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Criminal Mastermind
Lucky Luciano

He downsized, he restructured and he used Standard & Poor's as much as Smith & Wesson to change forever the face of organized crime


BY EDNA BUCHANAN

He was born and died in Italy, yet the influence on America of a grubby street urchin named Salvatore Lucania ranged from the lights of Broadway to every level of law enforcement, from national politics to the world economy. First, he reinvented himself as Charles ("Lucky") Luciano. Then he reinvented the Mafia.

His story was Horatio Alger with a gun, an ice pick and a dark vision of Big Business. He was nine when the family immigrated from Sicily, where his father had labored in the sulphur pits, to New York City. He took to the streets early, was busted almost at once for shoplifting, later for delivering drugs. Luciano was a tough teenage hoodlum on the Lower East Side when his gang targeted a skinny Jewish kid whose bold defiance won their respect. The encounter led to a merger of Jewish and Italian gangs and a lifelong friendship. When Luciano rebuilt the mob, Meyer Lansky was the architect. A ruthless natural ability enabled them to rise through the ranks of their chosen profession. Sometimes they simply eliminated the ranks. When they downsized colleagues, it was permanent.

Taking advantage of Prohibition in 1920, Luciano and Lansky supplied booze to Manhattan speakeasies. While others used small boats to offload mother ships, their contacts enabled them to dock ships in New York harbor.

An upwardly mobile member of New York's largest Mafia family, run by Giuseppe ("Joe the Boss") Masseria, Luciano grew impatient at the Castellammarese war in the late 1920s, a long and bloody power struggle between Masseria and Salvatore Maranzano. Lucky offered to eliminate his boss and end the violence, which he saw as disruptive to business. At an Italian restaurant, Joe the Boss ate lead. Lucky assumed control of the dead man's lottery business, while Maranzano seized his bootlegging turf.

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SIDEBAR: HOW TO GET AHEAD IN BUSINESS



POLL:
Do you believe Lucky Luciano was one of the 20 most influential builders and titans of the 20th century?

QUIZ:
The 1942 explosion of what ocean liner prompted the U.S. government to seek Luciano's assistance in tightening security at New York Harbor?

BORN Nov. 11, 1897, in Sicily

1906 Immigrates to the slums of New York City

1911 Drops out of school in fifth grade

1929 Survives rubout attempt on Staten Island

1931 Becomes crime CEO after masterminding murders of two big bosses

1936 Jailed on charges of running a prostitution ring

1946 Wins prison release for wartime assistance, and is deported to Italy

1962 Dies Jan. 26 in the Naples, Italy, airport


WEB RESOURCES:
"Lucky Luciano" Lucania
Lucky's story on Hoodlum Online.

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