[music] I can’t help. >> The year was 1974. The lights inside the Midsouth Coliseum in Memphis, Tennessee were blazing white hot. 15,000 people had packed into every seat, every aisle, every breathing inch of that arena. They had come to scream, to sweat, to witness the king.
But nobody, not one single soul in that crowd could have predicted what was about to happen. A small girl stood near the front of the stage, 9 years old, pigtails, a pale yellow dress her mother had pressed that morning with trembling, hopeful hands. Her eyes were open, but they saw nothing. Had never seen anything.
Born blind into a world of darkness and sound and sound she knew. Sound was everything. Her name was Lucy. She had heard Elvis Presley’s voice on an old AM radio in her family’s home just outside of Tupelo, Mississippi, the same town where Elvis himself had been born. and something in that voice had reached into her chest and rearranged something permanent.
She told her mother, “I just want to touch his face. I want to know what a voice like that looks like.” What happened next would break 15,000 people wide open. To understand that night, you have to understand the world Elvis Presley had built and the world that had built him.
He was born January 8th, 1935 in a two- room shotgun house in Tupelo, Mississippi. No indoor plumbing. A family so poor that poverty wasn’t a condition. It was just the weather. His father, Vernon, worked whatever jobs he could find. His mother, Glattis, loved Elvis with the fierce, consuming devotion of a woman who had already buried one son, Elvis’s twin brother, Jesse Garin, still born in that same small house.
From the very beginning, Elvis understood loss. He grew up in the pews of the Assembly of God Church, where gospel music wasn’t performed. It was survived. It moved through the body like electricity. He carried that voltage with him when his family packed up and moved to Memphis in 1948, settling into the Lauderdale Courts housing project on Winchester Avenue.
Memphis was loud and alive and crackling with rhythm and blues, country, gospel, and something that hadn’t quite been named yet. Elvis absorbed all of it. By 1954, he walked into Sun Studio on Union Avenue in Memphis and recorded That’s All Right with producer Sam Phillips. The sound that came out of that session didn’t fit any box anyone had built.
It was raw and dangerous and completely unmistakably American. Radio DJ Dwey Phillips played it on WHBQ and the phones didn’t stop ringing until dawn. By 1956, he was on the Eid Sullivan show broadcast to 60 million Americans and the country was never quite the same again.
But fame is a strange and heavy coat. And by 1974, Elvis had been wearing it for 20 years. He was tired in ways he couldn’t explain. The Las Vegas residencies, the movies that felt hollow, the divorce from Priscilla in 1973 that quietly shattered him. He still performed. Lord, he performed, but something was searching in him, searching for the reason it had all started.
He was about to find it in the face of a 9-year-old girl. The afternoon before the show, backstage at the Midsouth Coliseum smelled like hairspray and nervous energy, and the particular tension that gathers in rooms before something enormous. Elvis’s dressing room was a controlled storm. His longtime friend and road manager Joe Espazito was running through logistics.
The TCB band, James Burton on lead guitar, Glenn D. Harden on piano, Jerry Chef on bass, were warming up somewhere down the hall. The sweet inspirations were running vocal scales. The whole operation moved like a machine. Elvis stood in front of the mirror in his white jumpsuit, the Aztec Sun design, handsewn with gold stitching down the legs and across the chest, and stared at himself for a long time.
Joe, he said finally, “Do people still feel it? Or do they just come to see a show?” Joe didn’t answer right away. He’d learned over the years that some of Elvis’s questions weren’t really questions. They were prayers aimed at the air. Meanwhile, in the arena, Lucy and her mother, Diane, had arrived early.
Diane was a quiet woman from just outside of Booneville, Mississippi, who had raised her daughter alone since Lucy’s father left when Lucy was three. She worked the counter at a hardware store and had saved for 4 months to buy these tickets. Second Row Center. She had written a letter to Elvis’s management.
3 weeks before the show, a simple letter handwritten on notebook paper explaining who Lucy was and what she had asked for. She had received no response. But Diane had come anyway because when your 9-year-old daughter asks for one thing, one impossible, radiant thing, you put on your best dress and you show up.
