Timeline of organized crime in Chicago

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

American mafia figure Al Capone
. This article contains a list of major events related to organized crime.

Events – timeline

1830s

1850s

  • 1850 – Chicago had a population of 80,000 people, but the city had no police force, only nine "watch marshals".[2]
  • 1855 – The city had a bare-bones police force.[2]
  • 1850s (late) – Because Chicago was built over a swamp, mud constantly oozed from beneath the city's wooden streets. It was decided the whole city would be mudjacked 10 feet (3 metres) and the city would rest on stilts, with stones at the base. This led to the beginning of the free-wheeling crime sub-culture that overtook Chicago. After the city was raised, criminals in the area began practicing their trades in rooms and tunnels beneath the city. English immigrant Roger Plant, who ran a brothel in the Chicago netherworld called "Under the Willows", became the chief of this criminal underworld.[3]
  • August 20, 1858 – Michael "Hinky Dink" Kenna, one of the two "Lords of the Levee", was born.

1860s

  • 1860 – Chicago's mayor, John "Long John" Wentworth, serving two non-consecutive two-year terms, reduced his police force to 60 officers. Criminals from other states moved to the city's "underworld".[2]
  • August 15, 1860 –
    John "Bathhouse John" Coughlin
    , the second of the "Lords of the Levee", was born.
  • 1868 - Sometime after the
    faro.[4]

1870s

1880s

  • 1882 – Michael "Hinkey Dink" Kenna opened a First Ward saloon.[7]
  • 1882 – Chicago Police Chief William McGarigle, in the pay of Chicago crime lord Michael Cassius McDonald, was indicted for graft and later fled to Canada.
  • 1882? – John "Mushmouth" Johnson opened the Emporium Saloon and gambling establishment, began his reign as Chicago's first
    Policy racket king.[8]
  • 1884 – Founding Outfit leader Donato "Johnny" Torrio, nicknamed "The Fox", who the source author would call "the father of modern gangsterism", emigrated from Italy to New York City with his family, at age two.[9]

1890s

1900s

1910s

  • 1910 – Chicago police arrested over 200 known Italian gangsters and known Black Hand members in a raid in Little Italy. However, none of them were convicted as many of the notes of extortion threats could not be traced to those men.
  • January 1, 1910 – March 26, 1911 – Thirty-eight people were killed by Black Hand assassins, many by the unidentified assassin known only as "Shotgun Man", between Oak Street and Milton Street – "Death's Corner" – in Chicago's Little Italy.[34]
  • March 15, 1910 – The Chicago Vice Commission was organized by Chicago Mayor Carter Harrison Jr., to be able to bring an end to the Levee District brothels and panel houses.
  • 1911 – A young Filippo Sacco ("
    Johnny Roselli"), immigrated to Boston, Massachusetts, from Italy, with his mother. Sacco's father had already immigrated there. Sacco later became the Outfit's man in Hollywood and Las Vegas.[35]
  • 1911 – Again, North Side Gang leader Dion O'Banion was imprisoned three months for a "concealed weapons" conviction.[33]
  • August 1911 – By this time, there were 50 gambling establishments in the Loop. Respectable hotels hosted some form of gambling to draw patrons. According to the source's author, every block in the Loop had a gambling house in one form or another. Mont Tennes managed, oversaw, controlled it all, through his lieutenant, Mike "de Pike" Heitler. The only police raids that ever occurred at this time were on gambling establishments that competed with Tennes.[36]
  • October 24, 1911 – Chicago Mayor
    Everleigh sisters' fame and good fortune prompted them into distributing brochures for their brothel in respectable hotels and restaurants, where visitors to the city stayed and ate. Other brothels were then raided and closed in Chicago, which brought violence. The building which housed the Everleighs' brothel stood until July 1933, when it was demolished.[37]
  • 1912 – By this time,
    "Big Jim" Colosimo, then married to a brothel madam, controlled 200 prostitution houses. Colosimo took his place in Chicago's criminal history after becoming a leader in the city's Street Laborers Union and City Street Repairers Union – doing "honest work". He had already formed his own social club. Thus, Colosimo didn't go unnoticed by the Coughlin–Kenna political machine, who was looking to expand its votes base to other ethnic groups. It took Colosimo under its wing. When Colosimo began delivering big results, the First Ward "Machine" gave Colosimo "protected status". He became Democratic precinct captain. Police could not bother Colisimo, whatever he was doing. And, what he began doing was picking up brothel pay-offs for the "Machine".[38]
  • January 18, 1912 –
    Jim Cosmano, a major Chicago Black Hand leader, was severely wounded in an ambush by Johnny Torrio, near the 22nd Street police station. Cosmano had previously demanded $10,000, threatening to destroy Colosimo's Cafe if he didn't receive the money.[39]
  • July 18, 1914 – The closing of Levee brothels had incited violence in the area for some time, and on this day brought about the death of Police Detective Sergeant Stanley Birns and the wounding of a second officer.
    The Chicago Tribune entered the fray and directly blamed Michael Kenna and Police Captain Michael Ryan, who was dubbed, "Chief of Police of the First Ward", for the violence.[40]
  • November 7, 1914 – Outfit extortionist, counterfitter and robber Charles Carmen Inglese ("Chuckie English") was born.[41]
  • 1915 – Boston, Massachusetts-born William Hale "Big Bill" Thompson, "politically unknown at the time", was elected mayor of Chicago with the help of Chicago powerbrokers William Lorimer and Fred Ludin. Thompson was in office for two consecutive terms, then lost, or withdrew from – depending on the source, the 1923 election which was won by reform candidate and Massachusetts-born William Dever. Thompson ran again in 1927 with $250,000 of help from Al Capone, won, then, was defeated again in 1931, by Anton Cermak. That was Thompson's final term. His time as mayor brought brazen corruption to the Mayor's Office and to the city. He promised the underworld and upperworld powers that were at the time "a wide-open city", which translated to: any vice, any corruption – any time. "An unabashed defier of Volstead", Thompson was also a key member of the Sportsman's Club. This group actively solicited bribes from all of the various Chicago underworld figures and also solicited their memberships in the club, including that of brothel racketeer Jim Colosimo. In addition to the underworld members, it also had Charles Healy, Chicago's chief of police, and Morgan Collins, a Chicago police captain as members.[42][43]
  • 1915 (approximately) – After future Outfit powerbroker Johnny Torrio had made numerous trips to Chicago to do "mob chores" for his uncle through marriage, racketeer and "the biggest whoremaster in the city", Jim Colosimo, Colosimo brought Torrio to Chicago permanently to run Colosimo's "houses", the kind of work Torrio was already doing for himself in New York. Colosimo's business thrived under Torrio.[44]
  • 1916 – The Illinois State's Attorney's office began an investigation of the Sportsman's Club.[45]
  • January 16, 1917 – Indictments were handed down by the Illinois State's Attorney's office charging eight men with bribery and graft concerning the Sportsman's Club. The eight were: Chief of Police Charles Healy, Police Captain Tom Costello, Tennes' gambling lieutenant Mike "de Pike" Heitler, William Skidmore, a saloon keeper, a gambler, a well-known politician of the time and two police officers.[45]
  • 1919 – By this year, Jim Colosimo was one of the "overlords of the underworld", in Chicago, "though there were others who operated in spheres of influence" in the city.[46]
  • 1919 – Interested parties, including local businessmen and private citizens fed-up with rampant local thuggery and murder in the city formed the Chicago Crime Commission, founded by Chicago Attorney Frank J. Loesch. In the 1920s, he was the one to coin the term, "Public Enemy", concerning Chicago's organized crime figures. In the 1930s, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) started using this term for the hoodlums and "n'er-do-wells" who would plague various parts of the nation.[47]
  • January 16, 1919 – The Eighteenth Amendment (Prohibition) was passed at the federal level, redefining American law. One calendar year was given to drinking establishments, breweries, etc., across the nation to close down. Drinking any alcohol was not, however, prohibited by the Eighteenth Amendment.[48]
  • July 27, 1919 – A full-scale
    race riot began in Chicago, with accompanying arsons, lootings and murders. The riot was initiated when a gang of racist thugs known as "Ragen's Colts", which started as a baseball team formed by two brothers, threw stones at and drowned an African-American swimmer who had strayed into the segregated "White" area of a South Side beach.[49]
    The riot ended on August 3, 1919.
  • October 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 1919 – The
    Chicago Black Sox" since that time. Finally, though always denying publicly that he had any part in the 1919 World Series "fix", New York City racketeer and gambler Arnold Rothstein has been repeatedly mentioned over the decades as the one who financed this scheme to "throw" the 1919 series, in order to personally reap a financial windfall through betting on the series.[50]
  • 1919 (late) – Johnny "The Fox" Torrio brought his cousin and Al Capone from New York City to Chicago to help with business, after he faced a couple of murder charges in New York.[44][51]
  • 1919 – Under the tutelage of forward-thinking racketeer Johnny Torrio, Al Capone stood in front of Jim Colosimo's multi-use house of prostitution the, "Four Deuces", at 2222 S. Wabash Avenue, barkering to male passers-by to enjoy what "Big Jim's" business had to offer. Johnny Torrio also ran Colosimo's holdings from that building. Pre-Prohibition, Colosimo's influence through Torrio, by then into suburban Chicago as well, had given Colosimo holdings of more than "a thousand gambling joints, brothels and saloons". Estimates are that Colosimo-Torrio was grossing $4 million a year at that time.[52][53]

