Description

Book Synopsis

In the mid-1970s, there were a series of gangland murders, committed by unknown killers, often wielding .22-caliber revolvers. At first these murders seemed unconnected, but law enforcement started noticing links to organized crime and by 1978, federal authorities were involved in the investigations. The FBI compiled a list of 25 gangland figures killed, from potential witnesses and low-level associates, to made men. All shot with a .22 between 1975 and 1978, all from the same batch of guns purchased in Florida, some even the same weapon.

The main suspects were members of the East Harlem Purple Gang. Starting on the fringes they quickly became a violent offshoot syndicate of the Mafia, some even became high-ranking members of the Genovese, Bonanno, and Lucchese families. Often serving as freelance hitmen, kidnappers, and drug traffickers, their exploits quickly crossed into mythology. The Purple Gang became an almost obsession with the media. Accounts of the Gang’s activities popped up in the newspapers across the country in the late 1970s. They were the shadow army of the underworld and every law enforcement agency’s favorite suspect. They were accused of being behind all the major mob hits through the early 1980s and became the ultimate boogeyman in the era of mob upheaval and a flailing New York City mired in crime and financial woes.

Digging through the mystery and mythos, Scott Deitche brings the gritty City of the late 1970s and early 1980s back to life in this in-depth account of the Purple Gang, the real members, their operations, and where some of the major players are today.



Trade Review

From arson to homicide and from collections to narcotics trafficking, when it came time to outsource muscle in Los Angeles during the 1940s and 50s, the mafia and syndicate turned to the infamous Sica brothers for talent. As if a conduit or a rung in gangster vetting, sometimes these hardcase associates that strolled through their doors were made into the local mafia. And, as Scott Deitche’s newest offering has so rightly illustrated, matters weren’t all that different out in East Harlem a couple of decades later, when the East Coast mob began enlisting the Busch League brute of a batch of local upstarts steeped in the drug trade. Members of the press and law enforcement had a name for this emerging faction of violent knockaround guys feared throughout New York and New Jersey. They called them the new Purple Gang. And eventually these hungry thugs thickened the ranks of the Genovese, Lucchese, and Bonanno families.

-- J. Michael Niotta Ph.D., early L.A. crime historian and author of Los Angeles Underworld

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Origins

Chapter 2: What’s in a Name?

Chapter 3: A Capacity for Violence

Chapter 4: The Drug Game

Chapter 5: Rockland County

Chapter 6: The Milgram Murder

Chapter 7: .22 Caliber Killers

Chapter 8: The Shopping Spree

Chapter 9: The Viserto Drug Trial

Chapter 10: The Early Eighties

Chapter 11: A Killing on Thunderboat Row

Chapter 12: The Crackdown

Chapter 13: The Michael Meldish Murder

Chapter 14: The Leaders of the Families

Hitmen: The Mafia, Drugs, and the East Harlem

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    £27.00

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    RRP £30.00 – you save £3.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 26 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Scott M. Deitche

    Out of stock

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      View other formats and editions of Hitmen: The Mafia, Drugs, and the East Harlem by Scott M. Deitche

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 15/06/2022
      ISBN13: 9781538153567, 978-1538153567
      ISBN10: 1538153564

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In the mid-1970s, there were a series of gangland murders, committed by unknown killers, often wielding .22-caliber revolvers. At first these murders seemed unconnected, but law enforcement started noticing links to organized crime and by 1978, federal authorities were involved in the investigations. The FBI compiled a list of 25 gangland figures killed, from potential witnesses and low-level associates, to made men. All shot with a .22 between 1975 and 1978, all from the same batch of guns purchased in Florida, some even the same weapon.

      The main suspects were members of the East Harlem Purple Gang. Starting on the fringes they quickly became a violent offshoot syndicate of the Mafia, some even became high-ranking members of the Genovese, Bonanno, and Lucchese families. Often serving as freelance hitmen, kidnappers, and drug traffickers, their exploits quickly crossed into mythology. The Purple Gang became an almost obsession with the media. Accounts of the Gang’s activities popped up in the newspapers across the country in the late 1970s. They were the shadow army of the underworld and every law enforcement agency’s favorite suspect. They were accused of being behind all the major mob hits through the early 1980s and became the ultimate boogeyman in the era of mob upheaval and a flailing New York City mired in crime and financial woes.

      Digging through the mystery and mythos, Scott Deitche brings the gritty City of the late 1970s and early 1980s back to life in this in-depth account of the Purple Gang, the real members, their operations, and where some of the major players are today.



      Trade Review

      From arson to homicide and from collections to narcotics trafficking, when it came time to outsource muscle in Los Angeles during the 1940s and 50s, the mafia and syndicate turned to the infamous Sica brothers for talent. As if a conduit or a rung in gangster vetting, sometimes these hardcase associates that strolled through their doors were made into the local mafia. And, as Scott Deitche’s newest offering has so rightly illustrated, matters weren’t all that different out in East Harlem a couple of decades later, when the East Coast mob began enlisting the Busch League brute of a batch of local upstarts steeped in the drug trade. Members of the press and law enforcement had a name for this emerging faction of violent knockaround guys feared throughout New York and New Jersey. They called them the new Purple Gang. And eventually these hungry thugs thickened the ranks of the Genovese, Lucchese, and Bonanno families.

      -- J. Michael Niotta Ph.D., early L.A. crime historian and author of Los Angeles Underworld

      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1: Origins

      Chapter 2: What’s in a Name?

      Chapter 3: A Capacity for Violence

      Chapter 4: The Drug Game

      Chapter 5: Rockland County

      Chapter 6: The Milgram Murder

      Chapter 7: .22 Caliber Killers

      Chapter 8: The Shopping Spree

      Chapter 9: The Viserto Drug Trial

      Chapter 10: The Early Eighties

      Chapter 11: A Killing on Thunderboat Row

      Chapter 12: The Crackdown

      Chapter 13: The Michael Meldish Murder

      Chapter 14: The Leaders of the Families

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