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FBI SEEKS INFO 10 YEARS AFTER CHICAGO MOB BOSS ANTHONY ZIZZO VANISHED

An ABC7 I-Team Investigation
By Chuck Goudie
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
CHICAGO (WLS) -- Chicago crime boss Anthony Zizzo disappeared a decade ago on Wednesday. He is believed to be one of the outfit's last hits.

On August 31, 2006, George W. Bush was president and the Cubs were nearly in last place. And on that day 10 years ago, Zizzo kissed his wife goodbye and left their Westmont townhouse destined for lunch on Rush Street. He had been summoned to meet with some outfit colleagues, but Zizzo never returned. Now AWOL for 10 years, he vanished without a trace.

"Anthony Zizzo has connections to La Cosa Nostra which may have played a part in his disappearance," FBI Special Agent Garrett Croon said.

La Cosa Nostra, which means "this thing of ours" in Italian, is the favored federal lingo for the mob of which Anthony Zizzo was a high-ranking member.

"He was the underboss - traditionally a tough guy's job," said John Binder, author of "The Chicago Outfit."

Binder said Zizzo had left his house here in suburban Westmont and told his wife he had a lunch meeting on Rush Street. His car was found empty near a restaurant in Melrose Park.

Zizzo is said to have a falling out with mob boss Michael "Fat Boy" Sarno concerning illegal video poker machines.

"As they often do, they were going to sit down and smooth this out. But no - that's your death sentence," Binder said.

Investigators consider top hoodlums Joe "The Sledgehammer" Andriacchi and Albie "Falcon" Vena as possible suspects in Zizzo's disappearance, but no one has ever been charged.

Without a body, the FBI reiterates its $10,000 reward for information in the case.

"We need the public's help. Telephone the FBI. Tell us what you know if you were in that area at the time or you were around the rest or you knew Anthony Zizzo. Call us, tell us your information, no matter how small you think it may be," Agent Croon said.

"It's interesting that the FBI itself offered a $10,000 reward for information into the whereabouts or the disappearance of Tony Zizzo," Binder said. "Honestly, they would have seen him as valuable to them dead or alive in one sense or another. Possibly if they thought they could solve the Zizzo murder that would lead to a whole second round of indictments."

Zizzo vanished as the government's Family Secrets mob murder case was shifting into high gear 10 years ago.


A second round of Family Secrets indictments was always expected but never came. It isn't known whether authorities saw Zizzo as a defendant or thought they could turn him as a witness, but after he became unavailable, all the Zizzo options were off the table.

From Scarface to senile: Inside Al Capone's fall from criminal kingpin to syphilis-riddled madman


Capone took over the Chicago mob aged just 26, making $40million a year
But despite evading rival gangsters, he was taken down by syphilis
The sexually transmitted disease eroded his mental faculties over years
He spent final years 'talking to' dead men - some of whom he'd had killed
And doctors said he had the mental age of a 12-year-old
His wife Mae kept his condition a secret, knowing the mob would kill him
He eventually died in 1947 due to a pneumonia-caused heart attack
By James Wilkinson For Dailymail.com
PUBLISHED: 09:15 EST, 16 October 2016 | UPDATED: 10:17 EST, 16 October 2016
In the 1920s Al Capone was one of the most feared men in the United States of America - a criminal kingpin who rose to the head of the Chicago mob aged just 26 and whose campaign of extortion and murder touched the world of politics.

But despite being shrewd and security-conscious, Capone was ultimately taken down by an unstoppable foe: A syphillis infection that left him with the mental age of a 12-year-old, doctors said.

His shocking story and pitiful end are the focus of a new book, 'Al Capone: His Life, Legacy and Legend' by Dierdre Bair, the NY Post reported.

Mobster: Al Capone was the feared boss of the Chicago mob. But despite being careful to guard against rival gangsters, he was felled by the sexually transmitted disease syphilis

Last days: The gangster lived out his last days at this mansion with his family. But the disease has ravaged his mind, and he would 'talk' to dead men, including some that he'd had killed

Capone - nicknamed 'Scarface' after an attack as a teenager that left him with a marked left cheek - had made his fortune as the vicious leader of the Chicago Outfit.

The Outfit, which had tendrils across the US, ran bootlegging and smuggling operations, and Capone would bomb the stores of those who resisted their protection rackets.

That power turned Capone into a major target, but the wily crook was careful to surround himself with security and shield himself from arrest.

He was also famous for his parties and life of excess, which earned him headlines across the world and fascinating a population hungry for scandal.

But in 1932, Capone, then 33, was imprisoned on tax evasion charges, and prison doctors immediately diagnosed him with the sexually transmitted diseases syphilis and gonorrhoea.


By the time he was paroled in 1939, Capone was in the midst of late-stage syphilis, and as his mind began to unravel he would be seen talking to himself.

At least, that's how it appeared from the outside, but inside Capone's head he was having in-depth conversations with men who were long-dead - some of whom he'd had killed.

Capone was given a 'pension' of just $600 a week by the Chicago Outfit - a huge step down from his former life of luxury, in which the mobster, rumored to make $40million a year would wear expensive jewelry and drink fine liquor.

In danger: Had the mob learned Capone was senile, they would have had him killed

Instead, he would walk around his mansion in his pajamas, trying to collect butterflies with his granddaughter.

'It was, in many ways, an ideal, middle-class Italian-American household where family came first,' Bair told the NY Post.

That mansion was sold for $7.4million in 2014 and is now being rented out for movies and private functions.

Capone was fiercely protected by his wife Mae, who knew that if the reporters who camped out on their lawn found out he was talking about old business, the Outfit would have him killed.

And if his syphilis caused him to lash out, he would be determined to be breaking his parole and be hauled back into the slammer.

But Mae kept her husband safe with the emotional fortitude of any number of Capone's former heavies, and he lived out his final days in the mansion, dying in 1947, aged just 48, after a stroke, heart attack and pneumonia.

It was a muted end for the vicious mobster who fascinated America - and proof that all the henchmen in the world can't protect you from yourself.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3841142/Al-Capone-s-fall-criminal-kingpin-syphilis-riddled-madman-explored.html#ixzz4VIHDZ1Ek

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On Anniversary Of Al Capone's Prison Stint, IRS Delivers 2nd Gun To Mob Museum

Kelly Phillips Erb ,  FORBES STAFF October 17, 2016

It was 85 years ago today that the feds finally got their man: on this day in 1931, Al Capone was sentenced to serious prison time. Despite Capone's reputation, he wasn't put away for murder or gambling or bootlegging but for tax evasion.