1920s

  • 1920s – By this decade, with the encouragement and allowance of First Ward aldermen John Coughlin and Michael "Hinkey Dink" Kenna "more than 100 gambling and bookie joints" thrived in the Levee District, and there were 800 more throughout the city. The opening up of houses of prostitution "spread like wildfire". Coughlin and Kenna had such a grip on what went on in the ward, not "a cop or a city inspector" could succeed making a move against them. The bribes totalled $60,000 a year, $10,000 more a year than when the aldermen hosted the, "First Ward Ball".[54]
  • 1920 – Perfected in this year, the Thompson submachine gun, or the "Tommy Gun", aka, "the Chicago typewriter", became the weapon of choice for at least some of the city's mobster gangs. The SaltisMcErlane Gang was the first to use this gun in Chicago.[55][56]
  • 1920 – Future Outfit consigliere "Paul Ricca" (Felice DeLucia) came to America from Sicily, at age 23, and eventually landed in Chicago, after serving two years in an Italian prison for murder, at age 17. After his prison sentence, Ricca murdered the witness against him whose testimony put him in prison. Ricca was suspected of killing others, but nothing ever came of any of that.[57]
  • 1920 – 14-year-old Tony Accardo's parents filed paperwork with the authorities claiming young Accardo was two years older so that he could leave school and go to work, an apparently common practice in that day.[58]
  • January 16, 1920 – Prohibition ("
    U.S. Treasury Department, which oversaw bringing bootlegged alcohol-making gangs – which included bathtub gin made by locals – to justice, fired 706 agents and prosecuted another 257 agents for taking bribes related to Prohibition alcohol. In Chicago, Prohibition had some professionals scrambling. Fifteen thousand doctors and 57,000 druggists "applied for 'medicinal' liquor licenses", and sacramental wine sales rose by 800,000 gallons the first year of the new law.[59][60]
  • 1920? – With the dawning of Prohibition, the Genna brothers decided to switch from extorting the wealthy to producing illegal alcohol (with help from many Italian and Sicilian families in Little Italy). Having only a permit to make industrial-grade alcohol, they took the finished product, put additives in it to make it palatable, then labelled it whatever they wanted – gin, bourbon, etc. Drinking the brothers' alcohol was known, even at that time, to "cause psychosis".[61] The Gennas' base of operations was an alcohol processing plant at 1022 Taylor Street, in "The Patch", where allegedly the Gennas openly paid monthly bribes to a large number of police from the neighborhood Maxwell Street precinct and even had money left over for few men in the state attorney's office.[25]
  • February 2, 1920 – Labor racketeer Maurice "Mossy" Enright was killed near his South Side home.
  • May 11, 1920 – Three weeks after marrying his second wife, gambling racketeer and "whoremaster" Jim Colosimo was gunned down in the lobby of his self-named restaurant at 2126 S. Wabash Avenue, supposedly waiting for a shipment of some kind. Nobody was ever charged with the murder. Police considered the "prime suspect" to be New York City gangster and Torrio–Capone ally Frankie Yale. At Colosimo's funeral, there was an open, obvious mix of gangsters and politicians at the "lavish" affair. Aldermen Coughlin and Kenna were kneeling before the coffin.[62][63]
  • 1921 – Within a fraction of time of Jim Colosimo's murder, Johnny Torrio had brokered a deal with all the city's major gangs to share the city's Prohibition wealth by dividing the city into territories that each gang had a piece of. Only the South Side O'Donnell Gang refused to come to the table. The gang was shortly thereafter eliminated. Within weeks of Colosimo's murder, Torrio had moved into the suburbs with his "army" stock of gambling, girls and booze. He persuaded the Gennas and Unione Siciliana to side with him, even though Torrio wasn't Sicilian.[64]
  • 1921? – After the Torrio organization partnered with the Gennas, buying whatever alcohol the brothers could produce, taking in shipments of Canadian liquor, and adding the "vice" element to his organization, Torrio brought in $10 million a year, with the blessing of Unione Siciliana president Michele "Mike" Merlo, now a Torrio friend.[65]
  • April 15, 1921 –
    U.S. Supreme Court
    .
  • 1922 – Publishing magnate
    The Daily Racing Form.[66]
  • March 22, 1922 – Tony Accardo was arrested for a "motor vehicle violation" just before his 16th birthday. This was his first known arrest.[58]
  • 1923 –
    22nd Street (Cermak Road) and south Michigan Avenue, in Chicago. He also gained control of the Chicago suburb of Cicero, Illinois
    , as a "safe base" for his illegal operations.
  • 1923 – Because of city political reforms, the number of aldermen per ward was reduced from two to one. Michael Kenna gave up his aldermanic seat in favor of his friend and ally, John Coughlin. Kenna was then elected First Ward Committeeman.[67]
  • 1923 – Tony Accardo was charged with disorderly conduct, for "loitering" around a pool hall where people of questionable character were known to congregate. He was charged $200 and court costs. He was still living at his parents' home.[68]
  • 1923 – Around the time of his first disorderly conduct arrest, Tony Accardo hit the little "Big Time" and joined the Circus Cafe Gang, which met at the Circus Cafe, 1857 North Avenue. At the time, the alleged leaders of the gang were Claude Maddox ("Screwy Moore"), Anthony "Tough Tony" Capezio, and Vincenzo De Mora ("'Machine-Gun Jack' McGurn"). Accardo steadily rose in the gang by going from pickpocketing, to doing home invasions, to driving trucks loaded with Prohibition alcohol. He was arrested eight times before age 21 while the young tough was with the gang, mostly for disorderly conduct.[69]
  • September 17, 1923 – George Meegan, a Chicago bootlegger allied with the Southside O'Donnells, and Southside O'Donnell member George Bucher were killed by Frank McErlane.
  • 1924 – Prosperous Irish mobsters Paddy Lake and
    Terry Druggan, of Chicago's little-known Valley Gang, each got a year in jail for contempt of court. This gang was willingly taken in and made a part of Capone's organization by the end of Prohibition.[70]
  • April 1, 1924 - Frank Capone, brother of Al Capone, was killed by Cicero policemen during a gunfight which broke out in the city during the 1924 Chicago elections, during strong-arming support at the polls of gangster-backed, Republican politician Joseph Z. Klenha. Brother Al made sure his brother, Frank, had a "lavish" send-off at his funeral.[71]
  • May 1924 – Out of loyalty to one of his men, top Outfit boss Al Capone shot to death freelance hijacker Joe Howard at Heinie Jacobs' saloon on south Wabash Avenue after Howard had assaulted Outfit accountant Jake "Greasy Thumb" Guzik and then insulted Capone, himself, when he tried to find out why Howard "slapped and kicked (Guzik) around".[72]
  • May 19, 1924 – Despite conflicting accounts of the situation and its aftermath, on this date crime lord
