A fish that keeps his mouth closed, never gets caught - Tony Accardo
@davidc38399 ай бұрын
It also starves.
@barriolimbas9 ай бұрын
The Big Tuna, never been caught
@djquinn119 ай бұрын
That’s for suckers…
@jonathanjrgensen86769 ай бұрын
and it starves to death
@johnbravo75429 ай бұрын
I love the old mafia boss sayings
@princesspiplaysbass9 ай бұрын
If anyone thinks that this is not going on right now, they are delusional.
@reggaefan27009 ай бұрын
Bass player? I just read his brother's book. It was crazy the stuff that he was involved with.
@susiepittman6019 ай бұрын
Trump is a Russian asset. It's definitely going on right now.
@HellcatMad9 ай бұрын
More truths will be forthcoming I'm sure
@oldcremona9 ай бұрын
Perhaps, but you can't deny that a huge dent has been made in the mob in the last 20 years or so.
@johnsononey9 ай бұрын
No doubt , put all the mob hits together and it wouldn't even come close to the boys in Langley , Virginia . All ages ...
@jameswebb45939 ай бұрын
Shut down the mafia , but left the biggest crime syndicate stronger then ever the CIA.
@George-dy3pt9 ай бұрын
FACTS
@bbe30349 ай бұрын
I watched a great documentary on KZbin about the murder of JFK. The title is JFK to 911 Everything’s A Rich Man’s Trick!
@jameswebb45939 ай бұрын
@@George-dy3pt Try writing a sentence . and not shout . That's assuming you can actually write a coherent sentence.
@Alp5608 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😅😅😅@@jameswebb4593
@paulyricca38818 ай бұрын
👴🏻🥃 THE CIA ??? U MUST BE BENNEDETT ARNOLD.
@davidhaynes31269 ай бұрын
It’s always a close friend.
@Ada..D8 ай бұрын
True, betrayal always arrives with a smile on its face.
@ericsierra-franco78028 ай бұрын
Giancana was the "Front Boss". The real boss at this time was Tony Accardo who shunned attention.
@stevebohla64738 ай бұрын
This is absolutely true. Tony Accardo was hands down the most successful, mobster that ever lived and he ruled the Chicago outfit far longer than any others in any other families let alone his own.. and he never spent a single night in jail...
@dukedematteo19958 ай бұрын
Thats not true. For some reason that idea is out there. Chicago didn't function like NY. Giancana and Accardo were both "bosses." But Sam was the boss of the Taylor St crew, and Accardo was a Cicero guy. During the 50s and 60's, Taylor St was the more influential crew, so he was the top boss in the Outfit. Accardo was always a prominent, influential figure, but he didn't outrank Sam during the 50s and 60s.
@jonnytlong8 ай бұрын
@@dukedematteo1995that’s kind of true but if Accardo wanted something done it got done whether Sam wanted it or not. So in a way, he did outrank everyone else.
@9999bigb8 ай бұрын
Paul Ricca before Accardo. Both men silent as church mice.
@AndrewRobertson-kl4vi8 ай бұрын
@@dukedematteo1995 Absolute nonsense. Who copped 5 to the back of the head and one in the mouth. Giancana was a lightning rod. End of.
@SonnyCrocket-p6h8 ай бұрын
Carlo Gambino was the only one who ever learned. He never spoke about biz. He wrote messages on a chalk board, showed one to ONE person, and immediately erased that message. He made a note of who he'd shown what, so that he'd know who was a rat for the cops if anything happened.
@Scalettadom8 ай бұрын
Don't forget Tony Accardo. He ran a whole city, and really a better part of the country, for decades.
@mattblatti79368 ай бұрын
@Scalettadom exactly, you know how you can tell Tony Acardo was the best of all time... they really think bosses like Sam were really the boss.
@Scalettadom8 ай бұрын
@@mattblatti7936 exactly!
@lyndaehrich58098 ай бұрын
You're forgetting Joe Profaci. Master of keeping a low profile. Still very effective.
@knockknock12468 ай бұрын
I lived directly across the hall from a Gambino in an apartment complex in Denver a while back. Great conversationalist she was. Grocery shopped with her a couple of times, too. Just the most kind-hearted gal a man could meet. 👍.
@beautifullifemedia27338 ай бұрын
The scary part of this is that both Kennedy's were targeted...both were attacked and taken out, that is definitely no coincidence.
@claudiotagini8 ай бұрын
coincidence in having JFK as the biggest obstacle for Kommunist Russia to bring missile to Cuba and his assassination?
@yesterdayproductions10198 ай бұрын
The Kennedy's were both big lying HYPOCRITES.
@jimgraham67228 ай бұрын
Very likely. The circumstances around the deaths of both are very weird. It's most likely someone was getting even.
@beautifullifemedia27338 ай бұрын
@@jimgraham6722 most definitely.
