In the 20th century, other New York gangs were comparable to the ability of crafty, crafty, powerful and secret Charles "Lucky" Luciano. Who established the National Criminal Group in the early 1930s with the help of his closest friends, allies and even the enemies, yet (Nash 251). Fortunately Luciano, the "genuine" American gang rewrote the Italian Mafia under the control of the old Sicilia and created a tolerant organization for all ethnic backgrounds (Dewey).
Charles "Lucky" Luciano (1897 - 1962). Based in New York, Luciano is considered to be the most important Italian-American gang in the history of organized crime. Between 1930 and 1931, in New York City, Luciano settled the trio of old Italian leaders and founded the American mafia. Together with Meylanski, he launched the 'committee' of the ruling party of the Mafia. In 1936, US attorney general Thomas E. Dewey sent Luciano to prison. Luciano led his gang to the prison to protect the coastal waters of eastern United States, thus helping him to complete the efforts of World War II. He also asked for contact with his old world Mafia to help the allies during the invasion of Sicily. In 1968, Dewey stopped Luciano's verdict and banished him to Italy.
On May 13, 1936, Luciano began to respond to the trial. Dewey accused Luciano as part of a large prostitution circle called "Combination". During the trial, Dewey revealed that Luciano is in the position of a witness through direct testing and telephone records; Luciano is rich who claimed that his federal income tax record earns him only $ 22,000 per year. Dewe ruthlessly suppressed the relationship between Luciano's long-term arrest history and famous gangs such as Masseria, Shilohra, Nova and Louis Bouchat. On June 7, Luciano was convicted of 62 forced prostitution charges. On July 18th he was sentenced to 30 to 50 years in state prisons with Betillo and others.
On 1 April 1936, Luciano was arrested on a hot spring with a New York criminal warrant. The next day in New York, Dewey complained 90 forced prostitution to Luciano and his associates. Luciano's lawyer in Arkansas then began a fierce legal struggle against handover. On April 6, a $ 50,000 bribe was handed to Arkansas Attorney General Carl Bailey to facilitate Luciano's case. However, Bailey refused to bribe and reported it soon. After all the legal action on Luciano was exhausted on April 17, the Arkansas authorities handed Luciano to the three police stations in New York to trial the train. When the detectives and their prisoners arrived in St. Louis, Missouri and exchanged the trains, they were protected by 20 local police to prevent mobs from being rescued. Those people arrived in New York on 18th April, but Luciano had no bail.