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・ James J. Davis
・ James J. Davis (Catholic bishop)
・ James I. Dungan
・ James I. Finley
・ James I. Langtry
・ James I. McCord
・ James I. Mestrovitch
・ James I. Nazworthy
・ James I. O'Neill High School
・ James I. Poynter
・ James I. Robertson, Jr.
・ James I. Roosevelt
・ James I. Van Alen
・ James Iahuat
・ James Ibori
James Ida
・ James Idwal Jones
・ James Iglehart
・ James Ignatius Taylor
・ James Iha
・ James Ihedigbo
・ James II (disambiguation)
・ James II (single)
・ James II of Aragon
・ James II of Avesnes
・ James II of Cyprus
・ James II of England
・ James II of Majorca
・ James II of Scotland
・ James II, Count of La Marche


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James Ida : ウィキペディア英語版
James Ida

James Ida also known as "Little Guy" (born 1940) is a New York mobster and former consigliere of the Genovese crime family.
James was born to first generation immigrants from Lombardy, Italy. Growing up in the Little Italy neighborhood of Manhattan, New York, Ida was inducted into the Genovese crime family in the late 1970s. Ida was placed in the Little Italy based crew of captain Matthew "Matty the Horse" Ianniello, frequently serving as Ianniello's bodyguard and chauffeur. Ida's younger brother Joseph also served in Ianniello's crew.
==Racketeering in Little Italy==
In 1988, after Ianniello was convicted on federal racketeering charges, Ida took over the Ianniello crew. In 1991, after consigliere Louis Manna was convicted of federal racketeering charges, Ida became the official consigliere of the Genovese family. When boss Vincent Gigante and underboss Venero Mangano went to prison, Ida handled the day-to-day functions of the Genovese family with acting boss Liborio Bellomo. Ida also oversaw rackets involving the Mason Tenders Union and the San Gennaro Feast in Little Italy.
Each vendor working at the Feast had to pay tribute to the Genovese family.〔("19 indicted in blow to Genovese mob" ) New York Times June 12, 1996〕 Ida helped oversee the collection of rents from some 400 vendors. While the mob typically demanded $4,000 a booth, the society running the festival would report to city officials that booth vendors had paid only $1,000 or so each. The city would then assess each vendor a 25 percent permit fee based on this rent. The end result was that the city and charities received very little money.〔(" Genovese family counselor is convicted of racketeering" ) New York Times April 24, 1997〕
Ida also owned a social club in Little Italy that he used for family business. However, in 1990, capo James Messera was sent to prison based partly on conversations recorded by law enforcement at the club. Ida soon switched to conducting business on walks through the neighborhood and meetings in diners and parks. To counter Ida's new strategy, Federal investigators in 1994 obtained warrants for use of roving bugs and were able to intercept six of Ida's conversations with family members and union associates.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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