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The Irish mob (also known as the Irish-American mafia or Irish-American organized crime) refers to groups composed of largely ethnic members which operate primarily in the United States, and have existed since the early 19th century. Originating in first depicted in 's 1927 book, The Gangs of New Yorkthe Irish Mob has appeared in most major U.S. and Canadian cities, especially in the and the urban industrial , including , New York City, , , , , and .


United States

New York

Pre-prohibition
Irish-American street gangs, such as the (led by future Congressman ) and , dominated New York's underworld for well over a century. Beginning in the 1880s and 1890s, however, they faced competition from gangs consisting of recently arrived Italians and Jews. The Five Points Gang (led by Paul Kelly) would rise to prominence during the early 1900s, strongly rivaled by the , the , and others during the period.

In the early 1900s, with Italian criminal organizations such as the Morello crime family encroaching on the waterfront, various Irish gangs united to form the White Hand Gang. Although initially successful in keeping their Black Hand Italian rivals at bay, unstable leadership and infighting would lead to their eventual downfall. The murders of , , and led to the gang's disappearance by 1925. The waterfront was then taken over by Italian mobsters , , and . The Irish mob would re-emerge in USA's coal country and remain strong.


Prohibition
During the early years of Prohibition, "Big" Bill Dwyer emerged among many in New York's underworld as a leading bootlegger. However, following his arrest and trial for violation of the during 1925 and 1926, Dwyer's former partners were split among , the English-born former leader of the Gopher Gang, and against Jack "Legs" Diamond, , and renegade mobster .


The Westies
are an Irish American gang hailing from Hell's Kitchen on the West Side of Manhattan.

The most prominent members have included , , Mickey Featherstone, , and .

In the Irish/Italian Mob War of the 1970s, the Irish mob saw an increased threat from the Italian Mafia as the Genovese crime family sought control over the soon-to-be-built Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. Also around this time, a power struggle emerged between Mickey Spillane and James Coonan, a younger upstart from Hell's Kitchen. Since the convention center was located in Spillane's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood, Spillane refused to allow any involvement by the Italians. Although the Italian gangsters greatly outnumbered the members of the Irish mob, Spillane was successful in keeping control of the convention center and Hell's Kitchen. The Italians, frustrated and embarrassed by their defeat by Spillane, responded by hiring a rogue Irish-American hitman named Joseph "Mad Dog" Sullivan to assassinate , Eddie "the Butcher" Cummiskey, and Tom "the Greek" Kapatos, three of Spillane's top lieutenants.

In 1977 Spillane was murdered in a hail of bullets by assassins from the Genovese crime family. This prompted Coonan to form an alliance with of the Gambino crime family. The Genoveses decided that the Westies were too violent and well-led to go to war with and mediated a truce via the Gambinos.

Coonan was imprisoned in 1986 under the RICO act. Featherstone became an informant after his arrest in the early 1980s.


Boston

Prohibition
Boston has a well-chronicled history of Irish mob activity, particularly in the heavily Irish-American cities and neighborhoods like Somerville, Charlestown, ("Southie"), Dorchester and Roxbury where the earliest Irish gangsters arose during Prohibition. Frank Wallace of the dominated Boston's underworld until his death in 1931, when he was ambushed by Italian gangsters in the North End. Numerous gang wars between rival Irish gangs during the early and mid 20th century would contribute to their decline.


The Winter Hill Gang
The Winter Hill Gang, a loose confederation of Boston-area organized crime figures, was one of the most successful organized crime groups in American history. It controlled the Boston underworld from the early 1960s until the mid-1990s. It derives its name from the Winter Hill neighborhood of Somerville, Massachusetts, north of Boston, and was founded by first boss James "Buddy" McLean.

While Winter Hill Gang members were alleged to have been involved with most typical organized crime-related activities, they are perhaps best known for fixing horse races in the northeastern United States. Twenty-one members and associates, including , Joe McDonald, , and Sal Sperlinga were indicted by federal prosecutors in 1979. The gang was then taken over by James J. "Whitey" Bulger and hitman and was headquartered in . During the 1980s, Bulger's criminal associates were , , and Billy Shea.

The present Winter Hill Gang operates in secrecy and often avoids drawing public attention and scrutiny. With the activation of RICO law, the Winter Hill Gang's ranks were quickly thinned with federal indictments against key players like George Hogan and Scott "Smiley" McDermott. The Winter Hill Gang quickly disbanded in the late 90s to early 2000s after many of the federal indictments failed to stick due to a lack of evidence and cooperating witnesses.


