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Sixth Family
Sixth Family
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A Sixth Family is a crime family or criminal organization, usually an Italian-American or Italian-Canadian crime group, that has become powerful or notable enough to rise to a level comparable to that of the Five Families of the New York City Italian-American Mafia. A criminal organization deemed a "Sixth Family" may rival the Five Families or, alternatively, may work closely enough with the Five Families that it appears to be a peer or near coequal of the families.

Criminal organizations deemed "Sixth Family"

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Various criminal organizations have been deemed the "Sixth Family", often by the press or the criminal underworld. One organization to receive the designation is the Rizzuto crime family based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, though the Rizzuto family does not refer to itself as the "Sixth Family".[1] The Rizzuto family has allegedly worked closely with the Bonanno crime family out of all five New York Five Families.[1] The DeCavalcante crime family, which is based in North Jersey, across the Hudson River from the Five Families, and famously served as the inspiration for the hit TV show The Sopranos, are at times also referred to as the “Sixth Family.”[2][3]

Other criminal organizations referred to as the "Sixth Family" include:

References

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from Grokipedia
The Sixth Family, a moniker for the , is an Italian-Canadian syndicate of Sicilian origin, founded in by in the 1970s as a faction within the local landscape dominated by the Cotroni group. Under the leadership of Nicolo's son, , the group rose to prominence through aggressive expansion into and importation, often in partnership with New York's , while engaging in extortion, construction bid rigging, and gambling rackets across and beyond. The term "Sixth Family" emerged from investigative reporting highlighting the Rizzutos' infiltration of American Mafia operations, positioning them as a de facto extension or rival to New York's during the latter's internal collapses in the 1980s and 1990s. Vito Rizzuto's hands-on role in the 1981 murders of three Bonanno rebels in exemplified this transnational reach, leading to his eventual U.S. conviction and decade-long imprisonment starting in 2007. At its peak, the syndicate amassed substantial wealth and influence, evading major scrutiny through Vito's low-profile management style, until a wave of internal violence—including the 2009 killing of his son Nicolo Jr. and the 2010 assassination of patriarch Nicolo Sr.—signaled vulnerabilities exploited by rivals and . Major police operations, such as Quebec's Project Colisée in 2004 and subsequent raids, dismantled much of the leadership, arresting dozens and seizing assets tied to drug networks and money laundering. Vito's 2013 death from natural causes further eroded the family's cohesion, prompting power struggles and ongoing arrests, including those of associates linked to retaliatory murders into the 2020s. Despite these setbacks, remnants persist in fragmented form, underscoring the enduring challenges in eradicating entrenched Mafia structures through fragmented provincial and international jurisdictions.

Origins

Sicilian Roots and Migration to North America

The Rizzuto crime family, referred to as the Sixth Family in reference to its influence extending beyond the traditional of New York, originated in the Sicilian province of Agrigento, particularly the rural municipality of . This area, characterized by agricultural economies and entrenched traditions of Cosa Nostra—the Sicilian Mafia's code of conduct and organization—provided the cultural and criminal milieu from which the family's emerged. Sr. was born there on February 18, 1924, into a context where familial alliances and clandestine power structures were commonplace among local elites. Nicolo Rizzuto solidified his ties to Sicilian through marriage to Libertina Manno in the mid-1940s; her father was a prominent figure in the region, granting the Rizzutos access to established networks involved in , , and territorial control. Such unions were a standard mechanism for consolidating power within Sicilian clans, reflecting the 's emphasis on blood ties and loyalty over formal hierarchies. , the future leader, was born in on February 21, 1946, underscoring the family's deep provincial roots before any transatlantic shift. Post-World War II economic hardships and internal Mafia conflicts prompted waves of Sicilian emigration to North America, including Canada, where over 20,000 Sicilians arrived annually in the early 1950s seeking industrial opportunities in cities like Montreal. On February 21, 1954, Nicolo Rizzuto Sr., then 30, departed Sicily with his wife, 8-year-old Vito, and their daughter aboard the ocean liner MS Vulcania, docking at Pier 21 in Halifax, Nova Scotia—the primary entry point for European immigrants to Canada at the time. The family promptly relocated to Montreal's Little Italy neighborhood, a hub for Sicilian expatriates where informal padroni systems and mutual aid societies often masked emerging criminal enterprises. This migration aligned with broader patterns of Sicilian Mafiosi transplanting Cosa Nostra methods to North American urban centers, exploiting ethnic enclaves for protection rackets and labor control while evading Italian law enforcement crackdowns. In , Nicolo initially operated discreetly, forming alliances with pre-existing Italian crime figures like those in the Cotroni group, but his Sicilian credentials—rooted in Agrigento's clans—positioned him to recruit from fellow immigrants, laying the groundwork for an autonomous family structure by the 1970s. Unlike earlier 19th- and early 20th-century waves that fueled families in New York and , the Rizzutos' 1950s arrival capitalized on Canada's post-war labor shortages and lax scrutiny for skilled tradesmen, enabling Nicolo to front legitimate businesses like construction while building underworld influence.

