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Hamilton (Ont.) Wiseguy Tony Musitano Dies At 72, Did Time For Arson, Extortion, ’83 Toronto Mob Hit

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The “Bombing Baker,” Tony Musitano passed away peacefully in Ontario, Canada this week at 72 with little fireworks or fanfare. The Hamilton mafia figure served seven years in prison (1983-1990) for staging a bombing campaign in an effort to extort a string of bakeries and playing a role from behind bars in the murder conspiracy surrounding the gangland slaying of drugged-out Toronto mob scion Domenic Racco in the 1980s. Back then he headquartered from a bakery himself.

Despite the Hamilton City Council passing a resolution barring Tony Musitano from returning to town, the crafty, wisecracking gangster came back anyway after his release from prison in 1990 and opened a chain of dry cleaning stores. He quietly stayed off the radar for the last three decades of his life, deferring any and all heavy lifting in family mob affairs to relatives. His uncle Angelo (The Beast) Musitano founded the Calabrian mafia in the hardworking steel town of Hamilton in the 1930s before being extradited back to Italy in 1965 for the murder of his own sister when he was a young man.

Musitano’s older brother Dominic was a boss of the Hamilton mafia until he died of a heart attack in 1995. He was convicted for participating in the Racco murder conspiracy as well and did five years in the can on a plea to accessory after the face.

Patrick (Fat Pat) Musitano, Dominic’s oldest son and one of Tony Musitano’s nephews, is reputed to be the don of Hamilton’s Calabrian mob today. The Musitano family was pulled into the ongoing unrest in the Canadian underworld with the 2017 assassination of Tony Musitano’s other nephew Angelo (Big Ange) Musitano, Fat Pat’s baby brother and Dominic’s youngest son. A mob war erupted in Montreal in 2009 and has since spread to other parts of the country, finally reaching Hamilton two years ago by way of the Big Ange Musitano hit.

Tony and Dominic Musitano had Toronto mobster Domenic Racco killed in 1983 after the cocaine-addled Racco, a spoiled mafia prince who had done time in prison for a shopping mall shooting in the 1970s, accrued a $500,000 drug debt and was dragging his feet on repaying it. Racco’s father, Mike Raaco, was the highly-respected boss of the Calabrian mafia in Toronto for years. Mike Raaco died of cancer in 1980, leaving his loose-cannon of a son unprotected.

Domenic Racco was under indictment in a narcotics-trafficking case at the time of his death and between lawyer fees and his own habit, he was having trouble making good on the consignment shipments of drugs provided to him by the Musitanos. Royal Canadian Mounted Police intercepted phone calls and observed face-to-face meetings between Racco and Dominic Musitano discussing the debt in the weeks and days preceding Racco’s murder.

Racco was last seen alive on the evening of December 9, 1983 getting into a car with Dominic Musitano and two hit men Tony Musitano knew from prison (and had arranged to handle the contract’s trigger work) in the parking lot of his suburban Toronto apartment. The next morning, Racco was found face dowm sprawled across a set of train tracks in a field in Milton, Ontario with three bullets in the head and two in the chest.

The post Hamilton (Ont.) Wiseguy Tony Musitano Dies At 72, Did Time For Arson, Extortion, ’83 Toronto Mob Hit appeared first on The Gangster Report.


The Domenic Racco Hit: Musitanos Clipped Toronto Mafia Prince Over Drug Debt

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His last name couldn’t get him out of trouble anymore. Those days were long gone. Pretty-boy Toronto mob prince Domenic Racco, 34, met his end on a desolate railway track in Milton, Ontario on the night of December 9, 1983, shot five times in the head, neck and chest after tempting fate one too many times in shady drug deals with the infamous Musitano mafia clan in Hamilton.

Tony Musitano, who provided the gunmen for the hit, died of natural causes this week at 72. He was serving a prison term for arson and extortion at the time of Racco’s slaying and dispatched a triggerman from behind bars. His conviction for the Racco murder conspiracy ran concurrent with the arson and extortion beef.

The handsome, hot-tempered son of legendary Toronto Calabrian mob don Michele (Mike the Baker) Racco, Domenic Racco was known as a wildcard in Canadian underworld circles, the kind of gangland brat who shot first and asked questions later and leveraged his lineage every chance possible. An unabashed ladies’ man, he liked drugs, expensive designer clothes, flashy cars and life in the fast lane. A staple of the Toronto newspaper gossip columns, he could be found enjoying VIP treatment at the posh restaurants and glitzy clubs in Toronto’s trendy Yorkville neighborhood on a nightly basis in the years leading up to his murder.

Mike Racco ruled his Ontario mafia empire unchallenged for 30 years, using an iron fist, a sharp business sense, and a wide network of allies in both Canada and the United States to keep a firm grip on the Toronto rackets. Finally succumbing to cancer in January 1980, his funeral attracted some 2,000 mourners and mob luminaries from around the world flooding into Ontario to pay their respects. While he was alive, the scowling, heavy-handed Godfather had a soft spot for his son and would run interference for young Domenic whenever he got himself into jams, which was frequently.

One jam Mike the Baker couldn’t get him out of occurred in 1971 when 21-year old Domenic got into a fight with another youth over a pack of cigarettes at the Newtonbrook Plaza shopping mall, pulled out his pistol and started shooting. He was sent to prison for seven years for assault and reckless endangerment. Blaming his brother-in-law for his arrest, believing he was dimed out to the cops by his sister’s husband, Domenic had him shot in the leg as retaliation.

Released in 1978, Domenic Racco dove headfirst into the flourishing cocaine trade sweeping North America and hooked up with the Musitano crime family in blue-collar Hamilton as his suppliers. Angelo (The Beast) Musitano founded the Hamilton Calabrian mafia in the 1930s. His nephew Dominic Musitano was the region’s mob don in the last part of the 20th Century and controlled large swaths of narcotics turf throughout Ontario. Tony Musitano, Dominic’s baby brother, was a top lieutenant of his and helped broker the business relationship between the Racco and Musitano mafia dynasties in the coke trade.

The Musitano brothers began providing Racco drug shipments on consignment and Racco eventually fell behind on his payments. He further upset the Musitanos by pushing into Hamilton and infringing on their territory, violating a well-established treaty between the two families dating back decades. By the fall of 1983, Racco, at that point a full-blown coke-fiend, owed the Musitano brothers a half-million bucks and the Musitanos were getting tired of waiting to collect. Racco also faced a 1982 drug-trafficking case that made certain powers that be in the Canadian mafia worried and gave the Musitanos a pathway to getting approval to have him whacked.

