Joseph (Uncle Joe) Giacobbe: DeCavalcante Family Capo
Joseph (Uncle Joe) Giacobbe was a capo in the DeCavalcante Family of New Jersey who operated in Queens, Brooklyn, and...
Mob historians claim Stefano Badami, in the 1920s, was the first capo over a group of Mafiosi which later were more formally organized under the auspices of Filippo (Phil) Amari. Later, during the late 1940s through the early 1960s era, Nicholas (Nicky Dell) Delmore, a well-respected, old-line bootlegger and labor racketeer, commanded the Family.
By far the smallest Mafia Family in the New York/New Jersey area, the tight-knit DeCavalcante mob, nonetheless, always maintained an inducted membership of anywhere from 35 to 50 “made” members and upwards of 100 close associates. By 1964, with the death of Delmore, his nephew Simone (Sam the Plumber) DeCavalcante would be selected as the new boss of this Family. He would quickly utilize his position and popularity to help expand the influence and geographic reach of this borgata.
Although a small membership, they had a reach into metropolitan New York City, where they ran several regimes, including in Waterbury, Connecticut, where co-underboss Joseph (Joe Buff) LaSelva operated a crew, as well as in South Florida, where additional members lived and operated.
The Family was active in many of the traditional rackets such as gambling, shylocking, labor union racketeering and corruption, extortion, and narcotics. Important members over the years have included underboss Francesco (Big Frank) Majuri, capo di decina Luciano (Big Louie) Larasso, Frank (Frankie Coch) Cocchiaro, Vincent (Jimmy) Rotondo, and soldiers Robert (Bobby Basile) Occhipinti and the notorious Gaetano (Corky) Vastola.
But the DeCavalcante’s real strength lies in their control and domination of several key union locals of the Laborers Union of America and the International Longshoremen’s Union (ILA), with several key Family “soldiers” holding official union posts such as “business agent” or “secretary-treasurer.” This allowed the Family to control major construction projects in both New Jersey and New York.
Although a highly secretive Family, even among Cosa Nostra itself, in the early 1960s, the FBI was able to install a hidden “bug” or listening device in Sam DeCavalcante’s plumbing contracting office. For the next several years, every single word spoken by Sam and his Mafia associates was recorded for posterity by the agents. This happened right after the Valachi Hearings in 1963, during an era of extreme exposure and crackdowns on organized crime figures in this country. Sam was recorded talking about “The Commission,” his efforts as a Commission “rep” to help quell the “Banana War” and the Gallo-Profaci conflicts, casino operations in Vegas, and other very sensitive underworld secrets.
His low-key persona and legitimate cover was destroyed and before long he, himself, was indicted along with 54 mob minions for heading a $20,000,000-a-year gambling ring. Tried, convicted, and sentenced to five years in federal prison, and after serving two years in jail, DeCavalcante gained parole and immediately migrated to Miami, Florida and into semi-retirement.
In his absence, a little-known but extremely well-liked and capable caporegime stepped up, first as underboss, then acting boss, and ultimately to formally head the Family, John (The Eagle) Riggi, Sr., the “well-groomed” son of a veteran member named Emmanuel Riggi had served the Family for decades as “business agent” of Local #394 – Laborers & Hod Carriers Union (AFL-CIO) and several other labor unions. Riggi ran a well-structured borgata until he, too, fell afoul of law enforcement.
As with all of Cosa Nostra in the last 20 to 30 years, the DeCavalcante Family has fallen prey to the “Rat Fever” permeating through the ranks of all the mob…but the beat goes on!
Joseph (Uncle Joe) Giacobbe was a capo in the DeCavalcante Family of New Jersey who operated in Queens, Brooklyn, and...
John Riggi helmed the DeCavalcante ship with a steely resolve for nearly 35 years even while Gambino boss John Gotti...
Sam DeCavalcante was the boss of the DeCavalcante Family who became notorious for undercover FBI recordings at his plumbing office.
Robert Occhipinti was a soldier in the DeCavalcante Family who ran into trouble when the infamous "Sam the Plumber" tapes...
Virgilio (Virgil) Alessi rose from a young bookmaker in Queens to one of New York’s most notorious heroin traffickers, ultimately...
Joseph (Joe Buff) LaSelva was an underboss of the DeCavalcante Family along with Frank Majuri, a rarity in a Cosa...
Gaetano (Tommy Buff) LaSelva was a key figure in the Waterbury faction of the DeCavalcante Family, overseeing gambling and loansharking.
Anthony (Tony Buff) LaSelva was a key figure in the Waterbury, Connecticut faction of the New Jersey-based DeCavalcante Family.
Frank Majuri quietly rose through the ranks of New Jersey’s underworld, becoming a powerful figure in the DeCavalcante crime family...
Tony Caruso was a New York-based soldier in the DeCavalcante Family primarily engaged in the bootlegging rackets. But Tony had...
Umberto Gallo was a soldier in the DeCavalcante Family active in the shylocking rackets and served in the regime of...
Dominick Rizzo was a soldier in the DeCavalcante Family active in gambling rackets for the New York City faction of...
Gaetano D. (Corky) Vastola was a moneymaker and big earner, even infiltrating the recording industry and garnering himself a few...
Joseph Guerriero was a smart and nervy soldier in the DeCavalcante Family and a rackets “boss” of the New Britain...
Antonio Rocco Staiti was a sleeper in the DeCavalcante Family who worked as a union member in the DeCavalcante-dominated Local...
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