They found their seats. Lucy sat perfectly still, her small hands folded in her lap, her head slightly tilted, listening. She could already hear the crowd building around her, the shuffling of thousands of feet, the rising hum of excited voices, the distant tuning of guitars. She smiled like someone receiving a gift they had already imagined 10,000 times.
Is the stage closed, mama? Real close, baby. Real close. At 8:47 p.m., the lights went down. 15,000 people lost their minds. The opening notes of also scratch zerustra. The 2001 a space odyssey theme thundered through the coliseum speakers with the somnity of a cathedral organ. It was the sound of something inevitable arriving.
Lucy grabbed her mother’s hand and then he walked out. The crowd erupted into something that wasn’t quite sound anymore. It was closer to a physical force, a pressure wave of pure human feeling. Elvis stepped to the microphone, spread his arms slightly, and smiled. Under those lights in that white jumpsuit, he looked like something the American South had conjured from its own mythology. He opened with CC Rider.
Then I Got a Woman. The TCB band was on fire. James Burton’s guitar work was precise and searing. The sweet inspiration stacked harmonies behind Elvis’s voice like layers of stained glass. Lucy was utterly still through all of it. While everyone around her screamed and pressed forward, she sat with her hands open in her lap, receiving every note like something sacred.
The music went into her through the floor, through her fingertips, through some channel that people with sight sometimes forget to leave open. Diane watched her daughter and felt something crack loose in her chest. About 30 minutes into the show, Elvis moved to the edge of the stage. He did this sometimes, crouched down, took scarves from around his neck, and handed them to the outstretched hands below.
The crowd surged forward with the predictable, urgent hunger of people who want to hold a piece of something beautiful. Diane saw her openings. She stood. She lifted Lucy up slightly and leaned toward the stage barrier. And with every ounce of courage she had, she called out, not screamed, called in that clear, carrying voice of a woman who has learned to be heard in difficult rooms.
Mr. Presley, my daughter, is blind. She just wants to know what your face feels like. For a moment, the words dissolved into the noise. But Elvis Presley heard them. He had always had that strange gift, the ability to hear a single human voice inside a hurricane of sound. Maybe it came from all those years in small churches where one voice could carry the weight of an entire congregation’s grief. Maybe it was just who he was.
He turned. He looked down from the stage and found Dian’s face in the crowd. Then he found Lucy’s, that small, still 9-year-old face tilted slightly upward. Not searching, not straining, just waiting with the patient dignity of someone who has learned to live entirely in the present moment.
Because the past and future hold nothing visual to long for. Elvis Presley stood there for three full seconds. Then he did something that no one in that building expected. He got down off the stage. Not a dramatic leap, not a performance. He simply sat at the edge, swung his legs over, and stepped down to the floor level.
And his security moved with him. And the crowd parted, not all at once, but the way crowds do when something real is happening. And everyone instinctively understands that you do not block it. He walked to where Lucy stood. He crouched down to her heights. And in a voice just loud enough for her and her mother and the front two rows to hear, he said, “Hi there, sweetheart. My name’s Elvis.
I heard you wanted to say hello.” Lucy turned her face toward his voice with the precision of a compass finding. >> “I know who you are,” she said. “You’re the man who lives in the radio.” Elvis laughed, a real laugh, not a performer’s laugh, but the laugh of a man from Tupelo who grew up with nothing and somehow became the voice in everybody’s radio and had somehow never heard it described. so perfectly before.
Can I? Lucy started then stopped. Suddenly shy in the way that children become shy when the enormous thing they dreamed about is suddenly terrifyingly real. “Go ahead,” Elvis said, and he leaned his face forward. Lucy raised both hands, those small, careful hands, and placed them gently on either side of Elvis Presley’s face.