Irish Mob War
The Irish Mob War is the name given to conflicts throughout the 1960s between the two dominant Irish-American organized crime gangs in Massachusetts: the in , led by brothers Bernard and Edward "Punchy" McLaughlin, and the Winter Hill Gang of Somerville (just north of Boston) headed by James "Buddy" McLean and his associates, and Joe McDonald. It is widely believed that the war began when George McLaughlin tried to pick up the girlfriend of Winter Hill associate Alex "Bobo" Petricone, also known as actor . McLaughlin was then beaten and hospitalized by two other Winter Hill members. Afterward, Bernie McLaughlin went to Buddy McLean for an explanation. When McLean refused to give up his associates, Bernie swore revenge but was soon killed by McLean in Charlestown City Square.

The war resulted in the eradication of the Charlestown Mob with its leaders, Bernie and Edward McLaughlin, and Stevie and Connie Hughes all having been killed. George McLaughlin, the one who started the war, was the only one who survived by being sent to prison. McLean was also killed, by Charlestown's Hughes brothers, and leadership of The Winter Hill Gang was taken by his right-hand man, and mentor, Joe McDonald. The remnants of the Charlestown Mob were then absorbed into the Winter Hill Gang, who were then able to become the dominant non-Mafia gang in the New England area.

In the early 1970s, another mob war was taking place in between two other Irish-American gangs: the , which controlled and , and the , which was made up of thieves. In 1971, Killeen enforcer Billy O'Sullivan was shot and killed outside his house. The following year, was murdered and the remaining members of both organizations were absorbed into the Winter Hill Gang. One of Killeen's key associates was . In 1973, Bulger was appointed by Howie Winter to operate the South Boston rackets. Throughout the remainder of the 1970s, Bulger used his influence to have rival mobsters murdered. Among his victims were Spike O'Toole, , Eddie Connors and .


FBI corruption
During the 1970s and 1980s, the FBI's Boston office was largely infiltrated through corrupt federal agent John J. Connolly, by which Whitey Bulger was able to use his status as a government informant against his rivals (the extent of which would not be revealed until the mid to late 1990s).

The scandal was the basis for the non-fiction book Black Mass and its 2015 dramatic film adaptation, and it was partially the inspiration for the film .


Philadelphia

Pre-prohibition
The prominent Irish street gang pre-twentieth-century were the Schuylkill Rangers headed by , whose boyhood home was located on Arch Street in the area between Eighteenth and Nineteenth Street known as "McAran's Garden".

After numerous arrests for theft and similar offenses, Haggerty and Schuylkill Ranger Hugh Murphy were convicted of the robbery of a Ninth Street store and sentenced to ten years imprisonment on December 12, 1865. He was pardoned by Governor Andrew G. Curtin eight months later, in part due to Haggerty's political connections and his promise to leave the country upon his release, and lived in Canada for a brief time before returning to the city to resume his criminal career. Haggerty remained a major underworld figure in Philadelphia until January 1869 when he was arrested on several counts of assault with intent to kill; during his arrest, he shot the arresting police officer. He was caught trying to escape from prison but was later released on bail and fled the city. Staying in New York City for a brief time, he returned to Philadelphia in April to surrender himself to authorities after the wounded police officer had received "". He won both court cases against him but was ordered at the second trial to return to the Eastern State Penitentiary by the District Attorney for violating the terms of his release. While his lawyers argued the ruling, Haggerty disappeared from the courthouse during a recess in what was suspected to have been a planned escape.


Prohibition
Daniel "Danny" O'Leary fought with Maxie Hoff over control of 's bootlegging throughout Prohibition. Jack "Legs" Diamond was a prominent mobster in both Philadelphia and New York City.


Post–World War II and the K&A Gang
In the years following World War II, the K&A Gang was the dominant Irish gang in the city's underworld. A multi-generational organized crime group made up of predominantly Irish and Irish American gangsters, the gang originated from a youth street gang based around the intersections of Kensington and Allegheny, which grew in power as local hoods and blue-collar Irish Americans seeking extra income joined its ranks. In time, the group expanded and grew more organized, establishing lucrative markets in gambling, loan sharking, and burglary.

The gang moved into the trade in the late 1980s and expanded into the Fishtown and Port Richmond neighborhoods. John Berkery, a member of the K&A burglary crew, became leader of the gang and was influential in expanding the drug trade. In 1987, Scarfo crime family soldier Raymond Martorano, Berkery, and dozens of others, were indicted for their involvement in a large methamphetamine ring.


Chicago

Prohibition
The successors of Michael Cassius McDonald's criminal empire of the previous century, the Irish-American criminal organizations in Chicago were at their peak during Prohibition, specializing in and . However, they would soon be rivaled by Italian mobsters, particularly and the .

