Career
Boxing promoter
In the 1940s, Eddie Coco worked with James Plumeri, Frank Palermo, Harry Segal and Felix Bocchicchio for soldier Frankie Carbo in a group known as "The Combination". The Combination acted as boxing promoters and were accused of fixing matches. During this period, Coco met Rocky Graziano, then an amateur boxer fighting in New York City"s Lower East Side.
He helped Grazino start a professional boxing career and throughout the following years was viewed as a somewhat manager.
In the late 1940s, Coco was suspected of placing wagers and taking bets on fights while Graziano was accused of taking bribes. These accusations continued until Graziano retired in 1952.
In 1953, Coco was arrested in Florida for murdering a Miami car-wash operator in a dispute over a bill. On November 12, 1953, Coco was sentenced to life in prison.
During the 1963 McClellan hearings, government witness Joseph Valachi identified Coco as a Capo in Gaetano "Tommy Brown" Lucchese"s crime family.
Acting boss
In 1965, Coco was released from prison after serving ten years on his life sentence. He stayed in Florida and was under government surveillances. In July 1967, family boss Tom Lucchese died and Coco became a candidate to become the new boss.
He served as acting boss in 1967.
In late 1967, Anthony "Tony Ducks" Corallo went to Florida and meet with Coco. He later step down as acting boss and Carmine "Mr.
Gribbs" Tramunti became the new boss. Coco continued to operate as a capo under Tramunti, with criminal activities in New York and Florida that kept him under strict government watch.
Florida operations
During the trial, witness Joel Whitice testified that he borrowed money in the late 1960s from Falco.
He made payments to Falco, Coco and Nash, and described Coco as the leader of a loan-sharking ring. Coco was convicted and sentenced to fifteen years in prison on loan-sharking and extortion. By the late 1980s, Coco was considered a semi-retired mobster living in Florida.
In 1986, he served as Consigliere for the Lucchese family while boss Anthony "Tony Ducks" Corallo, Salvatore Santoro and Christopher Furnari were on trial in the Commission Case.
Coco later resigned and continued to operate in New York and Florida. In 1986, Coco created a bingo operation to launder money from criminal rackets.
The mobsters used Bingo World, a company operating bingo halls in several states, to launder the money. The new owner, Stephen Paskind, served as the front owner of the company.
While claiming he controlled 84 percent he actually only had 42 percent.
Izaak Silber soon joined in the bingo operation. In 1991, Coco and his bingo partners were arrested. Death
In December 1991, Coco died while awaiting trial on money laundering.