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Graves out of LA
" Final Resting Place of Vito Genovese"

Vito Genovese (Boss of Bosses)
27th November 1897 - 14th February 1969
Rose from hitman for Lucky Luciano to become Boss a New
York crime syndicate. Died in prison
and buried near Luciano. The Mafia boss who came nearest to "The
Godfather" in the film of the same name.
Saint
Johns Cemetery, Queens, New York
Vito Genovese (November 27, 1897 – February 14, 1969) was a mafioso who rose to power in America during the Castellammarese War to later become leader of the Genovese crime family.
The beginning
Genovese started his Mafia career serving Joe Masseria and worked with people like
Lucky Luciano, Meyer
Lansky, Bugsy Siegel, and
Frank Costello.
In April 1931, Luciano orchestrated the assassination of Joe Masseria. Vito Genovese was one of the four shooters involved in the hit on his former employer. Later that year, Luciano also arranged a hit on
Maranzano, and established himself as the paramount gangster in the United States.
Rise to Power
After World War II, Genovese began a murder spree to gain new status in the underworld, taking advantage of Luciano being in exile in Italy. Facing a murder charge (of Ferdinand "The Shadow" Boccia) in 1937, Genovese was forced to flee to Italy as well.
When he later returned to the States, all the witnesses to his murder spree had disappeared. He remained a free man, and attended the infamous Havana Conference in 1946, where he got involved in a scrap with Luciano and got three of his ribs broken.
Apalachin Meeting
Now Genovese had control of Luciano's family and sought to strengthen his hold. He reportedly co-ordinated the Apalachin Meeting where he expected to be named Boss of Bosses.
Unfortunately for him, the meeting (November 14, 1957) went horribly wrong. New York State Trooper Edgar Croswell had been watching the house in which the meeting was supposed to be held, because he was suspicious of the owner, Joseph Barbara.
When he checked the licence plates of the cars coming in and out, he found enough reason to set up a road block on the only road leading up and from the house on the hill. The attendees, who actually had nothing to worry about (because they were committing no crime), panicked and fled the house, thereby calling attention to themselves and making national headlines.
Genovese was blamed for the fiasco and before he could move to take advantage of the situation Lansky and Luciano set him up on a huge drug smuggling deal.
In 1959, Genovese was sent to prison, where he died in 1969.