As Netflix will premiere their three-part documentary series on the Philadelphia mob war in the 1990s, Mob War: Philadelphia vs. The Mafia, tomorrow, veteran organized crime reporter George Anastasia, who was a consultant on the documentary, offers a piece on the mob war for The Conversation.com.
The bloody mob war that is the focus of the new Netflix series “Mob War: Philadelphia vs. The Mafia,” which premieres Oct. 22, 2025, is full of the murder and
mayhem, treachery and deceit that have been the hallmarks of the nation’s Cosa
Nostra family conflicts.
What was
different in Philadelphia was that the FBI had it all wired for sound.
Electronic
surveillance has been a major tool in the government’s highly successful war
against the Mafia nationwide, but nowhere has its impact been felt more dramatically than in Philadelphia.
As a reporter
for The Philadelphia Inquirer, I covered this mob war in real time from
1994 through 2000. Now I teach a course at Rowan University on the history of
organized crime, using the war as a case study, and I was a consultant on the
Netflix series.
The war pitted
one faction of the Philadelphia mob, headed by Sicilian-born John Stanfa, against a rival faction led by Joseph “Skinny Joey” Merlino.
The issues were control of all illegal operations in the underworld – gambling,
loan-sharking, drug-dealing and extortion. Money was the bottom line, but there
also was a cultural and generational divide that had Stanfa and, for the most
part, his group of older wiseguys facing off against Merlino and his crew of young South Philadelphia-born mobsters.
But only after
indictments were handed down and evidence was introduced at trials did the
extent of the electronic surveillance operation become known.
Mobsters, speaking in unguarded moments and unaware that the feds
were listening, buried themselves.
So here was mob
boss Stanfa discussing with an associate plans to lure Merlino and two of his
two lieutenants to a meeting where they would be killed:
“See, you no
gotta give a chance,” the Sicilian-born Stanfa said in his halting English.
“Bam, bam … Over here is best, behind the ear.”
Or here was Salvatore Profaci, a New York mobster brought in to quietly settle a dispute
that had gone public after mob lawyer Salvatore Avena filed a
multimillion-dollar lawsuit against his mobbed-up business partner in a
trash-hauling business.
“Goodfellas
don’t sue goodfellas,” Profaci said in a line that couldn’t have been written
any better by “The Godfather” author Mario Puzo or delivered
more effectively by the award-winning actor Robert De Niro.
“Goodfellas kill goodfellas.”
You can read the rest of the piece and watch the documentary trailer
via the below link:
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