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East Harlem Purple Gang

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Purple Gang
Foundedc.Early 1970s
Founding locationNew York City,New York, United States
Years activec. 1970s–1980s
TerritoryHarlem(especiallyEast Harlem,Italian Harlem,andPleasant Avenue) and theSouth Bronx
EthnicityItalian American
Membership(est.)30 members and 80 associates[1]
ActivitiesDrug trafficking, murder, contract killing, gun-running, extortion, robbery, bookmaking, kidnapping, racketeering, loansharking
Allies
RivalsVarious gangs in New York City, including their allies, especially theBonanno crime family

TheEast Harlem Purple Gangwas agangandorganized crimegroup inNew York Cityconsisting ofItalian-Americanhit-menandheroindealers who were semi-independent from theItalian-American Mafiaand, according to federal prosecutors, dominated heroin distribution inEast Harlem,Italian Harlem,andthe Bronxduring the 1970s and early 1980s. Though mostly independent of the Mafia and not an official Mafia crew, the gang was originally affiliated with and worked with theLucchese crime familyand later with theBonanno crime familyandGenovese crime family.[2]It developed its "closest ties" with the Genovese family,[2]and its remnants or former members became part of the Genovese family's116th Street Crew.[3]

Origins

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They allegedly named their group the "Purple Gang" as a tribute to a Prohibition Era gang (Purple Gang) that dominated organized crime activities inDetroitfor a time fifty years earlier.[1]Membership in the group was restricted to Italian-Americans who grew up onPleasant Avenue[1]between 114th and 120th Streets, just east of 1st Avenue, also known asItalian Harlem.[4]In the late 1970s, at the peak of its strength, the Purple Gang had about 30 members according to police reports and 80 associates, with higher numbers placing the gang's membership at over 100 (though this may include associates).[1][5]By 1977, law enforcement claimed that the Purple Gang had committed at least 17 homicides, some on behalf of "organized crime principals",[1]though dozens of other murders in the 1970s and 1980s have since been attributed to Purple Gang members.

History

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The Purple Gang originated in Italian Harlem as an Italian-American youth street gang and were involved in variousrobberiesand assaults before engaging in more organized criminal activity. Many of its founding members were related, some as brothers or cousins.[2]When they first drifted into thenarcoticsbusiness, the gang originally acted only as "delivery boys"or" spotters "(i.e.lookouts) for local established Italianmafiosiinvolved with thedrug trade.[1]However, the Purple Gang eventually rose to power in the Harlem drug trafficking business and subsequently graduated to committing murders following the 1973 arrests and convictions of several powerful Italian-American Mafia figures who had until then been dominating heroin and narcotics distribution in East Harlem. The 1973 arrests largely involved high-ranking mafiosi involved in the so-called "French Connection"heroin smuggling ring, such as Louis Inglese and LuccheseBossCarmine Tramunti.In the wake of these arrests, the Purple Gang filled the power vacuum created within the drug trade in East Harlem, eventually dominating the heroin trade in Harlem and the South Bronx and becoming not only major independent drug distributors but also major drug distributors for New York's "Five Families."[2]In addition to drug trafficking and murder, the Purple Gang's other activities includedkidnappingrival drug dealers forransom,collectingloansharkingdebts,extortion,and laborracketeering,sometimes carrying out these activities independently and sometimes acting on behalf of one of the Five Families.[6]

Throughout the 1970s, Italian-American andAfrican-American organized crimegroups both controlled narcotics trafficking in Harlem and much of New York City, and the two ethnic crime groups often cooperated or worked closely together in the drug trade business. The Italian-American Purple Gang was especially closely connected with African-American organized crime groups in Harlem. The Purple Gang eventually began supplying heroin to infamous Harlem drug kingpinLeroy Barnesand his organized crime network. After the arrest of Leroy Barnes, who was at the time one of the top heroin dealers in Harlem, the Purple Gang began supplying heroin to his remaining network of African-American dealers in Harlem at $75,000 per kilogram.[2]

The Purple Gang became increasingly involved with murder, sometimes acting independently and sometimes as contract killers for the Mafia, and they became renowned for their "enormous capacity for violence."[1][7][8]By 1977, law enforcement claimed that the Purple Gang had committed at least 17 homicides, with many of these murders committed on behalf of "organized crime principals" (i.e., Italian-American Mafia families.)[1]Many of the murders attributed to the Purple Gang were exceedingly grisly, with some involvingdecapitation,dismemberment,or multiple stab wounds. The gang is also suspected to be involved in a rash of killings during the 1970s of various mobsters and people with organized crime connections, with the murders notably involving.22 caliberfirearms.[6]Dismemberment and.22 caliber killings subsequently became known in the underworld as the trademark of the Purple Gang.

