Skip to main content

Effectiveness of the Government's Attack on La Cosa Nostra

T-OSI-88-2 Published: Apr 11, 1988. Publicly Released: Apr 11, 1988.
Jump To:
Skip to Highlights

Highlights

GAO discussed the effectiveness of the U.S. government's law enforcement efforts directed at La Cosa Nostra, a sophisticated national criminal organization. GAO noted that La Cosa Nostra: (1) consists of several tiers of criminal enterprises, employing at least 2,000 members, with each member having various associates; (2) depends on violence for enforcement, competition elimination, and administration; and (3) makes money through involvement in street vice, murder, political corruption, and labor-union domination. GAO also found that federal efforts to curtail La Cosa Nostra include: (1) increasingly sophisticated use of electronic surveillance methods; (2) joint work with state and local agencies and commissions; (3) a focus on administrative heads within the organization, resulting in the conviction of 16 criminal bosses and depletion of criminal ranks; (4) civil suits seeking trusteeship of organized-crime-dominated labor unions; and (5) enactment of legislation producing longer sentences and encouraging witness cooperation. GAO believes that future federal efforts should include: (1) careful strategic planning; (2) restructuring of industries most vulnerable to organized crime; (3) rapid implementation of legislative tools; (4) vigorous enforcement of immigration laws to keep other foreign criminals from establishing organizations in the United States; (5) further actions against organized-crime-dominated unions; (6) attacks on member recruitment and induction; and (7) increasing public understanding and awareness of criminal activities.

Full Report

Media Inquiries

Sarah Kaczmarek
Managing Director
Office of Public Affairs

Public Inquiries

Topics

Crime preventionCriminalsFederal legislationImmigrantsLabor unionsLaw enforcementOrganized crimePolitical corruptionCriminal activitiesEmployee retirements