    Dion O'Banion, after Torrio believed O'Banion's story that he was tired of his life of crime and wanted to leave the rackets; thus, he wanted to sell Sieben Brewery to Torrio for $500,000 and make a clean break with his old life. What O'Banion didn't tell Torrio was that O'Banion knew the brewery was to be raided by the authorities, thus bringing beer production to a screeching halt and bringing possible jailtime for the apprehended brewery owners.[73]
  • November 8, 1924, Legitimate Unione Siciliana President Mike Merlo died of cancer. Of all of the Chicago "talking heads" of the day people would gravitate to, Merlo was one who tried to foster "peace" and civility among the warring Chicago gangs. Unione Siciliana was then taken over by "Bloody Angelo" Genna.[74]
  • November 9, 1924 –
    Holy Name Cathedral, on the pretense of picking up a floral arrangement.[75] O'Banion's murder began a five-year gang war between the North Side Gang under O'Banion, then under Hymie Weiss, then under Vincent "The Schemer" Drucci (and later under George "Bugs" Moran), and Al Capone's Chicago Outfit, that probably started when O'Banion swindled Outfit head Johnny Torrio out of half-a-million dollars when O'Banion sold Torrio a Prohibition brewery O'Banion knew was going to be raided by the authorities.[76]
  • November 1924? – Apparently following O'Banion's murder, another North Side Gang member, highly decorated World War I veteran Sam "Nails" Morton, "known" by Chicago police to have committed several murders, was riding a horse in Chicago's Lincoln Park, when the horse threw the gangster and then kicked him to death. Morton's gangster buddies got the last word and exacted gangster revenge on the horse. The "hit" was planned by "Louis 'Two Guns' Alterie" (Leland A. Varain).[77]
  • 1925 – Joey "Babe Ruth" Colaro organized what would become Chicago's infamous, "42-Gang", which would become a virtual "farm team" for the ranks of the Chicago Outfit. This group of street delinquents would seem to do anything for a "buck", or to impress the "ladies". A number of these outlaws were recruited into the Outfit, with some of them making it into its highest ranks, including:
    William Daddano, Joe Caesar DiVarico, Rocco Potenza, Leonard Gianola, Vincent Inserro and Sam Giancana.[78][79]
  • 1925 – Outfit front man and "42-Gang" graduate Sam "Momo" Giancana's arrest record consisted of more than 70 criminal offenses by this year. Giancana was considered the "prime suspect" in three murders before age 20, including the murder of a witness against him.[80]
  • 1925 – Vigilante citizens raids took place in Cicero, against Capone's whorehouses and gambling dens.
  • January 12, 1925 – North Side Gang members Hymie Weiss, George Moran and Vincent "Schemer" Drucci followed the limousines that Al Capone and Johnny Torrio were riding in to a restaurant, at south 55th Street and west State Street. Both limousines were fired on in a hail of gunfire, but neither Capone, nor Torrio were hurt. However, Torrio's chauffeur and dog were killed in the attack.[81]
  • January 24, 1925 – North Side Gang members again ambush Johnny Torrio as he returned from a
    Loop shopping trip with his wife. The gunmen shot him several times and wounded him and his chauffeur, Robert Barton. As George Moran was about to kill the wounded Torrio, the gun misfired and Moran was forced to flee as police arrived on the scene. For two weeks after he was shot, it looked like Torrio would die, but he recovered.[82]
  • February 9, 1925 – Johnny Torrio was sentenced by Judge
    Waukegan, for being the owner of the Sieben Brewery when it was raided by the authorities. The jail was supposedly chosen by Torrio's lawyers as a facility necessary for Torrio to receive proper medical treatment for gunshot wounds; however, the jail was actually chosen for Torrio's protection as the prison warden, Sheriff Edwin Ahlstrom, was in the pay of Torrio's organization. Torrio was later escorted by Capone out of the city after his release. After much time to reflect in jail, Torrio decided the gangland empire he was trying to build was too risky, personally. He handed the entire works to Capone. When Torrio left the city for Brooklyn, New York, for good, at the end of 1925, or in early 1926, he took $30 million with him.[82]
  • 1925 (Spring) – One year after Republican Joseph Klenha won the mayor's office of Cicero with Torrio and Capone's support, Klenha vowed in print to "run his office independently of the gangster element". Al Capone went to the Cicero City Hall and beat the mayor unconscious in full view of the police, who did nothing to Capone. Thus, Capone became Cicero's "de facto mayor". At risk to the Torrio–Capone machine were 100 saloons and 150 gambling establishments installed in Cicero since Klenha had taken office.[83] Note: It's not known if Johnny Torrio had left Chicago's organized crime scene by this point, because he would have still been in jail.
  • 1925?–'26?–'27? Top dog in the Chicago underworld, Al Capone's organization was pulling in $105 million a year. Adding flash to his personality, Capone began buying $5,000 suits and custom fedoras at some point along the way.[84]
  • May 25, 1925 – "Bloody Angelo" Genna was murdered after being followed in his car by the North Side Gang and Genna smashing into a lamppost after being chased. Someone then stepped out of the other car and shot Genna to death. Apparently, nobody was charged with the gangster's murder.[25]
  • June? 1925 – A month after his brother's death, Mike Genna and Genna Family members Albert Anselmi and John Scalise, who had secretly switched alliances to Al Capone, were going for "a ride", where Genna was unknowingly going to be killed. During the drive, the gangsters got involved in a shoot-out with police. Genna was wounded and immobile, and Anselmi and Scalise bolted from the scene. Mike Genna died two hours later. Two cops also died because of the shoot-out. Following Mike Genna's killing, brother Tony Genna was killed by a trusted friend, after Tony Genna went into hiding following Mike Genna's death. Tony Genna's death ended the Genna crime family for good.[85]
  • 1925 – Sometime after Angelo Genna's murder, professional fiddler and gangster Samuzzo "Samoots" Amatuna walked into the Chicago branch of Unione Siciliane and declared himself the winner of the local chapter elections that hadn't happened yet. Al Capone became furious at Amatuna for this, because Capone had his own guy in mind for the job, Antonio Lombardo ("Tony the Scourge").[74]
  • November 13, 1925 – Samuzzo Amatuna, an ally of the "Bloody Gennas", was gunned down after sitting down in a Cicero, Illinois, barber shop chair, allegedly by North Side Gang members Jim Doherty and Vincent Drucci. Amatuna died at the hospital, before he could marry his fiancée. Al Capone then had Tony Lombardo installed as president of the local chapter of Unione Siciliana.[74]
  • 1925?–'26 – Realizing Outfit boss Al Capone was a "train wreck", according to one biographer, Capone mentor Johnny Torrio returned to Brooklyn, New York, and began work on, "