The organizations existing before Prohibition – including the North Side Gang, which included Dion O'Banion, , , and ; the Southside O'Donnell Brothers, with the McKenna Crime family; the Westside O'Donnell's (led by Myles O'Donnell); Ragen's Colts; the ; ; ; James Patrick O'Leary; and – most of them were in competition with Capone for control of the bootlegging market.


Cleveland

Pre-Prohibition
The (also known as the Angle), Haymarket (was located at the site of the Gateway Sports and Entertainment Complex), Ohio City, , and Whiskey Island neighborhoods produced prominent pre-prohibition gangs included the McCart Street Gang and the Cheyenne Gang.://case.edu/ech/articles/h/haymarket The Blinky Morgan Gang became notorious after a robbery led to the murder of Detective William Hulligan. The crime was extensively covered, in newspapers, and a reward of $16,000 was offered. Most of the gang was caught, in Michigan, after being infiltrated by undercover police.

Publisher Daniel R. Hanna Sr. hired Chicago gangsters and Arthur B. McBride as heavies during the Cleveland circulation wars between the Cleveland Leader and verses The Plain Dealer.


Prohibition and the Cleveland Syndicate
Thomas Joseph McGinty known as Blackjack McGinty, was a former professional featherweight boxer, one of the city's largest bootleggers, and operated gambling establishments on West 25th Street as well as the Mounds Club in Lake County. The Mounds Club was repeatedly raided by law enforcement, including Safety Director , and was eventually shut down in 1950.

McGinty was a member of the Cleveland Syndicate, which was also composed of Jewish gangsters , , Maurice Kleinman, Sam Tucker, and Charles Polizzi the adopted brother of , head of the Italian Mayfield Road Mob.Paul A. Tenkotte and James C. Claypool (2009) The Encyclopedia of Northern Kentucky. The University Press Of Kentucky. P. 200. It operated casinos in Youngstown, Northern Kentucky and Florida. John and Martin O'Boyle were also part of the Irish faction of the Syndicate.Newton, Michael (2009). Mr. Mob: The Life and Crimes of Moe Dalitz. McFarland.

The Syndicate had significant operations, in Newport, Kentucky and Northern Kentucky, which had eighteen casinos or gambling halls, including the original The Flamingo Hotel & Casino opens (1946), and Tropicana. A notable casino was The Beverly Hills Club, which had high-profile entertainment acts such as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Nat King Cole. These establishments were the precursors to the casinos built in Las Vegas. The Syndicate's reign, in Northern Kentucky, came to an end following a botched attempt to discredit , a reform minded candidate for sheriff and a federal crack down during the Kennedy Administration.

McGinty and other members of the Syndicate were founders of the in Las Vegas. He was also involved in 's Hotel Nacional de Cuba in Havana, Cuba. McGinty held an interest in numerous race tracks, including Maple Heights, Fair Grounds Race Course, Thistledown Racecourse, Fairmount Park Racetrack, , and the Agua Caliente Racetrack. (see McGinty's obituary)

In the 1930s, James "Shimmy" Patton and Daniel T. Gallagher operated a large movable casino known as the Harvard Club at several locations on Harvard Ave. It could accommodated 500–1,000 people and was one of the largest casinos between New York and Chicago. It defied numerous raids until it was finally shut down by in 1941

"Handsome" Larry Davidson a former prohibition agent, and Dan F. Coughlin operated a rum-running organization on Lake Erie from Cleveland. The ring imported liquor from Canada to and Toledo and then distributed the alcohol to the Chicago area. [2] The gang also had an overland route from Florida to transport booze. A member of the ring, Ollie Zess, bribed Coast Guardsmen to accomplish the bootlegging.

In the late 1930s, Arthur B. McBride launched a wire service that supplied bookmakers with the results of horse races. He also invested in the Continental Press and Empire News, both based in Cleveland and run by mobsters Morris "Mushy" Wexler and Sam "Gameboy" Miller. , another friend and associate in the wire business, was murdered in 1946 in a Chicago gangland feud. A federal grand jury in 1940 indicted 18 people, including McBride and Wexler, over the supply of information used in gambling. The allegations were based on federal laws that forbade interstate transmission of lottery results; prosecutors treated the race results as lottery lists. He was never arrested or tried over his role in the business. McBride went on to found the .


Post World War II
In the 1960s and 70s, the Kilbane Brothers, Martin, and Owen Kilbane operated prostitution, gambling, and loan sharking rackets on Cleveland's east side. The Kilbane Brothers were convicted of murder for hire of Marlene Steele by her husband Euclid Municipal Judge Robert Steele. The Kilbane Brothers were also convicted of killing Andrew Prunella, a rival pimp and gangster.