According to police reports, at the peak of its strength in 1977 the Purple Gang consisted of approximately 30 members and over 80 associates, with higher numbers placing the gang's membership as over 100 (though this may include associates). Most of the gang's members were younger men in their 20s or 30s, many of whom were considered by the Mafia to be too reckless or "uncontrollable" for membership in the Mafia.[1][5]

Although an independent gang that operated largely outside the constraints and structure of the established "Five Families"of the New York Italian-American Mafia, the Purple Gang was closely tied to the Italian-American Mafia and would often freelance as" muscle "or hit-men for the larger New York families. Many Purple Gang members were in fact relatives of established Italian-American Mafia members.[1]However, it remains unclear what activities the gang performed independently and what activities the gang carried out for certain Mafia families. For instance, several members were notably arrested inMonroe, New YorkinUpstate New Yorkfor assaulting privatesanitation workers,suggesting the gang may have been involved in labor corruption orextortionwithin thesanitationbusiness, either independently or as enforcers for the New York Mafia.[2]Though the gang often worked for the Five Families and frequently acted as drug distributors for the Five Families, they were also noted for their "lack of respect for other members of organized crime," and they just as often competed with the Mafia or disregarded the Mafia's turf claims and orders, sometimes moving in on Mafia drug territory. In fact, law enforcement at one point feared that a mob war would break out between the Purple Gang and certain Mafia families, specificallyCarmine Galante's Bonanno Crime Family, and the gang became so powerful and feared that it was sometimes referred to as New York City's "Sixth Family."[5][1]

Law enforcement speculated that during the late 1970s, the Purple Gang developed a relationship withNicaraguandrug dealers, trading firearms for drugs.[1]The firearms were apparently sent toLatin Americannarcoterroriststhrough connections inFloridain exchange for smuggled drugs.[2]The Purple Gang was also suspected of having ties to theCuban Mafiain Florida.[5]

The Purple Gang disintegrated during the late 1970s and early 1980s and was absorbed into the current116th Street Crew.Some members were invited to join theMafiaand becamemade men,includingAngelo PriscoandDaniel Leo[9]who became the acting Boss of the Genovese crime family in 2005.[10]Bonanno alleged BossMichael Mancusowas also an associate of the Purple Gang.[11]On November 13, 2013, Michael Meldish, a reported leader of the gang, was killed inThroggs Neck,ordered by Lucchese acting BossMatthew Madonna,and carried out byChristopher Londonioand Terrence Caldwell;[12]the three were sentenced tolife in prisonfor the murder on July 27, 2020.[13]

Pleasant Avenue

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Pleasant Avenue,a six-block stretch in East Harlem, is one of the incubators of the Italian Mafia in New York City.[citation needed]Anthony 'Fat Tony' Salerno ran the Genovese crime family from Pleasant Avenue.[citation needed]

Anthony Loria, Sr.,a longtime partner ofVincent Papawho masterminded the "Who Stole TheFrench Connection"corruption scandal, was born and raised on Pleasant Avenue.[citation needed]This scheme involved corrupt NYPD and law officials who allowed the drug lords to steal an estimated 70 million dollars of narcotics from the NYPD property room at 400 Broome Street in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[citation needed]

The Purple Gang's longtime association with Pleasant Avenue is shown in the 1993 filmCarlito's Way.In the film, the titular character (Al Pacino) refers to the gang as "The Pleasant Avenue bunch" when its members come to kill him.

See also

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General:

Footnotes

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  1. ^abcdefghijklBlum 1977.
  2. ^abcdefg"Younger Thugs Surpass Elders: Manhattan's new Purple Gang deals with deceit, drugs, death".Eugene Register-Guard. New York Times News Servie. Dec 8, 1977.Retrieved20 November2015.
  3. ^Kappersetter 2007.
  4. ^Kilgannon & Malliozzi 2004.
  5. ^abcdSifakis, Carl (2005).The Mafia Encyclopedia.Infobase Publishing.ISBN9780816069897.Retrieved20 November2015.
  6. ^abSchorr, Mark (May 7, 1979)."The.22 Caliber Killings".New York Magazine.Retrieved20 November2015.
  7. ^Conley, Kristan (March 7, 2011)."Untouchable Bronx hitman faces life in jail after '40 murders'".New York Post.
  8. ^Paddock, Barry; Trapasso, Clare; Ransom, Jan; Schapiro, Rich (Nov 17, 2013)."Notorious gangster who led Purple Gang found shot to death in car in Bronx".NY Daily News.Retrieved20 November2015.
  9. ^Capeci 2006.
  10. ^Capeci 2007.
  11. ^Marzulli, John (June 30, 2005)."The Nose is Pick of the Mob. Called new top Bonanno".New York Daily News.RetrievedJune 16,2013.
  12. ^Whitehouse, Kaja (February 13, 2017)."Lucchese crime family members busted in murder of relative".New York Post.RetrievedJune 4,2017.
  13. ^Feuerherd, Ben (July 27, 2020)."'Veal shank' mobster and two other Luccheses get life in prison ".nypost.

References

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