Cause of death Gunshots Name Paolo Violi Children 4 | Spouse(s) Grazia Luppino Violi Other names Paul Successor Nicola Rizzuto | |
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Occupation Mobster, Ice Cream merchant |
Histoires de p gre paolo violi fr
Paolo Violi (February 6, 1931– January 22, 1978) was an Italian-Canadian mobster and acting capodecina of the Bonanno crime family's faction in Montreal, the Cotroni crime family.
Contents
- Histoires de p gre paolo violi fr
- Urkell ski paolo violi spring is even better
- Early career
- Mob war and death
- References

Urkell ski paolo violi spring is even better
Early career

Violi immigrated to Southern Ontario in 1951. In 1955, he shot dead Natale Brigante in Toronto, sustaining a stab wound from Brigante. He was charged with manslaughter in a Welland court, but was acquitted claiming it was self-defense, showing the stab wound as evidence. Violi gained Canadian citizenship in 1956 and by the early 1960s was running bootlegged liquor from Ontario to Quebec. He became associated with boss of the Hamilton Luppino crime family Giacomo Luppino, but left for Montreal in 1963 on Luppino's orders to avoid clashes with other Hamilton mobster Johnny Papalia. In Quebec, Violi opened The Reggio Bar in Saint-Leonard in the mid 1960s, which he used as a base for extortion. He developed connections with the Cotroni crime family, while maintaining ties with the Luppino family; he married Giacomo Luppino's daughter, Grazia in 1965. In December 1970, his bar was bugged with wiretaps by an undercover police officer.

In 1974, Violi and Vincenzo Cotroni were overheard on a police wiretap threatening to kill Hamilton mobster Johnny Papalia and demanding $150,000 after he used their names in a $300,000 extortion plot without notifying or cutting them in on the score. The three were convicted of extortion in 1975 and sentenced to six years in prison. Violi and Cotroni appealed and got their sentences reduced to six months, but Papalia's appeal was rejected.
Mob war and death
The Violi and Cotroni families were from Calabria while the Rizzuto crime family, like the Bonanno's, were from Sicily. This led to tension between Nicolo Rizzuto, an associate of Cotroni in Montreal, and the Violis, who were vying for control of the city's Mafia controlled drug market. During a time of power struggle between the Sicilian and Calabrian factions of the Cotroni crime family, Rizzuto aspired to become his own mob boss. Violi complained about the independent modus operandi of his Sicilian 'underlings', Rizzuto in particular. "He is going from one side to the other, here and there, and he says nothing to nobody, he is doing business and nobody knows anything," Violi said about Rizzuto. Violi asked for more 'soldiers' from his Bonanno bosses, clearly preparing for war, and Violi's boss at the time, Vic Cotroni remarked: "Me, I'm capodecina. I got the right to expel." This led to a power struggle mob war in Montreal which began with the murder of Pietro Sciara on Valentine's Day in 1976, who was considered to be Violi's consigliere, who was now acting boss; his body was left in the street after seeing the movie The Godfather Part II with his wife. On February 8, 1977, Francesco Violi, the younger brother of Paolo, the family enforcer, was murdered by several shotgun wounds. Shortly after Violi was released from a brief jail sentence for contempt in relation to the wiretaps, he sold his bar to brothers Vincenzo and Giuseppe Randisi; the name was changed to Bar Jean-Talon. On January 22, 1978, Paolo Violi was shot in the head at close range with a lupara in the Bar Jean-Talon after being invited to play cards by Vincenzo Randisi. Although Nicolo Rizzuto was in Venezuela at the time of Violi's murder, his brother-in-law Domenico Manno, was believed to play a major role in the murder under Rizzuto's orders. The war ended on October 17, 1980, when Rocco Violi, the last of the Violi brothers, was seated, for a family meal, at his kitchen table in his Montreal home when a single bullet from a sniper's rifle struck him dead. The Rizzuto organization subsequently took over Montreal.