Early Presence in Montreal's Underworld

Nicolo Rizzuto, born on February 18, 1924, in , , immigrated to in 1954 aboard the , arriving first in , with his wife, son Vito, and daughter before settling in . Upon arrival, 's underworld was already dominated by the Calabrian-led , which controlled key rackets including gambling, extortion, and labor union influence, while the city served as a hub for cross-border during its post-Prohibition era. Rizzuto, connected through marriage to figures, began aligning with emerging Sicilian immigrants and New York-based interests, positioning his nascent group as a faction challenging the established order. In the late 1950s and 1960s, Rizzuto's early operations focused on building alliances with Sicilian clans like the Cuntrera-Caruana, who specialized in heroin importation via the "French Connection" routes, laying groundwork for drug trafficking dominance. The family maintained a low profile, avoiding direct confrontation with Cotroni boss Frank Cotroni, but infiltrated Montreal's construction sector—a lucrative avenue for bid-rigging and extortion— with links traceable to Rizzuto associates by the mid-1960s. These activities marked the initial consolidation of Sicilian influence in a landscape previously controlled by Calabrian elements, setting the stage for inter-factional tensions that erupted in the 1970s, as documented by Quebec's Commission d'enquête sur le crime organisé. By prioritizing discreet networking over overt violence, Rizzuto's group avoided early law enforcement scrutiny, enabling gradual expansion amid Montreal's booming postwar economy.

Rise to Prominence

Vito Rizzuto's Role in the 1981 Bonanno War

, a key figure in the Montreal-based crime network later known as the Sixth Family, played a pivotal role in the Bonanno crime family's internal conflict, often referred to as the Bonanno War, which intensified after the 1979 assassination of acting boss . The war pitted imprisoned boss and his loyalists, including underboss , against a rebel faction led by captains Philip "Philly Lucky" Giaccone, Dominick "Big Trin" Trinchera, and Alphonse "Sonny Red" Indelicato, who sought to seize control amid Rastelli's legal troubles. Rizzuto's involvement demonstrated the strategic alliance between the Sicilian-influenced group, under his father Nicolò Rizzuto, and the Rastelli faction, providing external support to tip the balance in New York. On May 5, 1981, Rizzuto traveled from to , where he participated as one of the gunmen in the that killed the three rebel captains at a on Knapp Street. The plot, orchestrated by Massino, involved luring the captains to a meeting under the pretense of peace talks; Rizzuto and other shooters, including , hid in a before emerging to fire upon Giaccone, Trinchera, and Indelicato during the confrontation. The victims, armed and expecting betrayal, engaged in a , but the overwhelmed them, resulting in their deaths; the bodies were subsequently dismembered and buried in a . This triple murder effectively neutralized the primary rebel threat, allowing Rastelli to consolidate power upon his release from prison in 1984. Rizzuto's actions in the hit underscored his value to the Bonanno leadership, earning favor through demonstrated and combat effectiveness, which strengthened ties between the Montreal Rizzuto operations and New York Cosa Nostra. U.S. authorities later indicted him in 2004 for tied to these killings, leading to his from on August 17, 2006, and a guilty on May 4, 2007, to to commit , for which he received a 10-year sentence. The corroborated from former Bonanno members, including Massino's brother-in-law , who detailed Rizzuto's direct participation as a shooter. His role in quelling the war facilitated the Rizzuto group's expansion into U.S. and networks under Bonanno auspices, enhancing their status beyond traditional Canadian operations.

