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  1. The New York City gangs were divided into five crime families. Gagliano took over the old Reina family, with Lucchese as his underboss. As a boss, Gagliano became a member of the commission. In 1932, Gagliano was convicted of tax evasion and sentenced to 15 months in the Atlanta Penitentiary.

  2. Jul 8, 2013 · Tommaso “Tommy” Gagliano was an early leader of the Lucchese crime family in New York City, a low-key don who believed in secrets and knew how to keep them. Little is known about his reign at the top of one of the nation’s most powerful criminal organizations, and that’s exactly the way he would have wanted it.

  3. It was taken over by Tommy Gagliano during the Castellammarese War, and led by him until his death in 1951. Known as the Gagliano crime family under Gagliano, the family kept their activities low-key, with their efforts concentrated in the Bronx, Manhattan, and New Jersey.

  4. Thomas Gaetano Lucchese (born Gaetano Lucchese; Italian: [ɡaeˈtaːno lukˈkeːse]; December 1, 1899 – July 13, 1967), sometimes known by the nicknames "Tommy", "Thomas Luckese", "Tommy Brown" or "Tommy Three-Finger Brown", was an Italian-American gangster and founding member of the Mafia in the United States, an offshoot of the Cosa Nostra ...

  5. Gaetano “Tommy” Gagliano was the original boss of what the U.S. Federal authorities would later designate as the Lucchese crime family, one of the “Five Families” of New York City. He was probably the lowest-profile boss in the history of America Cosa Nostra and presided over the family for over two decades.

  6. Jul 13, 2017 · Compared with those of his colleagues, Lucchese’s Mafia family wasn’t the biggest, nor was his reign the longest (14 years as actual boss, 22 years as underboss to the family’s original boss – Tommaso “Tommy” Gagliano). Still, he cemented a prominent spot in the annals of gangland history.

  7. Thomas Gagliano was an Italian-born American mobster and boss of what U.S. federal authorities would later designate as the Lucchese crime family, one of the "Five Families" of New York City. He was a low-profile boss for over two decades.

  8. The Lucchese family originally bore the name Gagliano for Thomas (“Tommy”) Gagliano, who was named the boss of one of the Five Families. Gagliano had been the underboss (second in command) of the crime family led by Gaetano (“Tommy”) Reina, a casualty of the Castellammarese War, murdered by Vito Genovese , who would go on to control ...

  9. Jan 31, 2021 · The Lucchese crime family originated in the early 1920s with Gaetano Reina, and after his murder, Tommy Gagliano took over, and the crew became known as the Gagliano crime family. It was thanks to its next boss, Tommy Lucchese, that the family became one of the most powerful ones to sit on the Commission, the governing body of the American Mafia.

  10. Tommaso "Tommy" Gagliano (29 May 1883 – 16 February 1951) was boss of the Lucchese crime family from 1931 to 1951, succeeding Joseph Pinzolo and preceding Tommy Lucchese. Tommaso Gagliano was born on 29 May 1883 in Corleone, Sicily, and he moved to the Bronx neighborhood of New York City in the...