Soprano family

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The Soprano family (originally the DiMeo family) is a fictional Italian-American crime family featured in the HBO series The Sopranos and the prequel film The Many Saints of Newark . Based in New Jersey, the family consists of an administration and six crews. They are allies of the Lupertazzi family in New York City but the two become rivals as the series progresses. The family is loosely based on the DeCavalcante crime family, a real New Jersey mafia family. [1] [2] [3]

Contents

History

Formation

The family's origins began with alcohol bootlegging during Prohibition. A mysterious figure named Alfano was the first boss with the only known key members being Lino "Buddha" Bonpensiero, Carmine Cotuso, and twin brothers Aldo "Hollywood Dick" Moltisanti and Salvatore "Sally" Moltisanti. In 1927, Sally Moltisanti was given a life sentence for the murder of an unknown made man in the family. It's possible this is the reason Aldo remained an associate throughout his criminal tenure despite being the biggest earner in his crew. Aldo never saw Sally again.

In the book, The Sopranos Family History by Allen Rucker and David Chase, Genovese family turncoat Vincent Rizzo explained the origin: "Bootlegging was the best fucking thing that ever happened to us. Local guys worked out a deal with New York guys. First there was a guy named Alfano, I think, followed by DiMeo, a real ballbreaker, you know what I mean? As long as someone in New York was getting a slice, no one cared. On their own turf, they could do whatever the fuck they wanted."

Ercole "Eckley" aka "Boot" DiMeo is believed to have taken over in the 1950s, re-christening the family, the DiMeo crime family, based in Hudson County, New Jersey. Key members from the 1960s include brothers Giovanni "Johnny Boy" Soprano and Corrado "Junior" Soprano, sons of immigrants from Ariano in the Province of Avellino, as well as Raymond "Buffalo Ray" Curto, Michele "Feech" La Manna, Patrizio "Pat" Blundetto, Bobby Baccalieri Sr., and Giuseppe "Beppy" Scerbo. Herman "Hesh" Rabkin was a key associate, but as a Jew could never become a made member.

The Newark area in neighboring Essex County, New Jersey is depicted as an area of heavy activity during the family's early years. The Sopranos were a key faction in the DiMeo crime family, running two separate crews led by Johnny Boy and Junior, and also had longstanding ties with the five New York Families (particularly the Lupertazzi crime family). Despite DiMeo's long reign as Boss, it is implied throughout the series that the two Soprano brothers were the key players of North Jersey.

The crime family is shown to have criminal ties to the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, United Steelworkers, United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, N.Y.C. District Council of Carpenters, Operative Plasterers' and Cement Masons' International Association, Laborers' International Union of North America, Service Employees International Union, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, United Union of Roofers, Waterproofers and Allied Workers, United Food and Commercial Workers, International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers, Laborers' International Union of North America, International Longshore and Warehouse Union, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the United Association and the International Union of Operating Engineers.

They also have ties to the Associated Builders and Contractors trade association, United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, New York City Housing Authority, the United States Department of Labor Occupational Safety & Health Administration, United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, the New Jersey State Police, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey and the United States Environmental Protection Agency. The FBI also suspects that the DiMeo crime family has somehow been able to affect the jury selection process of criminal trials in the courts as suspected with Junior Soprano's racketeering case.

Newark Riots and Aftermath

In 1967, a young Tony Soprano traveled with his mentor, Dickie Moltisanti, to welcome home Dickie's father, "Hollywood Dick" Moltisanti, and his new Italian bride, Giuseppina. Moltisanti was a soldier in the DiMeo crime family, which also consisted of Johnny Soprano and his brother Junior, Silvio Dante, Paulie Walnuts, Pussy Bonpensiero, and "Buddha", Pussy Bonpensiero's father. After a black taxi driver was assaulted by white police officers, the riots broke out in Newark. One of Dickie's black associates, Harold McBrayer, began to take part in the riots. Harold killed a man stealing from their business, forcing Harold to flee to North Carolina. Before leaving, he received $500 from Dickie as a gift.

