The Washington Times ran my
review of Scott M. Deitche’s Garden State Gangland: The Rise of the Mob in New
Jersey.
New Jersey is unique as it is
the only state in America that is home to several different Cosa Nostra
organized crime families (called La Cosa Nostra by law enforcement).
In addition to the state’s
homegrown DeCavalcante Cosa Nostra crime family (which the TV series “The
Sopranos” was based on), all of the five New York City Cosa Nostra crime
families, as well as the Philadelphia Cosa Nostra crime family, have branches
in New Jersey that operate criminal enterprises independent of each other and
in tandem.
Scott M. Deitche’s “Garden
State Gangland: The Rise of the Mob in New Jersey” tells the more than
100-year-old history of organized crime in the state, from the 1900s’ Black
Hand extortionists to the Prohibition-era’s Enoch “Nucky” Johnson, an Atlantic
City politician and bootlegger who was the model for the main character in the
“Boardwalk Empire” TV series, and onward to the powerful Jewish gangsters, like
Abner “Longy” Zwillman, and the eventual control by the Cosa Nostra crime
families.
A good number of New Jersey
mobsters became powerful and influential national crime figures.
“To trace the start of
traditional organized crime (the mob, the syndicate, the Mafia) in New Jersey,
you could begin in a few cities around the state where new immigrant groups at
the turn of the twentieth century fell victim to extortion gangs and police
indifference,” Mr. Deitche writes in the beginning of this interesting and
informative true crime book.
“It was in these tight-knit
immigrant neighborhoods where the strands and threads of organized-crime groups
began. But if there was one focal point, one birthplace where originated the
larger, more influential crime figures who would shape both the underworld and
overall history of the state through much of the twentieth century, it would be
Newark.”
Mr. Deitche describes Newark
as the biggest city in the state where in the early part of the 20th century
the expanding industries attracted immigrants that settled in neighborhoods
like the Italian First Ward and the Jewish Third Ward. Wary and suspicious of
the police, these immigrants were considered easy pickings by the criminal
gangs.
By preying on their own
people, the criminals had little to fear from the cops. But there was one tough
police officer, Mr. Deitche informs us, that went up against the Black Hand in
Newark, an Italian-American detective named Thomas Adubato. The tall and
imposing detective with a thick handlebar mustache, one of the many fascinating
people one learns about in the book, was later killed in New York.
There are so many interesting
crime stories in this book, but one story that was of particular interest to
me, having grown up in South Philadelphia, was the 1980 murder of Angelo Bruno,
the Philadelphia mob boss. The story illustrates the greed, treachery and
viciousness of the mob.
You can read the rest of the
review via the below link:
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/mar/11/book-review-garden-state-gangland-by-scott-m-deitc/
Note: The top photo is of
Philadelphia Cosa Nostra crime boss Angelo Bruno. The bottom photo is of “Longy”
Zwillman.
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