With Mike the Baker out of the picture, long dead and buried, his son was no longer untouchable. The Musitanos knew it was open season and Domenic Racco was living on borrowed time.

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police had a bug on Dominic Musitano’s phone and listened in on this conversation in October 1983 between Musitano and Racco where the growing frustration was clear:

Racco – Listen, I’m trying to get that thing cashed, so I can I get you some of the money.

Musitano – How long is it going to take?

Racco – You’ve got to have patience…..I know I would have lost patience by now myself, so I don’t blame you.

Musitano – It’s gone well beyond patience at this point, kid.

Tony Musitano had recently been sent to prison for arson and extortion tied to a series of bakery firebombings. He was incarcerated at Millhaven Correctional Institute in Lenox County, Ontario and his brother Dominic would send Joe Avignone, their nephew, to the prison to relay messages about attempts to collect on the unpaid debt and subsequently the plot to knock off the drugged-out mafia royal.

Unfortunately for the Musitanos and Avignone, RCMP had the Millhaven visiting room wired for sound. All of Tony Musitano and Joe Avignone’s meetings were recorded.

RCMP agents watched on as Dominic Musitano traveled from Hamilton to the Toronto area on December 7, 1983 and met with Racco in Oakville, Ontario at the Holiday Inn coffee shop. Musitano took a room at the hotel and met Racco for lunch at the coffee shop the next two days in a row.

On the morning of December 9, Racco cashed a check for $21,000 from mortgaging a piece of family-owned property and another one for $8,000 and brought the money to Musitano at the Holiday Inn. It bought him another 10 hours.

That night, Musitano assembled a hit team and went off to pick up Racco at his luxury apartment in Mississauga, Ontario. The shooters and back-up team were provided by Tony Musitano. Exactly two days earlier, his cell mate, a petty thief named Billy Rankin was released from Millhaven and rounded up three of his buddies for a job he was promised a $20,000 fee for completing.

Racco was last seen alive the evening of December 9, 1983 in the parking lot of his apartment complex getting into a car with Dominic Musitano, Billy Rankin and Rankin’s best friend, Pete Majeste at the wheel. A car containing a pair of back-up shooters in Rankin and Majeste associates, Graham Court and Dennis Monaghan, followed behind them. Driving to a barren piece of farmland in Milton, Ontario, Rankin and Majeste walked Racco to a set of train tracks and killed him execution style. His body was found the next morning, spotted by a passenger on a passing commuter train.

The group of mob conspirators were indicted for the Racco slaying in March 1994. Both Musitanos pleaded guilty. Dominic Musitano did five years in prison for being an “accessory to murder.” He died of a heart attack in 1995 and his sons Patrick (Fat Pat) and Angelo (Big Ange) Musitano seized control of the Hamilton rackets by orchestrating the murder of Buffalo mob capo John (Johnny Pops) Papalia two years later in 1997. Big Ange Musitano was gunned down in his driveway behind the wheel of his SUV in 2017, a victim of the ongoing Canadian mob war centered in Montreal.

Tony Musitano was released from prison in 1990 and returned to Hamilton, a self-styled retired gangster looking to make an honest living in the dry cleaning business. To his credit, he had no further brushes with the law after his prison term.

The post The Domenic Racco Hit: Musitanos Clipped Toronto Mafia Prince Over Drug Debt appeared first on The Gangster Report.

Mafia Hit List: The Top 5 NYC “Westies” Irish Mob Murders

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Led by the violent and ambitious Jimmy Coonan, The Westies was New York’s Irish mob of the late 1970s and 1980s. Backed by the Italian Gambino crime family, the Westies turned Hell’s Kitchen upside down, flooding the streets with massive amounts of narcotics, murder and mayhem. While latter-era Irish crime lords from Hell’s Kitchen like Hughie Mulligan and Mickey Spillane resisted Italian mob influence, Coonan and his Westies felt empowered by their affiliation with the Gambinos and wore it as a badge of honor. Coonan seized control of the Irish mob in Hell’s Kitchen in 1977 —, in concert with the Gambino and Genovese crime families — with the killing of Spillane and several of his most-trusted lieutenants and ruled until he was jailed for life in 1988 courtesy of a federal racketeering conviction.

The Top 5 “Westies” Hits – The Rise To The Top Murder Timeline (1976-1977)

1 Mickey Spillane: May 13, 1977 – The neatly-coiffed old-school boss of the Irish mob in Hell’s Kitchen is gunned down in front of his Woodside neighborhood residence in Queens. Spillane, the quintessential “gentleman gangster,” had fought off the Italian mob for years from invading the West Side rackets and Jimmy Coonan used the rivalry to his advantage by forging an alliance with Italian Godfather Paul Castellano and the Gambino crime family. With backing from the Gambinos and Genovese mobs, Coonan engineered a war against Spillane which ended in Spillane’s assassination and Coonan taking his place as boss of Hell’s Kitchen. Spillane, 44, had moved from Hell’s Kitchen to a quiet section of Queens out of fear for his safety in the year before he was slain.

2 Charles (Ruby) Stein: May 15, 1977 – A well-connected 62-year old Jewish mobster with one of the biggest loan sharking operation in the country and links to a number of New York Italian crime families is killed at the 596 Club (also known as McCoy’s Bar) on Tenth Ave in Hell’s Kitchen, his body partially dismembered and disposed of in the Hudson River. Stein’s former bodyguard and driver was the new “Westies” boss, Jimmy Coonan, who wanted his huge shylock business for himself now that he was in charge of “The Kitchen.”

3 Tommy Devaney: July 20, 1976 – Mickey Spillane’s main enforcer is shot dead by hired gun Joe (Mad Dog) Sullivan in the middle of a Midtown Manhattan bar after attending a wake across the street with Genovese mobster George (Georgie the Jet) Barone, the man who founded the “Jets” street gang made famous in the stage play and film West Side Story. Barone set Devaney up for the kill. Devaney’s murder started the domino effect that wound up toppling Mickey Spillane’s Irish mob empire less than a year later.

4 Edward (Eddie the Butcher) Cumminsky: August 20, 1976 – The feared hit man and one of Mickey Spillane’s most reliable enforcers, is gunned down by Mad Dog Sullivan while drinking at the Sunbrite Bar in Hell’s Kitchen.