Alphonse Gabriel Capone, better known as Al Capone, was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1899. When he was 18, a friend, Johnny "The Fox" Torrio, introduced Capone to Frankie Yale. Yale owned a number of brothels which served as bases for illegal activities, including gambling. Yale gave Capone a job as a bouncer and bartender at one of the brothels. While at work, Capone, who wasn't known for being even-tempered, got into a fight and was slashed across the face three times with a knife, earning him his first nickname, "Scarface." Supposedly, the fight was over a girl: Capone made a pass at a customer's sister.

While still just a teenager, Capone met and married Mae Josephine Coughlin. That same month, Mae gave birth to the couple's first child, a son, Albert Francis "Sonny" Capone. Capone then decided it was time to settle down. He moved his family to Baltimore with intentions of making an honest living. But he couldn't resist his old life, and when Torrio asked Capone to move to Chicago and help him run his mob empire, it was an offer Capone couldn't refuse. Prohibition was in full swing and the men saw an opportunity to exploit the demand for booze, gambling, and women.

In 1925, Torrio barely survived an assassination attempt by rival mobsters Hymie "The Pole" Weiss, Vincent "The Schemer" Drucci, and George "Bugs" Moran. That was it for Torrio: he wanted out. He decided to leave Chicago and head to Italy, handing over control of his mob empire over to Capone.

Capone expanded Torrio's business in Chicago and made lots of money doing it. By the mid-1920s, Capone was reportedly taking home $60 million annually ($826 million in today's dollars). Despite playing "Robin Hood" to the locals, his wealth continued to grow, reportedly topping $100 million ($1.43 billion in today's dollars).

As Capone's empire grew, so did his penchant for violence. The bodies piled up as rival gangs fought for control in Chicago. The lawlessness culminated on February 14, 1929, when gunmen allegedly hired by Capone posed as police officers before executing rival gangsters belonging to George "Bugs" Moran. Capone was in Miami at the time of the shootings but was immediately blamed for what came to be known as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre. No one was ever prosecuted. After the shootings, the FBI dubbed Capone "Public Enemy Number One," a label Capone reportedly hated.


Capone's exploits taunted lawmen who wanted him brought down. Capone proved difficult to pin down, escaping prosecution for serious crimes through a combination of smarts and, more importantly, bribes. Then President Herbert Hoover made it clear that he wanted Capone off the streets.

Scarface and Tennessee

December 6, 2016

BY MIKE VINSON

Arguably, "Al Capone" embodies the term "gangster" more so than any other criminal in American History. However, after asking around, I was baffled at how many young people didn't know very much about him, or had never heard of him, period.

Alphonse Gabriel "Al" Capone was born to Italian immigrant parents in Brooklyn, New York, January 17, 1899. Dropping out of school at age 14, Capone became a member of the notorious "5 Points Gang," based out of New York. Having gained a reputation as a merciless street fighter and enforcer, the stockily-built Capone was bouncing at brothels while still a teenager.

Though accounts vary, it was while he still was in New York that Capone earned the nickname "Scarface." Capone was working in a nightclub (probably a brothel), and another gangster and his sister entered the nightclub. Capone reportedly made an off-color remark about the gangster's sister. The gangster took Capone's remark as a direct insult, and laid open the left side of Capone's face with a straight razor, thus the moniker "Scarface."

Chicago mob boss John Torrio recruited Capone to leave New York and come to the Windy City in 1921. It is key to note here that Prohibition was in effect as of 1920, Prohibition defined as: the legal prohibiting of the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages for consumption. Torrio's Chicago-based gang--comprised of a large number of captains, lieutenants, and foot soldiers--ran a lucrative enterprise, raking in millions yearly on gambling, prostitution, and bootleg beer and whiskey. After arriving in Chicago (1921), young Al began on the bottom rung and worked as a bouncer at one of Torrio's brothels. It wasn't long, though, before the ambitious Capone was Torrio's right-hand man.

January 24, 1925, there was an assassination attempt on John Torrio's life. Though shot several times, Torrio managed to survive. Aware that death was inevitable if he didn't step down, and with plenty of money stashed away, Torrio turned over his "Chicago Outfit" to 26-year-old Al Capone.

After assuming control from Torrio, Capone set up his headquarters at The Hawthorne Inn, located at 4833 - 22nd Street, Cicero, Chicago. If my sources are correct, Capone owned 160 speakeasies (slang for bar/dance club), 150 gambling joints, and 22 brothels. It has been written that, at his peak, Capone was making over 50 million dollars a year--both big money and big politicians in his back pocket! Chauffeur driven in a bulletproof, souped-up Cadillac, attired in tailored silk suits, fedora hats, cigar in mouth, "Big Al," sociopath though he was, commanded totalitarian respect. However, such bountiful success did not come without equally ambitious adversaries.

George "Bugs" Moran ran Chicago's North Side criminal rackets, in direct competition with Capone's South Side operation. It was well known that Moran wanted to "take out" Capone. Moran's headquarters was the SMC Cartage Company Garage, located at 2122 North Clark Street, Chicago.

On Valentine's Day/February 14, 1929, Capone was conveniently vacationing at his winter home in Miami, Florida. On that same Valentine's day, Moran was scheduled to meet a man at the Cartage Company Garage and buy a truckload of hijacked whiskey, a ruse preemptively hatched by Capone to draw out Moran.

However, Moran was running late, and before he arrived, four Capone hitmen dressed up as Chicago Policemen, probably led by "Machine Gun" Jack McGurn, marched into the garage and ordered the seven men inside to line up against the wall. Six of the men belonged to Moran's gang, and one was an optometrist who enjoyed hanging out with gangsters. Thinking it was a routine Chicago P.D. shakedown, the seven men did as ordered, their backs to their executioners. The Capone gunmen, mistakenly thinking one of the seven, indeed, was Moran, proceeded to blast the seven to smithereens with multiple .45 caliber rounds issued from Thompson submachine guns.

Newspapers across the country featured article-and-photo coverage of the carnage inside the Chicago garage, and it was--and still is--infamously referred to as the "St. Valentine's Day Massacre." Even Bugs Moran, who, as mentioned, had been the main target, but survived because he was running late, stated: "Only Capone kills like that!" Though Capone was considered the mastermind behind the multiple slaughter, no one ever was convicted for the St. Valentine's Day Massacre.

