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  • - Everyone goes running out of the house,

  • and you have like 75 mobsters just running into the woods,

  • running into the hills, trying to get out,

  • throwing money clips, throwing their guns.

  • It was just pure chaos.

  • It's November 14th, 1957.

  • "Jailhouse Rock" by Elvis Presley just came out,

  • so it was probably playing on the radios everywhere.

  • The Cold War between the United States

  • and Soviet Union is heating up.

  • Also, on this particular day,

  • in the small town of Appalachin, New York,

  • you have a meeting taking place with arguably the biggest,

  • baddest Mafia bosses in the country.

  • This is by far the greatest story

  • in the history of the Mafia and law enforcement,

  • and almost nobody knows about it.

  • I'm Jon Carlo, screenwriter

  • of the Hollywood film "Mob Town",

  • and this is the story of the day America met the Mafia.

  • Now you have to understand that in 1957,

  • it's very different from today.

  • Today we have references of the Mafia and organized crime

  • in movies and it's common knowledge.

  • But back then, the Mafia was almost never discussed.

  • It was truly a secretive underground organization.

  • Even J. Edgar Hoover, the head of the FBI,

  • refused to publicly acknowledge the existence of the Mafia.

  • But in reality, there's a war happening on the streets

  • of New York and Chicago.

  • So Lucky Luciano was, at the time, the boss of bosses.

  • He ran all of organized crime in New York City,

  • and he gets busted.

  • And because of that, they deport him back to Italy,

  • which creates a vacuum of power.

  • Now, Vito Genovese, being Lucky Luciano's right hand man,

  • decides it's his time to step up.

  • But, he needs to take out his rivals

  • from the other families in New York City.

  • Frank Costello's one of them.

  • Takes him out.

  • Albert Anastasia from a different family, takes him out.

  • And with those guys gone, Vito Genovese can now

  • step in and become the boss of bosses.

  • Now in order to solidify this claim,

  • he decides, against the beliefs of all of his peers

  • in the underworld, that he wants to hold a meeting,

  • a conference, with all the bosses of all the families

  • in the whole country.

  • This has never been done before

  • because you don't meet in broad daylight all together.

  • But Vito is hard set on holding this meeting.

  • And they decide to do it in a small little remote town

  • in upstate New York called Appalachin.

  • But on this particular day, a local state trooper

  • by the name of Edgar Croswell, the quintessential lawman,

  • he's a tall guy, broad shoulders.

  • He's on his way to a routine call.

  • One of the local motels had a case of a fraudulent check.

  • So him and his partner, Vincent Vasisko,

  • they head over to the motel, just to fill out a report.

  • And Edgar Croswell notices something.

  • He's a big car guy, he's obsessed with cars.

  • And he sees, parked right out front,

  • is a really fancy Cadillac.

  • And he knows the car, because the town is a very small town.

  • And he knows that the car belongs

  • to a guy by the name of Joseph Barbara.

  • And he goes in, and coming out of the motel

  • is the son of Joseph Barbara, Joe Junior.

  • So Edgar Croswell, he asks the woman working at the motel,

  • "What's this guy doing?"

  • And she tells him that they just booked

  • every single room in the motel.

  • And Croswell thinks, "Okay, that's odd."

  • Edgar Croswell asks the woman,

  • "Well what name was put under the rooms?"

  • She tells him that it was paid for by Joe the Barber,

  • but the name that they put on all the rooms

  • is Carmine Galante, which rings a bell for Croswell

  • because a couple years before that,

  • Croswell pulled over Carmine Galante

  • driving out of Appalachin in this same Cadillac.

  • And he had a fake ID on him at the time.

  • And so they take him in,

  • they try to book him for having a fake ID and speeding,

  • and all of a sudden, some big hotshot lawyer from New York

  • comes and bails him out.

  • Now Croswell remembered that moment.

  • Being, you know, stationed in the small town of Appalachin,

  • just a town of 200 people, they don't see much action,

  • or any activity, but he's been keeping track

  • of certain things that have been happening.

  • He's keeping clippings of all these Mafia headlines

  • that are starting to pop up.

  • He went out to dinner a couple nights before

  • and there was no steak, no pork chops.

  • Everything in town was bought up.

  • There's been an influx of expensive cars in town.

  • So Croswell, his head's exploding right now.

  • He starts piecing things together.

  • They finish the report, they go back to the station,

  • and he goes to the captain and says,

  • "Listen, Captain.

  • Something big is about to go down, I know it."

  • And shows him all this evidence.

  • But the captain, you know, he could care less, really.

  • The Mafia, that's, you know,

  • not even in the realm of reality at the time.

  • And so the captain says to Croswell,

  • "Just do your job and just forget all this Mafia crap."

  • They were told specifically by the captain

  • to leave Joe the Barber alone.

  • He's an upstanding citizen in the community, blah blah blah.

  • But Croswell, being the guy that he is,

  • he takes it upon himself to keep investigating.

  • And so him and his partner,

  • they drive up to the Barbara estate,

  • which is this beautiful house out in the outskirts of town.