Consolidation of Power in Quebec

Following the violent clashes of the late , the Rizzuto family, representing the Sicilian faction, decisively overpowered the rival Calabrian Cotroni clan in . Key assassinations, including that of —underboss to Vic Cotroni—and Violi's brothers in 1978, eliminated major opposition and shifted control toward the Rizzutos. This internal Mafia war, rooted in ethnic factionalism and disputes over drug trafficking territories, culminated in the Sicilian group's dominance by the early 1980s. Nicolo Rizzuto returned from exile in in 1980, where he had forged ties with Sicilian clans and Colombian cartels, and transferred leadership to his son Vito. Vito, bolstered by his role in the 1981 Bonanno family internal conflict in New York—where he participated in the murders of three rival captains—gained formal recognition and resources from networks, enhancing the family's leverage in . The death of Vic Cotroni in 1984 marked the effective end of Calabrian influence, allowing the Rizzutos to assume unchallenged authority over Montreal's underworld by the mid-1980s. Under Vito's direction through the 1980s and 1990s, the family consolidated power by forging strategic alliances with non-Italian groups, including the , , Haitian street gangs, and Hispanic traffickers, creating a multi-ethnic that controlled 's primary criminal enterprises. They dominated drug importation via the —handling tons of , , and marijuana destined for the U.S.—while infiltrating construction contracts through and , laundering hundreds of millions in proceeds. Vito's of delegating operations to underlings minimized his direct exposure, earning him the moniker "Teflon Don" after acquittals in multiple drug cases and evasion of major prosecutions until 2004. As mediator in inter-faction disputes, he extended influence across and into , solidifying the Rizzutos as Canada's preeminent .

Organizational Framework

Leadership and Hierarchy

The , known as the Sixth Family, operated with a hierarchical structure rooted in traditions, featuring a boss who directed operations through a close-knit cadre of lieutenants, capos, and associates rather than a large cadre of formally inducted soldiers. This setup prioritized family blood ties and trusted Sicilian immigrants, enabling low-profile control over criminal enterprises while forging pragmatic alliances with non-Mafia groups like biker gangs and street crews for distribution and enforcement. Unlike the more bureaucratic American LCN families, the Rizzutos emphasized and adaptability, with centralizing authority through personal relationships rather than rigid protocols. Nicolò Rizzuto (1924–2010), the family's founder, immigrated from to in 1954 and initially aligned with the before leading a factional war in the that secured Sicilian dominance in Quebec's underworld. He functioned as the boss through the and 1980s, overseeing early drug imports and rackets, until semi-retiring in the early 1990s following a stint from 1988 to 1993, at which point his son Vito assumed primary leadership. Nicolò's assassination by sniper on November 10, 2010, in his Cartierville home marked the onset of the family's decline amid internal purges. Vito Rizzuto (1946–2013) solidified the boss position from the late 1970s, expanding influence via and networks tied to the Bonanno family and Cuntrera-Caruana clan, while mediating peace in the Quebec biker wars of the 1990s–2000s. His tenure, spanning until his death from on December 8, 2013, featured evasion of major charges—earning the "Teflon Don" label—until to the U.S. in 2006 for the 1981 Bonanno murders, resulting in a 10-year sentence served until 2012. Vito relied on a small inner circle, including brother-in-law as or financial overseer, who vanished after abduction on May 20, 2010; Renda handled and construction infiltration. Other key lieutenants included capos Francesco Arcadi and Lorenzo Giordano, who managed drug trafficking cells, and Rocco Sollecito (1944–2016), who directed operations until his shooting death on May 27, 2016, amid factional strife. Following Vito's imprisonment in 2004 and death, succession devolved into fragmentation, with his son Leonardo Rizzuto (born 1978) emerging as a presumed heir and boss by the mid-2010s, coordinating from prison after his 2019 in Project Premedite for association and conspiracy. roles rotated amid violence, including Salvatore "Shorty" Scoppa as a senior advisor killed in 2019, and Andrew Scoppa as a short-lived boss murdered on October 21, 2019, after his October 2016 . This period saw Calabrian rivals challenge Sicilian control, eroding the traditional hierarchy through assassinations and disruptions like Operation in 2006, which netted over 90 of mid-level operatives. The family's estimated 20–30 capos oversaw crews of hundreds of associates, but loyalty fractures and multi-ethnic partnerships diluted formal ranks post-2013.

