User:DancerPrancer00/Frank Coppola (mobster)

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Later Years & Death[edit]

Frank Coppola, considered one of the last of the old-style “godfathers”, in time-honored tradition,  would go to his death continuing to deny the existence of the mafia [1]. He would also continue to evade arrest and conviction despite his key involvement in the U.S- Sicilian heroin trade which reportedly stretched from Italy to New York, New Orleans, Detroit, Kansas City, and St. Louis and the “lucrative crime partnership he shared with Lucky Luciano[2]." U.S authorities would attempt to finally convict him on tax evasion but Coppola would agree to pay the overdue amount, avoiding long term arrest. In 1973, Coppola, along with two Mafia- affiliated accomplices, Sergio Boffi and Ugo Bossi, would be arrested and charged with masterminding a plot to murder Prefect Angelo Magnano, a senior Italian officer, who was investigating mafia activity at the time [3]. The case would go to trial and Coppola would be cleared of all charges in 1976. Magnano, testifying before a court in Palermo said Coppola had informed him Luciano Leggio, leader of the notorious Corleone family well-known for his brutality, overtaking the Commission and slaughtering his enemies leading up to the Second Mafia War, had orchestrated a span of high-profile mafia killings and kidnappings of the past few years. Coppola profusely denied the account, calling Mangano ‘a dirty liar and my number one enemy[2].’

In 1980, Coppola would face arrest and charges again for his role in the “Sicilian Connection,” the mafia operation that smuggled heroin from Palermo to the East Coast of the United States but would be released on “provisional liberty” due to his failing health[4]. Coppola would remain hospitalized for over a year in a clinic in Aprilia. There, Italian police officers guarded Coppola’s hospital room 24 hours a day after receiving two anonymous threats that “Luciano Leggio [had] issued orders to shut the mouth of the spy [2].” The guards stood heavily armed with pistols and submachines, as the hospital had once been the site of another previous mafia hit. In true mafia fashion, the tipster said Coppola would be killed and a cork placed in his mouth to symbolize punishment for one who has broken the Mafia code of silence [5]. Coppola, who continuously disavowed the presence of ‘the so-called Mafia’ when naming the Sicilian underworld, when asked by reporters during his final interviews, said: “I have no reason to be scared of this ‘so-called Mafia.’ I fear these men at the door of my hospital room, because these are Mangano’s men [2].” In an attempt to have the Italian police guards removed, Coppola petitioned, unsuccessfully, for his lawyer to intervene. With his health steadily declining, on April 26,1982, Frank “Three Fingers,” Coppola died. He was 83.

References[edit]

1. “Mafia Chieftain Coppola Dies Near Rome at 83.” Los Angeles Times (1923-1995), 27 April 1982.pp1-b16. ProQuest, www.proquest.com/docview/153093377/

AD468063C358424CPQ/8?accountid=14667

2. “Mafia Boss Objects to Police Protection.” Atlanta Constitution (1946-1984), 25 Aug 1974, pp.1. ProQuest, www.proquest.com/docview/1616000338/AD468063C358424CPQ/7

3. “Mafia Chief to Go on Trial: Florence, Mar. 10.” South China Morning Post (1946-), 11 March 1975, pp. 20. ProQuest, www.proquest.com/docview/1526994563/AD468063C358424CPQ/11

4. “Three Fingers Coppola Dies: Rome April 27.” South China Morning Post (1946-), 28 April 1982, pp. 5. ProQuest, www.proquest.com/docview/1536427105/AD468063C358424CPQ/4

5.“Ailing Mobster Guarded by Police.” Detroit Free Press, vol. 144, issue 113, 25 August 1974, pp. 23. ProQuest, www.proquest.com/hnpdetroitfreepressshell/docview/1820

434312/ 20AD5AE7293745E6PQ/17?accountid=14667

  1. ^ "Preview unavailable - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  2. ^ a b c d "Preview unavailable - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  3. ^ "Preview unavailable - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  4. ^ "Preview unavailable - ProQuest". www.proquest.com. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  5. ^ "U-M Weblogin". weblogin.umich.edu. Retrieved 2021-11-19.