The silence broke. Facing life sentences, the soldiers did the unthinkable: they talked. The 1990s and early 2000s were a graveyard for the old guard, as the internet and advanced surveillance made the old ways of "earning" impossible. The Five Families were written off as a relic of a bygone, blood-soaked era. The Resurgence: The Digital Underworld But power, like nature, abhors a vacuum.
In the 2020s, the families didn't return with Tommy guns; they returned with encryption. The new "earners" are tech-savvy. They’ve traded street-corner bookmaking for offshore gambling sites and construction racketeering for sophisticated healthcare fraud and dark-web money laundering. Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgenc...
The mahogany table in the back of Rao’s wasn’t just furniture; it was the altar of East Harlem. For decades, the bosses of the —the Genovese, Gambino, Lucchese, Bonanno, and Colombo—had sat there, carving up New York like a Thanksgiving turkey. The silence broke