5 Thomas (Tommy the Greek) Kapatos: January 22, 1977 – The Hell’s Kitchen mob strong arm is blown away by Mad Dog Sullivan on a snowy night walking in Midtown Manhattan along 34th Street. Kapatos was Mickey Spillane’s last layer of protection and with him out of the picture Spillane was at the end of his lifeline on the street.

The post Mafia Hit List: The Top 5 NYC “Westies” Irish Mob Murders appeared first on The Gangster Report.

The G’s Vendetta Against G.G.: Detroit Man In Govt. Crosshairs For Its Past Failures In Building Cases, Say Sources

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In a murder case out of suburban Detroit, Michigan hampered by conflicts of interests and a deluge of delays, the name you hear least and who the government has no direct evidence connecting him in any way to the crime, may be the person driving the whole prosecution. According to sources, law enforcement in Motown was eager to bust one-time convicted drug dealer George (G.G.) Rider at any coast, fueled by frustration over an inability to make past cases stick, and that played the biggest role in Rider being charged in the January 2017 slaying of Juli Johnson outside her boyfriend’s house in Warren, Michigan.

The 60-year old Rider, a female acquaintance named Marcie Griffin and the alleged shooter Eric Gibson, are supposed to finally have their case heard by a jury next month in Macomb County Circuit Court. The May 14 start date follows a whopping total of four postponements, one tied to the removal of the original sitting judge. The trial had gotten underway back in March, with a jury even impaneled, but was quickly adjourned and the jury dismissed prior to opening arguments due to Griffin’s attorney, Todd Flood, requesting a continuance to deal with a personal family emergency.

Rider was convicted in a narcotics trafficking case in the 1990s and did a federal prison stint. After his release and a brief return behind bars for a parole violation, Rider reinvented himself as a legitimate businessman and built a formidable real estate investment portfolio. He purchased the historic Fine Arts Theatre in downtown Detroit and eventually sold it for a seven-figure profit.

Johnson, 34, was shot to death on the morning of January 13, 2017. At the time, she was in a romantic relationship with Griffin’s former boyfriend and father to her children, Jimmy Lattner, a convicted felon who sources say is a drug dealer and has enemies in the dope game. Johnson was killed in front of Lattner’s residence walking to her car.

Prosecutors claim Griffin was unhappy with the way Johnson was treating her two kids. An IPhone video shot inside a car wash Lattner owns shows a heated argument between him and Griffin that appears to be about Johnson. Gibson’s DNA was found on the murder weapon, ditched near the crime scene.

The only evidence prosecutors have against Rider is the fact that “pings” from his cell phone can be placed in the vicinity of Gibson’s cell phone on the day Johnson was murdered and text message exchanges with Griffin where Griffin expresses anger towards Lattner.

In other words, the case against him is paper thin. Media accounts of the case barely reference his presence in the chain of events.

Rider’s cell phone and two others were seized in a controversial stop-and-search of his Ford Explorer SUV in Roseville, Michigan on February 4, 2017. He was arrested and charged with Johnson’s murder three weeks later in state court and has been being held without bail ever since.

Judge Jennifer Faunce was ordered to recuse herself from the case last October because of a conflict of interest – her sister, District Court Judge Suzanne Faunce, had signed the search warrant for Rider’s vehicle. Judge Joseph Toia took over the case in late 2018.

Per sources, federal prosecutors and FBI agents have exerted influence in the case from early on and pushed for the Macomb County District Attorney’s Office to indict Rider despite the lack of any links to the actual crime itself. The feds have relentlessly pursued Rider for years in a number of investigations that never materialized into indictments and, according to sources, the fact that all they have to show for that work is a single drug conviction from 1993 combined with fact that Rider successfully transitioned into the white-collar business world is embarrassing to investigators — his 1.3 million dollar sale of the Fine Arts Theatre in the months before his arrest especially drawing their ire sources say. One source says they saw his friendship with Griffin, 48, (and who they could connect to Johnson via Lattner) as a leverage-point and desperately wanted to jam him anyway they could, even if it was with a trumped up case.

Lattner is under federal indictment right now on weapons charges. He has made it known he will assert his Fifth Amendment privileges if called to testify at the trial as he did in a 2017 preliminary hearing when he was jailed for contempt of court. Macomb County police seized more than a half-billion bucks in cash from Lattner in a search of his home related to Johnson’s homicide.

The Voice of Detroit news website and its crack reporter Ricardo Ferrell have covered the Feds quest to take Rider down by any means necessary for the last 18 months, breaking the story wide open. Local urban legend considers Rider’s former Fine Arts Theatre building haunted as a result of a string of suspicious deaths that have occurred on its premises through the years.

The post The G’s Vendetta Against G.G.: Detroit Man In Govt. Crosshairs For Its Past Failures In Building Cases, Say Sources appeared first on The Gangster Report.

Gangster Report Guest Op-Ed: The Vindictive Pursuit Of George Rider Needs To Stop

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The Gangster Report welcomes contributor Ricardo Ferrell from Detroit.

May 15, 2019

The long anticipated murder trial of George G. Rider is slated to begin this week in Macomb County Circuit Court in Mt. Clemens, Michigan, just outside of Detroit. There have been numerous postponements and delays in the high-profile case charging Rider and two others with the murder of 34-year old Juli Johnson in Warren, Michigan on the morning of January 13, 2017.

Rider has been in custody since February of that year since his unlawful arrest in the case. On February 4, 2017, local police tracking a ping from a cellphone believed to be connected to one of Rider’s co-defendants (Marcie Griffin), stopped him in his Ford Explorer outside a car wash. Police confiscated the vehicle and three cellphones without probable cause or a legal warrant. They claimed it was a traffic stop, but no record of such stop exists. Less than two weeks later, he Rider was charged along with Griffin and one Eric Gibson with Johnson’s murder.

I believe it goes without saying that federal authorities immediately became involved after learning that it was George Rider the police in Warren were trying to connect to the Johnson homicide. The U.S. Attorneys’ Office in Detroit has been after Rider for the past two decades, trying to link him to crimes, in some cases, homicides, they had no real evidence of.

It appears, at the very least, in this case, the U.S. prosecutors were overzealous in influencing the Macomb County D.A. to charge Rider in a murder they have zero evidence tying him to, in an attempt to leverage future federal racketeering counts its easy to suspect they are hoping to one day bring. This is a vindictive pursuit and it’s been going on for years. Not based on merit, but vengeance. The federal government will stop at nothing to get Rider.

The desire to take down Rider at all costs intensified after the September 2007 murder of businesswoman Valerie Atikian inside the Fine Arts Theatre in Downtown Detroit. Rider owned the theatre and prosecutors wanted to charge him, but never could.

