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Credit card fraud reportedly at heart of strip joint search










On most nights, Club Paradise pulsates near the garish glare of the Hard Rock Hotel on Harmon Drive and Paradise Road.
For the bosom obsessed, it’s a mind-boggling buffet of topless entertainment. Taxis buzz it like a neon flower, and the throngs of tourists and locals that jam its tables make it a highly lucrative business for owners Sam and Geralyn Cecola of Chicago.
So imagine the surprise of some of those cabbies and customers when the doors of Club Paradise were temporarily closed after the service of a law enforcement search warrant on June 6. They would be forced, sigh, to seek their dancing dream girls elsewhere.
The search warrant affidavit remains under seal, but near the shadows reliable sources are beginning to talk. I’ve learned that Metro detectives, with an assist from IRS Criminal Investigation, are building a case of substantial credit card fraud against at least two dancers after customers complained of being overcharged by thousands of dollars after spending late nights at the club. There’s at least one witness who claims a customer was drugged.
Police are developing leads from a half-dozen customer complaints. That might not sound like many, but it’s important to realize that most adult entertainment customers don’t file complaints when they’ve been ripped off at a club.
Adding to the intrigue is the fact three Club Paradise managers recently resigned suddenly, prior to the service of the search warrant. One source close to the investigation said the managers were asked to take polygraph examinations in connection with an internal theft at the club unrelated to the current fraud investigation. They instead chose to resign.
Here’s something the cops might want to ask themselves: How is it that those managers decided to resign just prior to the raid? Had they been on hand, they might have been asked difficult questions about their possible business relationships with the suspected credit card hustlers on the premises.
Was there a leak about the status of the investigation?
Meanwhile, these days Club Paradise officials are commenting only to say they are fully cooperating with the investigation.
The search warrant sought work-related records of the dancers, according to multiple sources, but not records related to the club’s owners. The Cecolas have been running the place from long distance, something they might be compelled to change in the coming months.
Sam Cecola is no stranger to controversy. He somehow successfully navigated Chicago’s mobbed-up adult entertainment scene and beat a 2000 nomination for Nevada’s Casino Black Book after his attorney, Dominic Gentile, made the case for him as a victim of the Outfit and not its partner in porn and the topless racket.
In a sometimes notorious career, Cecola survived a tax conviction and has maintained a relatively low profile while Club Paradise has prospered.
(I say “relatively” because the Cecolas, who still own adult businesses in the Chicago area, in June 2013 put their 20,000-square-foot mansion in Barrington up for sale for a headline-grabbing $15.9 million. They reduced the price of the palace in May to a mere $13.9 million.)
News of the Las Vegas case comes almost simultaneously with stories from New York about police and Drug Enforcement Administration investigations involving several topless clubs, where a crew of dancers is suspected of drugging and blackmailing customers.
Once they were hustled into the clubs, their credit cards were stripped of their limits. More than $200,000 was drained from customer accounts, according to published reports.
One source speaking with knowledge of the club side of the Las Vegas investigation said the two cases are not related.
Police in the Las Vegas case appear to be focused on the actions of two dancers who began creating trouble in Club Paradise approximately 15 months ago.
Not long after they took the stage, high-rolling customers began to complain their credit cards were getting rubbed the wrong way.
John L. Smith’s column appears Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. E-mail him at jsmith@reviewjournal.com or call 702-383-0295

The Cowboy Sheriff of Las Vegas Rides Into ‘Mob Museum’

Las Vegas Sun

U.S. News

06.08.14

The Cowboy Sheriff of Las Vegas Rides Into ‘Mob Museum’

Ralph Lamb, who was never above roughing up a wiseguy, now has his saddle and spurs—and acknowledgements of his improvements to the police department—in the city’s Mob Museum.
Given the legend that surrounds Ralph Lamb as the “Cowboy Sheriff” of Las Vegas, even in 2014 you almost expect him to enter a room on horseback. With guns blazing.

A Nevada-born country boy who shaped the evolution of law enforcement in Las Vegas through much of its mobbed-up evolution, Lamb, 86, manages to laugh at the Wild West image that somehow survives so far into the new century. He admits he was no stranger to trouble and settled plenty of arguments with his fists, but with a few notorious exceptions the donnybrooks ceased long before he became sheriff in 1961. It was an elected position he kept until 1979, when he was knocked out of office following a federal tax investigation that ended in his favor.

A recent addition to the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, better known in Las Vegas as the Mob Museum, highlights Lamb’s career and his image as a cowboy cop. The exhibit includes his saddle and spurs, as well as acknowledging some of his many contributions to the improvement of the police department.

He didn’t speak to the capacity crowd in the packed former federal courtroom at the exhibit’s opening in early May. Then again, he didn’t have to.
As with so much of the mythology that surrounds the Las Vegas story, there’s enough truth in the depiction of Lamb at the museum to satisfy the masses. His cowboy image was further boosted by the short-lived Vegas police and gangster drama starring Dennis Quaid as Lamb and Michael Chiklis as a composite mob figure representative of the underworld killers the real sheriff encountered in his tumultuous career as the head of law enforcement in a substantially lawless place.