At a carnival, Tony saw Johnny and Junior arrested and Johnny was sentenced to four years in prison for assault with a deadly weapon. During an argument, Hollywood Dick kicked Giuseppina down a flight of stairs. When Dickie found out, he confronted him, which led to a physical altercation where Dickie accidentally killed his father. He then put the body in one of his businesses and then burned it down to make it look like it was destroyed in the riots. Guilt-ridden, Dickie visited his father's twin brother, Sally, still serving a life sentence in prison for killing another made man in his own family, and later began seeing Giuseppina as his comare. In elementary school, Tony was suspended from school for starting a gambling operation, and Dickie made Tony pinkie promise him that he would follow the rules.

In the series, it would appear Johnny Soprano was temporarily let out of prison in October 1969. Tony witnessed Johnny and Junior cutting off Mr. Satriale's pinky finger due to unpaid gambling debts. Johnny soon took full ownership of the restaurant.

In early 1972, Johnny completed his prison sentence, and Harold returned to Newark and decided to start his own black-led criminal operation. Giuseppina also had an affair with Harold after a fight with Dickie. Harold killed one of Dickie's men and stole their extortion money. Dickie and his crew tortured one of Harold's gang members, Cyril, with an impact wrench and then killed him. In retaliation for Cyril's death, Harold and his gang engaged in a drive-by shootout with the DiMeos, during which Buddha was killed. Harold and Dickie engaged in a standoff, but both left when they heard police sirens.

After Tony stole the answers for his geometry exam, the school guidance counselor told Tony's mother, Livia, that he had a high Stanford–Binet IQ and the Myers–Briggs personality traits of a leader, and that Tony told her about a time in which his mother hugged him and read him a book about Sutter's Mill and how it was one of his best memories. Livia tried to show her affection for Tony, but she mentioned how her doctor wanted to prescribe her antidepressants and when Tony believed it might be helpful, she antagonized him. At Buddha's wake, Tony asked Dickie if he could get Elavil for his mother, but Dickie was hesitant.

After the wake ended, Junior slipped and fell on the church steps, causing Dickie to laugh uproariously in his face, infuriating Junior. Dickie reconnected with Giuseppina and promised her a beauty parlor for her to run. During a walk on the beach, she confessed to her affair with Harold. An enraged Dickie drowned her in the ocean. Dickie again visited Sally, who suspected Dickie of murdering both his brother and Giuseppina. Sally told Dickie that everyone close to him ends up dead sooner or later, and if he truly cares about Tony, he needs to stay out of his life.

Dickie listened to Sally's advice and began to avoid Tony, refusing to see him or answer his calls. An upset Tony threw the speakers Dickie gave him out his window. Later that night, Silvio encouraged Dickie to reconcile with Tony, and Dickie relented. However, before he could arrive home, Dickie was shot in the back of the head by an unknown assailant on Junior's orders.

At Dickie's wake, it was revealed that Dickie acquired the Elavil for Tony, and had it in his pocket when he was killed. Tony looked sadly at Dickie's corpse and imagined doing another pinkie promise with him as the two had done years prior. Sometime later, Harold moved into a White neighborhood, his organized crime operation having apparently become a success.

Unrest of 1983

The unrest of 1983 is seldom referenced, but it was a historical time for the family. It might be related to the convictions of various New Jersey mobsters during the time period and the instability it caused. Many DiMeo crime family members and associates were arrested, causing the biggest blow to the family since its formation. It was during the unrest of '83 that Salvatore "Big Pussy" Bonpensiero, a cat burglar and associate in the Soprano crew, "stepped up" (committed a murder) for Johnny Soprano. Bonpensiero became a made member of the DiMeo crime family soon after.

Rise of Tony Soprano

Johnny Soprano died of emphysema in October 1986. Before his death, he requested that his son become the capo of the Soprano crew. Tony Soprano was a relatively young man to be a capo at the age of 27. Tony's transition into captain was aided by the loyalty of Bonpensiero, longtime Soprano soldier Peter Paul "Paulie Walnuts" Gualtieri, and childhood friend Silvio Dante. Tony also avoided a long stint in prison when he missed a failed hijacking involving his cousin, Anthony "Tony B" Blundetto.

