The Lanzetta Brothers
Founded by | Leo Lanzetta |
---|---|
Founding location | South Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Years active | early 1920s–1940 |
Territory | South Philadelphia and Atlantic City |
Leader(s) | Pius, Leo and Ignatius Lanzetta |
Criminal activities | Drug trafficking, prostitution, bootlegging, numbers writing |
Allies | Michael Falcone, Louis Delrossi |
Rivals | Mickey Duffy, Joseph Bruno, Salvatore Sabella, and other various street and bootlegging gangs in South Philadelphia |
The Lanzetta Brothers, also known as the Lanzetti Brothers (due to incorrect documentation), was a group of six brothers that ran bootlegging operations in Philadelphia and possibly Atlantic City.[1]
Early lives
There were six brothers in the gang: Leo (the leader), Pius "the Brain", Ignatius (who was a good dresser), Lucien (who had an explosive temper), Willie (the quiet one), and Teo "the Baby" Lanzetta (who was the youngest and made women swoon because of his good looks).[2] It is not known when the brothers were born, but what is known is that they were born to Italian parents, that Leo Lanzetta was the oldest, and that Teo Lanzetta was the youngest of the six.
Prohibition and bootlegging
When Prohibition went into effect in January 1920, the Lanzettas organized an "Alky Cooking" supply network by providing a contingent of row house dwellers with home stills and paying them to produce sale-able liquor.[3] The brothers then sold the liquor at higher prices. Their most trusted associates included Louis "Fats" Delrossi and Mike Falcone. The brothers' criminal careers were marked by frequent arrests and brutal violence.
At various times, the brothers feuded with several different groups of racketeers in South Philadelphia, as well as Mickey Duffy and some of his partners. Between 1924 and 1939, at least one brother was involved as a suspect or a material witness in no less than fifteen murder cases, including Pius' imprisonment and dismissal during the early stages of the investigation into the murder of Mickey Duffy. The brothers were also rivals of Max Hoff's criminal organization.[4]
Leo and Ignatius killed rival dope peddler and bootlegger Joe Bruno on August 18, 1925, at 8th and Catherine Streets. Bruno was also a made man in the Philadelphia crime family.[3]
Deaths and conviction
Leo was killed on August 22, 1925, as he left a barber shop at 7th and Bainbridge Streets, in retaliation for the murder of Joe Bruno.[2] Sicilian Philadelphia family boss Salvatore Sabella was Leo's suspected killer.[3][5] Pius was killed in a luncheonette on December 31, 1936 at 726 South Eighth Street.[1] Willie was found with his head in a burlap bag with a bullet in his brain on July 2, 1939.[1][3]
Teo was convicted on drug trafficking charges and sent to Levenworth Prison in 1940. Along with Delrossi and Falcone, Ignatius was sent to prison in 1936 for breaking New Jersey's "Gangster Law" and released in 1940; even though their sentences (according to C. Ronald Huff in "Gangs in America III") were, "not more than 10 years and not less than 5 years of imprisonment".[1]
When Ignatius was released, he fled to Detroit, Michigan with Lucien and their mother.
Television
In the first season of the HBO series Boardwalk Empire, the Lanzetta brothers are the basis for Nucky Thompson's main rivals, the D'Alessio brothers. The D'Alessio brothers try to take over Atlantic City]]'s bootlegging operations along with Mickey Doyle, Lucky Luciano, Meyer Lansky, and Arnold Rothstein.[1] In the show, the brothers' names are Leo, Ignatius, Matteo, Lucien, Sixtus, and Pius. In the show, Ignatius and Pius are killed by freelance assassin Richard Harrow, Matteo is killed by Atlantic City North Side leader Albert "Chalky" White, Lucien and Leo are killed by James "Jimmy" Darmody, and Sixtus is killed by South Side Gang bouncer Alphonse "Scarface" Capone in Chicago, Illinois.
Members of the Lanzetta Gang
Bosses
- Leo Lanzetta: Early 1920s–1925 – Killed after leaving a barbershop for the murder of Giuseppe "Joe Bruno" Dovi in 1925.
- Pius Lanzetta: Early 1920s–1936 – Killed by enemy bullets in 1936.
- Ignatius "Frank Pius" Lanzetta: Early 1920s–1940 – Convicted and imprisoned for four years, later fleeing with Lucien to Detroit.
Other members
- Willie Lanzetta: Early 1920s–1939 – Shot in the head and beheaded in 1939.
- Teo Lanzetta: Early 1920s–1940 – Imprisoned on drug trafficking charges in 1940.
- Lucien Lanzetta: Early 1920s–1940 – Fled to Detroit with Ignatius and their mother in 1940.
- Michael Falcone: Early 1920s–1940 – Convicted and imprisoned for four years from 1936–1940.
- Louis "Fats"[3] Delrossi: Early 1920s–1940 – Convicted and imprisoned for four years from 1936–1940.
Rival
- Salvatore Sabella – Sent to Philadelphia by Sicilian Mafia capofamiglia to organize the city's rackets. Sabella died in 1927.[3][5]
- Giuseppe "Joseph Bruno" Dovi – Sabella's protégé. Rival dope peddler and bootlegger. Killed by the Lanzetta's in 1925.
- William Michael "Mickey Duffy" Cusick – Rival bootlegger. Rival of Philadelphia Jewish Mob boss Max "Boo Boo" Hoff. Possibly killed by the Lanzetta's in 1931.[3]
- Bruno crime family – Rival Sicilian crime family.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Mickey Duffy and the Lanzettta Brothers". November 2010.
- 1 2 "The Real People of Boardwalk Empire: Part 3". September 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "The Lanzettis - Philly's first drug dealers". March 2015.
- ↑ http://www.rbtaylor.net/biblio_bootlegging_urban_archives_part1.pdf
- 1 2 "Philly's first Godfather Salvatore Sabella Born in Sicily 1891.". March 2015.