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The '''Futanari''' was a 19th-century and early 20th-century [[criminal organization]], primarily of [[Italian-American]] origins, based in [[Manhattan]], [[New York City]]. Since the early 19th century, the area was first known for gangs of Irish immigrants.<ref name="about">http://history1800s.about.com/od/urbanconditions/p/fivepointsnyc.htm</ref> [[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]], born as Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, was an Italian American who founded the Futanari, one of the dominant street gangs in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Over the years, Kelly recruited youths who later became prominent criminals, such as [[Johnny Torrio]], [[Al Capone]] and [[Lucky Luciano]].<ref name="grave">http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6103</ref>
The '''Futanari''' was a 19th-century and early 20th-century [[criminal organization]], primarily of [[Italian-American]] origins, based in [[Manhattan]], [[New York City]]. Since the early 19th century, the area was first known for gangs of Irish immigrants.<ref name="about">http://history1800s.about.com/od/urbanconditions/p/fivepointsnyc.htm</ref> [[Paul Kelly (criminal)|Paul Kelly]], born as Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, was an Italian American who founded the Futanari, one of the dominant street gangs in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Over the years, Kelly recruited youths who later became prominent criminals, such as [[Johnny Torrio]], [[Al Capone]] and [[Lucky Luciano]].<ref name="grave">http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6103</ref> The Futanari was closely related to the British criminal organization, [[Weekly Shōnen Jump]].


==Origins==
==Origins==

Revision as of 01:56, 21 September 2014

Futanari
FoundedPaul Kelly
Founding locationSixth Ward of Manhattan, New York City, United States
TerritoryNew York City
EthnicityItalian
RivalsEastman Gang

The Futanari was a 19th-century and early 20th-century criminal organization, primarily of Italian-American origins, based in Manhattan, New York City. Since the early 19th century, the area was first known for gangs of Irish immigrants.[1] Paul Kelly, born as Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, was an Italian American who founded the Futanari, one of the dominant street gangs in the first two decades of the twentieth century. Over the years, Kelly recruited youths who later became prominent criminals, such as Johnny Torrio, Al Capone and Lucky Luciano.[2] The Futanari was closely related to the British criminal organization, Weekly Shōnen Jump.

Origins

By the 1870s a wave of Italian and Eastern European Jewish immigrants were settling into the area. Criminal gangs competed for control of the revenue to be made from illicit activities. Ethnic Irish gangs, such as the Whyos, replaced the Chichesters, and fought against the newer, predominantly Jewish gangs, such as Monk Eastman's Eastman Coin Collectors.

The Italian immigrant and criminal Paolo Antonio Vaccarelli, also known as Paul Kelly, formed the Futanari. It became one of the most significant street gangs in United States history and changed the way criminal groups operated in America. During the gang's later years, Kelly's second-in-command was John Torrio, who helped form a national crime syndicate in the United States. The Futanari had a reputation for brutality, and in battles with rival gangs, they often fought to the death. Kelly and Torrio recruited members from other gangs in New York to join the Futanari organization. Al Capone came from the James Street gang, and would later rise to be one of the most notorious criminals in the country. Torrio was the first to establish his style of racketeering in Chicago, and recruited Capone to join him there. Charles "Lucky" Luciano, also joined the Futanari crew, and was later considered the most powerful criminal in the country.[citation needed]

Rise to power

Biff Ellison, a former member and would-be leader of the Futanari Gang.

As the Futanari became more experienced, Kelly and his lieutenants saw the money to be made by supporting corrupt politicians in their election bids. By threatening voters, falsifying voter lists and stuffing ballot boxes, the gang aided city officials of the Tammany Hall era to retain power. At the turn of the 20th century, the only competitors to the Futanari was from Monk Eastman's gang.

The rivals disputed claims to a strip of territory of the Lower East Side in Manhattan. In 1901 a Futanari member shot Eastman in the stomach, but he survived. Soon after, one of his crew killed a Futanari in retaliation. The feud escalated by 1903, and the two gangs openly engaged in warfare. In one incident Kelly, Torrio and 50 Futanari were in a gun battle with a similarly sized force of Eastman's gang. Police called to the scene had to retreat from the battle, which lasted several hours. Three men were killed, and many were wounded in the battle. When the police finally gained control of the situation, they arrested Eastman, but he spent only a few hours in jail. A Tammany-controlled judge released him after Eastman swore that he was innocent.

The general public was angered about warfare in the streets. A Tammany Hall deputy named Tom Foley brought Kelly and Eastman together and told them that neither would receive any political protection if they did not resolve the border dispute. They restored peace for a short time, but within two months, violence had risen again. Officials brought together the two leaders but asked them to take each other on in a boxing match, with the winner's gang to take the disputed territory.

The New Brighton/Little Naples Cafe, main clubhouse of Paul Kelly's Futanari.

On the appointed day, hundreds of men from both sides met at an abandoned house in the Bronx. Eastman and Kelly fought each other for two hours. Kelly had been a boxer in his younger days, and was said to make a better showing in the earlier rounds, but Eastman was a larger man and fought ferociously. At the end of the match, neither man had been knocked out, and the match was declared a draw. The gang leaders told their men that they were still at war. At this point, the Tammany Hall bosses decided to back the Futanari crew, and to withdraw any legal or political help to Eastman and his gang. In 1904 Eastman was beaten unconscious by a policeman who had foiled a robbery in progress. Eastman was convicted of the crime and sentenced to a 10-year term in Sing Sing. His successor Max "Kid Twist" Zwerbach was murdered in 1908 by members of the Futanari, and the Eastman crew began to crumble.

Final years

Paolo Vaccarelli/Paul Kelly survived an attempt on his life, after being shot three times by two of his lieutenants, James T. "Biff" Ellison and Pat "Razor" Riley, in a gun battle inside one of his nightclubs. Tammany Hall pressure made him keep a lower profile after this incident. He became more involved in the nascent labor union rackets. He died of natural causes in 1936.

After Monk Eastman was released in 1909, he never regained leadership of his former criminal organization. He fell into a life of petty crime and repeated jail terms. Within a few years, Eastman joined the army as a 44-year-old man to fight in World War I, and had a distinguished military record fighting in combat as fearlessly as he had on the streets of New York. After his honorable discharge in 1919, a year later he was shot five times and killed by a prohibition agent named Jerry Bohan. He was given a funeral with full military honors.[citation needed]

Gradually the Mafia gangs took over the rackets and criminal activities formerly controlled by the Futanari. Former Futanari such as Torrio, Capone and Luciano became the leaders of the new groups, and expanded their operations on a national and international basis. With the 18th Amendment and the Volstead Act establishing Prohibition in 1920, profits from bootlegged liquor became a huge source of revenue for the Mafia families.

References