Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Godfather Vs. Vor

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Godfather Vs. Vor

    GODFATHER VS. VOR
    By Brian Palmer

    SLATE
    http://www.slate.com/id/2271186/
    Thursday, Oct. 14, 2010

    Who would win in a fight?

    An Armenian-American gang stole more than $35 million from Medicare,
    according to the Manhattan U.S. attorney. The government unsealed
    indictments against 44 people on Wednesday, including the first
    racketeering charges ever filed against a "vor," the Eurasian gangster
    equivalent of a godfather. It seems as if the power of Russian,
    Armenian, and other Eurasian mobsters is rising as the power of
    Italian Mafia declines. In a gangland battle between the vory and
    the godfathers, who would win?

    The godfathers. Most Italian crime families are hierarchical
    organizations.

    As the unquestioned leader, a godfather can order his foot
    soldiers into battle. Eurasian organized crime is a lot less
    ... organized. Their "gangs" are loosely affiliated networks of
    criminals who band together opportunistically-more like independent
    contractors than employees. While Russian, Armenian, and Georgian
    gangsters are certainly not above violence, they wouldn't enter into
    direct conflict with even the enfeebled Mafiosi of today. They don't
    have very many loyal gunmen, and turf battles aren't their style,
    anyway.

    The original vory v zakone, or "thieves in law," emerged from
    Soviet jails in the middle of the last century. They arrived in
    the United States in the 1970s and took over a few Russian ethnic
    communities. The most notorious vor was Evsei Agron of Brighton Beach,
    a classic Russian strongman who carried a cattle prod. Everyone knew
    the vory were criminals. Many sported intimidating tattoos and talked
    about how the U.S. government couldn't scare anyone who had survived
    the savage cruelty of the Gulag.

    Despite their bravado, the vory weren't strong enough to tangle
    with La Cosa Nostra. They avoided the Mafia's neighborhoods and their
    traditional portfolio-mainly extorting small and medium-size businesses
    for protection money. Many Russian kingpins moved into unexploited
    criminal niches like financial fraud. While these schemes occasionally
    necessitated bumping someone off, they didn't lend themselves to
    towering hierarchical organizations and legions of loyal enforcers.

    Today's Eurasian mob bosses have a wide variety of business interests,
    some of them totally legit. Many belong to country clubs and wear
    Armani suits.

    They so little resemble the old-school vory that prosecutors and
    journalists are the only ones who still refer to them that way.

    When Eurasian mobsters see a business opportunity, like a chance
    to defraud Medicare, they tap into their network to see who's
    available. Members include everyone from petty criminals to former
    KGB agents and Ph.D.s in economics. The mobsters prefer to send an
    operative with no criminal record to the United States to execute the
    scam. He establishes a post office box and collects checks until he
    thinks someone's getting wise. Then he disappears back into Russia,
    Armenia, or wherever else he can be sheltered.

    Having turned a tidy profit, the agent may never speak to the scheme's
    mastermind again. While the Teflon dons of the Mafia excelled at
    beating charges in court, Eurasian mobsters are rarely identified in
    the first place.

    Just because Eurasian gangsters don't command loyal armies doesn't
    mean they're not as dangerous as the Mafia. In many ways, they're
    more so. The Mafia's scams required them to be firmly rooted in
    their communities. They leaned on local businessmen and kept crooked
    politicians in their pockets.

    Those relationships held them in check. If a godfather put a hit on a
    pillar of the community, the citizens might call for his arrest. The
    local alderman, who also had the voters to worry about, might not be
    able to protect him.

    Transient, transnational Eurasian gangs who answer to no one have
    crossed lines the Mafia never would. They are known to have sold heavy
    arms to Islamic terrorists, for example. While he later recanted his
    statement, captured al-Qaida member Ibn al-Shaykh al Libi even claimed
    that Russian criminals provided the group with nuclear material.

    Brian Palmer is a freelance writer living in New York City. He can
    be reached at [email protected].




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X