@JamesJones-cx5pk8 ай бұрын
Carlos Marcelo of New Orleans and Trafficanti of Tampa killed the president. Gianncona killed Bobby.😮
@simontemplar19 ай бұрын
Brilliant documentary..............seems like our government is no different than the mob
@angelsgranny9 ай бұрын
The mob doesn't kill women and children, and they have respect for America and God. The government is on a mission to destroy America from within. That's a huge difference.
@asullivan40479 ай бұрын
Why would they be-???🤔.There's plenty of wealth💵 💰 to go around-!!!🤗.
@George-dy3pt9 ай бұрын
That's why they took them out!
@deantonto16159 ай бұрын
Worse
@bbe30349 ай бұрын
I watched a great documentary about the murder of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. The title is JFK to 911 Everything’s A Rich Mans Trick. It’s on KZbin if you’re interested! Bush Sr. is actually standing on the sidewalk near where JFK was murdered! Bush Sr. was actually with the CIA back then!!
@kaylalane91309 ай бұрын
I love this channel. Every detail is broken down to bring you the facts. 💯🧐#realcrime
@DavidAntunes-rm7dq9 ай бұрын
Well, not necessarily, many of the so called facts are speculations made to create a story for views. I should know, I was Sam's driver.
@AdminAbuse6 ай бұрын
@@DavidAntunes-rm7dq I was too
@sds55024 ай бұрын
Agreed. There are facts leading to LBJ and the CIA as the orchestrated players in the death of JFK and RFK.
@Sosolidcrew9 ай бұрын
Tony Acardo was the real powerhouse of Chicago
@chicagomike45878 ай бұрын
YES - he certainly was.
@ericsierra-franco78028 ай бұрын
Tony Accardo was one of the most competent and powerful figures in the history of American organized crime.
@flamboyentpromotions34718 ай бұрын
An Paul Ricca
@dukedematteo19958 ай бұрын
Chicago did not function like NY. Accardo did not have Carlo Gambino like power for 50 straight years. He was always an influential figure, but he wasn't the undisputed boss of Chicago for 50 years, nor did he weild a NY boss like power for multiple decades. He was always influential but his actual power level waxed and waned over the decades. He was the boss in the late 40s and early 50s....and again was a top figure in the 70s after the Cicero crew overtook the Taylor Street crew as the top crew in Chicago.
@ericsierra-franco78028 ай бұрын
@@dukedematteo1995 The Chicago Outfit became the dominant crime family in the US west. They had their hands in Hollywood deeper than any NY family, and they were the dominant crime family running things in Las Vegas. The Outfit was extremely powerful In it's heydey. When the CIA decided to co-op the Mafia with its plan to assassinate Castro they had their emissary, Robert Mayhew(an FBI agent working on contract for the CIA), contact Johnny Roselli a old school Mafioso affiliated with the Outfit and the derided LA crime family who represented Sam Giancana in negotiations with the CIA. Basically, the CIA went to the Outfit instead of any NY family to have the Mafia do its dirty work in Cuba. Only half-hearted attempts on Castro's life were made and they failed. But the fact that the Outfit was enlisted rather than the Genovese or Gambino family or the other three(at the time) NY families speaks to the overall reach and power of the Outfit at the time.
@r-leanmygirl-gj2kt8 ай бұрын
Bobby Kennedy hated the mob, but he didn't mind daddy Joe building his empire working with them. An empire that got brother Jack and he to the top of the heap.
@KrishnaSingh-ow1ie8 ай бұрын
That's not true. They didn't know there father was connected with mob. He should of told them it was the mafia that got you in office and made me rich. They bought all the votes. Don't mess with them. He killed both of his sons by nothing telling them.
@-jon-4778 ай бұрын
Oh no, that doesn't count, didn't you know? Typical politician; 'Do as I say not as I do'
@bugtesties8 ай бұрын
And then tried to go after him… how stupid could you be. I hate how the kennedy’s are like “American royalty” when they’re dirty fingers over everything. We need a limit on congress terms. When you look at the founding fathers ages they weren’t old fuckers thinking about their own mortality and setting up their families for the rest of their life
@edwardscott32626 ай бұрын
I've always wondered why the Kennedy's seemed to turn on organized crime after getting so much help from them. I'd assume the truth is far more interesting than the bullshit sold to the American public.
@kimnoble74084 ай бұрын
It also got them 🔙 them killed
@45Jayyyy8 ай бұрын
We live in a corrupt evil world.
@1972dsrai8 ай бұрын
The US is supposedly this great beacon for democracy and freedom yet is run by lobby groups that have more power than the president.
@SeamusMcGillicuddy08 ай бұрын
How astute !🙄
@capoislamort1008 ай бұрын
@@SeamusMcGillicuddy0IKR, sounds like something a 10 year old would say.
@FastEddy19598 ай бұрын
If that were true, this wouldn’t be noteworthy.
@barbaracrain29758 ай бұрын
AMEN!!!!🙏🙏
@Tony-gq8pi9 ай бұрын
Joe Kennedy was a mobster himself, Karam is amazing
@darrellmoore17439 ай бұрын
It's interesting that the son of a gangster was questioning everybody about gangsters!