    Louis "Lepke" Buchalter, who went on to head-up organized crime's assassins-for-hire group, "Murder, Inc.", Abner "Longy" Zwillman, who was a "Prohibition gangster" and who also went on to be a member of "Murder, Inc.", "Joe Adonis" (Giuseppi Antonio Doto), was one of the key criminal minds in beginnings of 20th-century American organized crime, "Frank Costello ("The Prime Minister", Francesco Castiglia), a powerful gangster who also went on to head the Genovese crime family, "Meyer 'The Brain' Lansky" (Meyer Suchowljansky), known as the "Mob's accountant" and a good friend and business associate of "Lucky" Luciano, and Abe "Kid Twist" Reles, allegedly the 'most feared' member of Murder, Inc. This meeting was reported in The New York Times, in 1935, and was, "ratted out", by one of the participants, Reles, in 1941. Following Reles' revelation, he either jumped or was forced out of a hotel room window. He died from the fall.[86]
  • 1926 – Beginning this year, forces from Chicago to Washington, D.C., had been at work to "dethrone" gangster Al Capone. With "The Big Guy" being the lead name of those who were turning the city into a shooting gallery, Chicago Loop banker,
    Charles Dawes, under President Calvin Coolidge, launched an all-out assault on Capone. The brothers' reason was clear. Rufus Dawes was president of the World's Fair Corporation at the time, which would bring the Century of Progress to the city, in 1933. Fear of being hurt or killed by gang gunfire while in the city could affect attendance, and the fair and showcasing Chicago life and business could be a financial disaster for the city and state. Capone had to be removed. The Dawes' lobbied both Coolidge and his successor, President Herbert Hoover. By May 1927, the brothers had handed to them "the goose that laid the golden egg", which would allow the feds to nab Capone and put him away for a long time.[87]
  • April 27, 1926 – After the South Side O'Donnells had been inching their way in on Al Capone's Chicago territory for a while, then in on Cicero, Illinois, Capone had had enough. With five cars and 29 gangsters, he went to greet the O'Donnells at Cicero's Pony Inn. No O'Donnell member was wounded, however. Capone's men did kill an assistant state's attorney who had been drinking with the O'Donnells. Realizing the gravity of what had taken place, Capone hid out in Michigan for a time. While Capone was in hiding, not only was the tide of citizen sentiment turning against him, police "sought reprisal, ransacking Capone's speakeasies, gambling joints and whorehouses, some beyond repair". His cash cow Cicero whorehouse was reduced ashes by a fire. While six grand juries addressed the attorney's killing, no indictments followed.[88]
  • July 1926 – When Capone returned to the city after hiding out, he went to the Cicero police who wanted to question him about the assistant state's attorney's killing. Capone responded with an apparently unconvincing line that he didn't kill the attorney, and he'd "liked the "kid" so much, Capone had personally given the attorney a bottle of alcohol for his father the day before the murder.[89]
  • September 20, 1926 – Using 10 cars in a successive motorcade, North Side Gang leader Hymie Weiss and his crew ambushed Outfit boss Al Capone with a cavalcade of bullets during his stop at the Hawthorne Inn in Cicero. Capone, being protected by his bodyguard Frank Rio, didn't have a scratch on him, neither did Rio. A Capone gunman, Louis Barko, and an innocent bystander, outside in a car during the attack, were slightly injured. Capone gave the injured bystander $5,000 for her medical bills. When Capone was asked who was responsible for that drive-by shooting, he reportedly said "Watch the morgue. They'll show up there."[90]
  • October 4, 1926 – In a show of magnanimity, Capone sent out RSVP invitations to host a citywide gang summit as Johnny Torrio had done. However, still enraged because of Dion O'Banion's murder, Hymie Weiss responded he'd be at the summit "with grenades exploding and guns blasting". He also wanted the heads of O'Banion's killers, something Capone would never have given up.[89]
  • October 11, 1926 – Three weeks after the last assassination attempt on Al Capone and one week following his summit invite, Hymie Weiss and his bodyguard were gunned down and three bystanders were wounded when the gangsters walked into their gang's clubhouse, the second floor of gangster Dion O'Banion's old flower shop, on north
    Holy Name Cathedral
    still bears the bullet holes today from the ambush on Weiss.
  • October 20, 1926 – Capone's gangland conference took place as planned, at the Hotel Sherman, across the street from a "chief of police headquarters". All of the major city gangs attended, and a still living North Side Gang member presented the conference's opening talk. But, the conference's goodwill was temporary.[91]
  • 1927 – A study found that in the city, 1,313 gangs existed, claiming 25,000 members.[92]
  • 1927 – Outfit heavyweight Paul Ricca got married. Al Capone was his best man.
  • 1927 – Highly ineffective and short-lived against the criminal gangs who were raging against the city at the time, Chicago police tried to stop the criminals by employing groups of police officers who would be ready to shoot known criminals with machine guns at the drop of a hat. This group of officers was known as, "O'Connor's Gunners", after Chicago Police Chief of Detectives William O'Connor.[93]
  • 1927 – Sam Valante, recently hired by Joe Aiello, was killed while arriving in Chicago.
  • January 26, 1927 – The Hawthorne Inn restaurant owner and Capone friend was killed by members of the North Side Gang. However, per the gang-conference agreement, Capone didn't retaliate. Yet, when the West Side's Joe Saltis killed gang member Ralph Sheldon, another Capone friend, Capone vented his rage on the West Side gunmen who killed his friend. Following the murders of these gunmen, Joe Saltis wisely "retired" to Wisconsin.[94]
  • April 4, 1927 – Arrested after being taken into police custody for perpetrating election violence, North Side Gang leader Vincent Drucci was shot four times and killed by Chicago Police Department Detective Dan Healy, while Drucci was in police custody. According to one report, the shooting was highly controversial.[95]
  • May 16, 1927 – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that profiting from "illicit traffic(ing) in liquor" would be taxable by the feds (U.S. v. Sullivan).[96][97]
  • November 9, 1927 – Singer and comedian Joe E. Lewis was viciously attacked and slashed on the face and neck and left for dead in his Commonwealth Hotel room by henchmen associated with Outfit lieutenant "Machine-Gun Jack" McGurn, who was at least part-owner of the Green Mill Cocktail Lounge, 4802 N. Broadway, in Uptown, where Lewis had been under contract, but decided not to renew. After the attack, Lewis initially lost his ability to speak, but regained it with therapy. Al Capone stepped up and gave Lewis $10,000 to aid his recovery.