Caught by the police, Tony B. ended up getting charged under the RICO law and spending 15 years in prison, while Tony would go on to become one of the top earners in the DiMeo family. At first, Tony said he was robbed by two black men, but he later admitted to his psychiatrist Jennifer Melfi, and to Tony B. that he had a panic attack after arguing with his mother and passed out, missing the hijack.

In 1989, longtime capo Richie Aprile was sentenced to ten years in Green Haven Correctional Facility. He gave control of his crew over to his younger brother, Giacomo "Jackie" Aprile Sr.

New acting boss

Ercole DiMeo was incarcerated in 1995, held at United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners in Springfield, Missouri. Jackie Aprile was named Acting Boss of the family by DiMeo, much to the chagrin of Junior Soprano. It was assumed that Junior would take over when DiMeo died or went to prison since he was one of the oldest and most senior mobsters in the DiMeo family.

DiMeo was impressed with Jackie's leadership abilities, the Aprile crew had been the top earner and best-run crew of the family for years. The years of Jackie's tenure as Boss (1995–1999) are generally considered to have been peaceful, prosperous years; Jackie was a well-respected and much-beloved Boss who didn't "eat alone," much to the contentment of his Capos.

War of 1999

When Jackie Aprile was diagnosed with stomach cancer in early 1998, [4] Tony Soprano, his closest friend and Junior's nephew, took over Jackie's responsibilities, again to Junior's displeasure. Uncle Junior and Tony were, at that point, at each other's throats because Junior plotted to have a rival, Gennaro "Little Pussy" Malanga, killed in Malanga's favorite restaurant, Vesuvio, a restaurant owned by Tony's childhood friend Artie Bucco. Tony foiled Junior's plans by ordering Silvio Dante to set fire to Artie's restaurant to prevent the Malanga hit from happening at the restaurant. Tony's nephew, Christopher Moltisanti and his associate Brendan Filone, were also hijacking trucks from Comley Trucking, a business that pays protection to Junior.

Junior's enforcer, Mikey Palmice, killed Brendan, and hired Russian hitmen to perform a mock execution on Christopher under Junior's orders. When Jackie Aprile died in he spring of 1999, tensions between Junior and Tony were at an all-time high, it was assumed that the two would go to war over the top position. Tony instead deferred to Junior, giving him the official title as Boss of the renamed Soprano crime family. However, Tony would serve as the power behind the throne with the support of both the other family capos and their main conduit to the Brooklyn-based Lupertazzi Family, underboss John "Johnny Sack" Sacrimoni.

Tensions flared up between Junior and Tony after Tony's mother, Livia Soprano, revealed that Tony was seeing a psychiatrist and had been meeting secretly with his capos in Livia's nursing home. An assassination attempt on Tony was made, but Tony luckily escaped with just an injury to the ear, leaving one hitman dead when the other accidentally shoots him while aiming at Tony. The FBI revealed to Tony that his mother's retirement home was bugged and let Tony listen to the tapes in a failed attempt to get him to flip.

The tapes revealed that the assassination attempt was concocted by Junior and made it sound like his mother was in on it, too. In retaliation, Tony ordered the deaths of key members of Junior's crew: soldier Chucky Signore, consigliere Mikey "Grab Bag" Palmice, and acting capo (after Junior's arrest) Phillip "Philly Spoons" Parisi. Junior Soprano was spared when he was indicted by the federal government, along with underboss Joseph "Beppy" Sasso and capo Lawrence "Larry Boy" Barese, and because Tony wished to keep him as the lightning rod that took the hits for the Family.

Tony then took over virtually all of Junior's business and became the Boss of the now renamed Soprano Crime Family. Former Junior Soprano soldiers Gigi Cestone and Pasquale "Patsy" Parisi defected over to various crews on Tony's side. Gigi Cestone went to the Aprile crew. Tony named Silvio Dante as his consigliere, and promoted long-time soldier "Paulie Walnuts" Gualtieri to the captain of his old crew, renamed the Gualtieri crew. Patsy Parisi went to the Gualtieri crew.