@seanohare54888 ай бұрын
No Kennedy was a very successful businessman
@skoodercrunch28218 ай бұрын
@@capoislamort100Truth. 👍
@waltertucker42978 ай бұрын
Government period wat !!I knew that since I was a kid ,,
@richardhowe55838 ай бұрын
What about Grandpa Bush?
@anonone89549 ай бұрын
I'd have liked to heard the conversations of Joe Kennedy and Sam behind closed doors. The Kennedys paid dearly for not sticking to the deal.
@anonone89548 ай бұрын
@A_Chicago_Man I'll Google him. Anything else to look at?
@Ignatius------68 ай бұрын
RFK Jr.. said that was all a ruse.
@1fnklown8 ай бұрын
The M.O.B at it's best, didn't have the resources the Government had, RFK Jr. brought some good stuff to light. The M.O.B didn't own the media or secret service, people played a part and didn't know it, they got orders to go here or there & thats all they knew, like the men who would have been around JFKs car that day he got hit.
@lovenlightman8 ай бұрын
Kenedy wonted to destroy or fight the Illuminaty ,the CIA so did his brother ,thats why he was Murdured
@tyejamescarter67428 ай бұрын
8:03
@chrisgerard16509 ай бұрын
He was a “street” or “front” boss for Tony Accardo and Paul Ricca.
@DavidAntunes-rm7dq9 ай бұрын
So it was 3 bosses, each playing their own positions in the organization.
@dukedematteo19958 ай бұрын
That's not really true. There's so much misinfo about the Chicago mob bc people compare it to NY....It had a different structure. Accardo and Giancana were both "bosses". In this case, a boss was roughly the equivalent to capo in NY. But Giancana was the top boss in the Taylor St crew. Accardo was a top boss in the Cicero crew. Taylor St was the more powerful crew in the 50s and 60s, so in effect Giancana was the top boss in the Chicago mob during that time period. Accardo was always a powerful figure, but he did not outrank or have more power than Giancana during the 50s and 60s. This idea that Accardo held Carlo Gambino like power for 50 years just isn't true. Again, the Outfit didn't function like NY. Giancana was not a puppet boss.
@NineInchTyrone9 ай бұрын
For the most part the Mob killed its own
@MikeGreenwood51Ай бұрын
They are like deadly scorpions in a barrel. To get to the top they have to trample oveer other scorpion cockeroaches and sting them. Has been going on since they stabbed Juius Ceasar in th back multiple times.
@thomasbullen52398 ай бұрын
What amazes me is that when you hear the two guys talking about Giancana screwing up they sound like Mobsters, the accent and all. Like in a movie.
@origin-al95858 ай бұрын
Roy Demeo was literally the most feared gangster in that life!! Ex mobsters say that when he walked in a room, you could hear a pin drop.
@keithheinz17248 ай бұрын
Wow
@origin-al95858 ай бұрын
@@keithheinz1724 sarcasm?
@mafiososamgiancana8 ай бұрын
Chicago mobsters were very cruel and evil demeo was nothing compared to those psychopaths
@mack84888 ай бұрын
I once tried to hear a pin drop.....no go whatsoever...impossible....thats how i know they where lying....but hey ....what do you expect from a bandido.?
@origin-al95858 ай бұрын
@@mack8488 it’s only called a hyperbolic expression for a reason, but hey, take it literal. It’s all good 👍🏼
@paulwerder37059 ай бұрын
Everytime I watch a mafia doc, whatever person or family it's about, Is always labelled the strongest person or strongest family, How many strongest people can there be?
@Freakeasy_chicago9 ай бұрын
New York had 5 families sharing the pot. Chicago , one. Everything West of Chicago was under the Chicago outfit's control
@kirkanos39689 ай бұрын
Sam was no joke but kinda a joke Chicago was just using him and had to keep a close watch on him. Some would have loved to have him wacked many years before they did. If they think he killed more then Roy DeMeo, Greg Scarpa, Tommy Karate Pitera or Mad Dog Sullivan they are crazy.
@weeooh19 ай бұрын
Tony Accardo was the top boss of the Outfit. Giancanna was simply a front man who took orders from him.
@oldcremona9 ай бұрын
Mob documentaries are always glamorized even if they claim to expose the truth. Mob stories are big business.
@jasper31279 ай бұрын
@@weeooh1Paul Ricca had equal power to Accardo, just a shorter tenure owing to his life being cut short by the rarest of Mafia dudes' fates; the big C.
@Noblerot18309 ай бұрын
Nasty times covered up by glamour and a naive public
@Erosgates9 ай бұрын
And a dollar that held some value lol
@LUIS-ox1bv8 ай бұрын
Now we live in nasty times with no glamour and naivete on roids.
@1972dsrai8 ай бұрын
No different today with lobby groups. Explains why so many politicians work for decent salaries, but leave owning multiple properties and assets worth multi millions.
@capoislamort1008 ай бұрын
Exactly, a dumb/naive public.