The coliseum, for one suspended and extraordinary moment, went completely silent. 15,000 people held their breath as a blind girl read the face of the king. Her fingertips moved slowly over his cheekbones, across his jaw, over the soft architecture of his nose along his hairline. He stayed perfectly still, eyes closed, and if there were tears gathering behind those closed eyes, he would not have been the only one.
Lucy’s hands moved with the slow, deliberate reverence of someone reading something written in a language only they fully understand. She traced the line of his brow, the slight furrow between his eyes, the warm curve of his cheek where a smile had just lived. Her lips were parted slightly, and her expression was one of absolute unguarded concentration.
The face of a child assembling something in the dark, piece by careful piece, into a picture she would carry forever. Elvis did not move. Around them, 15,000 people stood frozen in a collective stillness so profound it felt almost holy. Grown men who had come to that arena in boots and belt buckles and the comfortable armor of southern masculinity stood with their hands pressed to their mouths.
Women who had screamed themselves horse 30 minutes earlier were now crying in total silence, tears running freely. No sound, no performance, just the naked, unstoppable response of human hearts witnessing something true. Joe Espazito stood just behind Elvis and later said he had seen Elvis perform for enormous crowds on six continents.
He had watched him bring Las Vegas to its feet night after night at the international hotel. He had seen him reduce audiences to pure animal sound with a single hip movement and a crooked grin. But he had never seen Elvis Presley look the way he looked in that moment. He looked like himself, Joe said, like the kid from Tupelo.
Not the king, not the icon, just himself. Lucy finished her quiet reading. She lowered her hands slowly and then she did something that nobody expected, least of all Elvis. She smiled and said simply and clearly, “You look exactly like you sound.” The coliseum exploded. It was not the screaming frenzy of a rock and roll crowd.
It was something deeper and more ungovernable than that, the sound of 15,000 people simultaneously releasing something they hadn’t known they were holding. Sobs and cheers tangled together into a single enormous human sound that bounced off the rafters of the Midsouth Coliseum, and by every account of everyone present, seemed to shake the building at its foundation. Elvis stood.
He straightened to his full height. He looked at Diane who was crying too hard to speak and he took her hand and held it for a moment with both of his. You raised something extraordinary? He told her. Then he turned back to Lucy. “Would you like to come sit on the side of the stage for the rest of the show?” he asked.
“So you can feel the music better.” Lucy turned to her mother. Diane nodded, unable to form words. and Elvis Presley led a blind 9-year-old girl from Booneville, Mississippi up the steps and onto the stage of the Midsouth Coliseum, where she sat in a chair just off the main platform. Her small shoes not quite reaching the floor, her hands pressed flat against the stage boards so she could feel every vibration that came through them.
What happened in the next 45 minutes was, by the account of every person in that building, the greatest performance of Elvis Presley’s life. Not the most technically polished, not the most choreographed, the greatest. He walked back to the microphone and stood there for a moment without speaking, looking out at 15,000 tear streaked faces.
The band waited, the sweet inspirations waited, the entire building waited. Then Elvis said into the microphone quietly enough that people had to lean into hear. I’d like to dedicate the rest of this show to a young lady sitting right over there. He pointed to Lucy. The crowd responded with a long rolling wave of warmth that moved through the building like a change in weather.
Then he nodded to Glenn de Harden at the piano. The opening notes of How Great Thou Art filled the coliseum. It was not a song anyone had expected. This was not a Vegas showstopper. This was not a radio hit built for stadium energy. This was a hymn, a slow, climbing, enormous hymn that Elvis had grown up singing in church in Tupelo and East Memphis.
a song that came from somewhere so deep in his formation that performing it was less like singing and more like excavation. He sang it differently that night. Every person who was present and many of them gave interviews about it for years afterward said the same thing that Elvis sang how great thou art that night as though he had never sung it before in his life.
As though the words had just arrived fresh and devastating and he was encountering them in real time and every line cost him something real. His voice in 1974 was different from the young man who had recorded That’s All right in 1954. 20 years of living, of grief, of loss and excess and loneliness disguised as glory.