Although Junior had been stripped of nearly all power and was under house arrest awaiting trial, he still retained the title of Boss as Tony wanted the FBI to think they had indicted the head of the family. Two of the factors that brought the two closer together were when Junior informed Tony of Richie Aprile's plot to kill Tony, and take over the family, and when Junior was diagnosed with stomach cancer in 2000. However, Tony continued to punish Junior through business arrangements and only allowed him to earn on a "subsistence level". Junior managed to beat the disease before the RICO trial against him started.

FBI investigations

After years of investigating Tony Soprano (at one point trying to turn him into an informant) and failing to connect him to the murder of associate Matthew "Matt Drinkwater" Bevilaqua (which was tossed out when an eyewitness retracted his statement upon learning one of the shooters may have been Tony Soprano), the FBI arrested Tony in June 2000 when it was discovered that he had been extorting Davey Scatino. While busting out Scatino's sporting goods store, Tony had been receiving stolen airline tickets, discovered by way of information given by turncoat "Big Pussy" Bonpensiero, and Tony's giving one of the stolen tickets to his mother, Livia.

The case fell through when Big Pussy "disappeared" (having been outed as a rat, executed, and buried at sea by Tony, Silvio, and Paulie) and Livia died of a stroke. The FBI continued to build a case against Tony but fell on difficult times when a wiretapping of his basement was compromised (when Tony's daughter Meadow Soprano took the lamp they had bugged) and because of the deaths of several FBI informants.

In 2003 the RICO trial against Junior Soprano ended in a hung jury, but the government moved to schedule a re-trial, meaning Junior had to stay under house arrest. Due to his diminished position in the family because of the house arrest, longtime Junior Soprano loyalist Robert "Bobby Bacala" Baccalieri was named acting Capo of the Junior Soprano crew after it became clear that his elderly, senile Capo, Murf Lupo, wasn't up for it anymore.

Periods of unrest

In the meantime, the Soprano Family continued to stay in a period of transition, with Richie Aprile, older brother of Jackie Aprile, taking over the previously defunct (due to the death of Jackie Sr.) Aprile crew after his release from prison in 1999. Richie became a threat to Tony's power, crippling associate Beansie Gaeta and disobeying Tony repeatedly when it came to selling cocaine on garbage routes. Richie also came to Junior about overthrowing Tony, but Junior decided that he would be better off with his nephew. Tony caught wind of Richie's plot and set the wheels in motion to have him killed, but he was spared the trouble when Richie was killed in the heat of an argument by his fiancée, who coincidentally happened to be Tony's sister Janice Soprano.

When Gigi Cestone, a Soprano crew soldier set to take over and spy on the Aprile crew, died of a heart attack, Tony installed rival Ralph Cifaretto as captain. Tony had longtime problems with Ralph, despite the two having grown up together (along with Jackie Aprile and Silvio Dante). At one point, Tony, in a fit of rage, hit Ralph after Ralph murders a Bada Bing dancer named Tracee. Ralph also took Jackie Jr. under his wing without Tony's knowledge.

Jackie Jr. and his nascent crew held up a low-stakes poker game managed by Eugene Pontecorvo, one of Cipriano's underlings, in an attempt to duplicate a stunt done years earlier by Jackie Sr. and Cifaretto in an attempt to gain recognition. However, due to a combination of inexperience, nervousness, and being under the influence of drugs, the holdup goes horribly wrong; the boys end up killing the dealer "Sunshine" and wound Furio Guinta by shooting him in the leg. Ralph ordered his associate Vito Spatafore to kill Jackie Jr., who was hiding out in a housing project in Boonton.

Complicating matters is that Ralph is the family's best earner, running lucrative construction deals such as the North River (Hudson River) Esplanade Construction site and HUD scams in Newark. When a racehorse owned by Ralph (and beloved by Tony) named Pie-O-My dies in a stable fire, Tony becomes convinced that Ralph cruelly and intentionally killed the horse to help pay medical expenses for his hospitalized son (wounded in an accident while playing with a friend) with the insurance money. In a fit of anger and outrage, Tony attacks and kills Ralph.