@Noblerot18308 ай бұрын
@@1972dsrai exactly
@denniseubanks-go6bh9 ай бұрын
The most powerful,and deadliest mob boss? That’s a lie. He was a puppet for the outfit.Accardo was boss! No boss was ever feared or deadly as Albert Anastasia. None.
@danielhagan9218 ай бұрын
You're certainly right about Accardo and include Ricca on that. Anastasia was deadly but found to be lacking in good judgment. To that point, try a hit on a totally unconnected (to the mob) man for "snitching" on a bank robber. Anastasia had become a liability to the mob and got rubbed out by Commission decision.The real power in the mob resides with smarter guys, eg. Gambino, Lucchese, Ricca and Accardo.
@ericsierra-franco78028 ай бұрын
I don't know if Giancana was a "puppet". Giancana was a very powerful mobster. However, as you've stated the man who was really calling the shots was Accardo, and that's very well known.
@ericsierra-franco78028 ай бұрын
@@danielhagan921 Frank Costello was very competent.
@danielhagan9218 ай бұрын
@@ericsierra-franco7802 He certainly was and I have never said otherwise. My very short list of names was not all-inclusive. What I gave are examples and true, Costello would be another example.
@johnnyraider8 ай бұрын
HMNNNN, COULD PROBABLY BE?😊😊😊😊😊
@goutvols1038 ай бұрын
Another person of great insight was Judith Exner. She dated both JFK as well as Giancana and passed pillow talk between the two (2).
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
How? Do you mean pillow fighting? Like in 80s Hollywood movies with slumber parties? My life is a homeless shelter slumber party purgatory because of pathetic cowardly war criminals worried about what irrelevant derogatory labels to muster up next. You?
@MarlinWilliams-ts5ul9 ай бұрын
Crazy Joe Gallo was at those hearings, he wore dsrk glasses too.
@RobynRay4222 ай бұрын
He wouldn’t have missed that scene for all the tea in China
@peterwall5839 ай бұрын
Bobby kennedy "i thought on little girls giggled"says to sam
@seanohare54888 ай бұрын
Bobby Kennedy the most successful mob buster as attorney general the mob was on the run when he was sg
@gschu73858 ай бұрын
@@seanohare5488 only because he was in on half the crap going on and used is position to turn on the ones that got his brother elected
@AustralianOpalRocks5 ай бұрын
How did that work out for him
@CBGRTR4 ай бұрын
That mouth got him huh ?
@loupiscanis94499 ай бұрын
Thank you .
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
For? 🤔
@loupiscanis94498 ай бұрын
@@rlopez11-11 For , The hard work done for my entertainment and education . 🐺Loupis Canis .
@jimcochran11288 ай бұрын
Same stuff going on today in the Washington DC SWAMP.
@user-ld2fl7vv9g8 ай бұрын
yep, shite house has be rife with corruption since bush and trump
@barbaracrain29758 ай бұрын
Nailed it!!!😢
@jimgraham67228 ай бұрын
In the basement of the pissa shop?
@johnhood52748 ай бұрын
If you talking about trump & Biden. I don’t think so because trump is just as dumb as rocks. And his heart pump kool-aid. All talk and no action. I knew that from day one, about trump. We know a person by their work’s.
@ladylemur38028 ай бұрын
Exactly
@fatemehhassan70669 ай бұрын
I love Mr Hoffa my stepdad was a union member and friend of his as well. With my previous text on Giancana my uncle Johnny worked for him in Vegas.
@veryoldjohnson9 ай бұрын
He had the right friends in the right places!!!!
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
Who? What kind of friends? 🤔
@EarlFaulk9 ай бұрын
10:09 Im pretty sure that was the same guy interviewed about Chicago corruption on those old Thame mob documentaries
@Liepreachan8 ай бұрын
My uncle worked for him in 50s. 7 years in Walpole!!! Got paid well for the time. He told me mob did JFK for Dulles and revenge. RFK too.
You people know nothing, there are things you really don't want to know! Knowledge can get you ( gone ) 🪦🤔
@cellpat73923 ай бұрын
Fantastic narration of a known story. Yet it never ceases to amaze us. Good job.
@karenkershaw63248 ай бұрын
Great video. Thank you.
@ABCDEF-pf2nt9 ай бұрын
Really nice documentary.
@charlesross92608 ай бұрын
Not one word about Hoover.
@capoislamort1008 ай бұрын
Sam and his outfit had “dirt” on that evil bastard Hoover.
@joeyjamison57728 ай бұрын
Hoover was too busy trying on girl's clothes at the time.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
@@joeyjamison5772 Oh, you bad you bad.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
@@capoislamort100 Hoovmer was indeed a bast.
@smacc13238 ай бұрын
That was incredibly well done all around . Great authentic acting and visuals
@kbchaffin538 ай бұрын
His daughter wrote a really good book called, "Mafia Princess" that was also a good movie starring Tony Curtis.