Today, the government will stop at nothing to get Rider and that’s unjust. I even believe U.S. Attorneys interfered in this current case, sending offers on deals for other unrelated cases if he would spill the beans on Griffin, who Macomb County prosecutors believe wanted Juli Johnson killed because of her relationship with Griffin’s ex-boyfriend and father to her two children.

How can they do this, you ask, run interference for cases that have never gotten filed? The short answer is they can’t. It’s illegal.

Questionable behavior abounds in this case. Remember, the case’s original judge, Macomb County Circuit Court Judge Jennifer Faunce, was forcibly recused back in December on orders of the state’s appellate court because of the fact that it was Faunce’s sister, Suzanne, a district court judge in the area, who signed the warrant for the search of Rider’s vehicle.

Was this just a coincidence? Considering the chicanery known to be going on in Macomb County these past few years, I think not. The search warrant to raid Rider’s girlfriend’s apartment was only an application to obtain a search warrant, but it was used anyway despite being bogus.

The vindictive pursuit I hope to expose dates back to before Rider got out of prison for a drug case he took in the 1990s and was locked up for between 1992-2003. Rider owned property in the Cass Corridor and parts of Downtown Detroit that were being developed into what is now the neighborhood that serves as home to all three of the city’s pro sports arenas.

But back then, the lots were under siege by mostly white businessmen and their connections in the city’s power structure that were eliminating owners they couldn’t buy out, either by killing them or locking them up. Rider had a vision of opening up sports bars, classy restaurants and coffee shops in the area today known as District Detroit. Pretty much exactly what you see going on there now. This was 20 years ago though.

It’s no secret there are people who want Rider out of the way. They wanted him out of the way then. And they want him out of the way now because of other key properties he owns and they want to acquire.

The authorities in the Juli Johnson case aren’t interested in the pursuit of justice. Instead, they are motivated by a vendetta against George Rider, which fuels this ever-growing vindictive pursuit. I believe the only reason why he’s been charged in this crime is simply because his name is George Rider. I also believe its highly likely that a number of individuals involved in this investigation either intentionally or inadvertently acted in a corrupted, concerted, collusive and conspiratorial fashion in bringing this case against Mr. Rider.

In an effort to get him off the street, it’s clear they’ll do whatever it takes, legal or not, even knowingly violating his constitutional rights. The entire legal process has been tainted and this is a massive injustice. Reputation over facts, personal beefs over upholding our rights as citizens. That’s what this case says. And that’s wrong.

Ricardo Ferrell, lifelong friend of George Rider

The post Gangster Report Guest Op-Ed: The Vindictive Pursuit Of George Rider Needs To Stop appeared first on The Gangster Report.

Unsolved Chicago Mob Porn Racket Murder From ’80s Gets New Look In Grand Ave. Probe, Sources Claim

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According to sources, the 1985 murder of Chicago mobster and porn king Patrick (Patsy Rich) Ricciardi is one of the many cold-case gangland hits being probed in an ongoing federal racketeering investigation of current Outfit leaders. The long-gestating inquiry’s principle target is alleged to be reputed Grand Avenue crew chief and overall street boss Albert (Albie the Falcon) Vena. Upwards of a dozen unsolved mob homicides are getting a fresh set of eyes, per sources.

Patsy Ricciardi, 59, was found shot twice in the back of the head in the trunk of a stolen car on the outskirts of Lincoln Park on July 26, 1985. He had headed a large portion of the Chicago mafia’s lucrative pornography racket, according to FBI informants.

Ricciardi and Albie Vena were both members of the Outfit’s now-shuttered Northside crew in the 1980s. The Northside crew merged with the Grand Avenue regime, sometimes called the Westside crew, approximately two decades ago.

The man they called Patsy Rich never made it to the merger. He was slain for being a suspected informant and stealing shakedown money. And maybe some other reasons, like a longstanding feud within the crime family between two neighboring crews over porn and the illicit sex trade.

For years, the Northsiders and Westsiders fought for dominance in the Windy City pornography racket. The Grand Avenue gang planted a flag in the near Northside neighborhood of Old Town in the late 1960s. Repeated attempts by Northside soldiers to get a foothold in the area brought brewing tensions that soon boiled over to violence. Vena had strong ties to both camps. Ricciardi’s slaying was one of three high-profile gangland hits in less than ten years connected to beefs in the Chicago porn business.

Vena, 70, came up through the ranks of the Outfit as a ruthless enforcer for legendary Northside shot-callers like Lenny Patrick, Gus (Slim) Alex and Vincent (Innocent Vince) Solano. He was one of the Northside crew’s most reliable and feared collectors and beat a murder rap at trial in 1995. Tiny but ferocious, the powerful mob chieftain still remains a suspect in several high-profile Chicago gangland slayings.

Ricciardi’s cousin was notorious mob killer and one-time Chicago mafia don Felix (Milwaukee Phil) Alderisio. In 1971, Ricciardi bought the Admiral Theatre on Lawrence Avenue in the Albany Park section of the Northside and turned it into a porn palace. Per FBI records, he ran a sports book and a juice loan operation out of the Admiral, too. By the 1980s, the Admiral had transitioned into being a strip club. The theater had been a venue for vaudeville during Prohibition.

Ricciardi and the Chicago mob porn racket were the subjects of two grand juries, first in 1979 and then again in the mid-1980s. In the months before he was killed, indictments were filed against mob-affiliated figures in the pornography industry out of Illinois and Ohio for tax fraud. His absence from the indictment allegedly raised some eyebrows within the Outfit and rumors began circulating that Patsy Rich was a snitch. Others complained he was pocketing portions of tribute envelopes he was responsible for gathering.

On the afternoon of July 24, 1985, Ricciardi took a cab from his office at the Admiral Theatre to a meeting he had at a bar on Webster and Halsted and never returned. Two days later, he popped up dead in the trunk of a boosted Oldsmobile under some elevated train tracks near the corner of Webster and Ashland. His killers had taken his shoes and $1,000 in cash out of his wallet.

Per FBI records, Ricciardi was considered a person of interest to authorities in the murder of Windy City porn mogul Paul Gonsky, who was gunned down in Old Town getting into his Mercedes on September 21, 1976. Gonsky owned The Bijou Theatre on Wells Street in Old Town, territory controlled by the Grand Avenue crew and then Outfit capo Joey (The Clown) Lombardo. The parking lot Gonsky was killed in was owned by Lombardo’s bodyguard and main muscle Frank (The German) Schweihs, the man tasked with extorting tribute from porn shops operating in Old Town.