In early October 1931, Al Capone was convicted of income-tax evasion. In 1934, he was transferred from the Atlanta State Penitentiary to the notorious Alcatraz Prison (now closed), which was located in the San Francisco Bay. Suffering from advanced syphilitic dementia, Capone was released to the care of his family in 1939. Capone died of a heart attack at his Miami mansion on January 25, 1947, at the age of 48.

So what about Al Capone and the "Tennessee Connection"? Credible sources claim:

*Capone bought illegal whiskey from bootleggers in Cannon County, TN, and Dekalb County, TN.

*Capone dined at the historic Sedberry Hotel (now closed), located in McMinnville, TN.

*Capone patronized the renowned High Point Restaurant (still operating), located in Monteagle, TN.


Just some Gangster History 101.

Outfit soldier caught on tape planning robbery: 'It will be a great Christmas'

A reputed Chicago Outfit soldier was arrested on gun charges this week after he was caught on undercover recordings bragging about plans to break into the home of an elderly suburban lawyer and force him to open a safe filled with hundreds of thousands of dollars, federal prosecutors say.

"Nothing gets my juices flowing like putting a gun to someone's head, taking their stuff, and making it mine," Charles "Chuckie" Russell was quoted in a court filing telling a government informant. "It will be a great Christmas, I'm telling you."

Russell, 67, was arrested Wednesday after he allegedly went to a South Loop deli to purchase eight guns from a person who turned out to be an undercover federal agent, according to a 26-page criminal complaint unsealed Thursday. He was charged with two counts of being a felon in possession of a firearm and ordered held until a bond hearing in early January.

An alleged member of the Chicago mob's Grand Avenue crew, Russell was sentenced in 1992 to 35 years in prison for an aggravated criminal sexual assault conviction. He was acquitted of attempted murder in that case, records show. He was released on parole in March 2011.

Last month, a confidential informant told agents with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that Russell had been bragging about being "a top ranking member of the mob," according to the complaint.

At a meeting at a coffeehouse on Taylor Street, Russell allegedly told the informant he was the head of a prolific gang of burglars called the "Bishop" boys that was responsible for hundreds of burglaries and home invasions over the past several years.

On Dec. 16, Russell met the informant along with an undercover agent at the Boundary Tavern and Grille in Wicker Park, according to the complaint. During the conversation, which was secretly recorded, Russell talked about plans for an upcoming robbery of a man in his 70s who was believed to have as much as $750,000 in cash in a safe in his home, the complaint said. Russell said he'd been casing the home for years and had an "ex-girl" who was on the inside and knew the location of the safe and other valuables.

"If he doesn't open it, we're gonna make him open it," Russell said, according to the complaint. "They always open for me, believe me. I bring my butane torch, put it on the bottom of their feet, they open it."

According to the complaint, Russell wanted help on the robbery. He told the informant and the undercover agent that his crew would be equipped with all the proper tools to avoid detection, including police scanners, masks and a change of clothes. He also said their biggest worry would be if the victim had a heart attack, because if "he (expletive) drops dead, we got a (expletive) murder," according to the complaint.

"The fun for me is the score," Russell allegedly said on the recording. "That's how I get my adrenaline. ... You know how long it takes to come to down for me? I counted money one night for so long my hands were filthy."

Later in the conversation, Russell talked about buying firearms from the undercover agent. On Monday, the three men met again at the Gale Street Inn in Jefferson Park, where Russell gave the agent a list of guns he was looking for, including an Uzi submachine gun and an AK-47, according to the complaint.

During the meeting, Russell handed the undercover agent a driver's license depicting an African-American man and then showed him a cellphone photo of a car that was riddled with bullet holes. Russell said he was showing him "some decent work" of his, and that the man was "no longer with us."

"All (expletive) blood and brain all over the (expletive) seat," Russell was quoted in the charges as saying. "Went right through his head and out that side. Take (the car) and drop it off in the black community, another black bastard gets caught with it."

Chicago police confirmed that the man depicted in the driver's license photo was killed in November, according to the complaint.

Russell's arrest marked the latest blow for the once-feared Grand Avenue crew made famous by colorful and violent leaders such as Joey "The Clown" Lombardo and currently believed to be headed by Albert "Little Guy" Vena, who is Russell's brother-in-law

In 2014, alleged crew members Robert Panozzo, Paul Koroluk, and others were arrested on sweeping racketeering charges alleging an array of crimes going back to at least 2007, from home invasions and armed robberies to burglaries, arson, insurance fraud and prostitution.

jmeisner@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @jmetr22b


Copyright © 2017, Chicago Tribune

William Hanhardt, former Chicago police official convicted of running jewelry theft ring, dies at 88

Jeremy Gorner and Annie SweeneyContact Reporters
Chicago Tribune

William Hanhardt, a once-heralded cop who became the highest ranking Chicago police official convicted of wrongdoing for running a sophisticated crew of jewelry thieves who stole millions, died early Friday. He was 88.

Hanhardt, of north suburban Deerfield, died about 3 a.m. at Highland Park Hospital after suffering from complications of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, according to his son-in-law, Joel Levin.

Over three decades, Hanhardt worked his way up Chicago police to the rank of chief of detectives, before he pleaded guilty in October 2001 to running a theft ring that stalked jewelry salesmen throughout the country and stole more than $5 million in diamonds and gems in the 1980s and 1990s.

In 2002, when he was originally sentenced to 16 years in federal prison, prosecutors accused him of being in "the mob's pocket" for virtually his entire career.

At his sentencing, a hearing that lasted four days, Hanhardt, wearing a bright orange federal prison jumpsuit, expressed no remorse but rather spoke of his pride of being a police officer, including the days he walked into the federal courthouse, according to a Tribune account of the hearing.

"I still have the same amount of pride for this building and our criminal justice system," he told U.S. District Judge Charles Norgle Sr., who a day later handed down the sentence to Hanhardt.

At the sentencing, Norgle said he took into account 18 letters he received from family and friends, praising the loyalty and love of Hanhardt's family.

"We are not at all ashamed of our father," Edward Hanhardt told reporters as the family left the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse. "We stand behind him as a family and we are very proud of him."

Former U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald called the case "a remarkable chapter in the history of law enforcement" in Chicago.

But in 2004, Hanhardt was resentenced to 11 years and nine months in prison after a federal appeals court found that Norgle erred in finding that Hanhardt obstructed justice when he failed to appear in court in 2001 because of a suicide attempt.

