---
aliases:
- Santos Trafficante Jr.
- Santo Trafficante
- Santos Trafficante
born: 1914-11-15
category: Organized Crime
created: 2026-05-17
died: 1987-03-17
location: Tampa, Florida
summary: Santo Trafficante Jr. was the Tampa organized crime boss who held pre-revolutionary
  Cuba casino interests, was recruited by the CIA in 1960 for anti-Castro assassination
  plots alongside Sam Giancana and Johnny Roselli, and whose attorney Frank Ragano
  claimed he made a deathbed confession of involvement in John Kennedy's assassination.
tags:
- Person
- OrganizedCrime
- CIA
- AntiCastro
- Cuba
- JFKAssassination
- ColdWar
- 1960s
- 1970s
- 1980s
title: Santo Trafficante Jr.
updated: 2026-05-17
---

Santo Trafficante Jr. (November 15, 1914 - March 17, 1987) was the boss of the [Tampa organized crime family](/organizations/la-cosa-nostra/) from approximately 1954 until his death, the most prominent organized crime figure in [Florida](/places/florida/), and the primary Tampa underworld figure involved in the [CIA](/organizations/central-intelligence-agency/)'s covert anti-Castro assassination program from 1960 onward. He was held in a Cuban detention facility by [Fidel Castro](/people/fidel-castro/)'s government in 1959 before negotiating his release. He was recruited by [Robert Maheu](/people/robert-maheu/) and [Johnny Roselli](/people/johnny-roselli/) into the CIA-organized crime assassination collaboration in 1960, testified before the [Church Committee](/events/church-committee/) in 1975 and the [House Select Committee on Assassinations](/events/hsca/) in 1978-1979, and denied any involvement in the assassination of President [Kennedy](/people/john-f-kennedy/) - but his personal attorney, Frank Ragano, subsequently published an account claiming Trafficante had confessed to him near his death that Roselli and Trafficante had arranged Kennedy's killing.[^1]

### Criminal Career

Trafficante inherited the Tampa Outfit's leadership from his father, Santo Trafficante Sr., who had built the organization through Prohibition-era bolita gambling and other rackets. The Tampa family maintained interests in bolita (a Cuban-origin numbers game popular in Florida's Cuban and Latin communities), restaurants, hotels, and later drug trafficking. The family's geographic and cultural proximity to Cuba gave it distinctive advantages in pre-revolutionary Cuba's gambling and casino economy.

By the late 1950s Trafficante was one of five to seven organized crime bosses with significant investment in Cuban casinos. The Havana casino economy had become one of the most profitable gambling markets in the Western Hemisphere, operating under the protection of Fulgencio Batista's government. Trafficante had interests in the Sans Souci nightclub-casino and other Havana establishments.[^1]

### Cuba: Imprisonment and Release

When Castro's forces took Havana in January 1959 and the new government moved against the casino industry and its organized crime operators, Trafficante was among those detained. Cuban authorities held him at the Trescornia immigration detention center outside Havana from approximately June through August 1959. He was among the last of the American organized crime figures to be expelled from Cuba.

One anomalous detail of Trafficante's imprisonment: Jack Ruby, the Dallas nightclub owner who would kill [Lee Harvey Oswald](/people/lee-harvey-oswald/) four years later, visited Cuba in 1959 and made at least one visit to the Trescornia detention facility. The nature of Ruby's relationship with Trafficante - whether Ruby was attempting to negotiate Trafficante's release, conducting independent business, or operating for other purposes - was examined by the HSCA without resolution. The committee noted the contact as potentially significant but could not establish what it meant.[^2]

### CIA-Mafia Anti-Castro Plots

In September 1960, [Robert Maheu](/people/robert-maheu/) - a CIA cutout with organized crime connections - approached [Johnny Roselli](/people/johnny-roselli/) about the CIA's desire to recruit organized crime figures with Cuban experience for assassination operations against Castro. Roselli arranged a meeting that included both [Sam Giancana](/people/sam-giancana/), the Chicago Outfit boss, and Trafficante.

Trafficante was well-positioned for such an approach: he had pre-revolutionary Cuba connections to the Cuban underworld, access to exile Cubans with potential operational utility inside Cuba, and his own reasons to want Castro removed. The CIA's Technical Services Division developed poison pills intended for Castro's food, and Trafficante's network was used as one conduit for attempting to introduce the pills into Castro's entourage.

