City of Betrayal: The Genovese Family's Springfield Crew - Paperback
City of Betrayal: The Genovese Family's Springfield Crew - Paperback
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by Nicholas Anthony Parisi (Author)
"If it weren't for informants, the public would know nothing about the inner workings of La Cosa Nostra."
-Author Nicholas Parisi
"We have a shooting down on Winthrop Street. We need an ambulance fast because the guy is in tough shape."
Homicide detective Thomas Malidi also heard the dispatch.
"Al Bruno just took about eight to the body at the Mount Carmel Italian Club."
Hearing this, homicide detective Thomas Malidi's heart raced as he jumped into his car and sped towards the scene. As they arrived, the duo was met with a chaotic scene. Al Bruno, a prominent figure in the community, was still there on the ground.
He wasn't moving.
The smell of gunpowder hung heavy in the air, the only sound being the distant wail of sirens. Without hesitation, another officer rolled Bruno onto his back and began administering chest compressions, desperately trying to revive him. At that moment, Kearney's eyes met with the officer's, and in a silent exchange, it was clear that all efforts were in vain.
"Ah, he's dead. He's gone," the officer shook his head, his words heavy with defeat.
They ripped his shirt off, revealing the holes in his chest. Blood gushed out of him from just about everywhere, painting the ground a deep crimson. He lay motionless, clutching onto his cigar as if it were his last lifeline.
The cigar hung limply from the lifeless hand of the man sprawled on the pavement. He was no ordinary victim of murder. Adolfo Bruno, better known as Big Al, was the boss of Springfield's Italian mafia. Two years ago, he had reveled in the glory of being the most powerful mobster in town. But now, his lifeless body lay in a pool of blood, a stark contrast to the glitz and glamour he once exuded.
The police were baffled by Bruno's death.
When Al Bruno was murdered, investigators immediately assumed that the shooter had everything to gain. They believed it was an inside job and that the gunman was a member of the mob who sought to take over Bruno's profitable rackets and claim his power.
However, their primary suspect did not fit into these assumptions.