The 35-year old Gonsky was feuding with his partners in The Bijou over alleged skimming of funds. The matter was being litigated at the time of his murder. FBI informants said Gonsky was resisting mob infiltration of his business and Ricciardi pushed for action against Gonsky with the knowledge that he’d benefit from the fallout. With Gonsky out of the picture, Patsy Rich gobbled up more porn turf for himself, per informants. Ricciardi had been running interference for Gonsky in his troubles with Lombardo and Schweihs being that he was the one responsible for collecting the street tax from The Bijou.

Even though he was officially with the Outfit’s Northside regime, the diminutive and always dapper Vena was taught the ropes of the mob strong arm trade by Westside soldier Frank the German, according to Chicago Crime Commission files. Schweihs died of cancer in 2008 at 76 awaiting trial for his alleged role in a slew of mob murders charged in the epic Operation Family Secrets case which landed Lombardo, 90, and by then the Outfit’s consigliere, behind bars for the rest of his life and laid the groundwork for Vena’s ascent to mob administrator status.

The murder of Patsy Ricciardi in the summer of 1985 was the second slaying of a Northside crew soldier in a six month span: Leonard (Little Lenny) Yaras was bumped off that January. Yaras and Vena collected street tax, loan sharking debt and gambling proceeds for Lenny Patrick’s network of Jewish bookies and racketeers in and around Rogers Park in the 1970s and 1980s.

The post Unsolved Chicago Mob Porn Racket Murder From ’80s Gets New Look In Grand Ave. Probe, Sources Claim appeared first on The Gangster Report.

Needle In A Haystack: Chi-Town Mafia Boss Escaped Murder Beef In ’95

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Alleged Chicago mob street boss Albert (Albie the Falcon) Vena was found not guilty of murdering low-ranking Northside crew member Sam (Needles) Taglia at an April 1995 bench trial in Cook County Circuit Court in front of Judge James Flannery, Jr. That’s one homicide he no longer has to worry about. On the other hand, there are a number of others potentially still hanging over his head.

The vertically-challenged fireplug of a 70-year old mafia chief is being investigated for his role in several unsolved gangland slayings as part of an ongoing federal probe of Outfit activities mainly surrounding the crime family’s fabled Grand Avenue and Cicero factions, according to sources in law enforcement. For the last decade or so, Vena has led the Grand Avenue crew.

Taglia, a drug-addled repeat felon, was found shot to death with his throat slashed in the trunk of his late-model Buick in Melrose Park on November 4, 1992. He had reportedly burned Vena in a cocaine deal, failing to deliver the narcotics after money was fronted to him. His criminal record was dotted with close to a dozen collars for robbery, gambling and drug offenses.

Vena became capo of the Grand Avenue crew in around 2007. The bump up to street boss came around five years ago, per sources. Some press outlets have dubbed him the most dangerous man in Chicago.

Like Taglia, Vena had been part of the Outfit’s Northside regime in his younger days. The Northside crew got consolidated into the Grand Avenue gang in the late 1990s.

The Grand Avenue crew is historic in Chicago underworld circles for being ruthless and vindictive and has always housed valued enforcement units. In other words, Vena fit right in and not surprisingly rose quickly.

The legend of “The Falcon” began on the Northside though. As a skilled collector for mob figures Gus (Slim) Alex and Lenny Patrick, Vena’s strong arm duties took him from Alex’s stomping grounds of The Loop, the city’s downtown business and financial district, to Patrick’s turf further north in Rogers Park where he lorded over a sprawling consortium of Jewish bookies and loan sharks. Vena’s reputation for viciousness was cemented in 1973 when he traveled to Florida to muscle a guy out of $35,000 by kidnapping him, beating and torturing him until he gave up the cash.

When police in Chicago arrived at Vena’s home to arrest him for the Taglia slaying on Christmas Eve 1992, he tried to run over one of the case detectives with his car. Taglia was recently divorced and living in an apartment in River Forest at the time of his killing. He was last seen alive leaving his girlfriend’s Melrose Park residence with Vena shortly after returning under the influence of heroin from a dinner with his girlfriend and brother.

The next morning, the 50-year old Taglia was “trunk music,” found a block from the Melrose Park restaurant and bar he had ate his last meal at the night before. Melrose Park police discovered Taglia’s 1983 Buick parked on 13th Avenue across from an apartment building dripping with blood. The driver’s seat was adjusted for someone of short stature, opposed to the six-foot Taglia. Vena stands just 5-foot-2.

The post Needle In A Haystack: Chi-Town Mafia Boss Escaped Murder Beef In ’95 appeared first on The Gangster Report.

Reputed Detroit Drug Boss, “World Domination” Crew Founder, Once Viewed As Top Suspect In GF’s Slaying

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Police in suburban Detroit first had convicted drug dealer Jimmy Lattner as the prime suspect in the 2017 murder of his girlfriend, Julii Johnson, before eventually charging Lattner’s ex-girlfriend and two others, per sources, in a case that will finally make it in front of a jury this week in Macomb County Circuit Court. Lattner is out on bail awaiting a trial of his own on a weapon-possession case stemming from the investigation into Johnson’s slaying.

The Johnson case is rife with compelling, often vexing and intricate subplots, regarding the crime itself, the alleged players involved and the way it’s been adjudicated through the court system. The case is on its second judge and the start of the trial has been postponed four times in the last 16 months.

Johnson, 34, was gunned down on the morning of January 13, 2017 outside Lattner’s condominium in Warren, Michigan. Marcie Griffin, Lattner’s ex-girlfriend, George (G.G.) Rider and Eric Gibson are facing first-degree homicide charges in the case. Griffin was feuding with Lattner and Johnson over Johnson’s treatment of Griffin and Lattner’s child.

Gibson’s DNA is on the murder weapon and prosecutors believe Rider acted as a middleman for Griffin in hiring Gibson to kill Johnson. Rider, a folk hero of sorts on the streets of Detroit’s Eastside who served a prison stint for federal narcotic trafficking in the 1990s, has been in the government’s crosshairs for years.

After his release from prison in 2003, Rider built a robust real estate portfolio while the FBI hounded his every move trying to build cases against him. In 2015, he sold the historic Fine Arts Theatre in downtown Detroit for 1.3 million dollars. The feds have long tried linking him to a murder that occurred at the theatre in 2007 to no avail.