Alliances with Other Crime Groups

The Rizzuto crime family established a pivotal alliance with New York's Bonanno crime family, rooted in Vito Rizzuto's participation in the 1981 Bonanno War, where he contributed to the elimination of rival factions led by Philip Rastelli's opponents, thereby strengthening transborder operations in drug trafficking and extortion. This partnership positioned the Rizzutos as an extension of Bonanno influence in Canada, facilitating heroin importation from Sicily via Montreal's port in the 1970s and 1980s. The family also maintained close operational ties with the Sicilian , a key player in Nostra's global drug networks, collaborating on and heroin smuggling routes from and to during the 1980s and 1990s. These links, built on shared Sicilian heritage and family relationships—such as serving as godfather to a Cuntrera-Caruana member—enabled through Canadian financial channels and investments. Vito Rizzuto acted as a primary mediator in forging the "Consortium," a strategic pact among the Italian Mafia, Hells Angels, West End Gang, street gangs, and Colombian cartels to regulate drug importation, distribution, and territorial control in Quebec starting in the early 1990s. Under this arrangement, the Rizzutos handled high-level importation and brokerage, while the Hells Angels managed street-level sales, generating billions in cocaine profits by dividing markets and minimizing intra-group violence until disputes escalated. The West End Gang, an Irish-Canadian outfit, complemented these efforts by providing smuggling expertise for hashish from Morocco, integrated into the broader union to enforce peace and profit-sharing.

Criminal Activities

Drug Trafficking Operations

The orchestrated large-scale importation of and , leveraging international alliances for supply chains originating in and . shipments primarily arrived from and , concealed in suitcases, food carts, and shipping containers, while was sourced through Sicilian networks. These operations extended distribution to and the , generating substantial revenues funneled through schemes. A core method involved corrupting Montreal's Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, where a bribed federal customs agent and up to five and food-service employees facilitated entry. In , this network yielded 1,300 kg of seized over seven months, including 300 kg from a single 1.3-tonne consignment transported by train and truck from the U.S. Complementary routes exploited the Mohawk Reservation for cross-border smuggling with Native American and collaborators. Alliances amplified scale: partnerships with the Cuntrera-Caruana clan handled from Sicilian refineries, while ties to the , Bonanno family, and supported cocaine and ancillary drugs like marijuana (over 100,000 kg) and (tens of thousands of pills). A Rizzuto-linked enterprise from 1998 to 2012 trafficked over $1 billion in narcotics, with Montreal warehouses used for storage and production. November 2006 raids arrested 73 suspects, including and Francesco Arcadi, dismantling a conspiracy to import valued in millions and tied to gangsterism charges. An associate, Alessandro Taloni, trafficked over 80 kg of and laundered millions before a 10-year sentence in . These efforts underscored the family's dominance in Quebec's market prior to internal disruptions.

Extortion, Gambling, and Construction Infiltration

The , also known as the Sixth Family, engaged in systematic targeting businesses in , particularly bars, restaurants, and construction firms, demanding protection payments under threat of violence. In November 2006, Project Colisée led to the arrest of over 90 individuals linked to the group, with charges including and to commit , as authorities dismantled a network that enforced tributes through . Associates such as Joey Del Balso and Francesco Del Balso pleaded guilty in 2008 to -related offenses, admitting involvement in coercing payments from debtors and businesses. More recently, in 2022, Del Balso faced charges for threats and against religious community leaders in Laval, illustrating the persistence of these tactics even amid leadership disruptions. The family operated extensive illegal networks, including bookmaking, underground casinos, and online betting parlors, generating significant revenue alongside drug trafficking. Paolo , a key , managed illegal gambling houses across in the , coordinating bets on sports and games while laundering proceeds through front businesses. Raids in 2006 uncovered operations handling millions in online wagers and , tied directly to Nicolo Rizzuto's oversight during Vito Rizzuto's U.S. . These activities often intersected with , as gambling debts were collected forcibly, contributing to the group's control over Montreal's economy. Infiltration of Quebec's industry formed a of the Rizzutos' non-drug revenue, achieved through bid-rigging, union manipulation, and kickbacks from contractors. established early ties in the by owning a construction firm that secured municipal contracts in , laying groundwork for later dominance. By the , the family acted as brokers, extracting a standard 2.5 percent commission on rigged contracts, as testified by construction executive Lino Zambito at the 2012 , where surveillance videos captured bosses like Zambito delivering cash envelopes to and associates at a . This system diverted public funds to the group via corrupt unions and suppliers, with the Rizzutos leveraging alliances to enforce compliance and eliminate rivals. The commission's evidence highlighted how such infiltration inflated project costs by up to 30 percent, funding broader operations while evading detection through layered fronts.

