Chicago Mafia Vs New York Mafia - Explained By Frank Cullotta

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Patrick Bet-David and former Las Vegas Hitman Frank Cullotta talk about the Chicago Mob and his days of working with The Notorious Tony Spilotro. Stay tuned for a full interview coming soon on Valuetainment. Make sure to subscribe to the channel to get all the updates.

About Frank Cullotta:Frank Cullotta, is a former enforcer for the Chicago Outfit, leader of the "Hole in the Wall Gang" in Las Vegas, and a friend of notorious Chicago mobster Tony Spilotro. In later life, having given evidence against Spilotro and other mob associates, Cullotta wrote a book about his experiences.

About Valuetainment:

Founded in 2012 by Patrick Bet-David, our goal is to impact entrepreneurs around the world through value and entertainment. We are the #1 channel for entrepreneurs because of the diverse content and broad subjects we cover for entrepreneurs at all phases of their careers.

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As far back as I can remember I always wanted to be an internet gangster

JoeDiGiovanniIV
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There really is no New York or Chicago rivalry thing. That mentality or belief is from outsiders who don't understand the inner workings. It's all the same thing...different names. No matter where they are, this is a secret society/network of Italian guys. Italians just look at each other as fellow Italians. It's not a big deal if an Italian Chicago gangster goes to New York City and joins the racket over there, or vice versa. It's happened countless times. The end goal for both is money, which is achieved by cooperating with each other in a secret underground way.

truthteller
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Al Capone is from New York born and raised. He was brought to Chicago by Johnny Torrio, another New Yorker, as extra muscle to help take over the Chicago outfits. Johnny Torrios empire was handed down to all Capone. So let's make no mistakes here. Al Capone was the New York mob and he was put in a cream position of power in Chicago, got a little too big for his britches and was ignored for the most part by the syndicate. They just let him do his thing.

DoggieNYC
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What about Jimmy Two Times? " I'm gonna go get the papers, get the papers."

mikey
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You can tell he's from Chicago. He sounds like a Bears fan.

joeb
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Bet-David always does his homework, very thorough, always goes beyond the typical surface level interviews most do today

patrickm
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Capone knew the NY crime family very well and they left him alone when he ruthlessly killing enemies in Chicago

dazzaMusic
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I'm from Chicago & that's a real Chicago accent right there 👌🏿

chination
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“We are a bunch of Italian people”

Actual Italian mobsters: Scusi?

ct
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I swear this channel has turned into the mafia gangster channel lol

masterindisguises
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Frank Cullotta is the real-life version of Frank Marino played by Frank Vincent in the movie Casino. He nailed it in this interview explaining exactly what happened as opposed to Martin Scorsese’s Casino which has some historic inaccuracies but still one of the best movies ever.

Tombochio
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*Looking forward to watching the whole thing.*
Captivating stuff!

ossen
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I feel like eating a pizza after watching all of this.

jasonishere
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Al Capone was friends since he was young with some bosses from NY him and lucky use to be in the five points gang together

evasantos
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The best thing about this interview is Culotta's solid Chicago accent.

kenkunz
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Joseph Aiuppa 0.41 😂 absolute image of junior soprano 🤣😂🤣😂

zulu
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Before Tony A. started calling The Southside "the Outfit, " it was referred to as The Syndicate by Al.

michaeljam
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*Job interview:* “So i heard you paint houses”

jonbaptistaJB
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Great value set the mafia had. Undercover snitches and the constant fear that your going to get whacked.

aky
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Frank Cullotta. December 14, 1938 – August 20, 2020
RIP

madringking