Velentzas crime family

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Velentzas crime family
Founded by Peter "Pete the Greek" Kourakos [1]
Founding location New York City
Years active 1950s-present
Territory Astoria, Queens and New York City
Ethnicity Greeks, Greek-American, Italian-American and other ethnicities.
Membership (est.) 30 [2]
Criminal activities Racketeering, loansharking, extortion, and gambling
Allies Lucchese crime family, Gambino crime family, Philadelphia Greek Mob
Rivals Rudaj Organization and other various gangs.

The Velentzas crime family is a Greek-American criminal organization operating in the New York City area.[1] Mostly active in the 1980s and 1990s with illegal gambling. Today the organization is still active in illegal gambling operating with the Lucchese crime family.[3]

Spyredon "Spiros" Velentzas

The group originated from the Kourakos clan, a Maniot-Greek family led by Peter "Pete The Greek" Kourakos. It became a dominant group in the 1980s under Spyredon "Spiros" Velentzas, a Greek mobster who worked with and was aided by the Lucchese crime family.[2] The Velentzas family mainly operated in the Greek-American neighborhood of Astoria, Queens. With over 30 members, the group gained power in other Queens and Brooklyn neighborhoods in the 1980s and the 1990s by setting up and taking over illegal gambling rackets that included dice games and horse-racing parlors.[2]

Arrest

On June 20, 1992, Velentzas, aka "Sakafias," was found guilty of murder, loan sharking, gambling, and tax fraud charges. Along with Velentzas were arrested two other crew members, Peter Drakoulis and Michael Grillo.[2] Velentzas was later sentenced to over 20 years in prison from his charges; however, the jury did not find Velentzas guilty of the murder of a gambling rival, which was ordered by Lucchese.[4] Spyredon was found guilty of murdering Sarecho "Sammy the Arab" Nalo and was convicted to life in prison.[1] Velentzas, now 75 years old, is currently still serving his life sentence in prison.[5]

Speculations on Velentzas gambling

The lucrative horse racing parlors of Spiros Velentzas have been impugned by some as to be using satellite dishes for importing races from all around the world, in order to view them ahead of time in an attempt to cheat customers. Velentzas has denied this allegation.

Relations with the crime families in New York City

The Velentzas family has had very good relations with the Lucchese crime family, which offered protection in return for a percentage of the gambling profits. The other Mafia families of New York City have kept out of the Greek business and generally do not see them as a threat. However, there were attempts by some of the family members to expand business into Gambino crime family territory, but operations ended and receded back to Greek areas after warning from the Gambinos. As one Italian mobster was said to have stated, those "... Greeks know the game so damn good they'd cheat us blind."

On August 3, 2001, members of the Albanian Rudaj Organization attacked Greek associates of the Lucchese crime family. The brief fight was over controlling gambling rackets in Astoria, Queens.[3][6][7][8] The Rudaj Organization held on to this territory until 2004, when most of the leaders were convicted of racketeering.

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Jerry Capeci. Jerry Capeci's Gang Land. (pg.170-172) The Man Gotti Never Got. October 12, 1994. [1]
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Man Tied to Mafia Guilty on 10 Counts, The New York Times, June 20, 1992. Accessed July 2, 2008.
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Rudaj Organization aka: The Albanian Mafia. November 2, 2004. The Johnsville News.com [2]
  4. Lubasch, Arnold H. Mob Murder Is Recounted By Organizer, The New York Times, May 22, 1992. Accessed July 2, 2008.
  5. Spyredon Velentzas. Federal Bureau of Prisons
  6. Anemona Hartocollis. Albanian Gang Portrayed as Aspiring Mafiosi. December 20, 2005. The New York Times. [3]
  7. Carl Campanile. Albania 'Mafia' Broken. October 27, 2004. New York Post. [4]
  8. Kareem Fahim and Alan Feuer. Beating Them at Their Own Game; Albanian Groups Are Muscling Into Mob Land, Officials Say. January 3, 2006. The New York Times. [5]