Conflicts and Rivalries

Wars with Rock Machine and Hells Angels

The , known as the Sixth Family, became entangled in the (1994–2002), a violent conflict over narcotics distribution dominance in Quebec that claimed over 160 lives. Allying with the against the Rock Machine, the Rizzutos provided logistical and financial backing to the Angels, leveraging their control over cocaine importation routes from to undermine the Rock Machine's independent operations. This support exacerbated tensions with the Rock Machine, who were affiliated with anti-Angels coalitions including remnants of the rival , positioning the Rizzutos as de facto adversaries in the turf battle. Specific flashpoints arose from efforts to enforce the alliance, such as in spring 2000 when Rizzuto lieutenant Frank Arcadi pressured cocaine supplier Paolo Gervasi to halt sales to Rock Machine members, viewing it as a threat to interests. This led to retaliatory violence, including the April 20, 2000, assassination of Gervasi's son Salvatore in , amid broader skirmishes tied to disruptions during the war's attrition phase. The Rock Machine's weakening position—marked by clubhouse raids, arrests of 18 members in May 1997, and seizure of 325 kilograms of drugs—further isolated them from Mafia-aligned networks, though direct Rizzuto-orchestrated hits on Rock Machine figures were less documented than Angels' actions. ultimately mediated a fragile truce in 2002 between leader Maurice "Mom" Boucher and Rock Machine president Frédéric Faucher, temporarily halting the biker conflict but preserving Rizzuto influence over post-war drug territories as many Rock Machine defectors joined the Angels. Despite the historical partnership, frictions with the mounted in the 2010s amid power vacuums following Vito Rizzuto's 2012 imprisonment and subsequent deaths of family leaders. Simmering disputes over profit shares and territorial encroachments escalated into open warfare by March 2023, triggered by the attempted of a figure and linked to the earlier prison slaying of Angels lieutenant Daniel "Curly" Sauvageau, a former Rock Machine defector whose killing authorities tied to Rizzuto interests. The two-year conflict involved drive-by shootings, bombings, and at least six murders investigated under Project Alliance, including hits on Angels affiliates in by late 2023, reflecting breakdowns in the old narcotics pact. A tenuous peace was reported by late 2024, with Rizzutos and Angels recommitting to joint operations against emerging rivals like street gangs, though chapters saw renewed flare-ups into 2025 without full Rizzuto endorsement of splinter groups.

Internal Purges and Succession Disputes

During Vito Rizzuto's imprisonment from 2007 to 2012, the absence of centralized leadership exposed the Sixth Family to both external rivals and internal challenges, resulting in a wave of assassinations that decimated its upper echelons. On December 28, 2009, Nicolo "Nick" Rizzuto Jr., Vito's eldest son and designated heir, was shot multiple times while sitting in his vehicle in Montreal's neighborhood, dying at the scene. This killing, along with the May 2010 abduction and presumed murder of , Vito's brother-in-law and longtime , signaled opportunistic moves by adversaries to exploit the power vacuum, though some analysts noted underlying factional tensions within the family that hindered unified defense. Experts attributed these hits to a coalition of Ontario-based mafiosi, New York interests, and local street gangs seeking to dismantle Rizzuto control over narcotics and construction rackets, with the murders serving as explicit messages to Vito that his authority had eroded. The violence escalated with the November 10, 2010, sniper assassination of family patriarch Sr., aged 86, who was shot through a window while at his kitchen table in a mansion, an attack that underscored the family's vulnerability to coordinated external retribution rather than isolated internal purges. While primary motives centered on vengeance for past Rizzuto aggressions—such as their role in eliminating Calabrian rivals in the —sources indicate that lapses in internal loyalty and communication during Vito's incarceration amplified these losses, with some associates potentially cooperating with outsiders amid disputes over interim authority. No definitive evidence emerged of systematic self-inflicted purges, but the selective targeting of blood relatives and advisors eroded trust, setting the stage for prolonged instability upon Vito's October 2012 release. Following Vito's death from cancer on July 8, 2013, succession disputes fragmented the organization further, with his surviving son Leonardo Rizzuto emerging as nominal boss alongside Sollecito as or co-leader, a divided structure that fueled factional rivalries. This arrangement faltered amid ongoing mob wars, exemplified by the March 1, 2016, execution of Lorenzo Giordano, a key advisor positioning himself as acting leader, and the May 28, 2016, shooting death of outside a in Laval, events linked to challenges from upstarts like the Scoppa brothers who sought to supplant Rizzuto dominance. Internal betrayals surfaced, including allegations against figures like Dominico Scarfo for facilitating these hits to back rival claimants, reflecting eroded cohesion and failed power transitions that prioritized short-term gains over family unity. By the mid-2010s, the leadership split between Leonardo Rizzuto's faction and Sollecito's allies devolved into mutual plots, with 2025 charges under Project Alliance accusing both men of orchestrating murders against perceived threats within the divided , including attempts on figures like , highlighting how succession failures perpetuated cycles of internal violence. These disputes, compounded by arrests and informant penetrations, prevented stable hierarchy restoration, as traditional bonds weakened under pressure from and competing groups. The result was a diluted structure, where purges—whether self-directed or externally abetted—served less to consolidate power than to accelerate the family's decline into fragmented cells.