All of it had moved through that voice and made it into something richer and more complicated than pure beauty. There was sorrow in it now. There was the knowledge of things that couldn’t be undone. But there was also gratitude. Raw enormous American gratitude. The kind that only comes from people who started with nothing and never fully stopped being amazed at what sound and God and luck can build.
Then sings my soul, my savior god to thee. James Burton’s guitar wept quietly underneath. How great thou art. How great thou art. On the side of the stage, Lucy sat with her hands pressed against the boards and her head was tilted back and her eyes were closed. Though they were always closed to the world, they had never looked more open.
The vibrations came up through the wood and into her palms and up her arms and into her small chest, and she was receiving something that had no name and needed none. Diane stood below, both hands pressed over her heart, watching her daughter. The sweet inspirations voices rose behind Elvis’s, stacking and lifting, and Elvis went to a register that made the building hold its breath.
that upper range where his voice thinned to something almost unbearably exposed, where there was no performance left, just the pure biological fact of a human being reaching towards something larger than themselves. When the last note ended, the silence lasted four full seconds. Then the coliseum came apart at the seams.
People who had brought cameras and forgotten to use them. People who would spend the rest of their lives trying to describe what they heard and always feeling that language had failed them. People who drove home that night changed in ways they couldn’t articulate to their families who simply said it was something else and stared at the middle distance.
Elvis stood at the microphone with his head bowed for a long moment. Then he looked over at Lucy. She was clapping small enthusiastic 9-year-old clapping with a grin so wide and unguarded that it looked like pure sunrise. Elvis laughed again. That real laugh, the Tupelo laugh. He crossed the stage to her. He crouched down again.
He said something into her ear that the microphones didn’t catch. And Lucy laughed too. And whatever it was passed between them and stayed there, private and permanent, belonging only to them. Before she left the stage, Elvis unclasped a gold chain he wore around his neck. A small gold cross that his mother Glattis had given him before she died in 1958.
The loss that had broken him in ways he had never fully repaired. And he pressed it into Lucy’s hand. “So you’ve got something to hold on to?” he said when the music’s playing. Lucy closed her fingers around it. Elvis Presley died on August 16, 1977 at his home at Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee. He was 42 years old.
The world stopped for several days and then kept going as the world does, carrying him inside it. Lucy grew up in Mississippi. She learned to play piano by ear remarkably well. People said she kept the gold cross her entire life, wore it everyday, and when people asked about it, she told them the story, and it never got smaller in the telling.
She said once in an interview many years later that she thought about that night often. Not about Elvis the legend or Elvis the cultural monument about the man who got down off a stage off the highest stage in American music and crouched down to the height of a 9-year-old girl because she wanted to know what a voice could look like.
He didn’t have to do that. She said famous people don’t have to do anything they don’t want to do. That’s the whole point of being famous. She paused. He wanted to. That’s what I remember. he wanted to. There is something about Elvis Presley that resists being filed away into history.
Something that keeps escaping the museum and walking back out into the living world, showing up in unexpected places in an old song on a car radio late at night in a gold cross pressed into a small blind girl’s hand in the memory of 15,000 people who packed into a coliseum in Memphis in 1974 and went home different.
He was a man from nowhere, Mississippi, who became the sound of a nation. And on one October night, he became something even rarer than that. He became simply, quietly, completely kind.
Read more:
Nobody in the FBI surveillance team watching the Warfield restaurant that morning expected what they were about to record. They had the camera positioned on the exterior of the building for weeks. They had the audio bug planted inside. They were watching for John Stanfa, the Sicilianborn Philadelphia mob boss who owned the building and stopped in most mornings before heading to his warehouse on Washington Avenue.
What they got instead was something they had no protocol for. Something that had no real precedent in the documented history of American organized crime. A mob hit beginning to end, captured on both audio and video simultaneously in which the man giving the order to shoot was the victim’s own younger brother.
The FBI watched it happen. They recorded every second of it and they could not stop any of it. What you are about to hear is not a story about a mob war between two rival factions. It is a story about what a mob war does to a family when that family is the fault line the war runs through.
