The Info Web
People · Organized Crime

Carlos Marcello

Carlos Marcello was the boss of the New Orleans crime family who was identified by the HSCA as having both the motive and means to arrange President Kennedy's assassination - he had threatened Kennedy according to FBI informants, was deported to Guatemala by Robert Kennedy in 1961, returned illegally, and was eventually convicted on racketeering charges in the FBI's BRILAB sting in 1981.

Lifespan 1910–1993 Location New Orleans, Louisiana Mentions 4 Tags PersonOrganizedCrimeJFKAssassinationNewOrleansLouisianaCIA1960s

Carlos Marcello (born Calogero Minacori, February 6, 1910, Tunis, Tunisia - died March 2, 1993, New Orleans, Louisiana) was the boss of the New Orleans crime family from the late 1940s until his 1981 conviction, exercising informal control over organized crime in Louisiana and portions of Texas. He was identified by the House Select Committee on Assassinations as having both the motive and the means to organize the assassination of President Kennedy and was the subject of multiple FBI informant reports documenting specific threats against the president.1

Criminal Career

Marcello was born to Sicilian parents who emigrated to Tunisia and then to the United States, settling in New Orleans. He was raised in the area and entered criminal enterprise through the gambling operations and political corruption infrastructure that characterized New Orleans organized crime. He gradually consolidated control over the New Orleans territory following World War II, building a criminal organization that controlled gambling across Louisiana and into Texas and that maintained long-standing relationships with New Orleans political machines.

Marcello was never a member of the national organized crime commission in the same formal sense as New York or Chicago families, but he operated as a peer of the major organized crime bosses, attended commission meetings, and had close relationships with Santos Trafficante, Jr. in Tampa and with figures in the Chicago and New York families. His territory included the Gulf Coast and extended into Central American gambling and political connections.1

Deportation and the Kennedy Connection

In 1961, Attorney General Robert Kennedy's aggressive pursuit of organized crime - a personal priority that represented a sharp departure from J. Edgar Hoover's FBI, which had long declined to acknowledge the existence of a national organized crime structure - directly targeted Marcello. Kennedy's Justice Department secured Marcello's deportation on April 4, 1961, placing him on a government aircraft and depositing him in Guatemala without warning or due process. Marcello returned to the United States within weeks through undocumented means.

FBI informant Edward Becker reported to the FBI in September 1962 that Marcello had made an explicit threat against President Kennedy at a meeting at Churchill Farms, his estate outside New Orleans. According to Becker, Marcello invoked a Sicilian proverb - "Take the stone out of your shoe" - to describe his intention to deal with Robert Kennedy through the president, and stated that any hit man used for the assassination would be a "nut" without apparent organized crime connections.

The Becker report was not transmitted by the FBI to the Warren Commission. The HSCA later found the Becker meeting credible based on corroborating evidence and Becker's documented reliability as an informant.1

HSCA Investigation

The House Select Committee on Assassinations concluded in 1979 that Marcello had "the motive, means, and opportunity" to organize Kennedy's assassination. The committee found:

  • Marcello had a documented, intense personal motive arising from the Kennedy administration's deportation and continuing prosecution
  • Marcello had the organizational resources to arrange an assassination using individuals without apparent organized crime connections
  • Jack Ruby's connections to Marcello's New Orleans organization were documented
  • Lee Harvey Oswald had connections to New Orleans - his uncle and surrogate father Dutz Murret was a Marcello associate and bookie

The committee could not prove that Marcello organized the assassination but found that the circumstantial evidence was "not inconsistent" with his involvement and that the FBI's failure to pursue organized crime leads had left the question unresolved.2

BRILAB Conviction

In 1981, Marcello was convicted in the FBI's BRILAB (bribery-labor) undercover operation, in which FBI agents posed as insurance company representatives offering kickbacks to Louisiana officials in exchange for state insurance contracts. Marcello was caught on tape approving bribery payments. He was convicted of racketeering and bribery charges and sentenced to seven years in federal prison.

In 1985, while incarcerated, FBI informant Joseph Hauser reported that Marcello had confessed to planning the Kennedy assassination. The confession, if genuine, was never corroborated by independent evidence, and Marcello's attorney denied it. Marcello was released from federal prison in 1989 following a series of strokes that had severely impaired his cognition. He died of complications related to Alzheimer's disease on March 2, 1993.1

  1. House Select Committee on Assassinations. Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives. Government Printing Office, 1979. Davis, John H. Mafia Kingfish: Carlos Marcello and the Assassination of John F. Kennedy. McGraw-Hill, 1989.
  2. Blakey, G. Robert, and Richard N. Billings. Fatal Hour: The Assassination of President Kennedy by Organized Crime. Berkley, 1992. Ragano, Frank, and Selwyn Raab. Mob Lawyer. Scribner, 1994.

Hidden connections 1

Entities named in this page's prose without an explicit wikilink — surfaced by scanning for known titles and aliases.

Find a path from Carlos Marcello to…

Full finder →

    Local network

    Carlos Marcello's direct connections. Click any node to navigate, drag to pan, scroll (or pinch) to zoom. + 2‑hop expands the neighborhood one level further.