Law Enforcement Responses

Project Colisée and Early Crackdowns

Project Colisée was a joint investigation initiated by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) in 2004, targeting traditional Italian groups in the area, with a primary focus on the Rizzuto family's leadership and operations. The operation involved wiretaps, surveillance, and collaboration with provincial police, culminating in coordinated raids on November 22, 2006, that executed over 80 arrest warrants and conducted 90 searches across . The raids resulted in the arrest of 69 individuals, including , the 82-year-old patriarch of the Rizzuto family, along with key associates such as Paolo Renda and Rocco Sollecito. Charges centered on to commit , , illegal , and loan-sharking, reflecting the family's infiltration of management, and drug distribution sectors. Many defendants, including , were released on bail shortly after, but the operation disrupted immediate hierarchies and seized assets tied to illicit revenues. Preceding Colisée, earlier law enforcement actions had already strained the Rizzuto organization. In January 2004, , the family's operational leader and Nicolo's son, was arrested in on a U.S. warrant stemming from a 1981 case involving the murder of three captains. Extradited to New York later that year, his prolonged absence—exacerbated by U.S. proceedings that led to a 10-year sentence in 2007 after a guilty plea to —created a in , prompting internal tensions and rival encroachments. These pre-2006 disruptions, combined with 's intelligence-gathering phase from 2004 onward, marked the onset of sustained pressure on the group's cohesion and profitability.

Vito Rizzuto's Arrest, Trial, and Death

Vito Rizzuto was arrested on January 20, 2004, at his home in Montreal by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, acting on a U.S. provisional arrest warrant related to racketeering charges stemming from the May 5, 1981, murders of three Bonanno crime family captains—Alphonse "Sonny Red" Indelicato, Philip Giaccone, and Dominick "Big Trin" Trinchera—in New York City. The charges alleged Rizzuto's participation in the killings as part of a conspiracy within the Bonanno family, positioning him as a key figure in the Rizzuto crime family's ties to American organized crime. Rizzuto fought for over two years, with a Canadian ordering his on December 9, 2004, a decision upheld despite appeals. He was extradited to the on August 17, 2006, and transferred to a in pending proceedings. This period overlapped with Canada's Project Colisée, a major anti-Mafia operation that targeted the Rizzuto organization but focused on domestic charges against associates, while Rizzuto's case centered on U.S. over the 1981 events. On May 4, 2007, Rizzuto pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn to one count of racketeering conspiracy under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), admitting his role in the 1981 murders as part of a broader criminal enterprise. In exchange for the plea, which avoided a trial, he received a 10-year prison sentence on May 25, 2007, along with a $250,000 fine; the judge credited time served since his 2004 arrest, resulting in approximately eight additional years to serve. He was incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Institution in Florence, Colorado, and multiple appeals for early release were denied until sentencing guideline changes allowed for his discharge. Rizzuto was released from prison on October 5, 2012, and deported to , where he resumed activities amid ongoing violence targeting his family and associates. His imprisonment had weakened the Rizzuto organization's control, contributing to internal purges and rival incursions during his absence. Rizzuto died on December 23, 2013, at age 67, at Sacré-Coeur Hospital in from natural causes officially attributed to complications of , though reports indicated underlying . An autopsy was not publicly confirmed, and while speculation of foul play circulated in some circles, official statements from hospital and coroner sources affirmed natural causes without evidence of external involvement.

