Cotroni crime family
Founded by | Vincenzo Cotroni |
---|---|
Founding location | Montréal |
Years active | 1950s-2004 |
Territory | Montréal |
Ethnicity | Made men are Italian, Italian-Canadian, Calabrian. Criminals of various ethnicities are employed as "associates" |
Membership (est.) | 20 made members |
Criminal activities | Racketeering, drug trafficking, murder, gambling, corruption |
Allies | Bonanno crime family |
Rivals | Sicilian faction |
The Cotroni crime family was a Mafia organization based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Cotroni family was historically controlled by mobsters of Calabrian ancestry. The territory controlled by the family once covered most of southern Quebec and Ontario, until the Rizzuto crime family supplanted them.[1] The FBI considered the family a branch of the Bonanno crime family.[1]
History
In the 1950s the family formed a strong connection to the New York Bonanno crime family as the crime family began controlling the majority of Montreal's drug trade.[2] The Cotroni family also kept ties with other Mafia families in Italy and throughout the US and Canada. In the 1970s an internal war broke out between Sicilian and Calabrian factions in the family.[2][3] During the violent Mafia war in Montreal Paolo Violi (who was acting capo for Vic Cotroni) was murdered along with others in the late 1970s.[2] The war ended in the late 1970s, when Vic Cotroni the Calabrian leader had to let go the Sicilian faction led by Nicolo Rizzuto.[2][4][5]
The Calabrian faction continued to operate after the late 1970s with Vic Cotroni as the boss until he died leaving his youngest brother Frank Cotroni as the boss.[6] The faction would lose more power in Quebec and operated in the shadow of the Sicilian faction led by Nicolo Rizzuto. Their leader Frank Cotroni died of cancer in August 2004 leaving the Rizzuto Sicilian faction as the most powerful crime family in Canada.[7]
On November 4, 2012 Joseph Di Maulo, a longtime ally of the Cotroni family, was executed outside his Montreal home.[8] Police believe his murder is part of an ongoing power struggle between the Sicilians and their rivals.[9]
References
- 1 2 Lamothe & Humphreys, The Sixth Family, p.308
- 1 2 3 4 The Rizzuto family by Corinne Smith (January 6, 2011) CBC News Montreal
- ↑ Organized Crime in The Canadian Encyclopedia
- ↑ "Canada's alleged Godfather pleads guilty", Montreal Gazette, September 18, 2008
- ↑ "Mob takes a hit", Montreal Gazette, November 23, 2006
- ↑ FBI linked Montreal mobster to alleged U.S. assassination plot, CanWest News Service, July 10, 2007
- ↑ Alleged crime boss Cotroni buried in Montreal, CTV News, August 22, 2004
- ↑ Reputed Montreal crime boss Joseph Di Maulo killed in his driveway north of the city, National Post, November 5, 2012
- ↑ Police fear Montreal mobster’s murder may be start of bloody Mafia war, National Post, November 5, 2012
- Lamothe, Lee and Adrian Humphreys (2008). The Sixth Family: The Collapse of the New York Mafia and the Rise of Vito Rizzuto, Toronto: John Wiley & Sons Canada Ltd., ISBN 0-470-15445-4 (revised edition)