Cesare Bonventre

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Born(1951-01-01)January 1, 1951
DiedApril 16, 1984(1984-04-16) (aged 33)
Causeof deathGunshot wounds
Cesare Bonventre
Born(1951-01-01)January 1, 1951
DiedApril 16, 1984(1984-04-16) (aged 33)
Cause of deathGunshot wounds
Resting placeSaint Charles Cemetery
East Farmingdale, New York
Other names"The Tall Guy"
OccupationCaporegime
PredecessorCarmine Galante
SuccessorBaldassare Amato
SpouseTheresa A. Bonventre
Children1
RelativesGiovanni Bonventre (uncle), Vito Bonventre (first cousin once removed), Joseph Bonanno (first cousin once removed), Baldassare Amato (cousin)
AllegianceBonanno crime family

Cesare "The Tall Guy" Bonventre (January 1, 1951 – April 16, 1984) was a Sicilian gangster who served as a caporegime in the Bonanno crime family, operating out of Knickerbocker Avenue in Bushwick. Bonventre alongside Salvatore “Toto” Catalano led the Sicilian “Zips” faction of the family and was a key member of the Pizza Connection until his assassination on April 16, 1984 on orders of Joe Massino and Philip "Rusty" Rastelli.

Born in Castellammare del Golfo, Sicily, Bonventre was a member of the Sicilian Mafia. During the 1960s, the New York crime families imported young Sicilian men from Sicily to the United States to work as drug traffickers and hitmen. American mobsters soon derisively dubbed the Sicilians "Zips" due to their fast speech. Bonanno acting boss (unofficial) Carmine Galante brought Bonventre to New York to be his bodyguard. Bonventre soon became the unofficial underboss of the Bonanno family Sicilians. Bonventre's uncle was John Bonventre, a former Bonanno underboss. Bonventre was also a cousin of the first family boss Joseph Bonanno and Bonanno mobster Baldassare "Baldo" Amato. In 1979, Cesare and Baldassare were arrested for carrying illegal firearms in their car after being stopped by police at the Green Acres Mall in Valley Stream, New York, shortly before the execution of Carmine Galante. In April 1981, they were convicted and served two months. Ralph Blumenthal wrote in Last Days of the Sicilians: The FBI's War Against the Mafia that Cesare identified himself to law enforcement as "a pizza man from Brooklyn".

He was a regular habituate of his cousin Baldassare Amato's deli run by his family located at Second Avenue and Eighty-fourth Street in Yorkville, New York. The deli had burned down not long before January 1984 but in its place the Amato family built an apartment building with a sleek Italian cafe and restaurant called Biffi. Bonventre's moniker was "The Tall Guy" because he was almost six feet seven inches (2.01 m) tall. Lean and handsome, Bonventre frequented clubs such as The Toyland Social Club and the Knickerbocker Avenue area with other Sicilian mobsters.[1] In the book King of the Godfathers, Anthony M. Destefano wrote that there was something about Bonventre that made him stand out from the other ethnic Italians. His stylish clothing, aviator sunglasses and European man purses embodied Italian couture.[2] Bonventre normally wore his shirt unbuttoned with a gold crucifix hanging from his neck.[3]

Galante assassination

Galante was allegedly murdered for not sharing his drug trafficking profits with the family. The hit on Galante required Philip "Rusty" Rastelli to get approval from the Zips, Gambino crime family boss Paul Castellano and the other Commission bosses. It was later rumored that the Mafia Commission, which oversees all the crime families, had sanctioned Galante's murder and arranged for Bonventre and Baldo, Galante's bodyguards, to betray him.

On July 12, 1979, Bonventre allegedly participated in the murders of Galante and two of his friends. He had been dropped off for lunch at Joe & Mary's, an Italian restaurant in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn. After a short while, bodyguards Bonventre and Baldo Amato joined Galante. Although it was a hot summer day and they were dining on the patio, both Bonventre and Amato wore leather jackets, presumably to protect themselves from stray bullets and debris. Suddenly, three men in ski masks appeared on the patio and opened fire on Galante. Bonventre and Amato allegedly joined in the attack, then disappeared from the scene after the three hitmen. Galante and his two lunch companions died.[4][5] A week after the Galante murders, Bonventre was arrested by federal agents, but he was soon released and was never charged with the crime.

Rise to power

Philip "Rusty" Rastelli succeeded Galante as boss of the family, even though he was incarcerated at the time and Joseph Massino became underboss, although some believed Massino was the real power in the family. After Galante's death, Bonventre was promoted from soldier to capo and joined Salvatore Catalano's Brooklyn crew.[6] At 28, Bonventre became the youngest capo in Bonanno family history. Bonventre became involved in the importation and drug trafficking of heroin from Sicily into New York pizza parlors, known as the "Pizza Connection".

Bonventre had been on the side of the three capos Alphonse "Sonny Red" Indelicato, Philip Giaccone and Dominick Trinchera, a family faction who were planning a coup to take over the family; however, Bonventre switched sides, joining Rastelli's faction. If Bonventre and the Zips had stayed loyal to Indelicato, he would have probably taken over the Bonanno family. The ascension of Rastelli as boss triggered a period of discontent and rivalry in the Bonanno family. As a result, Rastelli and Massino started purging their opponents in the family.

In 1984, Massino decided to eliminate Bonventre.[3] Bonventre's pedigree, increasing wealth and fearsome reputation had made him a threat to Massino's leadership. Bonventre controlled the Sicilians, the most fearsome and reliable killers in the family. Bonventre was prone to outbursts of sadistic violence and was suspected of over 20 murders.[7] Massino warned, "He's a very sharp guy. You have to be careful."

Death

References

Further reading

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