Operations in the 2010s and 2020s

Following Vito Rizzuto's release from a U.S. in 2012 after serving time for related to the 1981 Bonanno family murders, the Rizzuto organization intensified efforts to reclaim dominance in Montreal's underworld, focusing on re-establishing drug importation pipelines disrupted during his decade-long absence. Associates facilitated weekly chartered flights from carrying hundreds of kilograms of destined for Canadian markets, with one linked operative pleading guilty in May 2013 to conspiracy charges involving multi-ton shipments valued in millions. By mid-decade, the group maintained alliances for and other narcotics distribution across and , leveraging prior networks while facing internal dissent and rival encroachments that led to sporadic violence. Extortion schemes in Montreal's construction sector persisted as a core revenue stream, with the family exerting influence over unionized labor to demand kickbacks from contractors on public and private projects. Testimony from former FBI undercover agent Joe Pistone in September 2012 highlighted how control of unions enabled systematic , forcing builders to hire aligned workers or face delays and . Linked figures faced charges in for demanding protection payments from area businesses, underscoring ongoing territorial enforcement through threats and violence. Illegal and loan-sharking complemented these activities, generating steady illicit funds amid pressures. Into the 2020s, under presumed leadership of Leonardo Rizzuto—Vito's youngest son—the organization sustained narcotics operations and extortion rackets despite leadership attrition and internecine conflicts, including pacts with to counter emerging groups like Blood Family Mafia in . However, escalating fragmentation eroded centralized control, with activities shifting toward decentralized cells handling drug distribution and localized shakedowns, as evidenced by sustained underworld brokerage in construction bids and narcotics flows until major disruptions in 2025.

Decline and Current Dynamics

Fragmentation After Key Losses

Following Vito Rizzuto's death from natural causes on July 8, 2013, the , also known as the Sixth Family, entered a period of acute instability characterized by a and escalating internal and external violence. Without a unified successor, longstanding alliances with groups such as the and street gangs fractured, allowing rival Calabrian factions and independent operators to challenge Rizzuto control over drug trafficking and extortion rackets in and surrounding areas. Key assassinations of senior lieutenants accelerated the fragmentation. Lorenzo Giordano, a purported acting leader, was shot dead on March 1, 2016, in Laval, followed by , a close Rizzuto associate, who was killed by a gunman on a on May 27, 2016, near Laval police headquarters. These hits, linked to revenge cycles and disputes over leadership, eroded internal trust and exposed vulnerabilities in succession planning, as attempts by Leonardo Rizzuto (Vito's son) and Stefano Sollecito (Rocco's son) to consolidate power faced betrayal and opposition from within. Further losses, including the 2019 murders of brothers Salvatore and Andrea Scoppa—former Rizzuto allies who had defected—underscored the breakdown, with at least 25 mafia-linked killings in since 2009, many post-2013, signaling a shift from coordinated operations to chaotic turf wars. Arrests compounded the disarray, with Leonardo Rizzuto detained in 2015 on conspiracy charges (later released on bail) and Stefano Sollecito arrested in 2016, weakening any remnant hierarchy. The June 2025 operation delivered a decisive blow, charging Leonardo Rizzuto, Stefano Sollecito, and nine others with murders spanning 2011 to 2021, involving over 150 officers in raids across . expert Nicaso described this as effectively decapitating the network, while criminologist Maria Mourani noted the absence of a single dominant leader, resulting in multiple splinter groups vying for influence rather than a cohesive structure. This erosion transformed the once-dominant Rizzuto entity into a fragmented array of autonomous crews, with diminished oversight and increased vulnerability to rivals and .