The 44-year old Lattner once led what was known as the World Domination Gang, a drug crew operating out of Detroit’s near Westside in the late 1990s and early 2000s. He did six years in prison for peddling cocaine and heroin and got out in 2010. His behavior in the aftermath of Johnson’s murder brought scrutiny. An eye-witness account of Johnson’s killer and results of a police-dog scent test drove detectives further towards pegging him as a suspect.

By February, however, they had moved their attention away from Lattner, eliminating him as a suspect and focused the investigation on the current set of co-defendants. There is video of Griffin screaming at and threatening Lattner at Lattner’s car wash in the months before Johnson was slain and texts between Griffin and a cell phone registered to a company owned by Rider expressing her anger towards Lattner and Johnson.

The only evidence connecting the 60-year old Rider and the 26-year old Gibson are “pings” from cell phone towers in the Metro Detroit area placing them in the same vicinity on the day Johnson was murdered. Nonetheless, Rider, Griffin and Gibson were indicted together on February 24, 2017 and have been held without bail ever since.

Lattner’s defiant posture towards investigators had them eying him with suspicion from the morning Johnson was found lying clinging to life outside his condo. When Warren Police arrived on the scene, Lattner was emotionally distraught, screaming at someone on his cell phone and cursing at the responding officers. He refused to answer any questions, a pattern that has continued to this very day, even in the face of time behind bars.

A neighbor’s description of how the shooter was dressed matched Lattner’s appearance that morning (gray-colored jacket over a hooded sweatshirt). The neighbor would later say she thought the assailant was younger than Lattner, but admitted that the shooter “could have looked like him (Lattner) from the back.” A police dog from the K-9 unit traced the shooter’s scent on a “back track” motion that went away from property and then returned in the direction of Lattner’s condo.

The police got search warrants for the condo and the Ford F-150 pickup truck in the driveway. Inside the condo, police found $533,000 in cash. Inside the vehicle, they uncovered a gun (9 millimeter Ruger) with the serial number filed off, a bag of marijuana and another $12,000 in cash. The truck was equipped with custom-designed hidden compartments, normally a common accessory for people in the drug game to travel with concealed contraband. The money and the truck were seized.

Lattner pleaded the Fifth Amendment when called to answer questions about Johnson’s murder at a pretrial evidentiary hearing and was jailed for contempt. He was charged with possession of a firearm by a felon. He’s been on “lifetime probation” since 1997.

Authorities were at first hot on the idea that either Lattner had something to do with Johnson’s killing or an enemy of his in the drug world was, sources claim. Upon a possible tie-in to Rider emerging, federal prosecutors, per sources, pressed police in Macomb County to refocus the investigation towards the “Marcie Griffin angle.”

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Taste Of Freedom: Capo In Philly Mafia Sprung From Federal Prison

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Philadelphia mob captain Anthony Staino was released early from prison this month after serving six years of an eight-year sentence courtesy of a federal racketeering conviction. Award-winning investigative reporter and Bruno-Scarfo crime family insider Dave Schrawieser broke the news of Staino’s return home to New Jersey on his social media accounts Tuesday.

The 62-year old Staino is a crew chief in the South Jersey faction of the family and was the right-hand man to longtime acting boss Joseph (Uncle Joe) Ligambi before going to prison in February 2013. He was caught on an FBI wire bragging to an undercover agent of being the family’s “CFO” and threatening to hurt him if he didn’t pay back the $30,000 loan he had taken out.

Where Staino fits in as a player in the current cluttered Philly mob landscape remains unclear. Attaching his trailer to Ligambi’s rising star in the late 1990s, Staino maneuvered up the family’s ladder fast, going from associate to made man to capo to de-facto No. 2 in charge in a matter of two years.

Staino and Ligambi were indicted together in 2011 for bookmaking, extortion and loan sharking, but Ligambi, 79, beat the case at a pair of trials. The two mob leaders co-owned a video-poker machine business with Ligambi’s underboss Joe (Mousie) Massimino, indicted, convicted and incarcerated for racketeering in the years leading up to the Ligambi-Staino bust. The triumvirate were looking after the shop for then jailed mafia don Joseph (Skinny Joey) Merlino. Uncle Joe Ligambi is back manning the store for Merlino, who is once again away as a guest of the federal government for gambling offenses committed in Florida.

Staino’s uncle was Philly mob figure Ralph (Junior) Staino, a soldier during the family’s “Little Nicky Scarfo era,” and famous for his romance with showgirl-turned-club owner Lillian (Tiger ‘Lil) Reis. Junior Staino (d. 2015) came up on the streets of Philly as a member of the mostly Irish K&A Gang prior to being inducted into the city’s Italian mafia by Scarfo in the early 1980s.

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The Iron Will Of Terrible Tom – AB Boss Did 35 Years In “Hole,” Dies As Mythic Prison Figure

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May 24, 2019 — Aryan Brotherhood leader Thomas (Terrible Tom) Silverstein, one of the most infamous men in the American prison system for the past four decades, died of heart failure behind bars this month in Colorado at 67. Terrible Tom spent 35 straight years in solitary confinement after killing four people as a part of his role in the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang.

Federal officials cite Silverstein as the impetus for creating the Supermax facility in Florence, Colorado, opened in the early 1990s to house the worst of the worst inmates in the nation’s prison pool. However, Terrible Tom didn’t land in the Florence facility until 2005.

Silverstein had surgery on his bad ticker in February and never recovered. He was originally jailed for a string of armed robberies that he pulled off with his dad and first cousin in California in the late 1970s. Incarcerated in Leavenworth, Kansas, the Irish Silverstein joined the Aryan Brotherhood and rapidly ascended through the organization’s pecking order, building a reputation for being violent, fearless and criminally savvy.

Less than two years into his sentence, he allegedly killed fellow inmate Danny Atwell for refusing to act as a courier for his drug deals. The following year in 1981, Silverstein strangled rival prison gang member Robert Chappelle to death in his cell at a high-security unit in Marion, Illinois. Chappelle was in the D.C. Blacks, an African-American prison gang with power on the East Coast and in the Midwest.

Shortly after Chappelle’s slaying, D.C. Blacks boss Raymond (Cadillac Ray) Smith was transferred into the Marion facility and he and Silverstein circled each other for several months until Terrible Tom stabbed him to death. Silverstein and an Aryan Brotherhood soldier named Clayton Fountain plunged makeshift knives into Smith nearly 70 times and then proceeded to parade his dead body around the cell block showing off their butchery.

