almost all of his sentence but in the end he ended up going up to another antonio lima, his nephew and antonio and sam lima and up in san francisco running the san francisco mob until he was 80 something years old. he had 84 limousines at his funeral. then it became more like the goodfellas, the mobsters. in the beginning they did not live like that. it was hidden in the walls and it was sort of conservative looking shops. then he became one of those big gangsters in the 1930's and 1940's. william: you never knew your neighbor as. >> my question would be that since the investigation took place and there is a conviction, does that change the way that the postal service looked at investigating this group. did it bring more attention to them? did they go back into the shadows? or did it become a focus of investigation of the future? william: the scores if you want to call it that, not everybody gets caught, it continues. we actually have a lot of scrap book records. other inspectors would send articles of local stuff going on. there are lists of black hand convictions, and became anything, we knew how to catc