Christopher then helps Tony dispose of the body, dismembering it and placing the several body parts in different dump sites. Tony blames Ralph's disappearance on the New York family—specifically Johnny Sack, who had had a beef with Ralph over a characteristically tasteless joke of Ralph's about Johnny's wife, Ginny, told at a Soprano mob family dinner. Vito Spatafore was named captain of the Aprile crew in 2003.

During that time, Tony Soprano began to groom his cousin/nephew Christopher Moltisanti, for a leadership role. Christopher, already considered young to have been "made," was named acting Capo of the Gualtieri crew while Paulie Walnuts was in jail facing a gun charge (later dropped). Patsy Parisi was dissatisfied with this choice, as was Silvio Dante, who wanted to see Patsy as Capo. In addition, Tony names Christopher his successor, a move that is severely compromised when Christopher is discovered to have a serious heroin addiction and is sent to rehab. Christopher temporarily cleans up and proves his loyalty to Tony by giving up his fiancée, Adriana La Cerva for execution when it is discovered that she has been cooperating with the FBI. As a reward for putting the Family above his fiancée, Chris is made captain of the Gualtieri crew (with Paulie Gualtieri promoted to Underboss).

It is during this period that the working relationship between the Lupertazzi crime family and the Sopranos reaches a rocky point. In 2002, when the two families joined to control the Esplanade construction site in Newark, New Jersey, Disagreements over the split of the money from the Esplanade, plus the HUD projects that Tony was keeping a secret from Lupertazzi and the displeasure of Johnny Sack with Ralph Cifaretto, nearly caused the two families to go to war. Johnny Sack and boss Carmine Lupertazzi blamed one another for the conflict, and each of them reached out to Tony to whack the other as a means of ending the conflict. In both cases, cooler heads prevailed and the two families worked out a deal.

Class of 2004

The prison release of "The Class of 2004" (Phil Leotardo, Angelo Garepe, Feech La Manna, and Tony Blundetto) along with the death of Carmine Lupertazzi set off another series of conflicts. "Little" Carmine Lupertazzi and Johnny Sack went to war over the position of Boss in New York, and Tony had to deal with the insubordination of Feech La Manna and his cousin, Tony Blundetto. One problem in his family was solved when Feech La Manna was sent back to prison after stolen flat-screen televisions were found in his garage by a parole officer, presumably called on the orders of Tony Soprano.

The other problem was complicated when Tony B. killed Lupertazzi associate Joey Peeps on the orders of Lupertazzi Capo Rusty Millio and consigliere Angelo Garepe. When Angelo was killed in retaliation, Tony B. went after Phil Leotardo and killed his brother, Billy Leotardo, in an unsanctioned hit. Faced with threats of war and torture from Johnny Sack and Phil Leotardo plus unease in his own family, Tony Soprano was left with no choice but to kill Tony B. himself.

The relationship between New York and New Jersey families was further complicated when Johnny Sack was busted by the FBI and sent to prison to await trial, and Phil Leotardo, still nursing hard feelings about Blundetto, was named Acting Boss of the Lupertazzi Family.

Shooting of Tony Soprano

During his house arrest and trials/re-trials, Junior developed signs of dementia. He had a head injury after being hit with a boom microphone and knocked down the courthouse steps. Several mini-strokes over the years increasingly diminished his capacity and led him to shoot Tony in the abdomen, mistakenly thinking that Tony was his already deceased nemesis "Little Pussy" Malanga.

The shooting of Tony Soprano set off a media frenzy, with reporters stalking the Soprano house and outside the hospital where Tony lay in a coma. Junior Soprano was arrested and questioned about the shooting, which he insisted must have been a self-inflicted gunshot by Tony, whom he labeled as a "depression case". The captains of the Family agreed to cut all ties with Junior and allow Tony to decide what happens to him. Junior was judged to be mentally unstable and was sent to a mental rehabilitation facility.

With Tony incapacitated, his consigliere Silvio Dante took over as acting boss of the Soprano crime family; however, Silvio was unable to handle the pressure of being boss and had an asthma attack that put him in the hospital. Tony, after a near-death experience, would awake from his coma soon after, just in time to settle a dispute over the future of Barone Sanitation with Johnny Sack and Phil Leotardo.