In October 1983, Silverstein and Fountain carried out a systematic double murder of two correctional officers at the Marion prison. Silverstein stabbed Merle Clutts to death and an hour later in a separate section of the facility Fountain shanked Robert Hoffman. Terrible Tom and Clutts had been bumping heads for a while and Silverstein carefully plotted and coordinated the Clutts and Hoffman hits for almost a year. It was the murders of Clutts and Hoffman that resulted in him being confined to the “hole” for the rest of his life.

Silverstein’s conviction for the Atwell murder would be overturned in 1985. Among the Aryan Brotherhood hierarchy, Terrible Tom was revered and admired. His legacy grew to practically mythical proportions as the decades went by and he remained in isolation. Aryan Brotherhood Godfather Barry (The Baron) Mills was also serving his time in the Florence Supermax until his death of natural causes last summer.

Even though he was locked up 23 hours a day, Silverstein stayed busy. He blogged about prisoner’s rights, painted, sketched, and was working on his autobiography with retired Washington Post reporter Pete Earley. Silverstein filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the Bureau of Prisons in 2007 challenging the constitutionality of the conditions he was being forced to endure but eventually lost the case in court.

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Going Bananas In The Bonannos: The Banana Mob War Timeline (1964-1969)

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New York mafia don Joseph (Joe Bananas) Bonanno sent his criminal empire into chaos in the early 1960s when he unsuccessfully plotted to murder three rival mob bosses and take total control of the Five Families. The Commission found out about Bonanno’s plans and deposed him, naming capo Gaspar DiGregorio his replacement. Bonanno retreated to Arizona and fought a war for his crime family against DiGregorio, street boss Paul Sciacca and the entire Commission that spanned the rest of the decade and set the stage for further instability within the organization down the road.

The New York media dubbed the conflict that reached its zenith in 1968, the “Banana War” or the “Banana Split.” Joe Bananas himself, one of the founders of the Five Families, never retained complete power and lived out the rest of his years in Tucson before dying of natural causes at the ripe old age of 97 in the spring of 2002.

The Banana War Timeline (1964-1969)

October 3, 1964 –Mob boss Joseph (Joe Bananas) Bonanno stages his own disappearance after learning that The Commission had uncovered his plans to seize control of the Five Families. Bonanno names his white-collar minded, college-educated son, Bill, his consigliere and main proxy, breeding resentment within his harder-edged support base of soldiers and capos. Joe Bananas doesn’t emerge again in public for another 18 months.

October 21, 1964 — Bonanno soldier Carlo Simari is shot to death in Brooklyn outside his home.

January 12, 1965 — Joe Bonanno is arrested by the FBI for failure to appear in front of a grand jury. He is given bail in February.

February 10, 1965 — DiGregorio-Sciacca soldier Joe Badalamonte is shot to death in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn.

March 15, 1965 — Bill Bonanno, Little Joe Notaro and Joe Bonanno’s underboss John (Johnny Burns) Morales and street boss Frank (Frankie Lane) LaBruzzo are shot at on their way to a peace conference in Manhattan.

March 18, 1965 — Joe Bonanno meets with The Commission and is told they are ruling against him and siding with DiGregorio. Bonanno goes into exile for the next 14 months.

January 28, 1966: The Troutman Street Ambush – Bill Bonanno and his entourage are called to a peace conference at a relative’s house on Troutman Street in Brooklyn and when a call to reschedule from the DiGregorio-Sciacca camp prompts them to leave, they are met by a fusillade of gun fire from strategically-placed snipers on rooftops and gunmen in phone booths and stationed behind fruit stands. Miraculously, nobody was killed, but the ensuing shootout on a public street in Brooklyn’s Bushwick neighborhood inspired a classic scene in the movie The Godfather Part II. Bonanno’s ambition to take over the Five Families by force also inspired a storyline in The Godfather Part III.

April 24, 1966 — Longtime crime family capo and fierce Bonanno loyalist Joseph (Little Joe) Notaro has his house in the Bronx firebombed.

May 19, 1966 – Joe Bonanno returns to New York following almost two years in hiding to rally his troops. Bonanno stays in New York for a short while and then goes back into hiding. He claims he was kidnapped by mob soldiers Buffalo’s Magaddino crime family in 1964.

*Little Joe Notaro dies of a sudden heart attack during Bonanno’s brief return to New York in the spring and early summer of 1966

July 13, 1966 – High-ranking syndicate capo Frank (Frankie T) Mari, the DiGregorio-Sciacca camp’s top muscle and field general in the war, is shot in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn, but survives.

March 17, 1967 – Genovese crime family capo John (Johnny Futto) Biello is killed on Bonanno’s orders for being one of those who tipped off The Commission about his plans to assassinate its members. Biello, the former owner of the famous Peppermint Lounge in Times Square, ran a Genovese crew in Florida and was shot to death in Miami.

October 25, 1967 – Bonanno faction loyalists Vince (Jimmy Lefty) Cassese & Vince (Vinnie Carroll) Garofalo are shot in front of a Brooklyn bakery. Garofalo’s older brother was a trusted advisor for Joe Bananas named Frank (Frankie Carroll) Garofalo, who was one of the American mob’s biggest narcotics chiefs.

November 10, 1967: The Cypress Gardens Massacre – DiGregorio-Sciacca faction captains Gaetano (Smitty) D’Angelo, James (Jimmy D) D’Angelo and Frank (Frankie 500) Telleri are machine gunned to death inside the Cypress Gardens restaurant in Ridgewood, Queens. Telleri was the crime family’s policy lottery boss and Smitty D’Angelo was angling for an administrative post in the DiGregorio-Sciacca regime.

March 4, 1968 – DiGregorio-Sciacca faction underboss Pietro (Skinny Pete) Crociata is shot getting out of his car on a Manhattan street corner. Skinny Pete Crociata was the conduit to all the crime family’s “old timers” and the shooting pushed him into retirement.

March 11, 1968 –Bill Bonanno’s bodyguard, Salvatore (Big Hank) Perrone, is killed, gunned down as he was purchasing a carton of cigarettes at a candy store in Brooklyn across the street from his cartage company.

April 1, 1968 – DiGregorio-Sciacca camp soldier Mike (Bruno) Consolo is killed after a court appearance in Brooklyn related to the Troutman Street Ambush two years prior. Consolo was shot to death as he went to get into his car a few blocks away from the courthouse. Some people speculate he was slain by his own side of the war for considering switching allegiances back to the Bonanno contingent.

April 5, 1968 – Bonanno camp associate Billy Gonzales, Big Hank Perrone’s best friend, is shot in the Bronx walking towards his front door after a night out on the town.

