November 12, 1941-Coney Island, New York
A body is found, having plummeted six stories from his room at the Half Moon Hotel. His voice is silenced, the damage had been done, but the Made Men could finally sleep……For Now.
The treacherous world of the Mafia was gobsmacked with the defection of hitman Abe “Kid Twist” Reles in 1940. Reles was the cog in the murder machine dubbed Murder, Incorporated. Murder, Inc was composed of a hodgepodge of Jewish and Italian men who murdered at the whim of their underworld bosses. Reles was born and raised in Brownsville, the son of hardworking immigrants. Reles was ashamed of his parents and their toiling for a living. He resolved to find an easier route to the valuable dollar.
Reles worked as muscle for the Shapiro brothers, enforcing their protection rackets. Reles would find himself behind bars repeatedly for his thuggish acts, yet the Shapiros bailed him out until Reles was no longer considered useful. A two year stint gave Reles time to plot revenge against the Shapiros, his release spawned a bloody war that left Reles on top. A partnership with ruthless labor racketeer Louis “Lepke” Buchalter further cemented the bona fides of Reles. Reles would soon set up shop at the Midnight Rose Candy Store. He would be joined by men like Phil “Pittsburgh Phil” Strauss, Emmanuel “Mendy” Weiss, Frank “Dasher” Abbandano and Harry “Happy” Maione. A phone call to the headquarters from Lepke, Albert Anastasia meant orders to kill. The target was usually an impediment to the earning power of the Mob. But as time elapsed, the killers began to turn on each other.
The body count mounted. Witnesses were scarce, as the intimidation employed by Murder, Inc could quell any busybodies. However, reform emerged in politics, corruption needing to be stamped out. Men like Thomas Dewey and William O’ Dwyer viewed the gangsters as masters of menace needing to be removed from society. The testimony of Reles began to demolish Murder, Inc resulting in convictions, imprisonment and capital punishment. Yet, as Reles got further into his testimony, he was getting closer to the mob hierarchy. This would not stand, and on November 12, his voice was silenced for good.
“A Brotherhood Betrayed” is a mesmerizing true crime narrative which is an attention grabber from the opening paragraph. The demise of Abe Reles and his posse of trigger happy men has been examined previously, but never as in depth. The crew that stabbed, strangled, shot with impunity for a decade is not merely a footnote in the story of the New York Mafia. They are center stage in this law and order tale, where the battle ends, but no clear winner has emerged. A powerful history book to add to an endless library of Organized Crime.