Tension with New York

While in prison, Johnny Sack reached out to Tony through Phil Leotardo to whack his insubordinate capo, Rusty Millio. Tony refused at first but had a change of heart after talking to Johnny Sack at his daughter's wedding. Tony conducted the execution of Millio with caution, bringing in two men from Naples to carry out the hit on Rusty and his soldier, Eddie Pietro. Johnny Sack later pleads guilty in his RICO trial to lessen his sentence, thus making Phil Leotardo the boss in all but title.

More complications occurred in the organization when Vito Spatafore, the top-earning captain of the Aprile crew and cousin-in-law to Phil Leotardo, fled New Jersey after his homosexuality was revealed. Carlo Gervasi was named by Tony as the replacement point man for the Family's construction interests. After hiding in New Hampshire for months, Vito returned to New Jersey, approaching Tony about starting up a separate operation in Atlantic City involving prostitution. Tony considered the request but ultimately decided that Vito needed to be taken out to placate Phil Leotardo, who was incensed about Vito's lifestyle.

However, Phil got to Vito first, breaking into his hotel room and watching while soldiers Dominic "Fat Dom" Gamiello and Gerry Torciano beat his cousin-in-law to death. Tony, realizing that Phil was sending the message that New York can do whatever they want, decided to hurt Phil financially as payback for Vito. Tony reasoned that a war with New York would prevent his family from earning. However, when Fat Dom went to Satriale's on a delivery stop and made jokes about Vito's death and implied Carlo was homosexual, Silvio and Carlo killed the New York soldier.

Tony's response to Vito's murder was to blow up a wire room held by Phil in Sheepshead BayBenny Fazio was on the scene for the explosion. After a sit-down between the New Jersey and New York Families, a truce was nearly reached before a reference from Little Carmine to the death of Billy Leotardo resulted in Phil Leotardo storming out. At a conference with Gerry Torciano, Albie Cianfiore, and Butch DeConcini, a decision was reached to take out a high-ranking member of the Soprano crime family.

Butch was particularly vocal in his desire to kill Tony, but Phil had more sense than that and decided against it. Phil had a massive coronary soon afterward and FBI Agent Harris informed Tony that someone on his crew could be in danger. In an attempt to clear the air between them, Tony paid a visit to Phil's hospital bed, telling him of his own near-death experience. During his disagreement with Phil about an asbestos removal project, Tony reminds him of their discussion in the hospital but Phil snubs him.

Tony retaliates by taking two members of Phil's crew, including one named Coco, off a project payroll, after which Coco threatens and sexually harasses Tony's daughter Meadow in a Little Italy restaurant. Tony retaliates by curb-stomping Coco on a wooden step in a restaurant in front of Butch DeConcini, shattering all of the threatener's teeth and putting him in a coma. Phil refuses to meet with Tony after this incident and war between the two families seems imminent.

War of 2007

It becomes clear that there is no compromise available between NY and NJ, and as a result, the wheels begin to turn. New York convinces Burt Gervasi to switch sides, and he approaches Silvio Dante to join in on a coup d'état attempt on Soprano. The likely idea is that if Tony is killed, Silvio will take over and make peace, and Gervasi will be rewarded. Silvio responds by strangling Burt Gervasi at his house with a garotte. Soprano knew what had to be done, and arranged for Phil Leotardo to be executed. At the same time, Phil had a war-room discussion where he arranged for New Jersey to be wiped out.

Phil gives orders to "decapitate the leadership" of the Sopranos and "do business with what's left", and orders contracts on Tony Soprano, Silvio Dante, and Robert "Bobby Bacala" Baccalieri. The Sopranos' attempt to hit Phil went awry however when Phil's Ukrainian mistress and her father were mistaken for Phil and were mistakenly killed by the non-English-speaking Italians who were brought over from "the other side" specifically to perform this contract.

