The Good Guys: How We Turned the FBI 'Round —and Finally Broke the Mob
| About/Subject | FBI Agents, American Mafia, Mafia Commission Trial |
| Publisher | Simon & Schuster |
| Format | Hardback |
| Language | English |
| Location | Unted States Of America |
| First Hardback Printing | 1996 |
| Pages / Font | 383 pages |
| Barcode | 9-780684-810157 |
| EAN 5 | 52400 |
| Chapters | No chapters listed in front of book. I will manually update later. |
| Notes | This is the story of how the FBI finally got up with the times during the mid 1970's and into the 1980's and finally acknowledged the existence of Italian Organized Crime in America. They started utilizing a law written by a Notre Dame professor named G. Robert Blakey in 1970. It is the R.I.C.O. Act. It says that if you can prove a criminal is part of an ongoing criminal enterprise, and you can prove two crimes as defined by the law, then you can charge everyone inside that criminal enterprise, not just the criminal who committed the individual crime. In the 1970's and into the 1980's the FBI became quite adept at using the R.I.C.O. Law, which led to The Commission Case of 1986, which put the heads of the Five Crime Families in New York in prison for over a 100 years each. |
Added by saunders1215 · Last edited by AgathaCrustie


