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Detroit mafia: D’Anna Brothers agree to plea deal

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Girolamo “Mimmo” D’Anna and Giuseppe “Joe the Hood” D’Anna alleged members of the Detroit mafia have agreed to a plea deal and are headed to prison. The Sicilian-born

The Sicilian-born Detroit mob brothers agreed to plead guilty in their racketeering case which included the beating of a rival restaurant owner they were attempting to shake down. According to reports, Joe D’Anna is a captain of an eastside crew in the Cosa Nostra family and could do from three to five years behind bars while his brother Mimmo D’Anna is looking at a likely sentence of no more than three years.

 

Mimmo and Joe D'Anna

“Mimmo and Joe D’Anna”

 

The brothers were convicted of the 2011 assault in a state case about five years ago but were issued a very controversial plea and each served only four years in county jail and some home confinement. The feds were not satisfied with the state’s punishment and later dropped a RICO case against the mafia duo in 2013. According to the feds, Joe D’Anna brutally attacked fellow restaurant owner Pietro Ventimiglia with a baseball bat. The restaurant owners place named Nonna’s Italian Kitchen was located across the street from a restaurant owned by the D’Anna brothers and were trying to get him to pay a street tax for over two years.

Joe beats the man leaving him with cracked ribs, cracked skull, and other broken bones while his brother Mimmo stood watch at the door according to court documents. As he hit the man in the face, head, and body threatening to kill him and his family back in Italy if he didn’t pay up, he screamed at the man “Don’t you know who I am?.” The brothers are nephews of former Detroit mafia capo Anthony “Tony Cars” D’Anna and were close to former Detroit mob boss Giacomo (Black Jack) Tocco. Black Jack passed away in 2014 but according to Scott Burnstein and his Gangsterreport one of his last acts as boss of the mafia in Detroit was to promote Joe D’Anna to captain.

 

UPDATE:

A correction to the previous report as the charges against Girolamo (Mimmo) D’Anna have been dismissed as part of the plea deal reached by his brother. So only one of the D’Anna brother will head off to prison.

 

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Former Detroit mafia capo Frank Bommarito passes away

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The Detroit mafia lost one of its former capos with the recent passing of Frank “Frankie the Bomb” Bommarito.

The 87-year-old mobster was hospitalized with due to symptoms of heart and kidney failure before passing away. Bommarito was once the right-hand man of now-deceased mob leader Vito “Billy Jack” Giacalone and for years acted as a liaison between the Detroit mob and the cities biker gangs according to the feds. He was bumped up to captain back in 2004 and served in that capacity until he was demoted and partially shelved in 2012 by new boss Jack “Jackie the Kid” Giacalone according to sources from Scott Burnstein and his gangsterreport.

 

frank-bommarito

“Frank Bommarito”

 

Frankie the bombs long history in the mafia included being captured by FBI surveillance in 1979 transporting Giacalone faction members to the inauguration ceremony of former boss Giacomo “Black Jack” Tocco. Bommarito also had his share of run-ins with the law during his illustrious career in Cosa Nostra. He was indicted back in 1985 for taking out a murder contract or a mob associate and did a five-year stretch. He has also long been a suspect in the 1985 mafia murder of Detroit mob soldier Peter Cavataio. He was implicated along with Jackie Giacalone for the hit by mob turncoat John Pree but was cleared after Pree recanted his testimony in front of a grand jury.

Bommarito may have been one of the last remaining people with information about the infamous 1975 disappearance of Teamsters union boss Jimmy Hoffa according to some in law enforcement. According to the feds, some believe that Frank and his brother along with Anthony Giacalone organized the details of the mob hit on Hoffa. The bomb’s close association to the Giacalone’s and being a top lieutenant have fueled speculation that he could have been used in the murder of Hoffa or perhaps the disposal of the body. But as is with many other aspects of the Hoffa case the speculation of Frankie the bombs involvement is likely to remain just that.

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Detroit mafia consigliere Anthony Palazzolo passes away

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Detroit mafia leader Anthony Palazzolo recently passed away of natural causes according to reports.

