The Tampa Mob originated out of an area of Tampa
known as Ybor City. Now a vibrant night spot, Ybor was the home
to thousands of immigrant Cubans, Spanish, and Italians at the turn
of the century. It was also the home to Tampa's cigar industry,
giving work to many of the immigrants. Unlike northern cities, Tampa
had no established Jewish or Irish gangs. In fact the biggest underworld
figure during the 1920's to 1940's was a native Floridan, Charlie
Wall. Wall was born to a prominent Tampa family, and began working
at gambling houses, rising to run the racket himself.
The dominant racket in Tampa was bolita, a kind of lottery brought
to Ybor in the late 1880's by Manuel Suarez. The bolita racket expanded
exponentially in Tampa and was the mob's predominant moneymaker
until the 1960's. Narcotics also played a major role in the fortunes
of the Tampa mob. Two early narcotics kingpins were James "Jo-Jo"
Cacciatore, and George "Saturday" Zarate.
The Mafia in Tampa came into the spotlight for the first time in
1928 in Cleveland. Police raided a meeting of gangsters at the Hotel
Statler, and arrested Ignacio Italiano and Joe Vaglicia from Tampa.
As the mafia grew in stature in Tampa a war broke out between the
various gambling factions for control of the bolita and narcotics
rackets. At this time there was no true boss in Tampa. Some early
powers were the Diecidue family, Augustine Lazzara, the Velasco
brothers, the Trafficantes, Salvatore Italiano, and Ignacio Antinori.
Sal Italiano was the leader of the gambling rackets, while Antinori,
along with his sons Paul and Joe controlled narcotics. Ignacio Antinori
eventually fell out of favor with some Chicago gangsters after selling
them a bad batch of narcotics and was gunned down in Tampa on October
24, 1940. He was one of over 25 killings from 1930 until 1959. This
has come to be known in Tampa as the "Era Of Blood". Among
those killed were Joe Vaglica (July 10, 1937), Mario Perla (Oct.
12, 1939), Jimmy Velasco (Dec. 12, 1948), and former kingpin Charlie
Wall (April 20, 1955). Wall had testified to the Kefauver Commission
in 1950 and was believed to be retired when he had his throat cut.
In the late 40's Sal Italiano left for Italy, leaving James Lumia
in charge. Lumia is credited by the FBI as the first true Mafia
boss in Tampa. Lumia's reign was short-lived as he was killed by
a shotgun blast on June 5, 1950. He was succeeded by Santo Trafficante
Sr. Trafficante ruled until his death in August of 1954 from stomach
cancer. He was succeeded by his son, Santo Jr.
Santo Trafficante Jr. would lead the Tampa mob for 33 years until
his death on March 17, 1987. A short bio of his accomplishments:
ran casinos in Havanna before being kicked out by Castro, allegedly
set up narcotics networks in Latin America and Southeast Asia, involved
in CIA plots to kill Castro, arrested at the ill-fated Appalachin
meeting, arrested at the "Little Appalachin meeting in Queens,
NY, allegedly involved in the assassination of John Kennedy, present
in the Waldorf Astoria the day that Albert Anastasia was killed,
ran all gambling operations on the Gulf Coast, closely affiliated
with the Marcello family of New Orleans, and , most importantly,
never spent a night in an American jail.
After Trafficante's death, authorities speculated the leadership
of the Tampa family was split between longtime underboss Frank Diecidue
(who died on Oct.19, 1994), Frank Albano, and Vincent LoScalzo.
LoScalzo is now believed to run the remnants of the organization.
The family came under investigation in the mid 80's involving a
cocaine distribution ring, and again in 1992 as part of the ill-fated
Key Bank investigation wherein all charges were eventually dropped.
LoScalzo recently (Oct. 1997) pled guilty to fraud and was sentenced
to probation.
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This is a very abbreviated history of the Tampa family.
Below are some identified members:
McClellan Commission (1962):
Santo Trafficante
Henry Trafficante
Frank Diecidue
Sal Scaglione
Al Scaglione
James Longo
Ciro Bedami
Angelo Bedami
Joe Bedami
Augustine Lazzara
Dominick Furci
Phillip Piazza
Angelo LoScalzo (father of Vincent)
Nick Scaglione
James Bruno
Salvatore Lorenzo
Sam Cacciatore
Sam Trafficante
1991 FDLE report:
Henry Trafficante
Vincent LoScalzo
Frank Diecidue (died Oct 19, 1994)
Sam Carollo
Salvatore Lorenzo (died 1995)
Frank Albano
Joseph DiGerlando
James J. Valenti
ASSOCIATES (active):
Pasquale "Pat" Mattasini (died May 1, 1999)
Joe Camero
Joseph Charles Bedami
Nick Scaglione (not named in 1992, died 1995)
James Donofrio
Sam Pupello
Michael Napoli
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by Scott Deitche
(currently writing: The Tampa Mob)
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