It is a story about three brothers, one-inch prison, one on each side of a shooting, and a father in a federal cell who watched both sons he could still reach get destroyed before the year was out. The Canian Kaglini family, South Philadelphia, 1993. Here is everything. There is a conversation documented in federal testimony that tells you exactly where this story goes before you know a single name involved.
Tommy Horseheads Scapiti, a Philadelphia mob associate who eventually became a government witness, is sitting with Michael Chianka Gleini in the months before March 1993. Michael is 29 years old, lean, serious, with his father’s South Philadelphia bearing and his childhood friend Joey Merino’s recklessness bred into everything he does.
He looks at Scapiti and says the following words documented verbatim in his federal testimony. We’re going to go kill that grease ball and we’re going to go kill my brother. If you don’t want to do it, I’m going to kill you right here, right now. Scapiti freezes, not because of the threat to himself, because of the seven words in the middle of that sentence.
We’re going to go kill my brother. His brother is Joseph Joey Chang Chianka Gleini Junior, 34 years old, dark-haired, handsome, the underboss of the Philadelphia crime family. The man sitting in the back room of the Warfield Breakfast Restaurant on East Pacunk Avenue every morning at 5:58 a.m. preparing for another workday.
The man who taught Michael everything he knows about how this world operates. The man whose father is the same father. That documented sentence spoken casually as if announcing a schedule is the beginning, the middle, and the end of the Chian Kaglini story compressed into one breath.
Everything before it is context. Everything after it is consequence. Joseph Chicky Chiian Kagalini senior built his reputation in South Philadelphia across three decades as a feared capo in the Lucesi Allied Philadelphia crime family. He was not glamorous. He was not the kind of figure who ended up on magazine covers or talked to reporters.
He was the kind of man who made things happen quietly, accumulated power without attracting unnecessary attention, and produced three sons, John, Joseph Jr., and Michael, who inherited his neighborhood, his connections, and the specific weight of a name that meant something in South Philadelphia before any of them were old enough to understand what it meant.
When the FBI finished with Chicky Chunka Glennini in the mid 1980s, they had built a case strong enough for a 30year sentence. He went in. His boys were left to navigate what came after. John, the oldest, was arrested in 1988 and sentenced to 9 years for extortion. Joseph was in his late 20s trying to find his position in a family that had just lost Nikki Scaro to a five-year federal sentence and was waiting to see what came next.
Michael, the youngest of the three, had found his position already. He had found it in a grade school in Point Breeze, sitting next to a boy named Joseph Salvatore Merino Joey, the son of former under boss Chucky Merino, who was going to grow into the most flamboyant and dangerous figure in the Philadelphia family’s modern history.
Michael and Joey were inseparable. They were arrested together. They were convicted together. They built their rebellion together. And this is what John Stanfo walked into when the New York families installed him as Philadelphia boss in 1991. Not a unified family waiting for direction. A family with a fault line running directly through its most prominent bloodline.
Stanfa’s calculation was logical on paper. He looked at the chunkagini name, respected, feared, multigenerational, and saw a bridge. If he took Joseph, the middle brother, made him under boss, gave him the title and the authority. Joseph’s presence inside the administration would theoretically anchor the young Turks who were already murmuring about Stanfa’s legitimacy.
Joseph was not Michael. He was not connected to Merino’s rebellion. He was the steady one, the practical one, the one who opened a restaurant and ran it honestly alongside his mob work, who moved through the neighborhood without the specific recklessness that was going to get his brother killed.
What Stanford did not fully calculate or perhaps calculated and dismissed was the specific position he was creating for Joseph. Not a bridge, a target. a man whose boss needed him to control his own brother while his own brother was actively planning to destroy that boss. Every day Joseph Chiankini went to work as under boss of the Philadelphia family was a day he was positioned directly between two men who were moving toward each other with weapons.