Hanhardt had a storied 33-year police career, with a reputation as a cop's cop with an uncanny ability to solve crimes. But as he rose through the ranks, eventually becoming a deputy superintendent, he was dogged by alleged ties to organized crime.

Levin, Hanhardt's son-in-law, said Friday that despite his crimes, he should still be remembered for his dedication to service as a Chicago cop.

"Look at all the good things he did in his career," Levin, citing Hanhardt's commendations, said in a phone interview. "He helped people throughout Chicago."

Hanhardt's crew used meticulous planning and pinpoint timing to steal jewels from traveling salesmen.

For example, a Chicago-area jewelry salesman stopped in 1984 at a Holiday Inn in Glendale, Wis., a Milwaukee suburb, parked and locked his Mercedes-Benz by the front door and went inside to use the bathroom. When he came out minutes later, the car was gone, retired Glendale police Capt. James Dandoy, who investigated the case, told the Tribune in 2011. Police found the car three blocks away with $310,000 in watches missing from the trunk, Dandoy recalled.

The thieves had used a valet key they copied while the car was at a repair shop.

The crew also showed patience. Months before a hotel hosted a trade show for jewelers, the crew worked to distract hotel clerks and make duplicate keys for the safety-deposit boxes where salesmen would store gems.

"It was a very sophisticated kind of conduct, the kind you usually just see in the movies and on TV shows," Eric Sussman, a former prosecutor on the case, said in 2011, when Hanhardt was moved to a halfway house on Chicago's Near West Side after serving time in a federal prison in Terre Haute, Ind.

After retiring from the Chicago Police Department in 1986, Hanhardt tapped a Chicago police sergeant and a detective to access law enforcement computers to help him gather intelligence about jewelry salesmen targeted for theft.

At Hanhardt's 2002 sentencing hearing, authorities also disclosed that in 1996 he asked another detective to keep him posted on a joint investigation with federal authorities on the importation of cocaine from South America. Prosecutors at the time said federal authorities felt the investigation had been compromised.

Hanhardt's lawyer, Jeffrey Steinback, on Friday did not want to talk about the case. But he said his former client was first and foremost always concerned about other people close to him.

"Whenever circumstances arose for us to speak, he always insisted on asking how I was," Steinback said. "And he was absolutely genuine about that."

Steinback said Hanhardt's time in prison was "extraordinarily difficult" because of his health, but he never expressed bitterness about his ailments.

"He had an enormous, an immense physical strength even in his later years that was only shown by his mental toughness," Steinback said. "I think that it was mental toughness that enabled him to endure and got him home to the people he loved."

Once he completed his sentence, Levin said, Hanhardt sought to put the crimes behind him. He had seven children, 18 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren, Levin said. Hanhardt had just turned 88 earlier this month and celebrated his birthday with his family.

"He was a family man and his family meant most to him," Levin said.

Funeral services are being planned.

jgorner@chicagotribune.com

asweeney@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @JeremyGorner

Twitter @annie1221


Copyright © 2017, Chicago Tribune

Razing Riviera casino will level part of Vegas' mobster past


By SALLY HO, Associated Press

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Riviera Hotel and Casino — the Las Vegas Strip's first high-rise that was as famous for its mobster ties as its Hollywood personification of Sin City's mobster past — will officially exit the scene on Tuesday with a cinematic implosion, complete with fireworks.

"The Riv" closed in May 2015 after 60 years on the northern end of the Strip. The shuttered casino's owners, the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, are spending $42 million to level the 13-building campus.

Officials said the 24-story Monaco Tower will go down at 2 a.m. Tuesday, and the Monte Carlo Tower will be imploded in August. The tourism agency bought the 2,075-room property across 26 acres last year for $182.5 million, plus $8.5 million in related transaction costs, with plans to expand its Las Vegas Convention Center.

The Riviera's 15-to 20-seconds-long implosion will mark the latest kiss goodbye to what's left among the relics to Vegas' mobster past.

"Ironically, the Riviera is as famous for its imaginary self as much as its actual self," said Geoff Schumacher of the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, also known as the Mob Museum in Las Vegas.

Most of its contemporaries have been long gone, with only the Tropicana and Flamingo casinos still in business. The Flamingo has been completely rebuilt at its original location, but the Tropicana still has pieces of its original building, making it the last true mob structure on the Strip, said Michael Green, Nevada historian and a professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.

When The Riviera opened in 1955, organized crime outfits from across the country had already sunk their teeth into the casinos in a takeover that had started the decade before. Gambling profits were skimmed to send back home to pay for their gangs' illegal enterprises involving illegal betting, drugs, prostitution, murders and everything else. The mobsters were known to have controlled the money-counting at the most famous casinos in their day, including the Dunes, Sands, Desert Inn and Stardust — all of which have already disappeared from the Strip.

"The Riviera was and always was the Chicago outfit's crown jewel in the desert," Schumacher said.
A classic mob joint, the Riviera's place in that seedy time is probably outranked by the Flamingo, historians said. That casino was run by Bugsy Siegel, who is regarded as the most historically significant figure from that era.

The casinos were cleaned up in the 1970s and 1980s, courtesy of state and federal crackdowns on organized crime.

Hollywood's version of the past, however, would hoist the Riviera to the top.

Three of the most famous movies ever filmed in Las Vegas used the Riviera as a backdrop, including the Rat Pack's original 1960 "Ocean's 11," the 1971 James Bond film "Diamonds Are Forever" and "Casino," the 1995 movie based on real-life Vegas mobsters Frank Rosenthal and Anthony Spilotro during their 1970s heyday at the Stardust. More recently, it was featured in "The Hangover" in 2009.
The Riviera also pioneered the business model that helped Vegas turn into an entertainment capital. The casino's first headliner was Liberace. Dean Martin was a part-owner for a short time as part of his exclusive residency.

"(The Riviera) looked like a 50s Rat Pack casino up until yesterday," Schumacher said.


Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Mob crook gets 18 years; convicted wife on leave from county job

Paul Koroluk, a leader of a mob-connected crew on the Near West Side, has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for racketeering.

Paul Koroluk, a leader of a mob-connected crew on the Near West Side, has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for racketeering.

Frank Main
@FrankMainNews | email

An Outfit-connected career criminal has been sentenced to 18 years in prison in a high-profile racketeering case brought by Cook County prosecutors.

Paul Koroluk, 57, pleaded guilty on June 13 to a felony racketeering charge. He’s currently in Stateville penitentiary.