@veggigoddess5 ай бұрын
Never ever thought anyone of the Rowan and Martin Duo would be involved in this in any shape or form
@galesams42059 ай бұрын
I served in the ARMY in Vietnam and fought against communisum and could not wait to leave that Hell hole. 16 of my brave brothers in arms never made it back to U.S. soil. so why in hell would i want to go back. This was all the corrupt democrats war.LBJ/ RICHARD NIXION.
@chicagomike45878 ай бұрын
Nixon ended the Vietnam War...and was a Republican
@ericsierra-franco78028 ай бұрын
Richard Nixon was a Republican.
@stevepickel21068 ай бұрын
Thank you for being a true patriot sir
@theenchantment64363 ай бұрын
The narrator voice is very hypnotic and bone chilling idk why I love it
@gustavorodriguez83258 ай бұрын
Nothing has change in Chicago, NYC, Philadelphia, Baltimore..etc
@Bob-te3le5 ай бұрын
I love Chicago. My favorite city.
@TheShahofBaltimore2 ай бұрын
Please upload more !! These are the best mafia documentaries!
@bblegacy8 ай бұрын
Sam Giancana saw the entire thing as something to be dealt with since he was one of many who were called to testify before the US Congress "United States Senate Select Committee on Improper Activities in Labor and Management Racketeering Committee" in 1959. A thorn in his side - of course. People like Giancana make their fortunes and commit their crimes quietly and any kind of publicity about "alleged activities" isn't good for business. Everybody knows that any business hates any kind of "bad" publicity. But he knew it was in his best interest to do whatever he had to do in order to "keep his cool" and just let RFK do all the "your government in action" public grandstanding as well as write his own hit contract. I grew up in a relatively prosperous Mob infested small industrial city right on the US / Canadian border that is a major worldwide tourist destination and in places like that you either don't acknowledge or let on that you know what's obviously rampant exists, you don't talk about it with anybody, you punch the time clock in the factory where you work every day and pay your union dues, and you keep your nose clean by not asking questions. Given that without the Mob effort through fixed labor unions, there's a good chance that JFK would not have been elected in 1960; and then with that came RFK strike two: an even more zealous clamp-down on organized crime when RFK became Attorney General of the US, and RFK's intent to break the mob just got more intense, well into the mid-1960's. While it's not for me to decide how much of the Kennedy fortune made by RFK's father was made by way of illegal (mob) racketeering (I.E. bootlegging during the Prohibition Era), there's no doubt that if Joe Kennedy, Sr. called in a few favors around the country to help get his son Jack into the White House in 1960, then RFK's zealous idealistic prosecution of the mob had to have been a stab in the back of Giancana and others like him. As it was, of the Kennedy sons, RFK was the more idealistic than his older brothers and RFK was more of being a moral crusader than pragmatic status-quo realist. The third strike against him, was the failed Anti-Castro "Bay of Pigs" fiasco that totally exposed how deeply the Mob was in bed with the FBI and CIA and embarrassed them and the entire US government AKA the JFK Administration by it. It's not exactly ironic that JFK and RFK were taken care of, in due time of course. People like Giancana know that sometimes you just have to keep your cool and play the long game, and take care of business the old-fashioned way. Those kinds of sociopaths know that Rule #1 is keeping your cool and being quietly amused, (at least outwardly), when your opponent is making headlines by publicly belittling you, especially in the halls of the US Congress. Rule # 2 is always use guys you can trust that you also know can get the job done when it's time to pull a trigger or two and Rule # 3 is to make sure there's always a patsy that's been groomed probably unknowingly, (I.E., an Oswald) to take the fall for it. After all, what the public wants is justice; the only thing any 99.9% of courts want are people they can convict whether they're actually guilty or not.
@jenniferhaynes86254 ай бұрын
Loved this so much information about modern history.
@akathecops8 ай бұрын
That little girls giggle comment was hardcore. Ya gotta wonder.
@CBGRTR4 ай бұрын
He pissed wrong people off ypu think they cared who he was NAW !!
@RobertWindedahl9 ай бұрын
THE CRIMES COMMITED BY THE U.S. GOVT. MAKE GIANCANA LOOK LIKE A SAINT@😂😂
@1972dsrai8 ай бұрын
What are lobby groups if nothing but a means of legalising corruption.
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
How so? 🧐
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
@@rlopez11-11 < --- Dum Dum.
@CBGRTR4 ай бұрын
If only ww knew half of it
@johnnysechrist63139 ай бұрын
Sam would have never snitched.
@peterwall5839 ай бұрын
We will never know!!!
@peterwall5839 ай бұрын
He was killed the night before his hearing
@menelaoskontos25539 ай бұрын
the CIA obviously disagreed
@jakeguzik9359 ай бұрын
All Sammy wanted was to know if his homeboy had his back but didn’t 😢
@asullivan40479 ай бұрын
That's open to debate.
@tommyandrews49928 ай бұрын
I couldn't imagine doing 6 hours in jail let alone 50 years. I'll stay poor living in my double wide trailer in the back woods lol
@angeldesigns13857 ай бұрын
“I ain’t got a dime, but what I got is mine, I ain’t rich but lord I’m free” -George straight- Amarillo by morning! Live free brother!