  • April 10, 1928 – The extraordinary level of violence leading up to Chicago's Republican primary election led to the election being called the, "Pineapple Primary" because of the handgrenades used liberally by both sides. Adding to the chaos were "about 1,000" Capone minions breaking arms and legs of those who opposed Capone's candidate for mayor William Hale Thompson. Chicago Crime Commission founder Attorney Frank J. Loesch paid Al Capone a visit to "demand" that the gangster get his and all the other gangs to cooperate in a cease-fire leading up to the November general election. Capone made that work, and there was peace in Chicago.[98][99]
  • July 1, 1928 – New York City gangster
    Unione Siciliana by backing Capone opponent Joe Aiello, who was also backed by Chicago's North Side Gang. A second reason Yale was killed may have been that Capone found out that Yale was stealing Capone's liquor shipments and then selling them back to him.[100][101]
  • July 25, 1928 – Aiello gang member Salvatore Canale was killed outside his home in Chicago.
  • September 7, 1928 – Capone's former consigliere and Unione Siciliane president, Antonio Lombardo, was gunned down during a busy Chicago rush hour, where north State Street divides Madison Street between east and west, apparently by the Aiellos. Capone vowed revenge and retaliated by killing four of Aiello's brothers.[101][102]
  • 1929 – The Capone organization was bringing in $6 million a week. Capone had a personal worth of $40 million.[82]
  • 1929 – Tony Accardo was allegedly made head enforcer for Capone's Chicago Outfit.
  • 1929 – Chicago native
    Untouchables" to try to stop the flow of illegal booze and bring down the Capone empire.[103]
  • January 8, 1929 – Unione Siciliane leader Pasquale "Patsy" Lolordo was killed in his apartment, supposedly by Joe Aiello and members of Moran's North Side Gang.[101]
  • February 14, 1929 – Four unidentified men, dressed as Chicago police officers, stormed into a
    St. Valentine's Day Massacre, the attack effectively ended the five-year gang war between Al Capone and the North Side Gang, which had presumably started some years before, when one-time North Side Gang leader Dion O'Bannion swindled Outfit founder Johnny Torrio in a deal for a Prohibition brewery O'Banion knew would be raided. A second scenario believed to be the reason for the killings was that Capone found out that Moran's gang was hijacking Capone's booze shipments, so a phony shipment was set up to lure Moran's gang to its demise. Moran and gangster Joey Aiello went into hiding after the killings. At the time of the murders, Capone was vacationing at his Palm Island, Florida, compound. Nobody was charged with this massacre, but seemingly everyone known to be allied with a gang in the U.S., in the late 1920s, has been broached as a suspect in the Chicago gangster crime biographies written through the decades since the bloodbath. However, since the killings, it has been found through ballistics that one of the guns involved in the massacre was also involved in two other killings, that of a Michigan policeman and New York City gangster Frankie Yale. The gun was traced to Capone man Fred "Killer" Burke.[104][105]
  • March 1929 – In the wake of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, Chicago Daily News publisher Frank Knox and Chicago Crime Commission director Frank J. Loesch pleaded with President Herbert Hoover for federal intervention in Chicago's gang wars. At that time, there were 63 gang-related murders a year. Besides the work of Knox and Loesch, there was group of crime-fighting Chicago businessmen known as the "Secret Six" who were working behind the scenes to bring Capone down.[106]
  • May 7, 1929 – Gangster Al Capone claimed he wanted to hold a party in honor of three mobsters in his ranks who he'd found out were actually traitors behind-the-scenes to mobster-rival Joe Aiello and Aiello's desire to wrest Unione Siciliane from Capone's grip. So, Capone held a ruse dinner at a roadside inn in Hammond, Indiana, in honor of ferocious killers Albert Anselmi and John Scalise and Capone's man heading Unione Siciliana at the time, Joseph "Hop Toad" Giunta. After the party was in full-swing, Capone personally beat the three traitors with an "Indian club". Then, Capone shot all three men. Their bodies were found on a roadside near Hammond. Contrary to popular culture, Capone enforcer Tony Accardo wasn't mentioned as having played any role in either account.[107][108]
  • May 13, 14, 15, 16, 1929 – While the St. Valentine's Day Massacre outrage was still brewing around the nation for many gangsters, mobsters from across the nation got together in Atlantic City, New Jersey, at the Hotel President, for the
    racketeer and future "Mr. Las Vegas" Morris "Moe" Dalitz, Genovese family member Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel (Benjamin Siegelbaum), Kansas City, Missouri, political boss Tom Pendergast, who had just helped launch future President Harry S. Truman's political career seven years earlier, and Al Capone. Capone brought with him to the conference Daily Racing Form owner Moses L. "Moe" Annenberg and Capone accountant and political "fixer" Jake Guzik. Former Chicago gang mastermind Johnny Torrio was there from New York, as he had instigated "The Commission" in the first place. The conference was called for to work toward a united front among the nation's organized crime leaders while removing the "old" mafia and bringing in the "new" mafia, cooperation during Prohibition and gambling concerns. While a "14-point peace plan" was the result of the conference, "Capone the man" also became a hot topic for discussion at the conference, because the other racketeers understood that despite payoffs to local authorities, the Feds would only take so much of what was going on in Chicago gangland before they would find a way to deal with it, and that treatment of Capone by the Feds might spill over onto other organized crime-controlled cities. Jealousy concerning Capone's "success" seemed to find its way into the conference: with their eyes on the Chicago turf war, which by the time of the conference was finished for good, the other organized crime bosses demanded that Capone "immediately dismantle" his gambling empire and give it to "The Commission". However, Capone "adamantly refused to be forced into that humiliation". The crime bosses also had the audacity to install deadly Capone-opponent Joey Aiello as the Unione Siciliane's Chicago branch president, which didn't last long.[109][110]
  • 1929 – Most likely following the Atlantic City conference and for reasons not quite clear, Chicago gang boss Al Capone "strolled" through Philadelphia, and was "arrested" on a concealed weapons charge. The arrest, which was solely a PR move, landed him in prison for "a year" at the
    Eastern Penitentiary, in Philadelphia. However, Capone was actually free to leave the prison when he wished, according to one biographer. The "incarceration" had been set up by Philadelphia racketeer Max "Boo Boo" Hoff, with Capone's knowledge and consent. While "incarcerated" in prison, Capone had a number of comforts, including use of the warden's office phone. Capone allegedly tipped the arresting policemen $20,000.[111][112]
  • May 29, 1929 – Thomas McElligot of the Westside O'Donnells was killed in a Chicago Loop saloon.

