thief.
Wonderboy's enormous profit After the imprisonment of Joe DeFede in 1998, Amuso handpicked Bronx faction leader,
Steven "Wonderboy" Crea as the new acting boss of the Lucchese crime family. Crea, a loyal Amuso underboss, began sending a larger amount of the crime family's profits to the imprisoned boss, which convinced Amuso that DeFede had been
skimming profits from the crime family the whole time he was acting boss. Amuso decided to put out a contract on DeFede's life in late 1999. On September 6, 2000, Crea and seven other Lucchese members were arrested and jailed on extortion charges. Crea was eventually convicted in 2001 and sentenced to five years in prison. Steven Crea was released from prison in 2006.
Daidone, DeFede and D'Arco Following the imprisonment of Crea in 2001, influential consigliere,
Louis "Louie Bagels" Daidone was promoted to acting boss and began to run the day-to-day operations of the crime family. Daidone, at the time one of the strongest and most dangerous family members, would continue to oversee the contract ordered by Amuso on imprisoned former acting boss
Joseph "Little Joe" DeFede. DeFede did not know that Amuso had placed a contract on his life but, during DeFede's imprisonment, he was demoted from capo to soldier and this alerted him to the possibility that he had fallen out of favor with boss Vic Amuso and could be in serious trouble. Upon DeFede's release from prison on February 5, 2002, it was reported that the former Amuso ally immediately turned to the government for help and became an informant. Federal witnesses Joe DeFede and
Alphonse "Little Al" D'Arco gave the U.S. government information regarding Lucchese controlled racketeering operations based around New York City, which helped the federal government continue their decimation of the old Amuso-faction. Both D'Arco and DeFede also provided information about rackets such as gambling, loansharking, extortion and even information about some old
murders, which led to the indictments of Mafia cops,
Louis Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa. Eppolito and Caracappa were allegedly working for and taking large bribes from former Lucchese underboss Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso since the 1980s. The two highly decorated NYPD officers were apparently used by Casso and the Lucchese crime family to gain valuable information about ongoing police investigations and cases concerning New York Mafia member. The two bad cops were also used to lure rivals and possible government informants to their deaths and, in some cases, they apparently executed the victims themselves. Daidone received a
life sentence in 2003 on racketeering and murder charges, while more than a dozen other prominent Lucchese crime family members were sent to prison during that same year on various charges.
The Committee/Ruling Panel After the conviction and imprisonment of acting boss Louie Diadone in 2003, Amuso instituted a new ruling panel/committee of influential capos to oversee and run the crime family's day-to-day activities. Prominent and senior Lucchese
capos Aniello "Neil" Migliore,
Matthew "Matt" Madonna and
Joseph "Joey Dee" DiNapoli were handpicked by Amuso to lead the crime family. These senior capos were chosen as street bosses to work in tandem. Instead of placing one particular member in the official underboss position, Amuso divided the power between three influential capos. Migliore, a former Corallo loyalist and Amuso rival, is now said to be one of the most powerful mobsters in the Lucchese crime family.
Crea returns to leadership In 2006, former acting boss
Stephen "Wonderboy" Crea was released from prison, and the ruling panel/committee continued to run day-to-day activities of the crime family. In late 2009, ruling panel members Madonna and DiNapoli were indicted on labor racketeering, illegal gambling and extortion charges. In 2009, Steven Crea took over as acting boss of the crime family. As of July 2014, Amuso remains the official boss of the Lucchese crime family. Amuso is serving his life sentence at
Federal Correctional Institution, Cumberland, a federal correctional facility in Maryland on murder and racketeering charges. His Register Number is 38740–079. Pennisi testified that in 2017, imprisoned for life boss Vic Amuso sent a letter to Underboss Steven Crea which stated that Brooklyn based mobster Michael "Big Mike" DeSantis would take over as acting boss replacing Bronx based Matthew Madonna. The testimony from Pennisi stated that if the Bronx faction refused to step aside, imprisoned boss Amuso had approved of a hit list that included a captain and several members of the Bronx faction. During Pennisi's testimony, he revealed that the Lucchese family operates with a total of seven crews - two in The Bronx, two on Long Island, one in Manhattan, one in New Jersey, and Castellucci's-Brooklyn crew (formerly Amuso-Casso's old crew) which is now based in Tottenville section of Staten Island. Law-enforcement agents have stated that Brooklyn based mobster Patty "Red" Dellorusso is the new acting underboss and that The Bronx-based mobster Andrew DeSimone is the new Consigliere. == References ==