@Bob-te3le5 ай бұрын
Facts.
@jamesgmenzel86468 ай бұрын
John made Bobby attorney general because of his dad. Dad wanted for John to have Bobby by his side for when things got tough
@stephencarter72668 ай бұрын
That was pretty insightful. Perhaps you ought to write a book about it.
@GaryMay-xm6vd8 ай бұрын
@@stephencarter7266 Or at least a paper back.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
@@stephencarter7266 Read my book- "Goose on the Loose".
@margaretwallaces36258 ай бұрын
Thank you, I really enjoyed your video. We (my siblings & I) used to stay up late Friday nights to watch The Marks Brothers.❤
@chaseschneier10768 ай бұрын
How did Hoover approve all this FBI activity when it was well known that the mob had the goods on HIM?! Gay, cross dresser, and other immoral behaviors were hanging over his head.
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
Who? How? Why? 🤔
@GaryMay-xm6vd8 ай бұрын
Edgar had a thick " black book "..................on everyone !
@joeyjamison57728 ай бұрын
Hoover was too busy trying on girl's clothes at the time.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
@@joeyjamison5772 Oh, you bad really bad.
@joaogirao42805 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for affordung me this info, Im in the process of laying charges against my local PSP VFXira police in Lisbon for like for like harassment, taking so long because Im having difficulties in convincing local courts - until Ive just recently caught their degree of involvement in scrupolous written cpurt surveillance schemes ------ substituted by 4 men present becaause its convenient to hide my forensics recordings of their continual swearing forever and ever..-- thank you very much and God bless
@ambrosiomorales4748 ай бұрын
Im so amazed to those mobb boss who live over 70 to 80 + yrs old inspite the very dangerous so violent life they been through with all that killing a very dangerous life and you still alive and calling the shot at the age of 70 to 80+ yrs old amazing
@andrestrishak8292Ай бұрын
Excellent documentary, well narrated, informative and entertaining. 👍
@mohammedsaysrashid35879 ай бұрын
What was an informative and wonderful historical coverage (video) about mobs ( organized crimes ) sharks 🦈 swimming beneath the USA's political economics oceans ....
@1972dsrai8 ай бұрын
Now instead of the mafia wielding power the US has lobby groups that make a lot of people.very wealthy and its all legal.
@glengrieve5448 ай бұрын
Great content and beautifully presented thanks for showing it Australia ❤🎉❤
@walkertongdee8 ай бұрын
Sam G lived in Oak Park a Chicago suburb on Winona St. near Jackson St one block away from my sister's house. I remember the night he got hit she said it was quiet and in the morning there were cop cars parked in front.
@SeamusMcGillicuddy08 ай бұрын
🥱
@pooooornopigeon8 ай бұрын
Cooking sausages and 22 slugs, a dangerous mix.
@roberthussey5958 ай бұрын
His home address was 1147 Wenonah - at the corner of Fillmore Street and Wenonah - I wonder if his old home still has the Green Tile roof ??
@vincenzodemora92747 күн бұрын
@@roberthussey595 it does
@tonyeloo71996 ай бұрын
How i love mafia documentaries with real life clips
@zukosmom37802 ай бұрын
I hate when they put fake/modern pictures and videos in
@cadillacdeville58289 ай бұрын
Thank-you ❤❤
@laurentsaurel17518 ай бұрын
Very informative,great narration. The mob ate its baby.
@asullivan40479 ай бұрын
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent photography news media still-motion coverage. Along with guest speakers enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing.-!!!😉.it's very questionable the criminal syndicate boss who killed or ordered his killings.😈.Uncle Sammy is definitely in the top 10 of diabolical street thugs whom alleviated his competition😇. One thing for certain-!!!🤔.Not an occupation for the faint of hearted-!!!😳. A lot of the heavy hitters were out of the ( 30's thru the 50's ). 😈😇😇😇😇
@mike1967sam6 ай бұрын
4:02 - It's always "so and so" was the most powerful gangster in the history of the US. Frank Costello was the most powerful gangster in the history of the US. Albert Anastasia was the most powerful gangster in the history of the US. Charlie Lucky was the most powerful gangster in the history of the US. Carlo Gambino was the most powerful gangster in the history of the US ... and on and on...and on...
@michaelbecker24355 ай бұрын
The chin actually was the most powerful. Lucky had the most connections (in and out of the mob) Gambino was the craftiest considering her ran everything from jail.
@georgecoull18839 ай бұрын
He was in Pittsburgh at my grandfather's shop in the 50's for sausage,cheese and bread
@LincolnJamesHeathrowIII9 ай бұрын
Yay
@45Jayyyy8 ай бұрын
Ok and
@kelvintorrence59948 ай бұрын
Your granddad was a made man ,he made sandwiches ,l.o.l
@45Jayyyy8 ай бұрын
@@kelvintorrence5994 hahahaha
@anneoboyle84478 ай бұрын
😂@@kelvintorrence5994
@Kwaka282 ай бұрын
Great show. Interesting regarding the kennedys. Sinatra etc.
