Organized Crime: Peter Edwards on mafia family Rizzutos' rise & fall
CBC Radio | Posted: February 9, 2015 5:00 AM | Last Updated: February 9, 2015
Today organized crime writer Peter Edwards tell the tale of the Rizzutos' rise and fall. You may be astonished at how much money, power and influence the real-life Rizzuto family of Montreal amassed and how it all came so violently tumbling down.
When Montreal businessman Terry Pomerantz had his brand new SUV stolen in 2003, he didn't call the cops. No, he called Vito Rizzuto -- the head of Canada's most powerful Mafia family.
The family's boss, Vito Rizzuto, accumulated enormous wealth and power running the crime syndicate in the 1980s and 1990s. He managed to keep his enemies at bay by forming canny alliances with criminals, street gangs, and Mafia clans... rather than engaging in deadly rivalries.
But his empire began to crumble in 2006, when the law caught up with him, and he was extradited to the United States. He'd serve a prison sentence there for his role in the 1981 execution of three members of New York Mafia's Bonanno family. And while in jail, Vito Rizzuto's son and father were slain. Those brutal hits marked the start of a battle to unseat the Rizzuto family from its controlling position in Montreal.
In their new book "Business or Blood: Mafia Boss Vito Rizzuto's Last War," Peter Edwards and Antonio Nicaso document the rise and fall of Vito Rizzuto.
Peter Edwards joined us in our Toronto studio.
This segment was produced by The Current's Josh Bloch.