| Prime Time for Irish Crime
By Tom deignan
FROM Boston to Chicago, from Hell’s Kitchen to a fictional enclave
in Rhode Island, Irish crime is all the rage these days.
All these years after the Irish had supposedly melted into the great American
ethnic pot, it seems people are still fascinated with both real life and
fictional Irish troublemakers.
In recent days, the new Showtime series Brother-hood has gotten a lot
of attention.
Brotherhood, which is featured in this week’s “Craic”
section, stars Irish Hollywood veteran Fionnula Flanagan as Rose Caffee
and is set in an Irish Rhode Island neighborhood known as “The Hill.”
Brotherhood, which has received rave reviews as well as comparisons to
The Sopranos, explores the tension between two of Rose’s sons.
Tommy Caffee (Jason Clarke) is a family man who has made a name for himself
in politics. In the show, Tommy’s brother Mike (Jason Isaacs), a
known gangster, returns to the neighborhood with plans of his own.
Though set in Rhode Island, Brotherhood bears more than a passing resemblance
to the real-life stories of Boston’s Irish Bulger brothers - one
a politician, the other a gangster.
Speaking of the brothers Bulger, if you think Brotherhood has kicked off
some sort of Irish crime trend then you obviously have not been reading
of late. Four books about the Boston Irish mob hit bookstores earlier
this year.
There was Kevin Weeks’ Brutal: The Untold Story of My Life Inside
Whitey Bulger’s Irish Mob (Regan Books). While promoting the book,
Weeks blasted fellow gangster/author John (Red) Shea, who penned Rat Bastards:
The Life and Times of South Boston’s Most Honorable Irish Mobster.
(William Morrow)
“He’s exaggerating his role,” Weeks said of Shea in
The New York Times.
Shea spent over a decade in jail on drug charges. He responded by blasting
Weeks, whose own jail sentence was cut because he cooperated with prosecutors.
“I don’t think any rat deserves any publicity,” said
Shea.
Also published recently is The Brothers Bulger: How They Terrorized and
Corrupted Boston for a Quarter Century (Warner Books) by Boston Herald
columnist Howie Carr, exploring Bulger and his brother Billy, a former
state senator and University of Massachusetts president.
The final entrance in all of this is Patrick Nee’s A Criminal and
an Irishman: The Inside Story of the Boston Mob-IRA Connection (Steerforth).
Meanwhile, over in Chicago, a real-life story of corruption has put a
crusading prosecutor who is the son of Irish immigrants on a collision
course with the son of an Irish American political legend.
U.S. Attorney Patrick J. Fitzgerald — who made headlines for steering
the recent CIA leak case in Washington — is claiming victory after
a jury convicted four city officials on charges of corruption.
Fitzgerald, whose father was a Manhattan doorman, has alleged that Chicago’s
City Hall runs a “machine,” in which favors are doled out
only to those who play by the administration’s rules.
Chicago’s City Hall, of course, is currently occupied by Richard
Daley, son of the king-making former mayor who bore the same name.
As The New York Times recently wrote of the Chicago corruption scandal,
“The convictions have left many people wondering how much closer
to Mayor Richard M. Daley a federal investigation that has been rising
up the ranks of City Hall might go, and what consequences it could have
as he faces re-election for a fifth term next year.”
Daley’s father Richard J., of course, was a six-term mayor and quintessential
Irish American big city politician.
Will Richard Junior’s path eventually collide with Fitzgerald’s?
We’ll see.
As if all of this weren’t enough, the new fall TV season includes
The Black Donnellys, a drama about — you guessed it — four
Irish brothers and their involvement in organized crime in the historically
Irish neighborhood of Hell’s Kitchen on Manhattan’s West Side.
What can we make of all this? Have Irish American bad guys been overlooked
for so long that only now these stories are bubbling up to the surface
from the murky bottom?
Or are Irish Americans now making the same mistake some other ethnic groups
have made by celebrating the sinners among them?
Never mind. I’d better watch what I say.
(Contact Sidewalks at tomdeignan@earthlink.net)
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