User:DonCalo

 Welcome to the userpage of DonCalo. I mainly work on Italian organized crime and related issues. This user was previously known as Mafia Expert.

Contributions

 * Good articles
 * GA [[Image:Symbol support vote.svg|14px|Good article]] Calogero Vizzini (1877 – 1954), the Mafia boss of Villalba who was considered to be one of the most influential Mafia bosses of Sicily after World War II until his death in 1954. In the media he was often depicted as the "boss of bosses" – although such a position does not exist in the loose structure of the Mafia.
 * GA [[Image:Symbol support vote.svg|14px|Good article]] Vito Cascioferro (1862 – 1943 or 1945), also known as Don Vito,  a prominent member of the Sicilian Mafia. He also operated for several years in the United States.
 * GA [[Image:Symbol support vote.svg|14px|Good article]] Fasci Siciliani, a popular movement of democratic and socialist inspiration, which arose in Sicily in the years between 1889 and 1894.
 * GA [[Image:Symbol support vote.svg|14px|Good article]] Mauro De Mauro (1921 – 1970), a journalist, disappeared and probably murdered by the Mafia following his investigations on the death of Enrico Mattei and on the Golpe Borghese.
 * GA [[Image:Symbol support vote.svg|14px|Good article]] Salvatore A. Cotillo (1886 – 1939), the first Italian-American to serve in both houses of the New York State Legislature and the first who served as Justice of the New York State Supreme Court.
 * GA [[Image:Symbol support vote.svg|14px|Good article]] Enrico Alfano (1869 or 1870 – 1940), also known as "Erricone", a former boss of the Camorra in Naples.


 * Did not quite make it
 * B - Giosuè Gallucci (1864 – 1915), a crime boss of Italian Harlem affiliated with the Camorra in New York City also known as the undisputed "King of Little Italy".
 * B - Banca Romana scandal, a bank and political crisis in 1893 in Italy over the bankruptcy of the Banca Romana.


 * Working on it
 * B - Bernardino Verro (1866 – 1915), a Sicilian syndicalist involved in the Fasci Siciliani, who became the first socialist mayor of Corleone in 1914 and was killed by the Mafia.
 * B - Nicola Barbato (1856 – 1923) was a Sicilian medical doctor, socialist and politician; he was one of the national leaders of the Fasci Siciliani (Sicilian Leagues).
 * B - Giuseppe Genco Russo (1893 – 1976), an Italian mafioso, the boss of Mussomeli; like Vizzini an archetype of the "man of honour" of a bygone age.
 * B - Paulus (1845 – 1908), a French singer, entertainer and theatre entrepreneur of the Belle Époque.
 * B - Gaetano Salvemini (1873 – 1957), an Italian socialist and anti-fascist politician, historian, and writer.
 * C - Ciccio Cappuccio (1842 – 1892), a legendary guappo and the capintesta (head-in-chief) of the Camorra in Naples.
 * C - Eugénie Fougère (1870 – 1946), a French vaudeville and music hall dancer and singer that introduced the ragtime "cake walk" in Paris after recording "Hello, Ma Baby," in 1899 in New York.
 * C - L'Asino, an Italian magazine of political satire founded in Rome in 1892 that opposed Benito Mussolini's Fascist dictatorship.
 * C - Saredo Inquiry (1900 – 1901), an official inquiry investigating corruption, bad governance and the Camorra in the city of Naples.
 * C - Alfred Choubrac (1853 – 1902), a French artist considered to be one of the pioneers of the modern coloured and illustrated poster of the Belle Époque in Paris.
 * C - Pupetta Maresca (1935 – 2021), a well-known figure in the Camorra, who made international newspaper headlines in the mid-1950s when she killed the murderer of her husband, Pasquale Simonetti, in revenge.
 * C - Cuocolo Trial, a trial against the Camorra in 1911-1912 that attracted a lot of attention of newspapers and the general public both in Italy as well as in the United States.
 * C - L'Ora, a Sicilian daily newspaper published in Palermo.