Luciano, Lucky
Name |
| ||||
Birthname | Salvatore Lucania | ||||
born on | 24 November 1897 at 12:00 (= 12:00 noon ) | ||||
Place | Lercara Friddi, Italy, 37n45, 13e36 | ||||
Timezone | MET h1e (is standard time) | ||||
Data source |
| ||||
Astrology data | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Biography
Sicilian-American gangster. From grubby street urchin, Luciano rose through the ranks of organized crime and became director of a crime syndicate. He earned the nickname "Lucky" because he successfully evaded arrest on a number of occasions and eventually became famous for racketeering in narcotics, prostitution, slot machines, loan sharking and "protection."
Born Salvatore Lucania, his family emigrated from Sicily to New York City in 1906. By the age of ten, he had embarked on his life of crime. In 1916, he spent six months in jail for selling heroin, but after he was released, he teamed up with Frank Costello and Meyer Lansky. By 1920, ruthless and upwardly mobile, he began working for the crime boss, Joe Masseria, and within five years, he became Masseria’s chief lieutenant.
In October 1929, he survived a "one-way ride," a rare feat. He was abducted, beaten, stabbed repeatedly, had his throat cut and was left for dead; he never named his abductors, and soon afterward he changed his name to Luciano – and earned his nickname of Lucky
The years of 1930 and 1931 were spent in a bloody gang war between Masseria and his rival, Maranzano, and Luciano felt this was an abomination. His personal vision was to replace traditional strong-arm methods with a corporate structure and then to systematically infiltrate legitimate business. Masseria wasn’t impressed by the plan, and Maranzano felt that Lucky was too ambitious and innovative, and therefore, too dangerous. Soon Luciano arranged to have both Masseria and Maranzano assassinated, leaving him as capo di tutti capi (boss of all the bosses). By 1934, he and the leaders of the other crime "families" had established the national crime syndicate, and Luciano was living the good life. He dressed like a business executive, wearing elegant suits, handmade shoes and silk shirts, and it was a rare occasion when there wasn’t a beautiful woman on his arm. He mingled with such stars as Frank Sinatra.
He had an enemy, however, in New York special prosecutor Thomas Dewey who called him "the czar of organized crime in this city." In 1936, Luciano was indicted, tried and convicted on charges of extortion and prostitution. Convicted in June of that year, he was sentenced to 30 to 50 years in prison. His power continued to grow even while he was incarcerated, as he issued orders and ruled from his cell.
In 1942, Navy Intelligence asked for his help after a luxury liner blew up in New York Harbor. Luciano gave the orders that tightened security on the docks and ended the possibility of sabotage. His sentence was commuted in 1946, but he was promptly deported to Italy where he settled in Rome. A year later, he moved to Cuba; pressure from the United States, however, forced the Cuban government to deport him, and he went to Naples, where he continued to direct his narcotics operations.
Near the end of his life, a reporter asked him if he would do it all again, and he replied, "I’d do it legal. I learned too late that you need just as good a brain to make a crooked million as an honest million." Luciano, the man who forever changed the face of organized crime, died of a heart attack on 1/26/1962, Naples, Italy.
Relationships
- business associate/partner relationship with Genovese, Vito (born 21 November 1897)
- friend relationship with Costello, Frank (born 18 February 1891)
- friend relationship with Lansky, Meyer (born 28 August 1902 Jul.Cal. (10 Sep 1902 greg.))
- opponent/rival/enemy relationship with Dewey, Thomas E. (born 24 March 1902)
- role played of/by Dallesandro, Joe (born 31 December 1948). Notes: 1984 film "The Cotton Club"
Events
- Financial : Best Period October 1929 (Lucky - survived a contract on his life)
chart Placidus Equal_H.
- Work : Gain social status 1934 (Head of the syndicate)
Source Notes
Bordoni quotes B.C. (Same data from Daphne Jones quotes L'Astrologue, 1970)
(Formerly, PC quotes Martin Gosch, "The Last Testament of Lucky Luciano" for the same date on p.3. and Sabian Symbols No.603 for 11:00 PM. Sabian Symbols gives 11/11/1897, no time.)
Categories
- Diagnoses : Body Part Problems : Heart (Terminal attack)
- Lifestyle : Financial : Gain - Financial success in field
- Lifestyle : Home : Expatriate (U.S. and Sicily)
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Civil/ Political (Racketeering)
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Drug business (Narcotics smuggling, sale)
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Homicide by order (Hired hit-men)
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Prison sentence (Jail, also deported to Italy)
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Social crime/ delinquent (Varying crimes and rackets)
- Personal : Misc. : Changed name (Nickname)
- Vocation : Business : Top executive (CEO)
- Vocation : Business : Top executive (Mafia exec)
- Vocation : Sex Business : Prostitute/ Pimp (Prostitution business)
- Notable : Famous : Criminal cases (Mafia)
- Notable : Book Collection : American Book
- 1897 births
- Birthday 24 November
- Birthplace Lercara Friddi, ITALY
- Sun 2 Sagittarius
- Moon 3 Sagittarius
- Asc 17 Aquarius
- 1962 deaths
- Diagnoses : Body Part Problems : Heart
- Lifestyle : Financial : Gain - Financial success in field
- Lifestyle : Home : Expatriate
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Civil/ Political
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Drug business
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Homicide by order
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Prison sentence
- Passions : Criminal Perpetrator : Social crime/ delinquent
- Personal : Misc. : Changed name
- Vocation : Business : Top executive
- Vocation : Sex Business : Prostitute/ Pimp
- Notable : Famous : Criminal cases
- Notable : Book Collection : American Book