The hits on the Sopranos in New Jersey took place with more finesse, however. Bacala is killed at a model train shop when two assassins ambush him. Word comes down that Leotardo has vanished, and the Soprano Family decides to do the same. However, as Patsy Parisi and Silvio Dante attempt to go on the lam, they are ambushed by a pair of New York hitmen outside the Bada Bing. In the ensuing carnage, Silvio Dante is shot multiple times but Parisi escapes. Silvio is rushed to a hospital where he is left in a coma. Tony and some soldiers head to a safe house to hide, as the search for Phil continued. Tony, surrounded by bodyguards, attempts to sleep while holding an AR-10 rifle in his arms, which Bobby gave to him on his 47th birthday.

Tony came out of hiding shortly after and arranged a sit down with Butch DeConcini and Albie Cianflone through "Little" Carmine Lupertazzi and retired Five Families Boss George Paglieri. During this meeting the New York Family agreed that Phil Leotardo's decision to go to war with North Jersey was a bad one, has gone much too far, and that consequently, the New York leadership would back off. Tony demanded that they give him a location on Phil, but Butch refused to tell of Phil's whereabouts (either because he didn't know or still felt loyal to his boss). Butch did, however, give Tony implicit permission to take Phil out should he find him, without retaliation from Butch and New York.

Butch agrees to financially compensate Bobby's widow. Since Tony had previously given FBI Agent Harris information on two Arab men that used to be small-time associates of the family, Harris eventually told Tony that Phil had been making calls from a pay phone at a gas station in Oyster Bay. The Soprano family began patrolling the area's gas stations looking for Phil. It wasn't long before Walden Belfiore, a soldier in the Gervasi crew, caught up with Phil at the gas station. Phil was shot in the head and chest in front of his wife and grandchildren. His vehicle was in gear and, while Phil was on the ground, the driverless SUV ran over his head. The New York/New Jersey war was seemingly brought to its conclusion.

Family members

The DiMeo crime family organization Sopchart.jpg
The DiMeo crime family organization
The Soprano (DiMeo) crime family's chain of command during the series (1999-2007) Sopranos (DiMeo) Crime Family Hierarchy.jpg
The Soprano (DiMeo) crime family's chain of command during the series (1999–2007)

Administration

Capos

Historical membership

Boss (official and acting)

Street Boss

The Street Boss is considered the go-to-guy for the boss and is responsible to pass on orders to lower-ranking members. [5]

Underboss (official and acting)

Consigliere

Crews

Miscellaneous members

Unofficial associates

Front operators

FBI cooperators

Soprano family tree

Soprano family tree
Mariangela Soprano
(née D'Agostino)
Corrado Soprano Sr. Faustino "Augie" Pollio Teresa Pollio Robert Baccalieri Sr. Blundetto family
Corrado "Junior" Soprano Ercole "Eckley" Soprano DeAngelis family Giovanni "Johnny Boy" Soprano Livia Soprano
(née Pollio)
Gemma Pollio Settimia Pollio Mickey Pollio Quintina Blundetto
(née Pollio)
Albert Blundetto
Barbara Soprano Tom Giglione Carmela Soprano (née DeAngelis) Tony Soprano Eugene Janice Soprano-Baccalieri Robert "Bobby Baccala" Baccalieri Karen Baccalieri Mary Baccalieri Christina Baccalieri
Tommy Giglione Alyssa Giglione Meadow Mariangela Soprano A.J. Soprano Harpo "Hal" Domenica Baccalieri Bobby Baccalieri III Sophia Baccalieri

See also

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Silvio Manfred Dante is a fictional character on the HBO TV series The Sopranos, played by Steven Van Zandt. He is the consigliere and right-hand man to Tony Soprano in the DiMeo crime family. John Magaro portrays a young Silvio Dante in the 2021 prequel film, The Many Saints of Newark.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Junior Soprano</span> Fictional character on the television series The Sopranos

Corrado John "Junior" Soprano Jr., portrayed by Dominic Chianese, is a fictional character from the HBO TV series The Sopranos. Usually referred to as "Junior" or "Uncle June", he is the official boss of the DiMeo crime family for most of the series. A younger Corrado sometimes appears in flashbacks and is played by Rocco Sisto. Corey Stoll portrays a young Junior Soprano in the 2021 prequel film, The Many Saints of Newark. Dominic Chianese's performance as Junior was universally lauded.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Satriale's Pork Store</span> Fictional butchery

Satriale's Pork Store is a fictional establishment on the HBO series The Sopranos. During the 1970s, the pork store was taken over by Johnny Soprano, a capo in the DiMeo crime family, when Francis Satriale failed to make payments on a gambling debt. It became a regular hangout for current members of the DiMeo crime family.