Danny Greene
, was the former president of the Longshoreman Local 1317, who was ousted for corruption. He then became an enforcer for mobster Alex "Shondor" Birns. Also, Mayfield Road Mob underboss, Frank "Little Frank" Brancato employed Greene as muscle for the city's garbage rackets. Greene got into a dispute with a garbage hauler "Big Mike" Frato. Greene caused his car to be blown up. Following this Frato attacked Greene in a park and fired three shots, which missed. Greene shot and killed Frato during the attack.

Greene formed a crew known as "The Celtic Club." He moved into the vending machine racket, which was controlled by Thomas "The Chinaman" Sinto. His relationship with Alex "Shondor" Birns also soured after a dispute concerning a loan. Birns and Greene put contracts on each other. Birns was murdered by a car bomb, which was planted by a Hell's Angel member who was hired by a Greene associate.

the head of the Mayfield Road Mob died, leaving a power vacuum. and both attempted to take control. Open warfare broke out between the Licavoli and Nardi factions. Greene backed 's claim. The Licavoli faction had difficulty killing Greene and hired , a Buffalo gangster, to kill Greene.

The war was costly. Mayfield Road Mob Consigliere Leo "Lips" Moceri was murdered. was killed exiting the Teamsters Joint Council 41 office by a car bomb. was murdered coming out of his dentist's office by a car bomb. During the war, 37 car bombs were used and Cleveland went by the moniker "Bomb City, USA." Throughout Greene's criminal activities he was a top-echelon informant for the FBI.

was arrested for the killing and flipped on the Mayfield Road Mob and other gangsters. This led to numerous arrests. During the investigation, , the boss of the Los Angeles crime family became a government informant. This was the first time a mafia boss became a cooperative government witness. Greene's story became the subject of the film Kill the Irishman.

Members of Greene's crew, Kevin McTaggart, Keith Ritson, Frederick (Fritz) Graewe, and Hartmut (Hans the Surgeon) Graewe went on to work in a drug ring with . The drug ring was a major distributor of marijuana and cocaine. The ring was responsible for 19 murders. Ritson was murdered while in the ring, McTaggart was sentenced to life and the Graewe Brothers were sentenced to lengthy prison terms. As of 2024, McTaggart remains in prison despite a push from attorneys and support from public figures in Cleveland.


Detroit
The Joseph "Legs" Laman gang specialized in the "snatch racket," which involved kidnapping wealthy bootleggers and gamblers. Many kidnappings attributed to the Purple Gang were committed by the Laman gang. The gang ran into trouble when it began kidnapping legitimate business people. During a ransom pickup of David Cass, a wealthy real estate dealer, the police arrived and Laman was shot and taken into custody. After Laman was arrested his associates executed Cass. Laman turned state's witness and the gang was broken up. Laman was sentenced to 30 to 40 years in prison.


Hot Springs, Arkansas
was a former bootlegger, who controlled the Hell's Kitchen rackets and owned several night clubs including the . Madden relocated to Hot Springs, Arkansas in 1935. Upon arriving he operated the Hotel Arkansas casino and a wire service. During Madden's time Hot Springs became a gambling hot spot with had ten large casinos, numerous smaller gambling dens, and off-track betting parlors.


Milwaukee

Minneapolis
Tommy Banks operated an organization known as the Minneapolis Syndicate that engaged in bootlegging. and his two brothers led a Jewish-American organized crime mob known as the Minneapolis Combination and as "The AZ Syndicate". Banks and Cann divided Minneapolis into territories with a handshake and worked side by side both during and after prohibition. Another powerful Irish-American gangster based in Minneapolis was Edward G. Morgan, alias "Big Ed", whom Paul Maccabee has described as, "a king and muckraking journalist for the Twin City Reporter ", who operated in a close alliance with St. Paul-based Irish mob boss .Paul Maccabee (1993), John Dillinger Slept Here: A Crooks Tour of Crime and Corruption in St. Paul 1920-1936, Minnesota Historical Society Press. Page 3.


New Orleans
An early prohibition gang, the Terminal Gang consisted of many from the Irish Channel neighborhood, including Frankie Mullen, Harold “The Parole King” Normandale, and Fred Kelly. The gang was closely aligned with Democratic and was named for the Terminal Station where many acted as livery drivers. The gang would rob fares as well as engaging in gambling, alcohol, and narcotics rings. The gang was decimated after the defeat of .

William Bailey and business partner Manuel Acosta operated a bootleg and hijack gang during prohibition. In 1930, Bailey was murdered on the orders of New Orleans crime family acting boss Silvestro Carollo. New Orleans Police believed the killing was in retaliation for a liquor hijacking.