1930s

  • 1930s – Rival gangs threw dynamite into the others' cabs in what became Chicago's "Taxi Wars".[citation needed]
  • 1930 – By this year, President
    Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary and a $10,000 fine.[113]
  • 1930 – Months before Chicago Tribune reporter Jake Lingle's murder, Chicago Daily News news reporter Julius Rosenheim was shot to death by gangsters, after Rosenheim blackmailed bootleggers, whorehouse overseers and gamblers by threatening to write exposès about them. Apparently, nobody was ever charged with the murder.[114]
  • March 1930 – Gangster Al Capone had had enough of his PR exile in Philadelphia, so he left the prison.[112]
  • 1930 (likely the end of the Spring semester) – Soon-to-be "Super Lawyer"
    Teamsters' Central States Pension Fund to infuse organized crime's "promised land", Las Vegas, with cash. But, one to never be seen with any mobsters in public, a sanitized Korshak also "moved easily" in elite Hollywood, and in sports team circles and with captains of industry and commerce. Korshak's California office was at a Beverly Hills eatery called "The Bistro", where women and men would fawn over him, or want an audience with him. However, for Outfit business he always used the restaurant's pay phone. The "Super Lawyer" could do miracles for his legitimate clients anywhere with one phone call, even though he never tested for the California bar exam. His clients' bills went through Korshak's Chicago office.[115]
  • June 9, 1930 –
    Randolph Street. At first, the deceased reporter was hailed as a hero. Over time though, people began to learn that Lingle's death had more to do with who his friends were, than what his news reporting was about. A one-time low-level member of St. Louis' Egan's Rats, Leo Vincent Brothers, found his way to Chicago and was convicted of Lingle's murder. He was sentenced to 14 years in prison, but was released from prison in 1940. It was noted by the author of this end-line reference that Brothers may not have been the one to shoot Lingle.[116]
  • August 1, 1930 – One-time pimp and former Outfit accountant Jack Zuta was gunned down while hiding out at an inn on Upper Nemahbin Lake, near Delafield, Wisconsin, after defecting to the North Side Gang. Some believe Zuta had even ordered the contract on Jake Lingle.
  • October 28,[117] 1930 – North Side Gang bootlegger Joe Aiello was shot to death after unsuccessfully attempting to bribe a hotel cook to poison Al Capone. Trusted Capone associate Louis Campagna has been alleged to be Aiello's killer as Aiello walked out of his apartment on north Kolmar Avenue. No one was ever charged with the murder.[118]
  • November 6, 1930 – Forty-two-Gang member at the time and soon to be Outfit rising star Sam "Teets" Battaglia and two other thugs executed a brazenly stunning armed jewelry robbery on the, then, mayor of Chicago's wife, Mary Walker "Maysie" Thompson, as she walked into her apartment. The crooks ran off with $15,000 in Thompson's jewelry and also with the gun and badge of Thompson's chauffeur-cop. Battaglia was never identified by witnesses of the crime.[119]
  • 1931 – William Hale "Big Bill" Thompson was defeated for mayor of Chicago by Anton Cermak.
  • 1931 – Long-time freelance Chicago, "assembly-line" pimp Mike "de Pike" Heitler was found burned to death in the wreckage of his house after he defied the poor treatment he was allegedly getting, due to a Capone takeover of his whore house business, by "ratting" details concerning Chicago Mob business.[120]
  • 1931 – Sometime in this year, a group of mostly college graduates in the Chicago area, dubbed, "College Kidnappers", decided it was going to take the bold step of kidnapping low-level, area gangsters and holding them for ransom. Allegedly, the Klutas gang, named after leader Theodore "Handsome Jack" Klutas, took in a half-million dollars from these kidnappings in about a two-year span.[121]
  • October 17, 1931 – Al Capone was convicted of tax evasion following a four-day trial in Chicago. While Capone's original jury had been bribed by his underlings, the presiding federal trial judge, James Wilkerson, switched the jury at the last minute. It was also reported that Capone's defense team was ill-prepared to protect him against the stream of witnesses testifying to the gangster's "lavish lifestyle". However, Capone had "cut a deal" with the prosecutors during the pre-trial to drop 5,000 Prohibition violations that could have "nailed him" for 25,000-years-to-life if convicted on all the charges. The public talk concerning the trial, during and afterward, was that the poor showing of Capone's lawyers in his defense smacked of a set-up against Capone. Capone's close associate Paul Ricca was quoted explaining that Capone had to go away for a while, for the benefit of the organization. It has been said by the author of this end-note reference that Capone underling Gus Winkler was prevented by other Capone men from freeing him outright with $100,000 upfront tax payment (not a bribe) to the federal taxman.[122]
  • October 24, 1931 – One week after being convicted of tax evasion, Capone was sentenced to 11 years in federal prison (first,
    Atlanta Federal Penitentiary, then Alcatraz Island), fined $50,000 and charged $30,000 in court costs. While awaiting transfer to Atlanta to serve his sentence, Capone sat in Cook County Jail, where it was reported in this account that he had all the booze and women he wanted.[123]
  • December 1931 – Months before the nationally broadcast news about the kidnapping of aviator Charles Lindbergh's baby, in 1932, and some time before any federal kidnapping law was enacted, Outfit lieutenant Murray "The Hump" Humphreys kidnapped and held for $50,000 ransom Robert G. Fitchie, president of the Milk Wagon Driver's Union. Fitchie was released when the ransom was paid to Humphreys, who went to get the money, it was alleged.[124]
  • May 1932 – Capone began serving his 11-year sentence for tax evasion, in Atlanta, Georgia. He was eventually transferred to Alcatraz Island to finish his sentence.[125]
  • 1933 – Chicago "reform" Mayor Anton Cermak sent two city cops to Outfit frontman Frank Nitti's office to put a "hit" on the gangster. Apparently, the mayor wanted to take over Outfit territory and give it to the likes of Teddy Newberry, someone more to the mayor's liking. Nitti eventually recovered from his injuries.[126]
  • 1933 (early) – Theodore "Handsome Jack" Klutas was machine-gunned to death by cops after one of his gang turned on Klutas, ending the gang's kidnapping spree.[121]
  • 1933 – Des Plaines, Illinois, gangster
    Jake Factor. The kidnapping has been widely seen as a frame-up by the Outfit to take over Touhy's rackets. Allegedly after Touhy's conviction, Outfit mobsters flooded into Des Plaines.[127]
  • February 15, 1933 – Corrupt Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak was riding in an open car with President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) in Miami, Florida, when Cermak was hit with sniper bullets. He died three weeks later. Speculation for years afterward was that Cermak had always been the sniper's real target, not FDR, the president-elect, in part because Cermak had put a failed "hit" of his own out on Outfit frontman, at the time, Frank Nitti. Cermak's assassin was a sharp shooter during his time in the Italian army.[128]
  • December 5, 1933 – Prohibition legally came to an end with the signing into law of the U.S. Constitution's 21st Amendment, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. It was time for organized crime across America to find a new money-making racket.
  • 1934 – Colorfully versed Mob "girlfriend" and Mob courier
    Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel. First, she met Mob tax expert and top Chicago bookie Joe Epstein, who was smitten with Hill throughout his life, even after they broke up. Then, she was seen with the Fischetti brothers, Charles, Rocco and Joseph, Murray Humphreys, Frank Nitti and Tony Accardo, who is believed to always have been faithful to his one wife.[129]
  • 1934 – Outfit member Tony Accardo married his fiancé and former showgirl, Clarice Porter. Within a short time after the marriage, Accardo became a capo who oversaw Outfit gambling.[130]
  • June 13, 1934 – The Copeland Act, federal anti-racketeering legislation, was signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[131]
  • February 4, 1935 – Thomas Maloy, president of local 110 of the Motion Picture Operators Union, was killed by multiple gun blasts from a pair of gunmen while Maloy drove down Outer Lake Shore Drive, near the former site of Chicago's 1933–34 World's Fair. FBI Agent
    William F. Roemer believed the gunmen were Tony Accardo and Gus Alex, with Frank "Strongy" Ferraro going along to help out.[132]
  • February 15, 1936 – Once a top Outfit player, Jack McGurn was gunned down by three unknown assailants at Kafora Bowling and Billiards Parlor, 805 N. Milwaukee Avenue. Members and associates of the Outfit are the leading suspects in the murder. Nobody was ever charged.[133]
  • November 11, 1938 – Former First Ward alderman and "Levee Lord" John Coughlin died on this date, at age 78.
  • January 1939 – Once feared and respected, Mob leader Al Capone was transferred from
    syphilus.[134]
  • November 8, 1939 – Chicago Attorney Edward O'Hare was shot to death by two unknown gunman who drove alongside his car while O'Hare drove down
    O'Hare Airport sometime after his father's death and during the initial airport building stages in late 1943 or early 1944. The name proposal was suggested by Chicago Tribune publisher Colonel Robert R. McCormick, who had been part of the Illinois National Guard, which served a tour of duty in Europe beginning in 1917, during World War I.[135]
  • November 16, 1939 – Steadily declining in mental capacity and in overall health, Outfit boss Al Capone was released from federal custody and sent home to Chicago.[134][136]