His wife, Maria Koroluk, was also charged in the investigation, dubbed Operation Crew Cut.
Since she was charged in 2014, she’s been on unpaid leave from her $103,707-a-year job as director of technical review for Cook County Assessor Joe Berrios, according to a spokesman for the office.

Maria Koroluk, 55, was charged with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute — a felony carrying nine to 40 years in prison. Police searched her home on the Near West Side and found 200 grams of cocaine packaged for sale in baggies, along with $12,000 in cash, according to court records.

But on June 13, prosecutors dismissed the drug charge and a felony charge of receiving stolen property. She pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of criminal trespass to a vehicle and was sentenced to court supervision.

The assessor’s office hasn’t determined whether she can return to her job, said Tom Shaer, deputy assessor for communications for Berrios. A misdemeanor conviction isn’t an automatic disqualifier, he said.

“It is important to note that Ms. Koroluk’s position is not Shakman-exempt,” he said. “Shakman oversight limits our latitude in hiring and firing such non-exempt employees.”

Paul Koroluk is connected to the Outfit and the C-Notes street gang in “The Patch” along Grand Avenue just west of the Loop — home to some of the city’s most infamous mobsters, prosecutors say.

His alleged partner in crime, Robert Panozzo Sr., continues to face racketeering charges in Cook County Criminal Court and a separate extortion charge in federal court.

Operation Crew Cut was the second racketeering case that Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez brought under 2012 state statute modeled after the 1970 federal racketeering law used to target the Mafia.

“We now have the legal tools that our federal partners have enjoyed for a very long time and we are putting them to work to systematically crack down on violent organized criminal activity as charged in this particular investigation,” Alvarez said in a statement Thursday.

The probe by the Chicago Police and feds was launched in October 2013 after Panozzo and others tried to have a state witness killed, officials say. The witness was preparing to testify against members of the crew in a kidnapping and home invasion case.

Prosecutors say Panozzo and Koroluk ran the “PK street crew,” which allegedly committed home invasions, armed robberies, residential burglaries, insurance fraud, prostitution and other offenses.

The crew used information from gang members to rob drug dealers. The crew members allegedly posed as cops — wearing badges — to steal narcotics from dealers, prosecutors say.

Paul Koroluk and Robert Panozzo Sr. are convicted burglars and have been in the news for years for their reputed connection to the Chicago Outfit.

They have longtime ties to Grand Avenue mob boss Albert “Little Guy” Vena, 68, and imprisoned mob boss Joseph “The Clown” Lombardo, 87, officials say.

They were busted in July 2014 when they raided what they thought was a Mexican drug cartel’s stash house on the Southeast Side. It was actually a police sting. Paul Koroluk has pleaded guilty to that July 2014 attempted holdup, as well as a January 2014 drug rip-off on the Southwest Side and a November 2012 drug rip-off in south suburban Crete.

Four other defendants, William Feliciano, Kevin Koonce, Donald Hines and Jose Contreras, have pleaded guilty to charges in the probe. Feliciano got 18 years in prison; Koonce, 47 years; Hines, 17 years, and Contreras, 22 years.

Charges are pending against Ponozzo’s son, Robert Jr.; Dionisio Garcia, and Jeffrey Hollinghead, the would-be hit man who informed police about the PK crew’s plot to kill a state witness. He started cooperating with authorities in 2013 before he pleaded guilty to a kidnapping and was sentenced to 15 years in prison, sources say.

THE LAST FAMILY SECRET: 30 YEARS AFTER THE SPILOTRO HIT

                By Chuck Goudie and Barbara Markoff and Christine Tressel
Friday, June 24, 2016

CHICAGO (WLS) -- On June 23, 30 years ago, the mob's powerhouse brothers were discovered buried in an Indiana cornfield. The "last family secret" is how they got there.

The I-Team looks into Tony and Michael Spilotro's last road trip, where it began and who was behind it.

"Do you have any fears at all for your life?"

The question to Tony "Ant" Spilotro was finally answered on June 23, 1986, when he and his brother Michael were found six feet under by a Northwest Indiana corn farmer.

"This don't look like any animal skin I've ever seen," the farmer said at the time.

The Spilotro's temporary resting place is still eerily visible thirty years later. How they ended up here is not nearly as obvious.

The movie "Casino," Hollywood's version of the brother's death, shows outfit bosses beating them in the Indiana cornfield, something mob insiders say never happened.

We do know from authorities and underworld informants the Spilotros were rubbed out because Tony had angered Chicago crime bosses by an affair with the wife of Lefty Rosenthal, a Chicago native and Vegas casino exec who was an outfit operative.

And former FBI supervisor John Mallul says Spilotro was a loose cannon.

"He was essentially operating on his own. Keeping the proceeds to himself and not looking for authority to do anything," says Mallul.

"He did a lot of things he was not supposed to do that were really bad for business and for the Outfit," says John Binder, author of "The Chicago Outfit."

And we know the Spilotros had been invited to a meeting with the bosses, under the belief it was to be a mob promotion ceremony. But they had been summoned to their deaths in a suburban basement. Details came years later by mob informant Nick Calabrese.

"He dove at Michael's legs, he grabbed Michael, he held Michael and Louie Eboli cut his throat," says Joe "the Shark" Lopez, mob attorney.

Top hoodlums Louie "The Mooch" Eboli and all the bosses were there, according to authorities, along with several mystery murderers, not known to this day.

"The plan was simply to tackle them, hold them down and strangle them," Mullul says.

"The top guys made a point of being there and getting their whacks in on them before they were dead," says Binder.

And the last Family secret? The exact location of where they were jumped and beaten by that gaggle of hoodlums, narrowed down only to a subdivision in northwest suburban Bensenville,

"It was my understanding that there was a couple of members, alleged members, that lived in that subdivision," says Lopez.

One of the murderers was Nick Calabrese, an FBI informant since 2002, and numerous times he tried to lead agents to the site of the basement beat-down.

"We couldn't locate the home and Nick couldn't confirm it. That's why that still remains a mystery," says Mallul.

For the family of Tony Spilotro, a ruthless career criminal who once put a victim's head in a vice until his eyeball popped out, 30 years has softened the memories.

"Ya know, he just- he was just a man, and got caught up in some things that maybe he shouldn't have but he lived it the way he lived it," says Vincent Spilotro, his son.


Mobwatcher websites display several Bensenville homes purported to be the location of the Spilotro killings. Investigators say all were all looked at and cleared. The I-Team examined property records for those and other possible locations and spoke with current and former homeowners and found no outfit connection. So that last family secret remains intact.