  • And they see 40 to 50 cars,

  • Cadillacs and Oldsmobiles and Pontiacs.

  • Like the most expensive, newest cars on the market,

  • all parked around this house.

  • And right there he's kinda taken aback.

  • He realizes that his hunch was right.

  • Something big is happening.

  • And so he radios into the captain.

  • The captain's like, "What do you want me to do?

  • You're the only cops in town."

  • So they're able to call two patrolmen

  • who arrive at the property, they all meet up.

  • And they're trying to figure out

  • what exactly they're gonna do.

  • The good news is that Barbara's property,

  • the geography of it is, it's this one long

  • kind of very narrow dirt road

  • from the main road to the house.

  • So Croswell, thinking on his feet,

  • decides to create a roadblock.

  • Now, right as they're about to assemble,

  • he gets a call on the radio from his captain

  • saying that he'd been able to get in contact with the Feds

  • and that reinforcements are on the way.

  • So Croswell is over the moon, he's rejoicing, he's excited.

  • Finally people are listening to him,

  • they're acknowledging that he was right all along.

  • But then one car shows up with two agents

  • of the Alcohol and Tax Unit.

  • These guys are looking at this house

  • and they're, you know, calculating

  • that there's probably 60 to 70 people in the house.

  • And they're thinking, "What are we gonna do?

  • How are we gonna take these guys in?

  • How are we gonna arrest all these people?"

  • But Croswell comes up with a plan.

  • The two patrolmen block the road.

  • The Feds go back around and they flank the woods.

  • And Croswell decides to kinda walk down the hill

  • and start writing down license plate numbers.

  • Now what Croswell doesn't know is inside the house,

  • you have Vito Genovese sitting at the head of the table.

  • You have all the bosses of all the families

  • from all over the country sitting around,

  • and he is essentially pledging his allegiance

  • to the Cosa Nostra, and he is asking,

  • not really asking, he's more of, he's telling these guys

  • that he's now the boss of bosses.

  • Vito Genovese is the Capo dei Capi.

  • And he wants their blessing.

  • Everyone kind of agrees

  • that he is the right man for the job.

  • So they're all about to toast in favor of Vito Genovese,

  • when through the window they see Croswell in their driveway.

  • And that's when panic erupts.

  • "The cops are outside!

  • Everyone make a run for it!"

  • And so everyone just gets up

  • and they just, like, burst out of the house.

  • There's gangsters in three-piece suits

  • running through the woods and getting all muddy.

  • And they're tossing their money clips

  • and they're throwing their guns

  • and they're jumping in their cars

  • and they're just gonna make a clean getaway, but,

  • thanks to Croswell's quick thinking, there's a roadblock.

  • So now this bottleneck happens

  • and the cars are backed up all the way to the house.

  • And, plus on the other side of the property

  • where the Feds are, they were rounding up these goons

  • just kinda like coming out of the woods.

  • So now, there's a problem.

  • You got four, maybe five police officers,

  • and 62 gangsters, just standing there.

  • Now, in a small town like Appalachin,

  • what, their jail probably holds five, six people.

  • So now they're thinking, "What are we gonna do,

  • how are we gonna bust these guys?"

  • So they basically, over the course

  • of like six to eight hours, two by two, three at a time,

  • they're pulling in these guys, they're fingerprinting them,

  • they're booking them,

  • putting them in whatever space they can.

  • Now it becomes a very serious matter.

  • The reason why this is significant

  • and the reason why this is the most important moment

  • in not only law enforcement history but also the Mafia is,

  • at this time, J. Edgar Hoover, the head of the FBI,

  • he keeps saying that this is something

  • that's happening overseas.

  • But now, it's obvious that he can no longer deny

  • that this is even happening.

  • So, we can flash forward a couple days, maybe a week,

  • where you have 62 indictments.

  • Now Croswell thinks he is a hero, he, you know,

  • changed the world, he saved the day.

  • Unfortunately for Croswell,

  • it's not illegal to have a barbecue.

  • And so not a single conviction stuck.

  • Everyone gets released, all the cases get thrown out,

  • and Croswell essentially feels like it was all for nothing.

  • What Croswell doesn't know is,

  • this made every headline across the country.

  • Huge Mafia summit busted.

  • Gangsters, this, that, running through the woods.

  • And so now it's in the public opinion.

  • And J. Edgar Hoover can no longer deny

  • the existence of the Mafia.

  • So he comes out and he makes a public statement saying

  • that there is an organized crime syndicate in America.

  • And in order to combat this,

  • they create this organized crime task force.

  • And Croswell actually gets appointed to the task force.

  • So Richard Nixon eventually enacts

  • this thing called the RICO Act,

  • which is an anti-racketeering charge,

  • which we use to this day

  • to charge members of organized crime,

  • gangsters, Mafia, drug dealers.

  • And it's, even today,

  • the most powerful tool law enforcement has

  • to take down organized crime in America.

- Everyone goes running out of the house,

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