2025 Arrests and Ongoing Challenges

On June 12, 2025, provincial police and police arrested Leonardo Rizzuto, the alleged leader of the , Stefano Sollecito, and nine other men aged 27 to 56 in Operation Project Alliance, a multi-agency probe into . The operation targeted alleged involvement in six murders between 2011 and 2019, with charges of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder filed against the group. Rizzuto, arrested at his Laval residence, was described by authorities as a central figure in the Mafia's command structure. The suspects pleaded not guilty shortly after their arrests, with court proceedings continuing into October 2025, including Rizzuto's appearance on October 15. In July 2025, the Bar Association suspended Rizzuto's license amid the charges, citing professional misconduct risks. As of early October 2025, five suspects remained fugitives, with two—Pierry Philogène, 38, and Gianpietro (JP) Tiberio—added to 's Most Wanted list in August after the probe expanded. These arrests have intensified structural challenges for the Rizzuto organization, which has faced leadership voids since Vito Rizzuto's 2013 death and subsequent purges. Police assessments indicate the operation disrupts command hierarchies, potentially spurring internal disputes and alliances with non-traditional actors like street gangs. Rival Calabrian factions and emerging groups have exploited resulting instability, contributing to persistent violence, including public hits in 2025 linked to power contests. Ongoing fugitive pursuits and trial outcomes could further erode operational cohesion, amid broader law enforcement pressure on Mafia remnants.

Impact and Analysis

Influence on Canadian Organized Crime

The , originating from Sicilian roots, fundamentally altered the structure of in by supplanting the Calabrian-dominated Cotroni family in the late 1970s and early 1980s through internal power struggles and targeted eliminations, thereby establishing as a hub for operations rather than traditional Calabrian networks. This transition centralized control over key rackets including drug importation, , illegal gambling, and construction bid-rigging, with the family's estimated annual revenue from these activities reaching tens of millions of dollars by the . Under Vito Rizzuto's leadership from the onward, the group prioritized discreet business infiltration over overt violence, forging alliances with legitimate enterprises and public officials to launder proceeds and secure territorial stability. The family's strategic partnerships extended its influence beyond traditional mafia confines, notably through collaboration with the during the from 1994 to 2002, where Rizzuto intermediaries facilitated drug importation at the wholesale level while bikers handled distribution, effectively marginalizing rivals like the Rock Machine and consolidating narcotics dominance across . This model integrated mafia oversight with biker enforcement and street-level gangs, resulting in over 160 deaths during the conflict but yielding a more efficient, multi-tiered that supplied up to 80% of Canada's market by the early 2000s. Vito Rizzuto's mediation role earned him recognition as Canada's preeminent mafia figure, with operations extending ties to international suppliers via connections to groups like the 'Ndrangheta and remnants of New York's Bonanno family. Nationally, the Rizzutos projected influence into and other provinces through proxy networks, including associations with Calabrian groups in and money-laundering channels in , positioning Montreal as a transshipment point for cross-Canada illicit flows and weakening localized independents by imposing systems. Their of non-Italians into formal structures, a departure from orthodox codes, broadened operational flexibility and challenged ethnic exclusivity in Canadian syndicates, influencing hybrid models adopted by subsequent groups. This evolution elevated the 's role from regional enforcers to national coordinators, though it also sowed vulnerabilities exposed by law enforcement disruptions starting in the mid-2000s.

Societal and Economic Effects in Montreal

The Rizzuto crime family's dominance in 's underworld from the late 1970s through the 2010s contributed to heightened levels of violence, particularly during internal power struggles and wars with rivals. Between 2009 and 2015, approximately 25 murders were linked to activities in the city, exacerbating public safety concerns and fostering an atmosphere of fear among residents and businesses. In 2012 alone, accounted for 18 of Montreal's 35 homicides, reflecting the destabilizing impact of factional disputes following key arrests and assassinations, such as that of Sr. in 2010. This violence, often public and brazen—including a 2016 slaying near police headquarters—strained resources and eroded community trust, as retaliatory killings signaled a breakdown in the family's ability to enforce internal discipline. Economically, the family exerted control over the sector through bid-rigging, , and union infiltration, inflating costs by an estimated 30% via a "corruption tax" passed to taxpayers. Firms bidding on municipal contracts paid kickbacks of 2.5% to the Rizzuto organization and additional percentages to political entities, as evidenced in RCMP surveillance from 2004–2005 at the , affecting over $500 million in city awards between 2006 and 2009. By embedding members in union leadership, the group extorted contractors through deliberate delays, demands for superfluous hires, and inflated labor claims, further driving up expenses on . Broader extortion rackets ensnared over 600 businesses—including hotels, restaurants, and dealers—with a 5% "pizzo" on deals, while the family laundered funds and profited from ventures like luxury condo sales yielding astronomical returns, embedding deeply into Quebec's economic fabric. These practices distorted , deterred legitimate , and perpetuated systemic , as detailed in investigative accounts drawing from police sources.

References

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