@michaeltischuk79728 ай бұрын
Robert should have investigated his own Father, Joe 😅
@PopeyeSailor-wz7ew8 ай бұрын
Better to investigate the competition. 🤷
@craigbritton10898 ай бұрын
He was doing atonement for his father's sins
@yankee26668 ай бұрын
@@craigbritton1089 ,,,And got his brother killed. Ohhh, yes he did. CIA was a non-factor used by left-wing Hollywood to denigrate the country. Go beyond what youve been told.
@jtwurthisk8 ай бұрын
@H8FUL4IM did some research on this topic years ago. Unfortunately, it's another example of 'common knowledge' not getting the whole story. Rosemary Kennedy was born mentally impaired and prone to violence and uncontrollable rages. Joe Kennedy followed advice from doctors of the time that the only way to help Rosemary was a lobotomy.
@claudiotagini8 ай бұрын
sort of like Easy Eddy for Al Capone?
@williamgallucci99138 ай бұрын
Enjoyed the video
@fatemehhassan70669 ай бұрын
I don’t not want to believe some stuff, I just don’t see him like that. I prefer to remember the man I met a few times as a young child…♥️♥️♥️♥️
@ke4noe6 ай бұрын
hey brother love from south carolina from your old redbeck friend
@j.kelley16858 ай бұрын
I think it's incredible that people are so quick to write off the conspiracies. Both John and Bobby were assassinated lol I'm sure there's nothing there though right?
@Spanner2498 ай бұрын
Yeah. Bobby got killed because people were obsessed with him because of his brother John. If John hadn’t been killed in that traffic accident in Dallas who knows what would have happened? That idiot driver ran right into those bullets.
@PopeyeSailor-wz7ew8 ай бұрын
People want to believe in fairy tails. 🤷
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
It is COMPLETELY OBVIOUS that the Mob had something to do with the JFK AND RFK assassinations.
@johnyurick87858 ай бұрын
Nice documentary
@brucesmith60079 ай бұрын
This film finally helps me understand cia and mafia connection.
@amanda15008 ай бұрын
I just recently learned of Operation Underworld
@CURVEDGLASS1237 ай бұрын
Stunning doc.
@ynysvon8 ай бұрын
A good informative documentary but I wish that the background music was not so loud.
@JOHN-tk6vl7 ай бұрын
It seems that all docus these days have crap music playing when people are speaking. Infuriating.
@johngulino26518 ай бұрын
I come from a Sicilian family. My father, his family, and I have no sympathy with these violent, brutal sociopaths.
@remainanonymous937 ай бұрын
Good, these scumbags tend to get glamorized in American culture. They should be treated with utter contempt.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
So you a mobber too.??? All of Italy is mobbers - that what Chinese think.
@roadrunner3818 ай бұрын
Excellent job on narrating this, your voice and delivery is spot on for these types of stories Mr. Tierney, looking forward for the next one!👍
@MrPercival018 ай бұрын
He sounds like Anthony Hopkins.
@GaryPlayer69-f9i5 ай бұрын
I've always wondered who it was that Sam trusted that night, to have let him in, to cook for him, and to actually turn his back to him? I've never heard the name's of any possible suspect's ever mentioned, either. Still wondering, to this day...
@zukosmom37802 ай бұрын
I don't think we will ever know
@leestebbins505114 күн бұрын
The book Double Cross posits that it was Tony Spilotro.
@GaryPlayer69-f9i13 күн бұрын
@@leestebbins5051 Hmmm....I didn't know Tony was ever that close to him like that. And like most everyone else, I too don't think we'll ever really know the truth. And by that, I mean, if it hasn't come out by now it probably never will.
@priscamolotsi9 ай бұрын
What a fascinating documentary! Thank you so much!
@buzby3039 ай бұрын
Are these episodes only being released as msm air them ?
@cynthiadrummond56848 ай бұрын
Albert Anatasia was the most deadly boss and this guy is considered by most in the know to be a front boss for Tony Acardo . He wasn't a boss at all.
@someguy35226 ай бұрын
When you become a liability to people who make money, you are no longer needed.
@Richard-g4u1r9 ай бұрын
Robert Kennedy was one of those guys who'd insult you if it was he and five other guys against you, but not when you and he were alone somewhere.
@angelsgranny9 ай бұрын
Everybody thought he was ruthless and John wasn't. In reality, it was the other way around.
@MGB189 ай бұрын
@@angelsgranny: John Boy and Booby were both scumbags! They got exactly what they deserved.
@asullivan40479 ай бұрын
He was a political party leader. That respected no one-!!!😉.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
I'm kinda like that - big mouthed wimp.
@CBGRTR4 ай бұрын
We gpt alot of them keyboard warriors alot of whats wrong now
@jdlamonte82127 ай бұрын
Wow alot of things make more sense to me know🤔 Thanks
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
Intentionally hurting anyone must be/feel horrific no matter who you are, I think.