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

  • 1980s – Operation Greylord was a federal-level investigation, followed by various corruption trials, targeting the Cook County, Illinois, judiciary (the Chicago jurisdiction).
  • 1980s – "Marquette Ten": 10 police officers in Chicago's Marquette District were convicted of taking bribes from drug dealers. Among those was Chicago police officer Thomas Ambrose, the father of former
    "Family Secrets" trial
    .
  • July 2, 1980 – Alleged Outfit "hitman" and muscle man William Dauber and his wife, Charlotte, were chased in their car and shotgunned to death after leaving the Will County, Illinois, courthouse, allegedly by four Outfit tough guys, Gerald Scarpelli, William Petrocelli, Frank Calabrese Sr., and depending on the source, Joseph "Jerry" Scalise, or Ronald Jarrett.[194] Calabrese's brother, Nick, corroborated that Frank had participated in the Daubers' killings during the 2007 "Operation Family Secrets" trial.
  • September 11, 1980 – Outfit burglars Joseph Scalise and Arthur Rachel stole the Marlborough Diamond (a value of $960,000 in 1994) and $3.6 million worth of jewelry from a jewelry store in London, England, in broad daylight. The diamond has not been recovered. Scalise and Rachel each got 15 years in jail in England for the crime. They were both released in 10 years.[195]
  • February 10, 1983, Japanese, Chicago mob boss
    Federal Witness Protection Program
    .
  • February 13, 1985 – Long-time mobster and West Side Outfit street boss Chuckie English, downgraded to a mob "soldier" and put in Joseph "Joey the Clown" Lombardo's crew after English's good friend and former Mob boss Sam Giancana's murder, was shot to death in an Elmwood Park, Illinois, restaurant parking lot, allegedly by an Outfit "hitman". Nobody has been charged with the murder.[197][198]
  • 1986 – Having been convicted of
    Joe Aiuppa were given long prison sentences.[199]
  • January 1986 –
    consiglieri Tony Accardo, Ferriola had decided it was time to kill troublemaker Anthony Spilotro
    for causing a multitude of problems in Las Vegas and in Chicago.
  • June 14, 1986 – Alleged Outfit Las Vegas overseer Tony Spilotro and his brother Michael, an alleged low-level mob associate, went missing. Their bodies were later found beaten and together in a shallow grave, in a cornfield, in Enos, Indiana. According to autopsy testimony given later in court, the brothers were not buried alive.[200]
  • June 15, 1986 – On Father's Day of that year, alleged Outfit boss Albert Tocco called his wife and told her to pick him up at a cornfield in Indiana. Tocco, then, told his wife he'd just buried the Spilotro brothers.[201]
  • September 1986 – Outfit juice loan collector and one-time, no-show union official John Fecarotta was gunned down while being chased on foot in front of Brown's Banquet's, Inc., 6050 W.
    Belmont Avenue, after he realized the "hit" he was on was for him. He bolted from his car with three bullets wounds. The fourth wound he'd received to the back of his head while running from his car to the banquet hall killed him. Apparently, the "hit" was put out because Fecarotta botched the Spilotro brothers' burial assignment. The bodies were not supposed to be found. Outfit "hitman" Nick Calabrese admitted killing Fecarotta in federal court during the "Operation Family Secrets" trial. Because of DNA evidence, Calabrese also had to admit during the trial that he was wearing the bloody glove that was dropped at the murder scene, while chasing Fecarotta, and was found by investigators and federal law enforcement, who ultimately put together the "Family Secrets" trial.[202][203]
  • 1988 – Outfit-associated bookmaker James Basile agreed to become a government informant, later identifying a "Mafia graveyard" at
    Route 83 and Bluff Road, near Darien, Illinois. Over the years, the bodies of three adult males were found there. Michael Oliver, age 29, of Chicago, a low-level mob associate went missing in November 1979. His body was recovered May 16, 1988. Robert Hatridge, age 56, of Cincinnati, Ohio, went missing in April 1979. His body was recovered June 9, 1988. Robert Charles Cruz of Kildeer, Illinois, a low-level mob associate went missing December 4, 1997. His body was found in March 2007. Cruz was the nephew of alleged Outfit front boss Joseph Ferriola and the cousin of convicted Outfit "hitman" Harry Aleman.[204]
  • December 1988 – Outfit
    bookie heavyweight Dominick Basso was convicted of gambling and conspiracy to commit gambling and was given 20 months probation and 70 days of work-release. Basso was the bookie linked by phone records to one-time Cincinnati Reds player-turned Cincinnati Reds manager Pete Rose, when he was accused of betting on sports in 1989. Rose has always denied the association with Basso, but eventually admitted he'd bet on sports.[205][206]
  • March 11, 1989 – Outfit frontman Joe Ferriola died at a Houston, Texas, hospital after receiving his second heart transplant.

1990s

2000s

  • January 25, 2000 – Ronald Jarrett died from the gunshot wounds he sustained in late 1999.
  • January 15, 2001 – William Hanhardt, the Chicago Police Department's former Chief of Detectives, was indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of masterminding a ring of Outfit-related thieves who stole $4.85 million in jewels in heists across the nation.[208]
  • November 20, 2001 – Highly feared Outfit "Juice Loan" operator and enforcer Anthony "the Hatch" Chiaramonti was shot five times and killed after a vehicle pulled-up beside him and the loanshark had words with someone inside the vehicle, outside a
    Frank Calabrese
    ), played some role in the murder, however, Calabrese died in 2018.
  • September 6, 2003 – One-time Las Vegas casino overseer and alleged Outfit "hitman", downgraded to an all-around Outfit utility player after being removed from his job in Las Vegas, Marshall Caifano died of natural causes. He was 92 years old.
  • April 25, 2005 – The
    U.S. Department of Justice's Operation Family Secrets trial indicted 15 Outfit top mobsters and associates under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). Joseph "The Clown" Lombardo, a top Outfit leader, and Frank "the German" Schweihs
    evaded their indictments and became fugitives for a time.
  • September 21, 2005 – After having been extradited from Greece by the
    tax fraud
    .
  • December 16, 2005 – Outfit "hitman", muscleman and fugitive from justice in the Operation Family Secrets trial, Frank Schweihs was apprehended in Berea, Kentucky.
  • January 13, 2006 – Outfit boss and fugitive from justice in the Operation Family Secrets trial, Joseph Lombardo Sr., was apprehended in Elmwood Park, Illinois. FBI agents found him while a mob "person of interest" was under surveillance, most likely John "No Nose" DiFronzo, but this has yet to be confirmed.
  • June 14, 2006 – Former city clerk James Laski was sentenced to 24 months in prison after admitting he pocketed tens of thousands of dollars in bribes as part of the, "Hired Truck Program".
  • August 31, 2006 – Mobster Anthony Zizzo disappeared. His car was found in Melrose Park, Illinois. There was no sign of foul play, because his body has never been found.
  • June 18, 2007 – Aided by RICO, the Operation Family Secrets trial began in Chicago.
  • September 10, 2007 – The "Family Secrets" trial's
    anonymous jury found guilty verdicts on all counts of the five defendants where there was corroborating evidence against the defendants and not just witness testimony against the defendants. The five defendants were Joseph Lombardo Sr., James Marcello, Frank Calabrese Sr., Paul Schiro and Anthony Doyle.[209]
  • July 23, 2008 – Alleged Outfit "hitman" and muscleman Frank Schweihs died of cancer.
  • September 9, 2008 – Alleged Outfit boss Nicholas Ferriola, son of one-time Outfit frontman Joe Ferriola, was convicted of running a gambling operation and of extorting a Chicago pizza chain. He was given a three-year prison sentence.
  • 2009 – High-ranking Chicago Outfit members Joseph Lombardo and James Marcello were sentenced to life imprisonment, because of their convictions in the "Family Secrets" trial.
  • April 28, 2009 – Deputy U.S. Marshal John T. Ambrose was convicted of leaking secret information to the Chicago mob about federal, protected witness, mobster Nicholas Calabrese in the Chicago organized crime investigation, Operation Family Secrets.[210] Ambrose was charged with theft of U.S. Justice Department property, disclosing confidential information and lying to federal agents who questioned him about the leak. He was however acquitted of two charges of lying to federal agents. Ambrose is the son of disgraced former CPD Officer Thomas Ambrose, who was convicted of taking bribes from area drug dealers as part of the Chicago Police Department's "Marquette Ten" scandal, in the 1980s.

2010s

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Reference incorrectly states Coughlin's age at election as 35.