The show didn’t last, but Lamb just keeps rolling along, despite a lengthening list of age-related medical maladies. Once a buckle winning rodeo roper, he’s lost much of his eyesight and can no longer sit a horse. Most days he’s content to ride the range in his living room, where he greets visitors with an impressive handshake and fields calls from reporters and a large circle of friends from the old Las Vegas.

Although he had plenty of Western boots in his closet, Lamb also was responsible for successfully combining the Las Vegas Police Department with the Clark County Sheriff’s Office, a move that helped law enforcement mature in the valley.
“There will never be another sheriff like Ralph Lamb, and the times do not permit it. What Ralph did nobody could do today. As good as Ralph was, he was never honored by the ACLU.”
“If it hadn’t been for his stature and his command of the political process,” says Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie, “many of us believe there never would have been that merger that I believe created the finest police department in America.”

Lamb’s Task Force cops, who were on a special assignment to track and corral the hoodlum element, gained a reputation for their sometimes bare-knuckle tactics. More than one defected to the other side during Lamb’s tenure. And Lamb himself wasn’t above roughing up a wiseguy, including no less a gangster than Chicago Outfit representative Johnny Rosselli, when he had it coming.

Although such behavior added to Lamb’s reputation, the department actually became more progressive on his watch. He embraced technological improvements, hired the department’s first female and minority officers, and added a network of substations throughout a county larger than some states.

“He was no Neanderthal,” says former U.S. senator Richard Bryan. “He did bring law enforcement into the latter part of the 20th century. He was in some ways a harbinger of the future and in other ways a throwback to the old frontier justice model.”

As a boy in Alamo, a tiny Mormon ranching community in Lincoln County 90 miles north of Las Vegas, Lamb was one of 11 children. When his father was killed in a rodeo accident on July 4, 1938, Lamb and his six brothers were called on to pitch in and support the family.

After a stint in the U.S. Army in Korea, he returned to Southern Nevada and applied for a job in the police department. With a gun tucked into his belt, he reported for duty.

Through the years he became just as adept at politics as he was on horseback. After winning appointment to replace a sheriff who had been promoted to run the state’s fledgling gaming regulatory apparatus, Lamb won election in 1961 and soon was known as one of the most powerful men in the state.

There was a time some on the federal side of the criminal justice system would have debated which side of the mob museum the Lamb family belonged in. One brother, state Sen. Floyd Lamb, was convicted in an FBI bribery sting. Another brother sat on the clout-heavy Clark County Commission.
Another had an uncanny ability to land paving jobs in Southern Nevada. And on it went.

When it came to policing the well-connected members of the casino industry in his era, Lamb was known as a go-along, get-along cowpoke who fiercely protected the status quo. For every tale of roughing up some transplanted hoodlum, there are just as many stories of Lamb befriending such notorious characters as Chicago Outfit legal titan Sidney Korshak and ex-Cleveland bootlegger Moe Dalitz.

But that was Las Vegas.

“He’s the last of a kind,” Bryan says. “There will never be another sheriff like Ralph Lamb, and the times do not permit it. What Ralph did nobody could do today. As good as Ralph was, he was never honored by the ACLU.”

Today, Lamb is a piece of the city’s history. It looks like the legend of the cowboy sheriff is safe.

Joey "The Clown" Lombardo files appeal claiming 'bad lawyering'

By Chuck Goudie


Chicago mob boss Joey "The Clown" Lombardo is in federal prison because people died. Now he is blaming his conviction on his trial lawyer, who is also dead.


Attorney Rick Halprin died by suicide a year ago, long after losing the Lombardo case which was part of Chicago's infamous "Family Secrets" murder trial. Lombardo now has a new attorney, who has filed a new motion to get the 85-year-old out of prison.


While a gag order seemed fitting in a case where the defendant was known as "The Clown," Lombardo was no easy client for his longtime attorney Rick Halprin.


During his notorious career as a top Chicago hoodlum, Lombardo was known to sport a newspaper mask at the courthouse, and in his heyday he liked to lead news hounds on hide and seek missions, once through a construction site.


But in the "Family Secrets" murder case the stakes couldn't have been higher for Lombardo and other mob bosses. Joey "The Clown" was sentenced to life in prison, and has been in solitary confinement at the federal penitentiary in Butner, N.C.


Now Halprin is being vilified in a Lombardo appeal memo newly obtained by the I-Team. Lombardo says he wants and deserves freedom because Halprin was ineffective, incompetent, deficient and unprofessional.


His new attorney from Florida is claiming Halprin did little or no work investigating the evidence and witness claims used against Lombardo, and that Halprin "ensured his conviction" by calling Lombardo a liar in closing arguments.


Lombardo's current attorney didn't respond to I-Team questions. In legal papers he claims that Halprin received extra money from the court to investigate decades-old evidence, but didn't do so.


In the motion, Halprin's work is described as so inept that Lombardo's conviction should be thrown out or he should be let out on bond.


Bad lawyering claims are not unusual, but with Halprin dead they will go unchallenged. Prosecutors, however, intend to respond in court.