Oklahoma City
An Irish prison gang established itself as an alternative to the Aryan Brotherhood. The gang expanded from dealing drugs in prison to drug trafficking in Oklahoma, Kansas, and California. In 2015 they were involved in a deadly prison riot where four people died including two members of the Irish Mob, all charges were dismissed against everyone involved. In 2018 3 members of the Irish Mob would be arrested for intimidation witnesses in the deadly gang shootout between Aryan Brotherhood members and Irish Mob members near a motel in Oklahoma. In 2022 the would claim to have effectively dismantled the Oklahoma Irish Mob after a five year long investigation that resulted in 125 arrests. One of those arrested was David Postelle, brother of then recently executed inmate . Both brothers where arrested and imprisoned for a quadruple murder they committed in 2005.


Rock Island
John Patrick Looney controlled gambling, prostitution, illegal liquor, extortion, and protection rackets in Rock Island. He studied law and was admitted to the Illinois Bar in 1889. He was a member of the Democratic Party. He operated a newspaper, which was used to blackmail opponents. He controlled approximately 150 gambling dens. The Looney gang entered into a war with William Gabel's gang. During the war, William Gabel and John Patrick Looney's son, Connor Looney, were murdered. Looney was later charged and convicted of the murder of Willam Gabel. He was sentenced to 14 years in prison and served 8½ years. Looney died in 1942 at a tuberculosis sanitarium in El Paso, Texas. Looney served as the model for John Looney, a major character in Max Allan Collins' graphic novel Road to Perdition. The character was renamed John Rooney and portrayed by Paul Newman in Sam Mendes' 2002 film adaptation.


Southern Illinois
The Shelton Brothers Gang was an early Prohibition-era gang that controlled bootlegging in Southern Illinois. The Shelton Brothers Gang and rival gang engaged in a war with the Ku Klux Klan that concluded with a shoot out at Herrin. The attack broke the back of the KKK's leadership and widespread bootlegging continued. The Shelton Brothers Gang engaged in a war with 's gang that concluded, in 1925, when the Shelton Brothers were convicted of the murder of a mail carrier. In 1928, was convicted of ordering the killing Joe Adams, the mayor of West City, Illinois, a Shelton backer, and hanged.


St. Louis
Thomas Egan and formed Egan's Rats, a large organized gang. A rival led by Edward "Jelly Roll" Hogan also operated in the city. The gangs engaged in the Egan-Hogan War of 1921–23, which resulted in the breakup of Egan's Rats.


Toledo
Jack Kennedy controlled bootlegging and operated nightclubs in Toledo. Kennedy became involved in a turf war with 's gang. An enforcer of the Licavoli gang and childhood friend of Kennedy, Joseph "Wop" English, killed Kennedy. Licavoli was arrested for conspiracy to commit murder in the slayings of Kennedy and three other club owners. Convicted, in 1934, Licavoli was sentenced to life imprisonment at the Ohio Penitentiary, despite attempts by Cleveland mobster to secure parole.

Gerald James Hayes, known as "Gentleman Jimmy", Hayes moved from Cleveland to Toledo as a child and eventually worked as a taxi cab driver. He sold his interest in the limo business and operated the Villa, Ramona Casino, Hollywood Club, Point's Casino, and Club Manito. He also opened a few clubs in the Cleveland area. In 1934, Hayes was found murdered, in Detroit, where he had been watching a World Series game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the Detroit Tigers. His wife, Eleanor, continued to operate his casinos for several years following his death. There is speculation that Hayes was murdered by 's gang because he may have been called as a witness in Licavoli's Kennedy murder trial or the Licavoli gang was trying to take over his gaming operations.


Ireland
Organized crime in Ireland


Canada

Montreal

West End Gang
The West End Gang is one of 's most influential organized crime groups. Active since the early 1900s and still active today, their rise to notoriety did not begin until the 1960s when they were known simply as the "Irish gang". Their criminal activities were focused on, but not restricted to, the west side of . Most of the gang's earnings in the early days were derived from truck hijackings, , , protection racket, , and .

The gang, which is dominated by – but not exclusively limited to – members of descent, began to move into the drug trade in the 1970s. They began to import and and developed important contacts in the , and with some members working out of .

Since that time, the gang has formulated ties to the Montreal Mafia, the , the , and Colombian cartels.


