Talk:Santo Trafficante Jr.

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Untitled[edit]

What's the picture of the building for or of? There is no caption. Ms ArtGeek 17:42, 6 December 2005 (UTC) Ms_ArtGeek[reply]

Citations?[edit]

Besides the lack of a caption on that picture of a building, this article dosn't give any citations at all. It should be tagged as such with the citation template but I'll wait a couple days to do this. It may be a "work in progress". Hamster Sandwich 17:53, 6 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I see the external links section, now, in the middle of the article, above the line indicating two sections to be merged. Thank you! Hamster Sandwich 18:47, 6 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I added the {{cleanup}} tag to the article as a reminder to finish the merge. wknight94 19:15, 17 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]


To be merged[edit]

Santo Trafficante was born in Tampa, Florida, on 15th November, 1914. His father, Santo Trafficante Senior, was a leading figure in the Mafia. In the 1940s he joined up with Lucky Luciano, Frank Costello, and Meyer Lansky to set up gambling operations in Cuba. The dictator of Cuba, Fulgencio Batista, received a large cut of the profits.

Santo Trafficante married Josephine Marchese on 17th April, 1938. He worked for his father in Florida and in 1953 he was sent to Cuba to manage some Mafia controlled casinos. Trafficante took full control of these operations when his father died of stomach cancer in August, 1954.

Trafficante also spent time in Florida. This resulted in his arrest and conviction for gambling offences. He was released from prison in January 1957 after his conviction was overturned by Florida's State Supreme Court. It is believed that soon afterwards Trafficante arranged for Albert Anastasia, his Mafia rival, to be murdered.

Trafficante returned to Cuba but his casinos were closed down when Fidel Castro overthrew Fulgencio Batista in January, 1959. Trafficante spent time in prison before being deported to the United States.

In September 1960 Johnny Roselli and Sam Giancana, took part in talks with Allen W. Dulles, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), about the possibility of murdering Fidel Castro. In 1961 Roselli persuaded Trafficante to join the conspiracy. Meyer Lansky also became involved in this plot and was reportedly offering a million-dollar reward for the Cuban leader's murder.

Trafficante also worked closely with the CIA agent, William Harvey, in this operation. By 1962, Trafficante and his friends became convinced that the Cuban revolution could not be reversed by simply killing Castro. However, they continued to play along with this CIA plot in order to prevent them being prosecuted for criminal offences committed in the United States.

Trafficante continued to work for the CIA and was involved in the Iran-Contra affair.

Santo Trafficante died on the 19th March, 1987 in a Houston Hospital.

On 14th January, 1992, the New York Post claimed that Trafficante, Jimmy Hoffa and Carlos Marcello had all been involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Frank Ragano was quoted as saying that at the beginning of 1963 Hoffa had told him to take a message to Trafficante and Marcello concerning a plan to kill Kennedy. When the meeting took place at the Royal Orleans Hotel, Ragano told the men: "You won't believe what Hoffa wants me to tell you. Jimmy wants you to kill the president." He reported that both men gave the impression that they intended to carry out this order.

Most of the things stated in the two books are completely false and unfounded. I took out some of the things that are false.

Books[edit]

Those books are completly lacking evidence. The man who wrote them is a complete bias douchebag, who just writes about what he thinks happens not even looking at the real facts. Everything about trafficante being a drug dealer or planing deaths or having anything to do with the JFK assination. Everything stating that is pure speculation. The only things that are strongly supported by facts is that he had casinos in cuba, and helped the CIA try to take out Castro. Nothing else has any evidence. I know for a fact that Trafficante never even spent a night in jail. I am going to take out everything that is not supported by evidence out of the article. If somebody wants to challenge me on this then they can either post in here or do their own invistigation, and not just find stuff off of random websites and non supported books that say "it is believed". Liger9292 02:16, 31 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Citation, Link[edit]

Reference for quote (1) is missing. Link "trafficante memo" fails. 84.176.88.252 (talk) 22:58, 12 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Citation For Tampan Language[edit]

Tampan (the Italian/Spanish dialect mentioned) seems to have no sources. I've found a few news articles referencing a Sicilian dialect resulting from mild hybridization with Spanish in Tampa, but that's it; I can't see a single reference to Santo inventing it (the article on the dialect mentions it arose naturally out of immigrants working in majority Spanish speaking factories). Without any sources I consider it a highly suspect claim. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 38.117.134.222 (talk) 16:20, 31 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]