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
Some people literally don't care. Sub-Human.
@garymcdowell76558 ай бұрын
Nice clip
@2005wsoxfan8 ай бұрын
The more things change.....
@stacynels48 ай бұрын
The more they definitely stay the same...
@2005wsoxfan8 ай бұрын
@@stacynels4 Unfortunately, yes.
@capoislamort1008 ай бұрын
From where I’m standing,Things never actually change.
@jamesforresternewone44238 ай бұрын
Can U please share more mafias greatest hits episodes please
@robertlamoy77838 ай бұрын
Just put it in “search” 🔎 and if they’re on n KZbin you will find them!
@manomyth119 ай бұрын
🤔my ex's grandfather was in the Mafia, he wanted me to be his bodyguard/bouncer for him and his bar, but my ex wouldn't let me, she told him straight out in front of everyone one Christmas when we were all at his house, anyways... he had several buddies that ended up protecting him until he died in a hideout in the Ozarks'', where I met Roy Sessions, the guitarist for George Jones.
@LibanFit7 ай бұрын
Great documentary amazing really !!
@amanda15008 ай бұрын
It always amazes me how anyone can put any of these people on a pedestal or romanticize their history. From the Kennedys, Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe, the CIA, the government, the mafia...they are all trash and always turn on each other. History rhymes.
@LUIS-ox1bv8 ай бұрын
Your pedestal must reach stratospheric heights.
@amanda15008 ай бұрын
@@LUIS-ox1bv I don't put people on pedastals, especially hollywood, mobsters, and government
@thomasjordan55788 ай бұрын
I disagree, particularly in respect to Marilyn and Frank.
@amanda15008 ай бұрын
@@thomasjordan5578 that's OK, everyone is entitled to their opinion.
@danielhagan9218 ай бұрын
Actually I think that you’re on to something. Exempt Marilyn and Frank. There are times, when watching mob history, that I say that I couldn’t run around w these types and they’ll never date my sister. I feel like a kid with a terrarium watching his lizards and snakes……. interesting but I’m not opening the lid on this thing. Michael Franzese counsels to never be involved with as it will destroy you family, lead to an untimely death. Young men may fancy all this, but they’ll likely step into a pile of dog shit. They’re losers but I admit fascination.
@mtshark7144 ай бұрын
I was around 10 when this happened. The country was divided than also. The biggest difference was that most problems were within the most dedicated people of the parties. Today, it's hard to find anyone who doesn't know who they are supporting even if they make that claim. They know they just aren't saying. Much different population.
@KevinSpeller-ny7gk9 ай бұрын
Interesting story.
@CharlesWilkinson-yc3dm7 ай бұрын
Sam was just the front man for the real boss of Chicago Tony Accardo, an he ended up getting wacked in his own home, nobody had the power to order that hit but someone higher than him.
@MarkM-x7z9 ай бұрын
6:30 rob Kennedy says to a vicious gangster , I thought only little girls giggle. WOW! Real tough guy. Kinda like the tough guys on the internet of today. He would never say it to his face.
@PopeyeSailor-wz7ew8 ай бұрын
Appeared to be face-to-face. 🤔 Mobsters typically walk up behind victims and shoot them in the back or from the dark or three armed men against one unarmed man. Giancana wouldn't have done it himself, he would have had someone else do it. How is that more manly than an Internet commando? Edit: @25:45 Giancana wants to poison a man's food rather than kill him face-to-face. 🤷
@rlopez11-118 ай бұрын
Why?
@gschu73858 ай бұрын
no just just thought he was untouchable because of his position
@CBGRTR4 ай бұрын
No wouldve never said that alone face to face he was a fake tough guy
@JamesNoonan-b9h8 ай бұрын
His boys sat out in front of my house for days - sending the message
@johnnydawson76758 ай бұрын
The use of the Olympus OM10 camera as a prop for the agents is historically incorrect. It was only introduced in 1979.
@ladcrooks2758 ай бұрын
enjoyed this
@marblox93007 ай бұрын
Sicko.
@popeye12508 ай бұрын
How are we supposed to watch this with all the ADS!!!???
@d.e.b.b57888 ай бұрын
You watch it with an ad blocker.
@jimlewis23958 ай бұрын
@@d.e.b.b5788 Whats the best one to get ???
@joeyjamison57728 ай бұрын
uBlock Origin removes all the unwanted ads and it's free to add onto your browser.
@zukosmom37802 ай бұрын
I pay a monthly subscription fee to KZbin. Zero commercials
@marcusarmijo08245 ай бұрын
Wow this was fascinating!!!!!!
@billbergendahl29118 ай бұрын
Many years ago I read the book 'Mafia Princess' which was written by Sam Giancana's daughter Antoinette.
@evanhughes30278 күн бұрын
38:22. That dude's laugh is hilarious. I want to drink with him. That shooting/life montage at the end was cold. Ice cold.