4.6 • 623 Ratings
🗓️ 11 April 2022
⏱️ 20 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hey, all your wiretappers out there back here in the studio, Gangland Wire. |
0:04.7 | I'm going to have a one-person show today. |
0:07.5 | I just found this interesting story. |
0:10.1 | And one of our big supporters and artists named Rob Star, Rob, this is for you, buddy. |
0:17.5 | He's always asked me about Pittsburgh stories. |
0:20.7 | And here's a Pittsburgh story for you. |
0:23.1 | It's Samuel Sam Manorino. He was really a prominent La Cosa Nostra figure in western Pennsylvania |
0:31.8 | for decades until he died in 1967. He worked with his brother, Kelly, Manorino, and together they controlled most of the |
0:41.8 | gambling and any other related activities, loan sharking, and of course fencing goes along |
0:47.7 | with that and bust out schemes from gamblers that get in too deep and insurance gigs from gamblers that get in too deep. |
0:56.8 | You know, these these gamblers, they get in too deep and they borrowed some money. |
1:00.3 | And as I heard him on the phone, a guy told another guy, said, you just need to get a policy. |
1:05.7 | And I thought, what's that mean? Get a policy. And he said, you know, get a policy, man. And it's about it, talking about his car. |
1:13.8 | And he wanted some money out of it. And so about three weeks later, we found out that car had been |
1:20.5 | burned. It's like, oh, yeah, get a policy. And I know what that means. They were, they operated |
1:26.2 | in the northern part of Westmoreland County and under the |
1:30.7 | auspices of the Pittsburgh crime family. The Manorino brothers, they had, they had interest in |
1:39.8 | Cuban casino like a lot of mob guys did in the 1950s, the San Suji in Cuba. |
1:47.7 | You know, Marilanski kind of started that trend down there. |
1:51.1 | They work under Pittsburgh Mob Boss John LaRocca later in their life, |
1:56.7 | and he would eventually force San Manonilinilk. |
2:02.6 | And Pittsburgh mob boss, John LaRocca, would eventually force Sam Manorino into retirement from the organization, 1958, after he'd had a few too many run-ins-ins with law enforcement and his health was declining too. |
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