Fiction

Films
Irish mobsters appeared as characters in the early "gangster" films of the 1930s and of the 1940s. These roles are often identified with actors such as , Pat O'Brien, , , , , and (although Bellamy, Morgan and Overman were not of Irish descent), as well as stars including and Edward G. Robinson.
  • Underworld (1927), gangster Bull Weed (George Bancroft) befriends a down and out former district attorney "Rolls Royce" Wensel (); soon, the two begin fighting over the gun moll Feathers McCoy ().
  • The Racket (1928), Chicago police Captain James McQuigg () matches wits with bootlegger Nick Scarsi (), their rivalry threatens to uncover the secret mastermind behind "The Organization," the criminal syndicate running Chicago.
  • The Public Enemy (1931), played by James Cagney, Tom Powers is a bootlegger whose older brother Michael (Donald Cook) attempts to reform him while he fights his way to the top of the underworld.
  • Scarface (1932), Tony Camonte fights several Irish gangs in Chicago.
  • Angels with Dirty Faces (1938), after former mob boss Rocky Sullivan (Cagney) returns to Hell's Kitchen, former childhood friend, Father Jerry Connolly (O'Brien) tries to save him from himself.
  • On the Waterfront (1954), after witnessing the murder of a fellow longshoreman, Terry Malloy () must choose sides between his brother Charlie () and mobbed-up Irish-American union boss Johnny Friendly (Lee J. Cobb) against crusading priest Father Barry () and Edie Doyle (Eva Marie Saint).
  • The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967), 's retelling of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre stars as Al Capone, as Bugs Moran, and appearances by and .
  • (1972), Nick Devlin (), an enforcer for the Chicago Irish mob, is sent to Kansas to collect a debt from Mary Ann () the owner of a slaughterhouse.
  • (1973), grifters Henry Gondorff () and Johnny Hooker () attempt to swindle Irish mob boss Doyle Lonnegan (Robert Shaw).
  • The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973), Eddie Coyle (), a gunrunner for the Boston Irish Mob, becomes an informant; when the mob finds out, they send his friend Dillon () to kill him.
  • Sorcerer (1977), one of the main characters is a member of an Irish gang and on the run following a botched attempt to rob an Italian Mafia crew.
  • Miller's Crossing (1990), Irish gangster Tom Reagan () tries to prevent a gang war between Irish boss Leo O'Bannion () and Italian boss Johnny Casper ().
  • State of Grace (1990), undercover officer Terry Noonan () returns to Hell's Kitchen to infiltrate , which include childhood friend Jackie Flannery () and neighborhood boss Frankie Flannery ().
  • Last Man Standing (1996), gunman John Smith () becomes involved in a gang war between an Irish gang led by Doyle (David Patrick Kelly) and an Italian gang led by Fredo Strozzi () in the small town of Jericho, Texas.
  • Sleepers (1996), about four childhood friend Irish gangsters in Hell's Kitchen, Manhattan, New York City
  • The General (1998), true story of () who rose from petty criminal to lead of one of Dublin's most powerful crime gangs before being murdered in 1994.
  • Monument Ave. (1998), in Charlestown, Massachusetts, a charismatic enforcer in the Irish Mob () must decide whether to abide by the neighborhood code of silence when his boss () begins murdering members of his family.
  • Southie (1998), Danny Quinn () returns to South Boston and gets stuck between his friends, who are supported by one Irish gang, and his family, who are members of another.
  • Gangs of New York (2002), starring Leonardo DiCaprio and , about the criminal underworld of the Five Points neighborhood in in the 1860s.
  • Ash Wednesday (2002), wrote, directed, and starred in this movie about Irish gangsters in Hell's Kitchen.
  • Road to Perdition (2002), based on the graphic novel by Max Allan Collins, Irish American gangster Michael Sullivan () finds himself on the run from his former employer, Irish Mob boss John Rooney (Newman), after his son witnesses a gangland slaying.
  • Dirty Deeds (2002), in 1969, Irish Australian gangsters find themselves pitted against rival Sydney gangsters for control of gambling.
  • (2003), Seamus O'Grady () is a member of the Irish Mob.
  • Veronica Guerin (2003), based on the true story of a reporter who challenges the mob in Dublin.
  • A History of Violence (2005), film featuring Irish American gangsters from .
  • (2006), A Boston-set remake of the Hong Kong crime drama (2002) about two moles, one a cop in the city's Irish Mob, the other a mobster in the Massachusetts State Police.
  • What Doesn't Kill You (2008), based on the life of director , featuring two childhood friends who join a South Boston Irish American gang.
  • White Irish Drinkers (2010)
  • The Town (2010), a crime drama involving a gang of Irish American bank robbers in Charlestown, .
  • Kill the Irishman (2011), in in the 1970s, , an Irish American mob boss and FBI informant, goes to war against Cleveland crime family boss James T. Licavoli.
  • Killing Them Softly (2012), based on the George V. Higgins book Cogan's Trade, about Irish American gangsters plotting to rob a high-stakes card game run by the Boston Italian-American Mafia.
  • (2014), a documentary about James "Whitey" Bulger.
  • Rage (2014), Irish crime families go to war with the Russian .
  • Black Mass (2015), a drama based on the true story of , who lead the Winter Hill Gang, which was based in .
  • Run All Night (2015), an Irish American mobster () fights to protect his son from his former boss ().
  • Cardboard Gangsters (2017), an aspiring DJ Jayson Connelly (John Connors) whose mother gets him immersed in the drug trade of Darndale, Coolock of Dublin
  • (2019), a drama about Irish American mobster (Robert De Niro) having conflicting loyalties to and Italian-American Mafia boss
  • Kings of Coke (2022), a documentary chronicling the history of the West End Gang of
  • The Irish Mob (2023), a drama about Irish mafia boss Val Fagan () who gets to war with the narcotics police and rivals in Dublin


