This video delves into the shadowy history of how the Mafia quietly seized control of New York City's trash industry, transforming mundane waste into a multi-billion-dollar enterprise. Starting in the 1930s, post-Prohibition, mobsters like Vincent Squilante, through the Greater New York Cartmen's Association, systematically intimidated independent haulers and forced businesses to pay inflated prices for garbage collection in territories carved out across the city. This lucrative racket, overseen by figures like Carlo Gambino, expanded from commercial waste to municipal contracts and eventually into waste disposal, including landfills in Staten Island, New Jersey, and Upstate New York. The mob's involvement led to environmental disasters like toxic dumping and elevated cancer rates in communities. Despite federal investigations and a high-profile raid in Apalachin, New York, the mob's control remained largely intact for decades due to a pervasive culture of silence, political corruption, and law enforcement focusing on other crimes. Key figures like Squilante and his successor, James Failla, remained largely untouchable, living lavish lives funded by illicit trash money. It wasn't until the 1990s, with new RICO statutes and the establishment of the New York City Trade Waste Commission, that the Mafia's stranglehold on the industry was finally broken, allowing legitimate companies to bring transparency and competitive pricing to the collection and disposal of the city's 15,000 tons of daily waste.
via Street Files
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