The 78-year-old mobster was known to be low key and elusive during his long career in the mafia. He served as a captain in the Cosa Nostra family for years before getting bumped up to consigliere approximately five years ago. He was one of the last people alive to be linked to the murder of legendary Teamsters labor union leader Jimmy Hoffa. It was long believed that Hoffa had used his ties to organized crime to take over as President of the powerful union and it was those same ties which ultimately lead to his 1975 disappearance and death.

 

“Anthony Palazzolo”

 

Hoffa’s insistence on taking back control of the union after his release from prison didn’t fall in line with what the mafia wanted. He disappeared while heading to a lunch meeting with Detroit mafia street boss Anthony (Tony Jack) Giacalone and was never seen again. Palazzolo’s name popped up early on in the Hoffa investigation according to the feds. At the time he was still young and trying to make his way up the ranks to be part of something that big it showed that he was a real up and comer.

Former Detroit mob underboss turned informant Tony Zerilli fingered Palazzolo as a member of the hit team that took out Hoffa. According to Zerilli, he was the driving the car that picked up Hoffa from the Bloomfield Township, Michigan restaurant parking lot and was one of the men who killed him. Then in the 1990’s while in control of Detroit’s Canadian rackets Tony Pal was caught talking about the Hoffa hit on a wiretap. According to court records during the investigation a Canadian undercover cop working with the feds got him to admit his role in the Hoffa murder saying that he disposed of the body by running it through a sausage auger at the Eastern Market headquarters of the Detroit Sausage Company.

That investigation ended up with Palazzolo getting sentenced to five years behind bars on money laundering and drug charges. But he was not charged with anything having to do with Hoffa’s disappearance. The mafia in Detroit has always been a small and low key family and they remain that way today. Veteran mobster Jack “Jackie the Kid” Giacalone now heads the family with Anthony “Chicago Tony” La Piana reportedly serving as underboss. It is unclear as to who is next in line to fill the now vacant consigliere position.

 

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Is the Detroit Mafia Family Dead or Alive?

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The Detroit Mafia also referred to as the Tocco-Zerilli crime family or the Detroit Partnership has a long and interesting history dating back to the 1900s.

The mid-west organization was recognized by The Commission and became one of the 24 original Mafia families that comprised Cosa Nostra in America. The mafia in Detroit grew in power and influence over years under the guidance of top mob bosses that included Joe Zerilli and Giacomo “Jack” Tocco. The highly respected mob family maintained a very quiet and low key approach compared to some of the countries other families. That is until the disappearance of former Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa in 1975 pushed them into the headlines. Years of investigations would follow many of which included members of the Detroit mafia making them one of the most talked-about American Mafia families outside of New York. But times have definitely changed and now many wonder if the mob in Detroit has become a thing of the past.

 

Detroit Mafia

 

The families long-held tradition of marrying off within its ranks has truly made it a family affair. This strategy has allowed the mafia in Detroit to avoid many of the pitfalls that have taken down other mob families across the country. Having so many members within the family related by blood made them extremely hard to penetrate. It has also allowed them to avoid costly internal wars and an infestation of mob rats at least for the most part.

The downside was that it limited the families ability to expand and grow. What was once a large organization consisting of more than 100 made men has reportedly dwindled down to approx 30 or fewer today. Over the past couple of decades, the family has lost the majority of its political influence and wide-ranging power. As we entered the 1990s questions of the families sustainability began to arise.

A large racketeering indictment in 1996 proved the organized crime family was still fully functional and actively controlling some traditional mafia rackets. Sixteen alleged members and associates of the Tocco-Zerilli crime family were indicted including aging boss Jack Tocco and underboss Tony Zerilli. The feds described the case as a stake to the heart of the Motor City Mafia. While that may have been a bit much it was a blow to the already diminishing organization.

A RICO indictment that centered around bookmaking, money laundering, and extortion landed in 2006. The indictment while not directly attributed to the local mafia family included the familiar names of Tocco and Giacalone. Many saw this as a sign that rumors of the mob families demise may have been a bit premature. But it remained clear that the changing times were having a negative effect on the once-mighty crime family as this was one of the last major cases to date involving multiple members of the organization.

