The Bonanno Crime Family: A Century of New York Mafia Power
From Sicilian roots to FBI infiltration, how one of the Five Families built and lost its empire

From Sicilian roots to FBI infiltration, how one of the Five Families built and lost its empire

The Bonanno crime family emerged as one of New York City's Five Families in the aftermath of the Castellammarese War, a violent power struggle that reshaped organized crime in America during the early 1930s.
The war itself erupted between two factions: supporters of Salvatore Maranzano and those backing Giuseppe "Joe the Boss" Masseria. Named for Castellammare del Golfo, a town in Sicily from which many early members emigrated, the conflict represented a collision between old-world Sicilian traditions and new American criminal ambitions. Masseria's murder in April 1931 effectively ended the main phase of fighting, but the real restructuring came when Maranzano declared himself "capo di tutti i capi"—boss of all bosses—and appointed territorial heads across New York.
Among those appointed was Joseph Bonanno, who would become the family's most iconic leader. At just 26 years old, Bonanno became the youngest boss in American Mafia history when Maranzano was murdered shortly after establishing the Five Families structure. Alongside Bonanno, the other four families were led by Lucky Luciano, Vincent Mangano, Tommy Gagliano, and Joseph Profaci. Bonanno's family initially remained exclusive, limited primarily to Sicilians from Castellammare del Golfo, though it would eventually expand far beyond Brooklyn.
Gründung der Bonanno-Familie
Nach dem Ende des Castellammarese-Krieges wird die Bonanno-Familie als eine der fünf Mafia-Familien in New York etabliert. Joseph Bonanno wird mit nur 26 Jahren zum Boss ernannt.
Joseph Bonanno wird Boss
Joseph Bonanno übernimmt die Führung der Familie und wird damit der jüngste Mafia-Boss in der Geschichte der USA.
Ende der Bonanno-Ära
Nach über drei Jahrzehnten an der Spitze endet Joseph Bonannos Herrschaft über die Familie. Er hatte die Organisation zu einer der mächtigsten kriminellen Vereinigungen aufgebaut.
Bonanno-Familie als Nummer zwei
In den frühen 2000er Jahren ist die Bonanno-Familie die zweitgrößte der fünf Familien in New York, nur noch übertroffen von der Genovese-Familie.
Bonanno's 30-year reign as boss proved remarkably durable. A bootlegger during Prohibition who served as an enforcer for Maranzano before seizing power, Bonanno built his empire methodically. He diversified criminal operations across gambling, prostitution, loan-sharking, and narcotics trafficking. The family's reach extended from Brooklyn to Arizona, California, and Canada—an unusual geographic spread that allowed Bonanno to operate with less direct attention from New York's other families. He forged key alliances, including a crucial partnership with Joseph Profaci of the Colombo family, cemented when Bonanno's son married Profaci's daughter.
Bonanno's grip on power loosened in 1964 when he was abducted the night before scheduled grand jury testimony about his role as a Five Families boss. By 1965, he had relinquished leadership, though the family retained his name.
The decades following Bonanno's departure proved turbulent. Carmine Galante, known as the "Heroin Don," emerged as a powerful de facto boss during the 1970s, attempting to consolidate control over New York's lucrative narcotics trade. His ambitions, however, exceeded what the Mafia Commission would tolerate. On July 12, 1979, Galante was murdered at a restaurant in a hit approved by the Commission itself—a devastating blow that demonstrated how far Galante had overreached. Philip Rastelli became boss during the 1970s and 1980s, but the family remained fractious. In 1981, three competing capos—Al Indelicato, Dominick Trinchera, and Philip Giaccone—were murdered before they could move against Rastelli.
The family's most damaging blow came from within its own ranks. FBI undercover agent Joseph Pistone, operating under the alias "Donnie Brasco," infiltrated the Bonanno family between 1976 and 1981. His operation resulted in over 100 Mafia convictions and proved so devastating that the Bonanno family became the first of the Five Families to be expelled from the Mafia Commission as punishment.
By the early 2000s, the damage compounded when Joseph Massino, a Bonanno member who had participated in Galante's murder decades earlier, became boss only to turn government informant in 2004. His cooperation further weakened the organization. By 2015, the family was estimated to have roughly 110 made members and 500 associates—a shadow of its mid-20th-century power.