Television
  • Oz (1997), the Irish American Bridge Street Gang led by Ryan O'Reily is one of the criminal organizations wielding influence in the Oswald State Correctional Facility
  • Brotherhood (2006), set in Providence, Rhode Island and revolving around the alliance between two Irish American brothers
  • Paddy Whacked: The Irish Mob (2006), a documentary tracing the rise and fall of the Irish mob
  • The Black Donnellys (2007), a drama that follows four young Irish brothers in Hell's Kitchen and their involvement in the remnants of the Hell's Kitchen Irish Mob and its conflicts with the Italian-American Mafia
  • Underbelly (2008), Australian drama series based on the Melbourne gangland killings
  • (2010), an series set in Prohibition-era and featuring gangsters of various ethnicities, including Irish American gangsters. The Irish American mobster protagonist, , is loosely based on real-life American politician Enoch L. Johnson, who otherwise had no Irish ancestry.
  • Madso's War (2010), a television film about Mike "Madso" Madden who is drawn into the underworld when a power vacuum opens following the departure of a mob boss
  • Love/Hate (2010), depicts Dublin's underworld
  • The Chicago Code (2011), set in Chicago, undercover police investigate corruption involving the Irish Mob
  • Shameless (2011–2021), a Showtime series set in Chicago, of the dysfunctional Irish-descent Gallagher family with the patriarch Frank regularly involving his family in criminal enterprises and endeavors albeit amateurish and improvised.

  • Copper (2012), Irish American street gangs are depicted
  • In the seventh season of Sons of Anarchy (2013), IRA arms dealer Connor Malone goes rogue and eventually cuts ties with the organization permanently and establishes an independent gunrunning syndicate with other former IRA operatives.
  • (2013), series about an Irish American , Boston-born professional "fixer" and his family.
  • Public Morals (2015), series set in 1960's New York as Irish mobsters try and take control of the city
  • Daredevil
    • (season 1, 2015), Matt Murdock's father, a professional boxer, is killed by the Hell's Kitchen Irish Mob on the orders of Irish American mobster Roscoe Sweeney after failing to take a dive in a .
    • (Only season 2, 2016), depicts a gang of Irish American mobsters, known as the Kitchen Irish, trying to replace the Kingpin as the dominant crime family in New York, which brings them into conflict with the Punisher when he wipes out most of the gang's leadership in an ambush. Their base of operations is next to the Hell's Kitchen bikers club Dogs of Hell. The Kitchen Irish are loosely based on the Westies.
  • Ozark (Season 2–present), depicts a fictional Kansas City crime family headed by Irish American mobster Frank Cosgrove.
  • Fargo (season 4) features an Irish-American gang in Kansas City and its downfall at the hands of an Italian American Mafia family.
  • Kin (2021), tells the story of a fictional Dublin family embroiled in gangland war and speaks to the enduring unbreakable bonds of blood and family.
  • (2022), depicts the Flynn crime family, an Irish American criminal organization based out of Chicago whom the protagonist; Tommy Egan, encounters.
  • Peaky Blinders (Series 6) (2022), features the character Jack Nelson; a Boston-based Irish American gangster who has powerful connections in the U.S. government. He is the uncle-in-law of Michael Gray and a potential adversary to the cousin of the former; Tommy Shelby, the show's protagonist. The character is loosely inspired by Joseph P. Kennedy