Archives of the Chief Investigator, Winter 1998

THE CHIEF SAYS.....
  by Chief Investigator, Wayne A. Johnson

ORGANIZED CRIME IN CHICAGO

  The problems involving North Loop Tax Increment Financing District Contracts (no bid) known as (TIF)s, that were first reported by Crain’s Business Chicago in the summer of 1997 was expounded upon in the November 2, 1997, Sunday Tribune. A holistic explanation was provided of the TIF concept and it’s expansion. This report also provided an inside look at common political favoritism practices, in a typical city council meeting (Feb, 7, 1997). It’s good for the public to see just how this process works. Crain’s and the Tribune should be commended for these reports. A proposal is being considered to designate the Taylor St. (Little Italy) area as a TIF district. Remember, Corruption will only be tolerated by an uninformed public!  
  Since that revelation, other scandalous incidents have appeared on the horizon. One such case was documented when a TV news crew followed a Ward, Streets and Sanitation Superintendent. The Superintendent not only left his ward but, left the state while on company time. In typical Chicago fashion his cronies stood fast and defended his actions citing past exemplary service. What makes this case exceptional is the fact the one current and three former Alderman came to the rescue. Since this storey surfaced the Inspector General brought charges against this Superintendent and he was currently on suspension. This case was scheduled to be presented before the Personnel Board for the City of Chicago until the Ward Superintendent suddenly retired in late January. The troubling part of this scenario is that he was allowed to take part in a buy-out offered to some but, not all city employees. What about the criminal aspects of this THEFT.      

UNION NEWS

  Well as spring approaches the long awaited ruling by former organized crime prosecutor and Hearing Officer for LIUNA, Peter Vaira was released. The ruling coincided with the complaint filed in 1997 by the GEB Attorney for LIUNA, that characterized several LIUNA Officials as Organized Crime members or Associates. This finding led to a takeover in early February, of the Chicago District Council offices at 6121 W. Diversey by U.S. Marshalls and FBI Agents armed with a Federal Judges Court Order. Trustee Robert Bloch was appointed for the task of sorting through bank accounts, pension funds, and other union records for signs of improprieties. This task as characterized by Washington-based Attorney Dwight P. Bostwick as “only the beginning”.   

  New allegations have arisen from the GEB Attorney for the Laborers International Union of North America, except this time they are directed at the International President and Bill Clinton confidant, Arthur Coia. This is not the first time that such actions have been considered however. In 1994 through 1995 a takeover seemed unavoidable as government negotiators and union representatives tried to reach an agreement on a plan to rid the union of mob influence. Although, a short time later Coia himself agreed to lead the effort to clean up the union after hiring a former federal prosecutor and federal agents, to placate the Justice Department. Talk about putting the fox in charge of the chicken coup. But, for the time being the heat dissipated and it was back to business as usual, including the close relationship between Coia and President Clinton.



  Well, as 1997 came to an end former U. S. Justice Department lawyer, and the man Coia himself hired, GEB Attorney  Robert D. Luskin filed charges in Washington against Coia, while still other investigations against Coia proceed in Washington, Boston, and Rochester N.Y.  In this complaint, the charges against Coia concern “historical misconduct”, and claimed that Coia has “associated with, and been controlled by and influenced by organized crime figures” in the past. This is no surprise in light of past accounts from his own mouth that included a meeting in 1991 between Coia, John Serpico (a former union official ousted in 1995 and current chairman of the Illinois International Port District), and Chicago MOB Lieutenant Vincent A. Solano. The late Solano a former Laborers local president himself gave Coia his blessing in his bid for a run at secretary-treasurer of the international but, warned him that it was Serpico that the MOB had designated as the heir-apparent to the International Presidency. Well, as you can see this episode reads like a Nicholas Pileggi screenplay. In coming months we will monitor this and other union affairs and report those results in the next Alert.      

POLICE CORRUPTION

  On November 3, 1997, the FOP membership at a regular meeting attended by over 300 members  passed a vote of no confidence in their former leader Supt. Matt Rodriguez. This unprecedented measure came on the heels of what is felt to be a rush to judgement regarding the move to fire two officers in the alleged beating of a west side teenager.

  In light of this, what I find astonishing is the department’s tortoise like investigation of an officer with a long Organized Crime associations in Gambling ventures that was first brought to light in 1994 when this officer was in the training academy as a recruit. This revelation was  made public when the Chicago Crime Commission released it’s latest work on Organized Crime titled “The New Faces of Organized Crime”. High ranking officials of the department have told the Chicago Crime Commission that legal affairs attorneys admit that if all that is known now, was known when this officer applied for employment he would not be a police officer today. More recently, a former candidate for the Superintendents position claimed in a Sun-Times interview that he  never had files in his possession that would clarify this officers Organized Crime associations.  However, this information was known by the department and specifically the Internal Affair Division. Why the lies? And why was this officer not fired. Smells like a cover up to me! This makes me wonder aloud, why does the department not ask all of it’s applicants if they have Organized Crime affiliations and further, why don’t they consult their owns experts in that area about the backgrounds of potential candidates? Could it be because, the unit over the last several years has been stripped of manpower and could not handle such a mandate!


  Future recommendations by newly appointed Superintendent Terry Hillard address just that. In his first days as the Superintendent designee, Hillard spoke of bringing the Intelligence function of the Department back to its prior strength. In my eyes, this is a sign the Mayor made the right selection. I wish Superintendent Hillard all the best and look forward to working with him in the future.

Sinatra And The Jack Pack: Hollywood star and JFK break-up

SLEDGEHAMMER in hand, an apoplectic Frank Sinatra swung savagely around his newly renovated home in Palm Springs, California.

By PETER SHERIDAN
PUBLISHED: 16:26, Sun, Jul 24, 2016 | UPDATED: 17:43, Sun, Jul 24, 2016

Ol’ Blue Eyes had rebuilt the house at vast expense to welcome his good friend, President John F Kennedy.

He had remodeled it, adding rooms for White House staff and Secret Service agents, and installed a bank of 25 phone lines.

He even built a helicopter pad in the garden. But days before JFK’s planned visit in March, 1962, the president abruptly ended his friendship with Sinatra – the bitter aftermath of a shared penchant for dangerous women and Mafia connections.

Sinatra stormed through his house “smashing up everything in his way before taking a sledgehammer to the concrete helipad outside,” reveals Michael Sheridan, author of the gripping new book Sinatra And The Jack Pack, detailing their remarkable friendship and its dramatic ending.“

He was deeply wounded by what he regarded as a huge personal insult.”