Longtime boss Jack Tocco passed away back in 2014 followed by the death of Tony Zerilli in 2015. The family would lose other long term members over the past few years as well. It was time for the next generation to take the reigns of the Detroit Mafia. But many believed that this new generation were more businessmen then they were mobsters intent of moving the family away from their long-held mob rackets and into more legitimate businesses.

The mob family still maintains a functioning hierarchy according to some reports. It including current boss Jack (Jackie the Kid) Giacalone, underboss Anthony (Chicago Tony) La Piana, and street boss Peter (Specs) Tocco. Although some believe these ranks and positions have become more ceremonial than they are functional. Just how active is this new era of the Detroit Mafia when it comes to the families illegal enterprises?

Many mob enthusiasts and insiders point to the lack of indictments and legal cases brought against the organization over the last several years as a sign of the families inactivity. Would the feds have turned their backs on an active and functioning American Mafia family? It could be a clear indicator that the new regime isn’t as involved in illegal rackets as their predecessors were. The feds may no longer consider them as part of the American Mob landscape.

We still see cases at least to some extent being brought against other active mafia families outside of New York including New England, Philadelphia, and Chicago. But not everyone buys into the idea that the Detroit family is all but dead and gone. Many believe the family has adapted its methods of doing business utilizing its close ties to avoid any federal hiccups. They believe the family still maintains sway over the local area and still controls much of its illegal bookmaking, extortion, and loan sharking activities along with some of the drug trafficking.

The organization is clearly a shadow of its former self like many other families around the country but for many that doesn’t mean they are defunct. If the Motor City Mafia family hasn’t met its end just yet it may be trending toward doing so sooner than later. It’s hard to tell exactly where things stand in Detroit today but a real lack of mafia news out of the Motor City in recent years is hard to overlook. Perhaps the truth lies somewhere in the middle.

The debate will continue as to whether or not Detroit still has a functioning and established crime family. Even if the guys in Detroit still have a piece of long-running rackets like bookmaking and loansharking is it enough today for them to still be considered a legit and active family? What do you think? Feel free to comment below.

 

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Detroit Mafia soldier Joseph Ruggirello passes away as mob family quietly motors on

FBI starts new dig in Michigan in search of Jimmy Hoffa’s remains

Detroit Mafia quietly moving into new era

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  The Detroit mafia also known as the Detroit partnership has always been a very low key La Cosa Nostra family avoiding much of the media attention attached to other families in cities like New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago. With much of its membership and hierarchy having family ties the Detroit mob family has been [...]

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Detroit Mafia transitions to new leadership

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  The Detroit mafia also known as the Detroit Partnership for the first time in over thirty years now officially has a new boss. Former boss Giacomo “Jack” Tocco has now retired and the family is now being lead by new boss Jack “Jackie the Kid” Giacalone. The change over in power has been rumored [...]

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MGM Not Liable For $6 Million Gambling Loss

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Gino Accettola, a 52-year-old man with ties to Detroit’s “Tocco crew” Mafia, gambled away over $6 million of investors’ money that was supposed to be used towards construction projects. The investors then sued the casino saying they should be held responsible for the loss. According to official court papers, the swindled investors loaned a large [...]

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50-Cents’“Black Mafia Family” Drama Series gets the Green Light

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Curtis Jackson, best known as 50 Cent, will produce “Black Mafia Family” through his production company G-Unit. For the first season, Starz has ordered eight episodes which it will co-produce alongside 50-Cent and Lionsgate. “Black Mafia Family” is based on the true story of the Flenory brothers. Demetrius “Big Meech” Flenory and Terry “Southwest T” [...]

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Detroit Mobster Antonio “Toto” Ruggirello, dead at 83

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Antonio “Toto” Ruggirello died this week from COVID-19 at the age of 83. Ruggirello was a soldier in the Detroit mob and the last of the notoriously tough Ruggirello brothers who once controlled the organized crime in Genesee and Washtenaw counties. One of the secrets Toto may have taken to the grave is what he [...]

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