The first shot in the Chonkaglini war is fired not in 1993 but a full year earlier. The 3rd of March, 1992. Michael Chiian Kaglini comes home from a basketball game and approaches his South Philadelphia house. Two men are waiting. They have shotguns. They open fire. Michael dives inside and takes cover. He survives.
He lies on the floor of his house in the dark and processes what just happened. Then he goes through the specific inventory of detail that a man raised in this world performs automatically the build, the walk, the way the shooter moved. He has known that walk his entire life. His brother Joseph was behind one of those guns, acting on Stanfa’s orders.
Michael gets up off the floor. He calls Joey Merino. He tells him what he now knows. From this moment, the Chanka family ceases to exist as a family in any meaningful sense. What remains is a father in federal prison, two brothers at war, and a clock running toward the 2nd of March, 1993. Stanfa attempts a ceasefire.
That September, he convenes a formal induction ceremony and makes both Merino and Michael Chianka Glein as official members of the Philadelphia crime family. He extends the ultimate institutional gesture, the ceremony that is supposed to mean loyalty, obligation, protection to the two men who are actively planning to end his tenure and kill his underboss.
Merino accepts the honors. Michael accepts the honors. Neither one of them slows down. The Warfield is the mechanism they choose. Joseph Chian Kaglini owns and operates the Warfield Breakfast and Lunch Restaurant on East Pion Avenue. He opens it every morning before 6:00 a.m. His routine is fixed, predictable, documented.
He is there every day. The FBI knows this, which is why they have a camera on the building’s exterior and an audio bug on the inside. Stanford knows this, which is why he goes there most mornings to talk before heading to his warehouse. Michael and Merino know this because Joseph is their brother and their underboss and they have known his schedule for years.
The original plan targets two men simultaneously. Joseph Chianagini is one. John Stanfa is the other. If both men die at the warfield on the same morning, the Philadelphia mob has no boss and no underboss before breakfast. What stops the plan from achieving its full design is something the hit team cannot control.
Stanfa does not come that morning. For reasons that are never clearly documented, Stanfa skips his usual visit to the warfield on the morning of the 2nd of March 1993. The hit team goes in anyway. 5:58 a.m. The FBI camera captures the station wagon at 5 hours 58 minutes and 18 seconds, driving right to left past the Warfield’s exterior.
22 seconds later, at 5 hours 58 minutes and 40 seconds, the figures come running from the direction of the station wagon. Three or four men masked, moving fast. They burst through the front door. The audio bug inside the warfield captures what the camera cannot see. Susan Lucabello, the waitress who rode to work with her boss that morning, who has set up the front of house and is waiting for the day to begin screams.
There are rapid footfalls a door. The storage room in the back of the building where Joseph Chian Kagini is working. He is shot three times in the head. Once in the foot, once in the shoulder. The men exit. The station wagon is gone. South Philadelphia is quiet again. The entire documented sequence from the station wagon’s first appearance to the exit of the last shooter is captured on both video and audio, making the Warfield shooting one of the only mob hits in American history, preserved completely in real time on government surveillance. Joseph Siani survives biologically. His heart keeps beating. His body continues to function in the most basic sense. He never speaks again. He never walks again. He never recovers any meaningful neurological function. He spends the rest of his life in a permanent vegetative state, neither dead nor alive
in any way that the man who walked into the warfield that morning would recognize as living. His brother, Michael, when told that Joseph survived the shooting, is documented to have expressed his frustration not at his brother’s survival, but at Stanfa’s absence. The man he wanted most was not in the building. Five months.
That is how long the distance between the two remaining acts of this story takes to close. The 5th of August, 1993. A sunny afternoon on the 600 block of Katherine Street, South Philadelphia. Joey Merino and Michael Chunkaglini are walking together outside their social club. Stanford’s gunman John VC and Philip Kleti are in a Ford Taurus circling waiting for this exact configuration of circumstances.
VC is in the back seat with a 9 mm. Kleti has a 45 in the front. They circle the block once to clear a bystander, V’s own brother, Billy, a childhood friend of Merinos, and then Kleti pulls alongside the two men on the sidewalk. Both men fire simultaneously. Michael Chiankini is hit in the arm and chest. He goes down. He tries to get up.