"Members Only" is the 66th episode of the HBO series The Sopranos, and the first of the show's sixth season. Written by Terence Winter and directed by Tim Van Patten, it aired originally on March 12, 2006.

"Two Tonys" is the 53rd episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the first of the show's fifth season. Written by David Chase and Terence Winter, it was directed by Tim Van Patten and originally aired on March 7, 2004.

"Rat Pack" is the 54th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and is the second of the show's fifth season. Written by Matthew Weiner and directed by Alan Taylor, it originally aired on March 14, 2004.

"Mayham" is the 68th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the third of the show's sixth season. Written by Matthew Weiner and directed by Jack Bender, it originally aired on March 26, 2006.

"The Legend of Tennessee Moltisanti" is the eighth episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos. It was written by David Chase and Frank Renzulli, directed by Tim Van Patten and originally aired on February 28, 1999.

"Fortunate Son" is the 29th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the third of the show's third season. It was written by Todd A. Kessler and directed by Henry J. Bronchtein, and originally aired on March 11, 2001.

"Mr. & Mrs. John Sacrimoni Request..." is the 70th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the fifth of the show's sixth season. Written by Terence Winter and directed by Steve Buscemi, it originally aired on April 9, 2006.

"All Happy Families..." is the 56th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the fourth of the show's fifth season. Written by Toni Kalem and directed by Rodrigo García, it originally aired on March 28, 2004.

"Army of One" is the 39th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the finale of the show's third season. It was written by David Chase and Lawrence Konner, and directed by John Patterson, and originally aired on May 20, 2001.

"For All Debts Public and Private" is the 40th episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos and the first episode of the show's fourth season. Written by David Chase and directed by Allen Coulter, it originally aired on September 15, 2002.

"Stage 5" is the 79th episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos, the second episode of the second half of the show's sixth season, and the 14th episode of the season overall. It was written by Terence Winter and directed by Alan Taylor, and originally aired on April 15, 2007.

"Remember When" is the 80th episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos, the third episode of the second half of the show's sixth season, and the 15th episode of the season overall. Written by Terence Winter and directed by Phil Abraham, it originally aired on April 22, 2007, and was watched by 6.85 million viewers on its premiere.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paulie Gualtieri</span> Fictional character

Peter Paul "Paulie Walnuts" Gualtieri is a fictional character portrayed by Tony Sirico on the HBO series The Sopranos, one of the chief henchmen of series protagonist Tony Soprano. Sirico originally auditioned for the role of Uncle Junior with Frank Vincent, but Dominic Chianese landed the role. David Chase instead offered him the role of playing Paulie Gualtieri, Sirico agreed under the condition that his character would not "become a rat." Paulie begins the series as a soldier, later becoming a caporegime in the DiMeo crime family. He is violent, impulsive, and paranoid. Billy Magnussen portrays a young Paulie Gualtieri in the 2021 prequel film, The Many Saints of Newark.

References

  1. Anthony Bruno. "All about the Real Life Sopranos overview". crimelibrary.com. Archived from the original on April 10, 2008. Retrieved June 12, 2007.
  2. Gary Edgerton (2013). The Sopranos. Wayne State University Press. ISBN   978-0814338520.
  3. Malanga, Steven (May 13, 2007). "Da Jersey boys who inspired The Sopranos". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on May 16, 2007.
  4. 1 2 "Tony Soprano reading The Star Ledger - dated June 17, 1998 - in the pilot episode". Archived from the original on January 25, 2021. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  5. Raab "Five Families" pp. 494–95