Vincent, E. Duke (13 de diciembre de 2008). Mafia Summer A Novel. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. X. ISBN9781596919273. Consultado el 21 de febrero de 2022.
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Governmental Affairs. Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (1984). Waterfront Corruption Report. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 99. Consultado el 21 de febrero de 2022.
«Joe Adonis, Underworld Gambling King, Dies». The New York Times. 27 de noviembre de 1971. Consultado el 19 de marzo de 2020. «ANCONA, Italy, Nov. 26—Giuseppe Antonio Doto, also known as Joe Adonis, once a leader of the United States underworld, died here this afternoon. He was 69 years old. [...] He was born at Montemarano near Avellino, east of Naples, on Nov. 22, 1902, and his parents soon afterwards took him to the United States.»(requiere suscripción)
Markham, James M. (7 de diciembre de 1971). «Other Members of Mafia Miss Funeral Services for Adonis». The New York Times. Consultado el 19 de marzo de 2020. «FORT LEE, N. J., Dec. 6— Giuseppe Antonio Doto, known in life as Jpe Adonis, was bUried here today, accompanied to the wind‐chilled Madonna Roman Catholic Cemetery by members of his immediate family. [...] Newsmen principally trailed Adonis's wife, Joan, and the four Adonis children, Joseph, 38, Mrs. Dolores Maria Olmo, 32, Mrs. Anna Arietta, 21, and Elizabeth Doto,».(requiere suscripción)
«Joe Adonis Is Near Death After Pulmonary Collapse». The New York Times. 24 de noviembre de 1971. Consultado el 19 de marzo de 2020. «ANCONA, Italy, Nov. 23 (Reuters)—Joe Adonis, said to have been a king of the American underworld, suffered pulmonary collapse tonight and is close to death, according to hospital sources.»(requiere suscripción)
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«La Cosa Nostra». Lacndb.com. Archivado desde el original el 15 de junio de 2018. Consultado el 21 de agosto de 2017.