References

  1. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 8
  2. ^ a b c Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 10
  3. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 9, 10
  4. ^ "Billiards and Faro: The Champion McDevitt, and Three Gamblers Arrested for Conspiracy," The Chicago Tribune, Nov. 13, 1868; "Faro and Billiards: Partial Examination of McDevitt, Page, McDonald and Swift," The Chicago Tribune, Nov. 14, 1868.
  5. ^ a b Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 11
  6. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 10, 11
  7. ^ Michael "Hinkey Dink" Kenna
  8. ^ John "Mushmouth" Johnson and the Policy Racket
  9. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 92, 93, 360–362
  10. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 11, 12
  11. ^ One reference notes as late as 1893; Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 252, 253
  12. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 252, 253
  13. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 278–280
  14. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 28
  15. ^ a b "Bathhouse John" Coughlin and Michael "Hinkey Dink" Kenna
  16. ^ "All Down But Nine: Out Of 34 Old Aldermen 25 Are Retired". Chicago Tribune. April 6, 1892. p. 1.
  17. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 20–23
  18. .
  19. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 22, 23
  20. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 92, 93
  21. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 16
  22. ^ The First Ward Ball
  23. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 316, 379, 380
  24. ^ A second source reports that the Gennas came to America as late as 1910; Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 22
  25. ^ a b c Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 150, 151
  26. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 296, 297
  27. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 17, 18
  28. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 21–24
  29. ^ "City of Traverse"
  30. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 21, 22
  31. ^ a b Alderman Michael "Hinkey Dink" Kenna
  32. ^ Giancana, Antoinette and Thomas C. Renner, Mafia Princess: Growing Up in Sam Giancana's Family, William Morrow and Company, Inc. (1984), p. 30
  33. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 278
  34. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 108, 337, 338
  35. ^ a b c Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 319, 320
  36. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 22
  37. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 23
  38. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 16, 17
  39. ^ Chicago Tribune, January 19, 1912
  40. ^ Roemer Jr., William, F., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 23
  41. ^ Giancana, Antoinette and Thomas C. Renner, Mafia Princess: Growing Up in Sam Giancana's Family, William Morrow and Company, Inc. (1984), p. 295
  42. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 23, 24
  43. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 38
  44. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 360–362
  45. ^ a b Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 24
  46. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 25
  47. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 220
  48. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 6, 7
  49. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 304, 305
  50. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 321, 322
  51. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 23
  52. ^ pp.Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), 139, 140
  53. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 18, 19
  54. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 15, 16
  55. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 360
  56. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 31
  57. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 313, 314
  58. ^ a b Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 18
  59. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 298–320
  60. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 19
  61. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 22
  62. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 390–392
  63. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 20, 20n
  64. ^ Russo, Gus, "The Outfit", Bloomsbury (2001), p. 21
  65. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 22, 23
  66. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 15, 16
  67. ^ City Aldermanic Changes
  68. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo; The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 18
  69. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 18, 19
  70. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 374, 375
  71. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 67, 68
  72. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 170, 171
  73. ^ Torrio duped by O'Banion
  74. ^ a b c Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 8, 9
  75. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 16, 17, 150, 151, 280
  76. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 16, 17, 360–362
  77. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 8, 259
  78. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury, (2001) pp. 180, 181
  79. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 138, 139
  80. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 155, 156
  81. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 379, 380
  82. ^ a b c Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 32
  83. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 26
  84. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 26, 27
  85. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp150,151
  86. ^ Russo, Gus, Russo, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 32–34
  87. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 44–46
  88. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 35, 36
  89. ^ a b Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 36
  90. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 173, 174, 259, 260, 379, 380
  91. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 27
  92. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 12
  93. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 280, 281
  94. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 37
  95. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 128
  96. ^ Feds rule "Prohibition" profits taxable
  97. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 44
  98. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 291, 292
  99. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 38, 39
  100. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 290–292
  101. ^ a b c Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 39
  102. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 220, 221
  103. ^ Elliot Ness comes back to town
  104. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 362
  105. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 39, 40
  106. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 34, 45
  107. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 16, 17
  108. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 40
  109. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 15, 16, 21, 22
  110. ^ Russo, Gus, The Oufit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 41–43
  111. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 21, 22, 238, 239
  112. ^ a b Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 43
  113. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 45, 46
  114. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 216
  115. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 199, 200
  116. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 215, 216
  117. ^ One biographer notes the date as Oct. 30; Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 42
  118. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 4, 64, 65
  119. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 31
  120. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 174, 175
  121. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 197, 198
  122. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 46, 47
  123. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 47, 48
  124. ^ a b c d Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 184, 185
  125. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 48
  126. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 271, 272
  127. ^ Sikafis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 362–364
  128. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 394, 395
  129. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 175, 176
  130. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 57
  131. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 171
  132. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Ultimate Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp . 70–72
  133. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 64, 65
  134. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 388, 389
  135. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 508, 509, 509n
  136. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 509
  137. ^ a b Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 174
  138. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 82–84
  139. ^ The death date is disputed.
  140. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 304
  141. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 172, 173
  142. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 35, 36, 135, 136, 209, 216, 217
  143. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 252
  144. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 193–196
  145. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 255, 257, 258, 260
  146. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 254–256
  147. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 258
  148. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 261, 272
  149. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 266
  150. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), pp. 263–266, 272
  151. ^ "Gang Profile: The Latin Kings | Office of Justice Programs".
  152. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 116, 177
  153. ^ "Mad Sam" DeStefano: The Mob's Marquis de Sade, Part 2 Archived February 1, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  154. ^ The bomb explosion at Willie Bioff's house
  155. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury, (2001) pp. 306, 307
  156. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 314
  157. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 157–160
  158. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp/252,253
  159. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 19, 20, 27, 28
  160. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 166, 167
  161. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 168, 169
  162. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 62, 63, 76, 77
  163. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 168
  164. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury Publishing (2001), pp. 352–354
  165. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. 334
  166. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 184, 185, 362–364
  167. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 37, 38
  168. ^ Russo, Gus, The Outfit, Bloomsbury (2001), p. Introduction
  169. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 56, 57
  170. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., The Enforcer, Ivy Books (1994), pp. 25, 26
  171. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 196
  172. ^ "CIA conspired with mafia to kill Castro". The Guardian. 2007-06-27. Archived from the original on 2023-04-25.
  173. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 283, 284
  174. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 177, 178
  175. ^ a b Roemer, William F. Jr., The Enforcer, Ivy Books (1994), p. 28
  176. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., The Enforcer, Ivy Books (1994), p. 27–29
  177. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 219, 220
  178. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 14
  179. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 173,174
  180. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 5
  181. ^ Sam DeStefano's death photo
  182. ^ Mob fingerprint found on car tile
  183. ^ Hitman Aleman Allegedly "Hits" Hitman Nicoletti
  184. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., The Enforcer, Ivy Books (1994), pp. 157, 158
  185. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 5–7.
  186. ^ Devil's Advocate
  187. ^ a b c Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 8
  188. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 8,9
  189. ^ a b Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 9
  190. ^ Burglar tells how he survived the Outfit
  191. ^ a b Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 10
  192. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), pp. 10–14
  193. ^ Roemer, William F. Jr., Accardo: The Genuine Godfather, Ivy Books (1995), p. 13
  194. ^ Couple assassinated in rural Will County
  195. ^ Outfit burglars snatch England's Marlborough Diamond
  196. ^ Campise and Gattuso – "Trunk Music"
  197. ^ Chuckie English autopsy photo
  198. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), p. 132
  199. ^ Sifakis, Carl, The Mafia Encyclopedia, 2nd ed., Checkmark Books (1999), pp. 76, 77
  200. ^ Mobsters were not buried alive
  201. ^ Mob boss confesses to murder
  202. ^ "Organized Crime & Political Corruption".
  203. ^ Botched burial ends in murder
  204. ^ "Gangster graveyard"
  205. ^ "BASEBALL; Rose Case Is Itself An Impact Player (Published 1989)". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2018-06-15.
  206. ^ http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=2798498 [Pete Rose admits betting on Cincinnati Reds]
  207. ^ Reputed Mob Boss Accardo Dead At 86
  208. ^ Round Up The Usual Suspects 1
  209. ^ [1] Archived July 25, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  210. ^ U.S. Marshal guilty of leaking information to Outfit
  211. ^ Calabrese Sr., dies in prison
  212. ^ "Mob Enforcer Could Face Life on Gun Charge". 2013-02-27.

Further reading