Sinatra had his famed Rat Pack – Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr and the president’s brother-in-law Peter Lawford – but he craved more.

“Sinatra desperately wanted to be part of John F Kennedy’s gang,” says Sheridan.

“The guy Ol’ Blue Eyes really wanted to hang with was the real chairman of the board, John F Kennedy.” He adds: “He and his father [Senator Joe Kennedy] had covertly used the Mob, through Sinatra to get the vote out and to, in some cases, fix entire electoral areas.

He had used Frank to encourage his Hollywood and entertainment industry friends to support the Kennedy presidential election campaign.” For hard-drinking, brawling, Mafia-connected womaniser Sinatra, raised on the hardscrabble streets of New Jersey, the friendship offered an entrée to Washington DC’s ultimate circle of power, and a veneer of respectability.

Kennedy loved the singer’s Hollywood glamour, and access to the world’s most beautiful women. Sinatra was even put in charge of JFK’s inaugural gala ceremony and parade in Washington, DC, in January, 1961, assembling a stellar cast including Gene Kelly, Bette Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Nat King Cole and Ethel Merman.

“Since the election Sinatra had sought access to, and approval from, the president with a new intensity,” and “bombarded Kennedy with letters, messages, gifts and suggestions,” says Sheridan.
Sinatra hosted lavish parties and fund-raisers for JFK, and privately they womanised together.

Both bedded screen siren Marilyn Monroe, and FBI files disclose that both were investigated for a fling with two New York prostitutes, the book reveals.

Among the women Sinatra pimped for JFK was brunette beauty Judith Campbell Exner, who Sinatra – in an appalling display of bad judgment – also introduced to Chicago Mafia boss Sam Giancana.
Thanks to Ol’ Blue Eyes, the president of the United States and the nation’s leading mobster shared the same lover for more than two years. But while Kennedy kept his affair with mobster’s moll Exner under wraps, Sinatra made no secret of his affection for Mafia hoodlums.

This posed a mounting problem for the president’s brother, US Attorney General Robert Kennedy, who had vowed to crush the mob and viewed Sinatra’s links to organized crime as a political time bomb.

An FBI probe into organized crime exposed Sinatra’s extensive mob ties. His file would ultimately fill more than 2,000 pages. By 1962 Kennedy reluctantly acknowledged that it was political suicide to remain friends with him. He ordered brother-in-law Peter Lawford to break the bad news: his visit to Sinatra’s Palm Springs home was cancelled.

“I was scared, “ Lawford admitted.

“When Jack called me, he said that as president he just couldn’t stay at Frank’s and sleep in the same bed that Giancana or any other hood had slept in.”

Ol’ Blue Eyes phoned Robert Kennedy in a rage, “to be told that the reason for the cancellation was the disreputable company he was keeping and the need for the administration to distance itself from people such as himself,” says the author.

“Sinatra called the attorney general every name in the book before slamming the phone down. Cut off from the White House, Sinatra threw himself back into Hollywood, filming Robin and the Seven Hoods with Rat Pack pals Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr.

He deliberately omitted Peter Lawford from the movie, livid that his friend had sided with the Kennedy clan. When Sinatra learned of Kennedy’s assassination on November 22, 1963, he halted filming and phoned the White House, only to discover that his privileges had been revoked.
“Sinatra, despite his celebrity, was just another caller that afternoon,” says the author.
The president’s family and close friends went to Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia, for the funeral but in a final indignity Sinatra was snubbed.

Sinatra later turned his support to Republican Richard Nixon, and then Ronald Reagan, despite having branded him “a bore” who “couldn’t get into the pictures.”

After JFK’s slaying, Sinatra reportedly had an affair with his widow, Jackie Kennedy – perhaps the ultimate revenge. But in death, Sinatra finally spoke more kindly of the friend who had cruelly shunned him.

“For a brief moment, he was the brightest star in our lives,” Sinatra said of JFK. “I loved him.”

Sinatra And The Jack Pack by Michael Sheridan with David Harvey. £16.99 Skyhorse Publishing. Call the Express Bookshop on 01872 562310. Or send a cheque or PO to Jack Pack Offer, PO Box 200, Falmouth, TR11 4WJ, or visit expressbookshop.com

How the Mafia Almost Fixed the 1932 Democratic National Convention

FDR Presidential Library, CC BY
BY JAMES COCKAYNE
July 25, 2016

After a dramatic Republican National Convention in Cleveland which saw Donald Trump finally become the party’s official nominee, Hillary Clinton will this week accept the formal nomination of the Democratic Party.

U.S. national conventions have always been big business opportunities. As one long-time ally of the Bush family reportedly said, “For people who operate in and around government, you can’t not be here.” Although some of the usual donors to the Republican National Convention, like Ford and UPS, stayed home this year, the host committee was able to raise nearly US $60 million from American businesses. Yet historically the “people who operate in and around government” are not only legitimate businesses but also, sometimes, less-than-legitimate ones.

Take the 1932 Democratic National Convention. As I explain in my book about the hidden power of organized crime, from which this article is adapted, the nomination that year had come down to a contest between two New York politicians. Al Smith was a reform-minded former governor aligned with Tammany Hall, the Manhattan-based Democratic political machine. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the sitting governor, was running against him, and he was not aligned with Tammany.

If Roosevelt was to win the nomination at the Democratic National Convention, he needed to neutralize the Tammany threat. That meant figuring out what to do about the Mob.

You can’t fight Tammany Hall.
Through their control of liquor and vice-markets in southern Manhattan, Tammany’s stronghold, the Italian-American Mafias and Jewish-heritage gangs that made up the New York Mob had developed growing power in Tammany affairs over the preceding years.

The Mob leadership now saw a huge strategic opportunity at the Democratic National Convention to leverage that power into something even bigger: influence over the next occupant of the White House.

Strange bedfellows
Mob leaders Lucky Luciano, Frank Costello and Meyer Lansky all accompanied the Tammany Hall delegation to the convention in Chicago. Their Mafia associate Al Capone provided much of the alcohol, banned under prohibition, and entertainment.

Al Capone in 1929. US National ArchivesCostello shared a hotel suite with Jimmy Hines, the Tammany “Grand Sachem,” who announced support for Roosevelt. But another Tammany politician, Albert Marinelli, announced that he and a small bloc were defecting and would not support Roosevelt.