Trafficante played a less operationally central role than Roselli, who was the CIA's primary organized crime contact throughout the program. Trafficante served primarily as a connector - providing access to Cuban exile networks and Cuban underworld figures who might reach Castro's inner circle - rather than as a direct operational manager.[^1]

### Church Committee Testimony

The Church Committee's 1975 investigation into CIA assassination plots disclosed the CIA-organized crime connection and subpoenaed Trafficante to testify. He appeared before the committee in closed session. His testimony was carefully evasive; he confirmed the general outlines of the CIA approach and his participation but denied specific operational knowledge of plots and denied any connection to the Kennedy assassination.

His primary CIA contact, Roselli, was murdered in August 1976 shortly after his own Church Committee testimony. Giancana had been murdered in June 1975, one day before additional Senate testimony. Trafficante was the surviving primary witness to the CIA-mob collaboration.[^1]

### HSCA Investigation and the Aleman Allegation

The House Select Committee on Assassinations, investigating President Kennedy's assassination between 1976 and 1979, examined Trafficante's role. The HSCA's Final Report (1979) found that organized crime had both the motive and the capability to assassinate Kennedy and that the evidence was "consistent with" organized crime involvement, though the committee stopped short of a definitive finding.

One piece of evidence the HSCA examined was the testimony of Jose Aleman, a Cuban exile and FBI informant who had known Trafficante through exile community circles. Aleman testified that in 1962, Trafficante had told him - in the context of discussing Jimmy Hoffa's frustration with the Kennedy administration's organized crime prosecutions - that Kennedy was "going to be hit." Aleman told the HSCA he had interpreted this as Trafficante's prediction based on inside knowledge.

Trafficante testified before the HSCA and denied Aleman's account. He denied any foreknowledge of the Kennedy assassination and denied any role in organizing it.[^2]

### The Ragano Claim

Frank Ragano was Trafficante's personal attorney for approximately three decades, beginning in the early 1960s and including the period of the CIA-mob plots and the Kennedy assassination. Ragano also represented [Jimmy Hoffa](/people/jimmy-hoffa/) and had maintained close relationships with organized crime leadership throughout his career.

In 1994, Ragano published a memoir, *Mob Lawyer*, co-written with journalist Selwyn Raab, in which he claimed that Trafficante had confessed to him in January 1987 - two months before Trafficante's death from kidney failure - that he and Roselli had arranged Kennedy's assassination in retaliation for the Kennedy administration's prosecution of organized crime and its perceived betrayal of the anti-Castro cause after the Bay of Pigs.

According to Ragano's account, Trafficante said, in Italian: "Carlos [Marcello] fucked up. We should not have killed Giovanni [Kennedy]. We should have killed Bobby." Trafficante died on March 17, 1987, before any independent verification of Ragano's account was possible.

Ragano's credibility as a witness was disputed. He had his own motivations for a dramatic memoir, he had been suspended from the Florida bar for misconduct, and his account shifted in emphasis between earlier interviews and the published memoir. The HSCA, which had access to Ragano before Trafficante's death, did not obtain any similar admission. Historians have treated the account as suggestive but unverifiable.[^3]

### Death and Significance

Trafficante died March 17, 1987, in Houston, [Texas](/places/texas/), of kidney failure, during a planned heart surgery. He was 72. He was the last surviving senior figure from the original CIA-organized crime anti-Castro collaboration - Giancana had been killed in 1975, Roselli in 1976, Maheu lived until 2008 but was a peripheral figure - and his death closed off the possibility of further firsthand testimony about what the collaboration involved.

The CIA-Trafficante-Giancana-Roselli axis remains one of the most thoroughly documented but least conclusively analyzed relationships in modern American intelligence history. The Church Committee established the relationship's existence and the deliberate concealment from the Warren Commission; what that relationship produced beyond the documented failed Castro assassination attempts - and whether its participants had any role in the Kennedy assassination - has never been definitively established.

[^1]: Church Committee (U.S. Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities). *Alleged Assassination Plots Involving Foreign Leaders.* Senate Report No. 94-465, 1975. Rappleye, Charles, and Ed Becker. *All American Mafioso: The Johnny Roselli Story.* Doubleday, 1991.
[^2]: House Select Committee on Assassinations. *Report of the Select Committee on Assassinations of the U.S. House of Representatives.* U.S. Government Printing Office, 1979. Scheim, David E. *Contract on America: The Mafia Murders of John and Robert Kennedy.* Shapolsky Publishers, 1988.
[^3]: Ragano, Frank, and Selwyn Raab. *Mob Lawyer.* Scribner, 1994. Scott, Peter Dale. *Deep Politics and the Death of JFK.* University of California Press, 1993.