Video games
  • Grand Theft Auto IV (2008) features the McReary Crime Family, an Irish criminal syndicate reduced to working as hired guns for the following their takeover of organized crime in Liberty City (the game's setting, a fictional parody of New York City). The McReary's are among the more powerful gangs of Liberty City, controlling most of Dukes (the in-game counterpart of ), and become one of the player's main allies and employers during the storyline. The gang is led by Gerald McReary, and later by his younger brother Patrick following Gerald's arrest and incarceration. After Patrick moves away from Liberty City, the McReary's are left leaderless and presumably disband. In the handheld game (2009), they have been replaced by a street gang called the "Irish American Killers", who play no role in the storyline.
  • In Watch Dogs (2014), the Chicago South Club, an Irish American organized crime syndicate that dominates crime in Chicago, is descended from Irish mobsters who survived the 1929 Valentine's Day Massacre. Led by elderly mobster Dermot "Lucky" Quinn, the club has recently expanded into human trafficking and the theft and sale of confidential information, using the city's vast surveillance network to expand their reach and influence. Quinn, regarded as one of Chicago's most prominent citizens, keeps a vast payroll of city employees from prison guards to the mayor himself, and his lieutenants, including Joseph DeMarco and Tommy Flanagan, oversee illegal businesses including money laundering, drug trafficking, and contract killing. Following Quinn's death at the end of the game's storyline, the club is taken over by his son Niall.
  • (2010) features the O'Neill Gang, an Irish criminal syndicate founded by Irish immigrant Jimmy O'Neill during the 1800s in the fictional Empire Bay (based on New York City). Led by Brian O'Neill, they are one of the most powerful gangs in the city, controlling the neighborhoods of Dipton and Kingston, and have a rivalry with the Mafia. The gang is first encountered in the storyline when they attempts to rob a jewelry store at the same time as the player character; while the player escapes from the police, most of the Irish gangsters, including O'Neill, are arrested. Later, while the player is in prison, they encounter O'Neill again and murder him in a fight. Five years later, after the player is released of prison, the gang takes revenge on them by burning down their house, prompting the player to retaliate by attacking a bar owned by them and killing their new leader, Mickey Desmond.
    • A different version of the Irish Mob, called the Brodie Gang, is featured in two of the game's , "The Betrayal of Jimmy" and "Jimmy's Vendetta". This incarnation is led by a man named Tam Brodie and is at war with the local Triads. During the first DLC, Brodie hires the player character to help him take over the Triads' territory and wipe them out, before conspiring with the Gravina Crime Family and a corrupt judge to have the player framed for narcotics possession and arrested. In the second DLC, after the player escapes from prison, they exact revenge on Brodie, sabotaging his operations to weaken his position before finding and killing him.
  • In (2016), the Irish Mob in the fictional New Bordeaux (based on ) is one of several criminal factions the player recruits in their quest to control the city's criminal underworld. Operating out of a scrapyard/chop shop owned by Irish mob boss Thomas Burke and his daughter and underboss Nicki, the gang's interests include bootlegging, drug smuggling, and gunrunning, and they can assist the player by providing cars, explosives, and interfering with police pursuits. In turn, the player can undertake special missions to boost their loyalty and unlock further perks.


See also
  • List of American mobsters of Irish descent


Citations

General and cited references
  • (2025). 9780446506144, Grand Central Publishing. .
    .
  • Clark, Neil G. Dock Boss: Eddie McGrath and the West Side Waterfront. Barricade Books, 2017. .
  • Covey, Herbert C. Street Gangs Throughout the World. Charles C. Thomas. .
  • Downey, Patrick. Gangster City: The History of the New York Underworld, 1900–1935. Barricade Books, 2004. .
  • Durney, James. The Mob: The History of Irish Gangsters in America.
  • English, T. J. The Westies.
  • English, T. J. Paddy Whacked: The Untold Story of the Irish American Gangster. New York: HarperCollins, 2005. .
  • Flemmi, Joe. The General.
  • Hornblum, Allen. Confessions of a Second Story Man: Junior Kripplebauer and the K&A Gang.
  • Jacobs, James B., Coleen Friel, and Robert Radick. Gotham Unbound: How New York City Was Liberated from the Grip of Organized Crime. New York: NYU Press, 1999. .
  • Lehr, Dick and O'Neill, Gerard. Black Mass.
  • McCain, Joe (2005). Legends of Winter Hill.
  • MacDonald, Michael Patrick. All Souls.
  • McKenzie, Edward "Eddie Mac". Street Soldier.
  • Porrello, Rick. To Kill the Irishman: The War that Crippled the Mafia. Novelty, Ohio: Next Hat Press, 2004.
  • Shea, John "Red". Rat Bastards.
  • State Department, Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism. Country Reports on Terrorism 2004.
  • with Thomas C. Renner. My Life in the Mafia. Doubleday and Company, 1973.
  • Weeks, Kevin. Brutal: The Untold Story of My Life Inside Whitey Bulger's Irish Mob.
  • Williams, Paul. The General: Irish Mob Boss. First Forge, 2003.
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