He falls again. He dies on the Catherine Street sidewalk. He is 30 years old. Joey Merino takes bullets in the leg and buttocks. He goes to the hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in stable condition. He survives. Michael does not. The Ford Taurus is found 35 blocks away, burned to the frame.
Hundreds attend Michael’s viewing at the Cartau Funeral Home. A neighbor interviewed by the Inquirer says, “Why’d he get killed? Look at the life he lived.” In a federal prison somewhere in the United States, Chicky Siani receives the second piece of news in 5 months. Joseph is in a hospital bed, permanently vegetative, destroyed by three bullets from men his brother sent.
Michael is dead on a South Philadelphia sidewalk, destroyed by bullets from a boss he spent two years trying to kill first. The father who gave his sons his name and his neighborhood and the specific inheritance of a family that had been inside the Philadelphia mob for 30 years is sitting in a cell having lost both sons he could still reach before the summer of 1993 is over.
John Stanfa is arrested on March 17, 1994 along with 23 of his associates on 31 racketeering charges. The mechanism of his fall is specific and documented. John Vzy, the gunman who killed Michael Chian Kaglini on Katherine Street, is lured to a second floor apartment above a meat store in January 1994 by Stanford’s own underboss, Frank Martins, who shoots him four times in the head and chest.
VC, who is by every account genuinely too tough to die, wrestles a knife from Martine’s partner, slashes Martines across the eye, and escapes down the stairs and onto the street. He goes to the FBI within days. His testimony, combined with what the FBI has already documented across years of surveillance, produces the indictment.
Stanfa is convicted in November 1995 and sentenced to life in 1996. Joey Merino takes control of what remains. He wins the war that Michael Chiian Kaglini died fighting. He is convicted of raketeering in 2001, serves 14 years, and remains the documented dominant figure in the Philadelphia family into the 2020s.
John Shankagini, the eldest Chang brother, who spent the entire war serving his own federal sentence, is eventually released. He rises to consiglier of the Philadelphia family. He is charged with simple assault following a brawl at Chicks and Pete sports bar in South Philadelphia in August 2024.
When reached by a reporter and asked about his history, he says, “No sir, don’t believe everything you read.” Chicky Sian Gleiny Joseph Senior, the feared Cappo, the man whose name built everything and whose sentence left his sons to navigate it alone, is released from federal prison. He never cooperates with federal authorities across decades of prosecution and every pressure applied to him.
He dies on March 6th, 2023 at age 88 at a facility in Philadelphia. Mob Talk Sitdown describes him as an ultimate standup guy. He dies having outlived two of his three sons, having watched both of them taken by the same war, having never spoken publicly about any of it from the moment he went in to the moment he died.
Joseph Joey Chang Chiian Kaglini Jr. is never charged, never prosecuted. The FBI tape of his own shooting plays at multiple trials. He is a victim. He remains in the condition produced by three bullets in the back of a South Philadelphia restaurant until his death. The man who walked into the warfield that mo
rning at 5:58 a.m. Dark-haired, handsome, the underboss of the Philadelphia crime family, the middle son of Chicky Siana Gleini, the brother standing between two sides of a war, does not come back from that storage room. And somewhere in the documented federal testimony that dismantled everything, Tommy Horseheads Scapiti’s words sit in the court record exactly as Michael Chiian Kaglini spoke them.
We’re going to go kill that [ __ ] and we’re going to go kill my brother. The matterof fact delivery. The casual inclusion of his own blood in the same sentence as his enemy. The specific thing that happens to a family when a mob war decides it has no use for the distinction between the two. The FBI tape is still in the evidence archive.
Susan Lucabelloo’s scream is still on it. The timestamp still reads 5 hours 58 minutes and 40 seconds. And three sons of a South Philadelphia Kappo are either dead, paralyzed, or old and charged with brawling in a sports bar. And the only man from that generation who died in his own bed was the one who went to prison first and missed the entire