rdfs:comment
| - A lifelong resident in Old Bridge Township, New Jersey, Consalvo reportedly joined the North Jersey based DeCavalcante crime family during the disappearance in October 1991 of underboss Louis LaRasso. Consalvo, Gregory Rago, and Anthony Capo allegedly murdered LaRasso in return for becoming made men, or full members, of the family. Consalvo is a nephew of Carmine and Francis Consalvo who are in-laws to Bonanno crime family capo Frank Lino. Consalvo is also the cousin of Gambino capo Salvatore Scala. He is also the brother-in-law of DeCavalcante crime family capo Philip Abramo. Louis holds a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority brokerage license.
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abstract
| - A lifelong resident in Old Bridge Township, New Jersey, Consalvo reportedly joined the North Jersey based DeCavalcante crime family during the disappearance in October 1991 of underboss Louis LaRasso. Consalvo, Gregory Rago, and Anthony Capo allegedly murdered LaRasso in return for becoming made men, or full members, of the family. Consalvo is a nephew of Carmine and Francis Consalvo who are in-laws to Bonanno crime family capo Frank Lino. Consalvo is also the cousin of Gambino capo Salvatore Scala. He is also the brother-in-law of DeCavalcante crime family capo Philip Abramo. Louis holds a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority brokerage license. In the mid 1990s, Consalvo and Gregory Rago began working in a social club on Mott Street in New York, as well as operating with various criminal activities on Manhattan, which eventually led to a dispute between the New Jersey and the New York families. At a sitdown in New York, reputed DeCavalcante crime family acting boss, Giacomo Amari and Consigliere Stefano Vitabile represented the family, along with Gambino crime family captain/street boss Nicholas Corozzo and Colombo crime family acting consigliere Vincenzo Aloi, where the represantives of New York meant that Consalvo's operations should've gone to one of the Five Families, as those criminal operations were in New York City, and not New Jersey. The conflict was eventually resolved peacefully when it was ruled that the DeCavalcante crime family could no longer 'make' members outside of New Jersey and South Philadelphia, which was another area that the DeCavalcantes had traditionally recruited from.
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