Marinelli was Tammany’s leader in the Second Assembly District, its heartland below Manhattan’s 14th Street. During Prohibition he had owned a trucking company – run by none other than Lucky Luciano. Luciano had helped Marinelli become the first Italian-American district leader in Tammany, and in 1931 forced the resignation of the city clerk, whom Marinelli then replaced. This gave Luciano and Marinelli control over selection of grand jurors and the tabulation of votes during city elections.
Now, the two were sharing a Chicago hotel suite.

An offer he couldn’t refuse
Why were Costello and Luciano backing rival horses, and through them, rival candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination? Was this a disagreement over political strategy?
On the contrary, the evidence suggests that the Mob was playing both sides, to place themselves as brokers in the Democratic nomination process.

Roosevelt needed the full New York state delegation’s support – and thus Tammany’s – if he was going to win the floor vote at the convention. But he also needed to avoid being tainted by the whiff of scandal that hung stubbornly around Tammany – and the Mafia.

Roosevelt responded to the split by issuing a statement denouncing civic corruption, while carefully noting that he had not seen adequate evidence to date to warrant the prosecution of sitting Tammany leaders, despite an ongoing investigation run by an independent-minded prosecutor, Sam Seabury. Picking up his signal, Marinelli threw his support behind Roosevelt, giving him the full delegate slate and helping him gain the momentum needed to claim the nomination.

Roosevelt on the campaign trail in 1932. FDR Presidential Library, CC BY
The Mob’s role may not have been decisive. Roosevelt’s nomination had numerous fathers, not least John “Cactus Jack” Garner, a rival presidential candidate to whom Roosevelt offered the vice presidency in return for the votes of the Texas and California delegations. But it was a factor.
If the Mob leaders were not quite kingmakers as they had hoped, they were certainly players. As Luciano reportedly put it, “I don’t say we elected Roosevelt, but we gave him a pretty good push.”

It takes one to know one
Luciano was nonetheless a newcomer to national politics, and seems to have been quickly outsmarted by his candidate. Having secured the nomination, Roosevelt loosened the reins on Seabury’s corruption investigation, making clear that if it developed new evidence, he might be prepared to back prosecutions after all.

Seabury quickly exposed significant Tammany graft in the New York administration. The city sheriff had amassed $400,000 in savings from a job that paid $12,000 a year. The mayor had awarded a bus contract to a company that owned no buses – but was happy to give him a personal line of credit. A judge with half a million dollars in savings had been granted a loan to support 34 “relatives” found to be in his care. Against the backdrop of Depression New York, with a collapsing private sector, 25 percent unemployment and imploding tax revenues, this was shocking profligacy and nepotism.

By September 1932, the mayor had resigned and fled to Paris with his showgirl girlfriend. In early 1933, Roosevelt moved into the White House and broke off the formal connection between Tammany Hall and the national Democratic Party for the first time in 105 years. He even tacitly supported the election of the reformist Republican Fiorello La Guardia as New York mayor.
Luciano was pragmatic about having been outsmarted. “He done exactly what I would’ve done in the same position,” he reportedly said. “He was no different than me … we was both s—ass double-crossers, no matter how you look at it.”

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Muhammad Ali's son's dirty dealings with the mob revealed


Published on:8 July 2016
JO SUE

Ali Jr. at risk of losing his inheritance to Chicago gangsters for back debts on drugs.
The late Muhammad Ali's son Ali Jr., is in debt to the Chicago mob who are now coming after him hard since the death of his father on June 3rd. The gangsters are looking to get paid what they are owed and then some from Muhammad Ali's estate after the inheritance has been doled out to his children.

Sources close to Muhammad's family have revealed that his son owes the gangsters money for drugs he was supplied with and they are threatening to take whatever they want from the Ali estate which is estimated to be around $80 million. "Everybody wants a piece of him" the insider reportedly stated. Ali Jr., 44, is one of nine children the boxing legend fathered during his four marriages
Muhammad Ali died last month at the age of 74 following hospitalization due to a breathing issue. Ali Jr., has been estranged from his father for several years up until his death believing his father's fourth wife Lonnie was responsible for keeping the two apart. Muhammad, who was diagnosed in 1984 with Parkinson's disease lived a comfortable life thanks to his success in boxing and world championship title, while his namesake son grew up poor in a seedy part of Chicago.

Ali Jr. may lose all his part of father's estate to drug debt

The neighborhood of West Englewood is described as rundown and poor with houses falling apart, and people living without basic needs such as hot water. The majority of people living there are crack addicts and drug dealers. Ali Jr. claims that since he was cut off by Lonnie he has struggled to feed his wife and two children, often relying on food stamps and handouts to get by.

His friends describe him as a devout Muslim, and is said to smoke weed heavily when he has money adding that his drug habits are to blame for his debts. Those closest to him say he is in heavy to the mob, they are not sure how much, but enough to live in constant fear over. The gangsters are well aware that he is Ali's son and will inherit a large sum of cash from his will.

Not only does he have the mob pressuring him, he is also being bombarded by so-called friends who approach him daily in hopes of getting their hands on some of his cash soon. They are also giving him drugs so that he will be indebted to them, Ali Jr. has recently flown out to Los Angeles to meet with his siblings about their father's estate, which Lonnie is in control over.
It appears as if Ali Jr.'s biggest threat lies within the hands of the Chicago gangsters who are plotting as we speak to get their hands on his cash, sadly though this is not his only worry, it is said his wife has been waiting for this time to come so she can walk away from him with a huge amount of money.

I'M Back

Greetings everyone, I apologize for my absence over the last couple of months. I was a little buried with school responsibilities i.e. prepping a new book for my Organized Crime class, wrapping up the Fall semester and other administrative responsibilities. However, I did enjoy the last several months basking in the glory of my beloved Chicago Cubs bringing home the World Series trophy. I will resolve for this year to be more active on this blog and provide you with the latest in Chicago Outfit news. Remember they are not pursued by Law Enforcement anymore but do exist. I have consulted on a Lake County case since the release of my book and maybe, just maybe some day it will be indicted. In the meantime I will post some more stories that had be in the hopper for awhile and report that book sales are pretty steady, especially at the Mob Museum in Vegas.

And oh yea, I am working on my next book that I hope to release soon. So like I always say "Stay classy America"

Buy the book at: https://www.amazon.com/History-Violence-Encyclopedia-Chicago-Murders-1st/dp/0615986935/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1394923423&sr=1-2&keywords=a+history+of+violence