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March 19, 1877 - Ignazio Lupo

One of the most feared figures in early twentieth-century organized crime, Lupo built his power through systematic extortion, loan-sharking, and violence in New York's Little Italy, where his reputation alone was considered a tool of coercion. Suspected of involvement in roughly sixty murders, he operated for years beyond the reach of law enforcement — ultimately brought down not for the violence but for counterfeiting. His career traces the arc of the Black Hand era, a period when immigrant communities were particularly vulnerable to predatory criminal networks operating largely in the shadows of official attention.

From Wikipedia

Ignazio Lupo

Ignazio Lupo (Italian: [iɲˈɲattsjo ˈluːpo]; March 21, 1877 – January 13, 1947), also known as Ignazio Saietta and Lupo the Wolf, was a Sicilian American Black Hand leader in New York City during the early 1900s. His business was centered in Little Italy, Manhattan, where he ran extensive extortion operations and committed other crimes, including robbery, loan-sharking, and murder. By the start of the 20th century, Lupo merged his crew with others in the South Bronx and East Harlem to form the Morello crime family, which became the leading Mafia family in New York City.

Suspected of at least 60 murders, he was not caught by authorities until 1910, when the Secret Service arrested him for running a large scale counterfeiting ring in the Catskills. He was paroled after serving 10 years of a 30-year sentence. A few years later, he was forced into retirement by the emerging National Crime Syndicate led by Lucky Luciano.

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