Alex Rudaj: the Patriarch of the Sixth Family

Rudaj Organization
Founded 1993
Founding location Westchester, New York
Years agile 1993–2004
Territory Astoria, Queens, Bronx, New York City, Westchester
Ethnicity Albanian, Albanian-American, some Italian-Americans
Membership 22 defendants charged in RICO indictment
Activities Extortion, illegal gambling, robbery
Rivals Lucchese offense family
Gambino criminal offense family
Velentzas criminal offence family unit

The Rudaj System is the Albanian mafia in the New York Metropolis metro area, named for the homo accused of being its kingpin, Alex Rudaj of Yorktown, New York. The Rudaj Organisation, called "The Corporation" by its members, was started in 1993 in Westchester and spread to the Bronx and Queens. Prosecutors say the Albanian gang was headed by Alex Rudaj and an Italian-American homo named Nardino Colotti who both had ties to the late Gambino soldier Phil "Skinny" Loscalzo.[i]

System [edit]

FBI surveillance photograph of Alex Rudaj, outside Jimbo'southward Bar in Astoria, Queens on Apr 15, 2003

Alex Rudaj (also known as Sandro Rudovic, Allie Boy, Uncle Rudaj, Xhaxhai,) of Yorktown, New York is the alleged boss of the Albanian mafia'due south Rudaj Organization, based in the New York City metro area. Rudaj is an ethnic Albanian from Ulcinj, Montenegro who immigrated to the U.s.a. in 1987. Federal prosecutors said Rudaj was the triggerman in a 1996 shooting of some other organized crime figure after a high-speed chase in the Bronx. Rudaj hung out the sunroof of a car and fired at Guy Peduto as he fled in another motorcar. They besides described an incident where Rudaj showed upwardly with 20 thugs to get late mob dominate John Gotti's tabular array at Rao'due south, the legendary and exclusive East Harlem Italian eatery. On Friday, June sixteen, 2006, Alex Rudaj, 38, was sentenced to 27 years in federal prison for racketeering, extortion and gambling offenses.

Nardino Colotti (born 1963) of the Bronx, New York, is an Italian American protégé of the tardily Gambino soldier Phil (Skinny Phil) Loscalzo and co-leader of the Albanian Mafia Rudaj System. Loscalzo allegedly promised Colotti territory with rackets to run in the Bronx and to suggest him for Gambino family unit membership. However, when Loscalzo died, Sicilian Gambino soldier Joe Gambino took over his operations. Rudaj and Coletti didn't receive his territory and they neither to work for Gambino nor respected him. Therefore, in 1993 they became independent and founded their own organization. In improver to gambling dens in Queens the Rudaj Arrangement ran gambling operations in Mount Vernon and Port Chester. Nardino Colotti's group had a gambling joint on Adee Street in Port Chester and forced bar owners in Mount Vernon to install their illegal gambling machines. In one instance, Colotti's group tried to force Salvatore Misale, the possessor of Puerto Roja in Mount Vernon, to hand over his bar to the Corporation. Misale went to authorities in 2003 after he endured a beating at a Bronx cafe over his refusal to hand over the keys to the bar. Lamaj sliced his ear off and then beat and cursed at him.

Federal prosecution [edit]

On October 26, 2004, the FBI and Manhattan U.S. Attorney David Kelley announced the arrest of the group'southward alleged boss, Alex Rudaj, and 21 other reputed mob members charged in the indictment. Kelley'due south office said information technology believes the indictment is the first federal racketeering case in the United States against an alleged organized offense enterprise run by Albanians. Kelly neglected to mention a smaller Albanian-Italian drug smuggling functioning indicted past federal authorities in Brooklyn since 1981, from which a known crime associate was also charged merely only received 2 years at sentencing. Several of the defendants indicted in the instance are not Albanian - the organization has soldiers that are Greek, Arab and Italian - merely near of the defendants in the case were either native Albanians or first-generation Albanian-Americans.

During a bail hearing for i of the two dozen people arrested in the case, Banana U.South. Attorney Timothy Treanor said that the Albanian mob had taken over the operations of the Lucchese family in Astoria, Queens. Rudaj led an attack in August 2001 on two Greek associates of the Lucchese crime family who ran a gambling noise inside a Greek social club chosen Soccer Fever at 26-80 30th St. in Queens. On August 3, 2001 Rudaj and at to the lowest degree six other men entered the guild with guns, chirapsia i of the men in the caput with a pistol and chasing others out of the neighborhood by threatening to destroy the building.

Gambino leader Arnold Squitieri had had enough and wanted a talk with these rogue mobsters. The "sit down down" took identify at a gas station in a balance area near the New Bailiwick of jersey turnpike. Xx armed Gambino mobsters accompanied Squitieri. Alex Rudaj on the other paw had just managed to bring vi members of his coiffure. Co-ordinate to hush-hush FBI agent Joaquin Garcia, who infiltrated the Gambino law-breaking family during this menstruation, Squitieri told Rudaj that the fun was over and that they should cease expanding their operations. The Albanians and Gambinos then pulled out their weapons. Knowing they were outnumbered, the Albanians threatened to blow upwardly the gas station with all of them in it. This ended the discussion, and both groups pulled back.

Past 2006 all of the main players involved in this "sit down down" were in prison. Rudaj and and then personal driver and bodyguard Lumaj including all members of 6th Family had been picked off the street in Oct 2004 and charged with a diverseness of racketeering and gambling charges. After a trial Rudaj and his main lieutenants were all found guilty. In 2006 Rudaj, at that time 38 years former, was sentenced to 27 years in prison. His rival Arnold Squitieri was convicted in an unrelated racketeering instance and was sent to prison for seven years.

"What we take here might be considered a sixth crime family," after the 5 Mafia organizations — Bonanno, Colombo, Gambino, Genovese and Lucchese — said Fred Snelling, head of the FBI's criminal sectionalization in New York.[2]

To date, over 20 members of the Rudaj organization have been charged with various crimes. Six of its top leaders, including Alex Rudaj himself, take been convicted. Ten more have pleaded guilty.

Problem with Velentzas family [edit]

On August 3, 2001, members of the Albanian Rudaj Arrangement, attacked Greek assembly of the Lucchese crime family. The brief fight was over controlling gambling rackets in Astoria, Queens.[3]

Run across also [edit]

  • Albanian Boys

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Albanian Gang Portrayed as Aspiring Mafiosi - New York Times, December xx, 2005
  2. ^ ALBANIA 'MAFIA' BROKEN - New York Times
  3. ^ Anemona Hartocollis. Albanian Gang Portrayed every bit Aspiring Mafiosi. December twenty, 2005. The New York Times.

congdonancentiond.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudaj_Organization

0 Response to "Alex Rudaj: the Patriarch of the Sixth Family"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel