The Original Gangster: The American Saga of Carlos Marcello

The Original Gangster: The American Saga of Carlos Marcello An upcoming book by Lamar White, Jr. about the life, times & crimes of NOLA mob boss Carlos Marcello. I've also interviewed his adversaries, most notably G.

During the past three years, I have been researching, writing, and rewriting a book about the life and crimes of Carlos Marcello, the reputed boss of America's "original" Mafia family in New Orleans. I've collected and read more than 150 books and nearly two terabytes of digitized documents: Court pleadings and opinions, transcripts, photographs and videos, thousands of archival news reports, and

more than 100,000 declassified government documents and files, many of which have never before been available to the public. I've interviewed members of Marcello's family, including his only son Joe C., as well as his former lawyers, employees, and friends. Robert Blakey, a former staff attorney for Bobby Kennedy's Department of Justice and the author of the 1979 House Select Committee on Assassinations' Final Report, which named Marcello as one of only three people who had the "motive, means, and opportunity" to potentially conspire with Lee Harvey Oswald in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy (the other two were reputed Florida Mafia boss Santo Trafficante and Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa). I've filed two Freedom of Information Act requests with the FBI. In April 2023, I received 1,500 pages of documents from my first request and notified my second request would be granted. (Unfortunately, it appears the FBI destroyed the documents I requested). I've also obtained a 270-minute-long audio recording of the late Shreveport lawyer Michael Maroun, one of Marcello's closest confidantes for more than 45 years. Only days after Marcello's death in 1993, Maroun, intending to write a book about the "real Carlos Marcello," began dictating notes to himself. The recording's existence had never been known to anyone outside of Marcello's small inner circle. Maroun details, among other things, the incredible story of Marcello's "kidnapping" and deportation to Guatemala in April of 1961 and of accompanying him on a treacherous journey from Guatemala and through the jungles of El Salvador to the capital of Honduras, disclosing, for the first time, how Marcello ultimately snuck back into the United States. Although I have been steadily working on this project for three years and had initially intended to complete a final manuscript in early 2022, my efforts were complicated by the delayed release of more than 13,000 documents pursuant to the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992 and the FBI's delayed response to my FOIA requests. I am glad I waited, though. The new documents included several significant details that were critical to my book, and as a consequence, I've decided to revise and rewrite most of the manuscript, which is the work I'm doing now. This year, 2023, marks the 30th anniversary of Carlos Marcello's death and the 60th anniversary of President Kennedy's assassination in Dallas, which is why the next few months and your support are critical for me.

— Lamar White, Jr.

08/03/2025

On Nov. 22, 1963, Dave Ferrie danced out of a courthouse, partied with a mob boss, & sped into the darkness to take an 18-year-old boy ice-skating in Texas, a trip that would haunt him to death.

06/16/2025

Part one of a two-part series detailing the extensive investigation that the eccentric, elusive pilot conducted for Marcello's legal defense team.

06/02/2025

A comprehensive database of documents about the life and death of Huey P. Long.

05/31/2025

Lost for nearly a century, a set of recently released photos of Carlos Marcello show a poised and striking figure, offering a glimpse of the defiance and determination that would later define him.

05/13/2025

After a three-year hiatus, Lamar describes what paid subscribers can expect first from his new online publication, CenLamar 2.0.

After three years of researching, writing, revising, and then completely rewriting a sprawling biography on the life, ti...
08/19/2023

After three years of researching, writing, revising, and then completely rewriting a sprawling biography on the life, times, crimes, trials, tribulations, and triumphs of Carlos Marcello, the reputed boss of America's original Mafia syndicate in New Orleans, I put together this video to update my supporters on Patreon and followers on social media about the reasons for the delay, the research I've accumulated, and why the real story about the "Little Man" of the Big Easy has never before been told and is definitely worth the wait.

I've also been putting together a new website, and like the book, it is a work in progress. The main page and the gallery are online and operational. Stay tuned for an excerpt from the book and a massive section of research files and documents I will be making available for download at no cost.

www.carlosmarcello.org or www.carlosmarcellobook.com

Support my work here: www.patreon.com/lamarwhite

Official Post from Lamar White, Jr.

For the past three years, I have been researching, writing, revising, and now rewriting a sprawling book about the life,...
08/02/2023

For the past three years, I have been researching, writing, revising, and now rewriting a sprawling book about the life, times, crimes, trials, tribulations, and triumphs of Carlos Marcello, the longtime boss of the New Orleans Mafia.

In the pantheon of 20th-century American crime bosses, arguably none were as misunderstood or as elusive as the "Little Man" of the Big Easy. He was, some argued, the most powerful Mafiosi outside of New York City, and during his nearly 40-year reign as boss, the New Orleans syndicate, purportedly the first and oldest in the country, the Marcello crime family generated enormous wealth. New Orleans was, according to the Saturday Evening Post, "Cosa Nostra's Wall Street," a claim made all the more extraordinary considering Marcello ran his empire from the back of a nondescript motel in suburban Jefferson Parish.

Although my first manuscript was nearly complete, I determined that I needed to write an entirely new book for a few reasons, the most important of which was my acquisition of troves of documents and other material previously unreleased and unknown to the public. Some of these documents were among the 15,490 files released by the National Archives pursuant to the JFK Assassinations Records Act (13,173 files in December 2022 and a total of 2,317 in April, May, and June of this year). I've also uncovered details of his biography that are conspicuously missing in every other account of his life.

The only other major biography of Marcello, John H. Davis's 1988 bestseller "Mafia Kingfish," may have been a page-turner, but it's almost entirely a work of fiction, constructed out of sloppy research and discredited hearsay, a book written for the sole purpose of advancing a convoluted conspiracy theory about Marcello orchestrating the assassination of President John F. Kennedy (Davis's first cousin was Jacqueline Kennedy Onaissis, who became estranged from him after he wrote a gossipy book about their family, "The Bouviers"). "Mafia Kingfish" is no longer in print, likely because Davis and his publisher were successfully sued for defamation, but the book continues to inform practically every subsequent work written about Marcello.

That's a shame because the real-life saga of Carlos Marcello is, in my opinion, one of the most sensational and fascinating untold stories of the past century. It's a story about what it means to be an American, a story about the rise and fall of a great American city, New Orleans, and a story about a small-time gambling racketeer who was mistakenly labeled as "one of the principal criminals in the country" by a politician from Tennessee and a tabloid columnist from Washington, D.C.
It's about the makings of celebrity, about a man without a country, and about an overzealous, irrational, and paranoid group of government lawyers and federal agents willing to trample all over the Constitution and eventually kidnap a lifelong resident of the United States and leave him for dead in Central America by using fabricated and forged documents and fraudulent misrepresentations to foreign officials.

And it's about an uneducated man who dropped out of school in the fifth grade yet managed to outmaneuver, outwit, and outlast the Department of Justice, the "largest law firm in the world," at nearly every turn.

Before he was kidnapped off of the streets of New Orleans and whisked away to Guatemala, Carlos Marcello had managed to avoid deportation for over eight years, not through trickery or corruption, but by making his case in court. Two months after his kidnapping, he snuck back into the United States. The government never figured out how, but I know the answer.

While they continued to fight for his deportation and eventually secured a conviction against him through an undercover sting operation that today would easily qualify as entrapment (and had nothing to do with organized crime or his reputed role in the Mafia), Marcello stayed in the United States for the next 32 years, until he passed away in his sleep at his home in Metairie a month after his 83rd birthday.

Marcello was a career criminal and a Mafia boss, but his crimes were never as serious as the press and the government portrayed them to be. And his version of the mafia was vastly different than the criminal enterprises that flourished in big cities like New York and Chicago. At the end of his life, Marcello was a multi-millionaire, a fortune he made primarily in real estate investments and land development.

Famously, in 1979, Marcello told a Senate investigating committee that he was merely a "tomato salesman" for his company, Pelican Tomato, and made only $1,600 a month, which was clearly farcical. Later, it was revealed that the United States Navy was Pelican Tomato's biggest client. Today, his company, now known under a different name, is the fourth-largest food distribution company in the Gulf Coast.

But his legacy is much more than that, and since his death, his mystique has only grown.

This year, 2023, marks the 30th anniversary of Marcello's death and the 60th anniversary of President Kennedy's assassination, which is why I intend to complete the final draft and send my book proposal to publishers and literary agents within the next couple of months. To accomplish this, however, I need more resources than I currently have, which is why I hope you will consider supporting my work through Patreon. Those of you who sign up to contribute $50/month for a year will receive customized merchandise every three months: a coffee mug, bandana, long-sleeve shirt, and tote bag. You can also pay for the entire year's subscription upfront and receive everything right away!

Check it out: http://www.patreon.com/lamarwhite

A treasure trove including rare, color photographs.
08/01/2023

A treasure trove including rare, color photographs.

(I know this isn't Carlos-related, but some of you may appreciate this nonetheless). I thought I'd share a rough summary...
11/18/2021

(I know this isn't Carlos-related, but some of you may appreciate this nonetheless). I thought I'd share a rough summary of the story I'm telling in the preface to the book that I'm finishing on the assassination of Huey Long:

https://www.patreon.com/posts/58869504

Official Post from Lamar White, Jr.

(Albeit not directly related to my work on Carlos, I imagine some of you may find this interesting).In the third and fin...
09/27/2021

(Albeit not directly related to my work on Carlos, I imagine some of you may find this interesting).

In the third and final part of the Bayou Brief's trilogy on the assassination of Huey P. Long and with the help of previously unreleased photographs and reports that have either been buried with time or concealed from the public, I unpack the conspiracy theories that have persisted for decades and challenge the portrayal of his alleged assassin, Dr. Carl A. Weiss, Sr., as the innocent victim of a corrupt cover-up.

https://www.bayoubrief.com/2021/09/26/holes-in-the-story-huey-p-long-carl-weiss-and-the-american-spectacle-of-conspiracy/

Featuring exclusive, previously unreleased photographs and reports that have been either buried with time or kept hidden from the public, this sweeping conclusion to the Bayou Brief’s trilogy…

During the last week of his life, Huey P. Long celebrated the high-life in Manhattan, signed a book deal in Pennsylvania...
08/25/2021

During the last week of his life, Huey P. Long celebrated the high-life in Manhattan, signed a book deal in Pennsylvania, campaigned like a country preacher in Oklahoma, and commanded Louisiana from his 24th floor private apartment inside of the state Capitol.

**I'd initially intended for this to be Part Two of a two-part series, but there was so much material that needed to be covered, it turned into Part Two of a three-part series.

https://www.bayoubrief.com/2021/08/25/the-final-days-of-the-indefatigable-huey-p-long-jr/

During the last week of his life, Huey P. Long celebrated the high-life in Manhattan, signed a book deal in Pennsylvania, campaigned like a country preacher in Oklahoma, and commanded Louisiana fro…

I've changed my mind. I am now wholly persuaded that Dr. Carl Austin Weiss, Sr., a 28-year-old ear, nose, and throat spe...
08/16/2021

I've changed my mind. I am now wholly persuaded that Dr. Carl Austin Weiss, Sr., a 28-year-old ear, nose, and throat specialicist from Baton Rouge was the lone assassin of U.S. Sen. Huey P. Long, Jr.

Long wasn't killed accidentally by an errant bullet from one of his bodyguards, nor was his death the result of poor medical care. Carl Weiss deliberately murdered him.

But before we get into those details, it's important to know a few things about the legendary Kingfish.

Part I of II.

https://www.bayoubrief.com/2021/08/16/the-kingfish-is-dead-long-live-the-kingfish/

During his brief but extraordinary life, Huey P. Long inspired and enraged, fundamentally reshaping how politics would be defined in his home state for generations. Today, more than 85 years after …

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