Company with mob ties helping with District 64 renovations

Jennifer Johnson/Sun-Times Media
                 
jjohnson@pioneerlocal.com | @jen_pioneer
May 30 1 p.m.                   
A company with alleged ties to Chicago organized crime has been brought on as a subcontractor for a Park Ridge elementary school construction project.

A green dumpster belonging to D&P Construction recently appeared outside Field School, 707 Wisner St., ahead of an air conditioning, heating and ventilation project slated to occur this summer.
Scott Mackall, Director of Facility Management for Park Ridge-Niles School District 64, said he was told D&P is providing only the dumpster for the project and was subcontracted by Palatine-based Bergen Construction Corporation, which is the company performing the bulk of the work.

“We’re writing [Bergen] the checks,” Mackall said.

The Better Government Association reported in 2012 that the FBI believes D&P Construction is run by two brothers with Chicago mob connections: Peter DiFronzo and John “No Nose” DiFronzo. During the 2007 “Family Secrets” mob trial in Chicago, the BGA said John DiFronzo was implicated in the murders of two mob brothers, but was not charged with a crime.

According to a 2008 report by the BGA and the Chicago Sun-Times, D&P “was the focus of a Gaming Board disciplinary case that stopped Emerald Casino Inc. from building a floating gambling barge in Rosemont in 2001.” The report also stated that the Gaming Board “linked D&P to individuals who have been identified as known members of organized crime.”

D&P Construction has been used on projects for a number of Chicago Public Schools, according to a 2011 investigation by the BGA and Fox 32.

Mackall said he was unaware of the allegations of mob ties and D&P Construction.
“I’ve never heard that at all,” he said.

A representative from Bergen Construction could not be immediately reached for comment.

The Field School construction project, slated to be complete by Aug. 8, will install air conditioning in the school, in addition to heating and ventilation upgrades and asbestos abatement. Field is the last of the District 64 schools to receive air conditioning.

The project, said Mackall, came in under budget at $4.5 million. The contract awarded in February identified the total cost at $5.33 million.

“The bids came in very competitive. They were quite a bit lower than we anticipated,” Mackall said.
Other building projects slated to occur around the district this summer include security upgrades at each school building costing a total of $337,425. The upgrades consist of security cameras on school property, changes in door access and a system that will run the driver’s licenses or state IDs of building visitors through a registered sex offender database.
 

Robert De Niro Joins Robert Pattinson in Olivier Assayas’ Idol’s Eye Based on the Chicago Mafia

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As reported by Variety, the latest addition to the cast of “Idol’s Eye” is Robert De Niro .He has joined the cast alongside Robert Pattinson in the next film from director Olivier Assayas.  While plot details are being kept undisclosed, the film is being described as an action thriller about a heist. It is said to be based on a 2007 Playboy article entitled “Boosting the Big Tuna” by Hillel Levin which is inspired by real-life events. The story follows a gang of habitual criminals who inadvertently rob a porn store backed by Chicago mafia boss Tony Accardo.

Robert_De_Niro_Cannes_2011
Accardo’s Wiki page states that he was also known as “Joe Batters” or “Big Tuna.”  He grew from a petty ruffian to the place of routine boss of the Chicago Outfit also known as the Chicago Mafia, Chicago Mob, or Chicago Syndicate in 1947. He ultimately becomes the final Outfit authority in 1972 until he died on May 22, 1992 at the age of 86 due to congestive heart failure.  Accardo reportedly moved The Outfit into new operations and regions, significantly escalating its command and capital during his term as boss.

By these details, readers can simply imagine that De Niro might be up for the role of the aforementioned mafia boss. This movie could prove a game-changer for Robert Pattinson’s career. Pattinson appears to be doing a great job by taking on more theatrical (“Rover”) and sometimes peculiar (“Maps to the Stars,” “Cosmopolis”) roles.

“Idol’s Eye” is the second flick from Assayas to sign in a Twilight heartthrob in the lead. The director’s “Clouds of Sils Maria” stars Pattinson’s Twilight co-star and on-and-off girlfriend Kristen Stewart.

Benaroya Pictures has come aboard to produce and finance “Idol’s Eye,” which is expected to start production in October 2014 in Chicago and Toronto. Charles Gillibert developed and produced “Idol’s Eye” with CG Cinema, Bluegrass Films’ Scott Stuber, Film 360’s Scott Lambert, Alexandra Milchan and Michael Benaroya. Ben Sachs is executive producing the film. International Film Trust will be the representative for foreign sales. CAA, which arranged financing for the film, will represent domestic rights along with WME.

And that’s it for MNG’s movie news about Robert De Niro joining Robert Pattinson in Olivier Assayas’ “Idol’s Eye,” which is based on the Chicago Mafia. For more details coming up about the “Idol’s Eye” and other entertainment news, stay tuned here at  Movie News Guide (MNG).
Images by Georges Biard
 
(Note: The aforementioned story is a bit off like most Hollywood offerings. The term Mafia is misplaced here in Chicago and the term of Accardo is way off as he took the reigns in the 40s and maintained some oversight almost until his death. And lastly the heist that is mentioned is probably Levinson's Jewelry store not a porn shop. Maybe next time Hollywood. Wayne Johnson)