On Federal Hill Mobsters Used to Kill Mobsters, Now Tourists Get Shot

GoLocalProv News Team

On Federal Hill Mobsters Used to Kill Mobsters, Now Tourists Get Shot

Raymond Patriarca outside Superior Court building. IMAGE: RI Historical Society. ENLARGE TO WATCH
For about 40 years, Federal Hill was virtually crime-free for “civilians.” From the 1940s through to the 1980s, the "Hill" was under the control of Raymond Patriarca, the head of organized crime in New England

Yes, there were random mob hits from time to time, but the neighborhood was for decades a close-knit, overwhelmingly Italian-American neighborhood under the control of La Cosa Nostra.

Now, Federal Hill is one of Providence’s crime hotbeds and a black eye for the tourism industry.

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On Wednesday, GoLocal broadcast a video of a robbery of a couple who had come to Providence for a night out on “The Hill.”

The video shows the couple who had finished their evening on Atwells Avenue and were walking back to their Bentley bearing Florida plates when they were approached by a man demanding their valuables.

The suspect shot the male driver once before he had time to turn over personal possessions, including a Rolex watch.

The victim was taken to Rhode Island Hospital for treatment of the gunshot wound.

 

It was one of the recent violent crimes to hit visitors to Federal Hill.

As GoLocal had reported in July, two men from Massachusetts reported being robbed of their Rolex watches at gunpoint on Federal Hill. 

Sadly, these are just some of the latest violent episodes -- there were high-profile murders tied to the clubs on Federal Hill.

In 2019 a man was stabbed to death at Nara Lounge, also in 2019, a man was beaten and stabbed to death by a group

 

October Columbus Day celebration draws tens of thousands PHOTO: File
Tale of Two Neighborhoods

State Representative and Chief Justice of the Providence Municipal Court John Lombardi tells GoLocal, “It is the tale of two neighborhoods. From morning until about 9 PM or 10 PM is pretty safe, but after that the neighborhood has its challenges.”

Lombardi grew up on Federal Hill and represented the area on the City Council.

City Council President Rachel Miller said more needs to be done to make the area safe. In July of 2020, Uprise RI reported that Miller was one of six members of the Providence City Council who supported defunding the Providence Police and refused to support the budget that year. “Councilmembers Kat Kerwin (Ward 12) and Rachel Miller (Ward 13) also confirmed that they will not vote for a budget that does not reallocate money from the police,” reported Uprise RI. Kerwin had a stressed relationship with the police. SEE VIDEO

Kerwin did not run for reelection in 2022.

Miller, in an interview with GoLocal on Wednesday, said it is critical to remove guns from Providence Streets. “Any amount of gun violence is unacceptable,” said Miller.

She said her early position on police funding is neither a factor in the crime on Federal Hill nor how the police respond.

“I have a great relationship with police leadership and Chief [Oscar] Perez. I don't have concerns about the policing and their reaction to headlines of a few years ago,” said Miller.

However, Providence faces a significant police staffing issue.

Years of inaction to properly staff the police force under then-Mayor Jorge Elorza and Providence City Council President Sabina Matos allowed police staffing to plummet.

Today, the police staffing has dropped from a fully staffed 505 officers to under 419 — increasing callbacks, overtime, and stress to department personnel.

Miller said the city needs to be constantly recruiting for new recruitment classes.

 

 

Raymond Partriaca inside the Coin-o-Matic on Atwells Avenue PHOTO: GoLocal File
Federal Hill of Years Gone By

“It is no secret that organized crime was prevalent in Rhode Island, and when Ray Patriarca was the boss he ran all of all New England from his chair outside of ‘The Office’ on Atwells Avenue,” said former State Police Superintendent Col. Brendan Doherty in an interview with GoLocal in 2014.

Doherty served for 24 years in the Rhode Island State Police Intelligence Unit, focusing on organized crime in the 80s and 90s. 

“Back then, in the 60s and 70s, there was, shall we say, an 'arrangement' between the police and organized crime. And it was an unspoken arrangement. The mafia was expected to keep the lid on [violence pouring out onto the streets]. To keep violence out of their places of business, restaurants on Federal Hill would pay tribute to Patriarca for ‘protection,’ said Providence City the late City Archivist Paul Campbell.

Hit on mobster Rudolph Marfeo PHOTO: Providence Police/GoLocal FILE
Lombardi said the safety of the neighborhood was more complicated than the control of the mob. “It was a stable neighborhood. U.S. Senator John Pastore lived in the neighborhood,” said Lombardi.

Today, Rhode Island’s two U.S. Senators live in multimillion-dollar homes in affluent coastal communities far from the urban corridor —  Jack Reed lives in Jamestown and Sheldon Whitehouse in Newport.


Violence on Federal Hill: A Chronological History

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