April 17, 1968 – DiGregorio-Sciacca soldier Francisco (Frank Coffee) Crociata, Skinny Pete’s brother, is shot inside the Rossini Democratic Social Club in Brooklyn while sipping an espresso.

July 22, 1968 – Joe Bonanno’s home in Tucson is shot up and a stick of dynamite is thrown down his chimney.

September 18, 1968 – Newly-minted DiGregorio-Sciacca faction underboss Frank (Frankie T) Mari & consigliere Michael (Mikey Adams) Adamo are murdered. They vanished from The 19th Hole Bar in the Dyker Heights section of Brooklyn.

September 23-thru-October 28, 1968 – A string of bombings rip through Tucson, targeting Bonanno loyalists and their businesses.

November 1968 – Joe Bonanno steps aside, finally relinquishing the reins of the crime family he built and had led for more than 35 years and settles permanently in Arizona

*Earlier that year, Bonanno had survived his third heart attack

February 6, 1969 – DiGregorio-Sciacca soldier Tommy Zummo is the last casualty of the war, shot to death in the lobby of his girlfriend’s Queens apartment building by up-and-coming wiseguy Joseph (Big Joey) Massino, who went on to become boss of the Bonanno crime family in the 1990s. Today, Massino, once the most powerful mob chief in America at the height of his reign, lives under assumed identity in the Witness Protection Program. He “made his bones” with the Zummo hit which officially ended the Banana War.

*Gaspare Magaddino’s murder in 1970 could have been residual violence from the war and remains unsolved. Magaddino had family ties on both sides of the squabble and was one of the shooters in the Cypress Gardens Massacre.

*Gaspar DiGregorio was forced out of the boss” chair in 1968 and replaced by Paul Sciacca. DiGregorio died of lung cancer in 1970 and Sciacca was incarcerated in 1971. Joe Bonanno wrote an autobiography and did a short federal prison sentence in the 1980s for minor offenses. Sciacca died peacefully in 1986 while enjoying his retirement from the rackets.

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The Murder, Inc. Of Motown: Murder Row Crew Of Yesteryear Back In The News

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Detroit’s almost-mythic Murder Row Gang has received some fresh ink this month. The mafia-supported drug trafficking organization and hit-for-hire crew hasn’t been active in more than 30 years, but made quite the impact in their gangland heyday of the late 1970s, building a mystique and mammoth reputation that still resonates on the streets of Motown today. The gang was known for moving large quantities of heroin, doing contract-hit work coast-to-coast and for the sheer volume of capable racketeers and coldblooded killers in its midst.

Notorious Murder Row hitman Chester (The Angel of Death) Campbell got a shout-out in a British tabloid piece in The Telegraph last week comparing the devilish and cultured Motor City assassin to the fictional shadowy John Wick character played to pinpoint perfection by actor Keanu Reeves in the wildly-popular eponymous-titled film trilogy. John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum opened on May 17 and has already cleared more than $100,000,000 at the box office ($120,000,000 to be precise).

In other recent Murder Row news, former Murder Row leader James (Jimmy Red) Freeman, was paroled from prison back in March after 31 years behind bars and is a character in a new book penned by retired U.S. Treasury Agent Jim Sanderson called Down The Rat Hole about an unsolved mob triple murder in Sterling Heights, Michigan – the book theorizes Freeman could have played a role in the Time Realty Massacre, which saw three Detroit-area bookmakers slain on April 3, 1985.

The 69-year old Freeman was found not guilty at trial for the Michigan Federated Democratic Social Club Massacre, a triple beheading of two Murder Row lieutenants and a female associate in July 1979. Freeman headed Murder Row in the 1980s after he beat the case and the gang’s original bosses either went away to prison or were executed.

Murder Row was founded in the early 1970s by Francis (Big Frank Nitti) Usher and Harold (The Hawk) Morton as a subset of the Detroit Italian mafia’s Giacalone crew. Usher came under the tutelage of the Giacalone brothers (“Tony Jack” & “Billy Jack”) at a young age and it was the Giacalone brothers, two of the Midwest’s most respected and well-connected mobsters, who set him up in the drug game. Using Giacalones as their bank, Usher, Morton and Murder Row ran gambling and prostitution rackets as well.

When Murder Row began its rise, the gang’s No. 1 enforcer was the equally fastidious and fearsome Chester Campbell, known for his high fashion sense, love of the arts and doing contract “wet work” for both Italian and African-American criminal groups around the country. Campbell was jailed in 1975 after police found him carrying an “assassin’s kit” and a hit list containing political and judicial targets — he naturally made his home base out of a funeral parlor.

During an arrest in 1987 for being a felon in possession of a weapon that put him away for the rest of his life, the FBI discovered a small gun disguised as a fountain pen in his sports jacket pocket. A search of his home, found a library full of books about the science of the criminal mind and the act of murder.

“Chester Campbell was a gangland James Bond, he was the 007 of the underworld, a master of tradecraft,” said Campbell biographer and organized crime expert Christian Cipollini (Diary of a Motor City Hit Man). “He was truly one of a kind.”

With Campbell behind bars, Freeman and Adolph (Doc Holliday) Powell became the gang’s top muscle. Powell served as Morton’s bodyguard and arrived in Detroit from New Orleans via Buffalo. Upon Morton getting locked up, he made a grab for power and moved against Usher. Freeman was close to both Usher and Powell.

The Michigan Federated Democratic Social Club, located in Detroit’s Midtown neighborhood, was Powell’s headquarters. Usher and Powell went to war for control of the gang in the wake of Morton’s imprisonment in 1978 for smuggling heroin from Europe and then killing one of his female mules he worried would testify against him. The first body to drop in the Murder Row feud was in January 1979 when Edward (Sugar Bear) Brown was shot to death.

Murder Row members William (Little Dirty) McJoy and William (Straw Hat Perry) Jackson and a woman named Joanne Clark were slain and beheaded inside the Michigan Federated Democratic Social Club on July 18, 1979. McJoy and Jackson were Usher loyalists. Clark dated one of Usher’s best friends.

Within months, there was more bloodshed; Murder Row soldier Clarence (Mickey Was) Welton and Usher’s business partner John (Johnny Coach) Cociu, a Syrian wiseguy who he co-owned his Black Orchid nightclub headquarters with, were killed in December 1979 and January 1980, respectively. Johnny Coach was decapitated.

Usher was present and allegedly spared at the last minute in the Michigan Federated Democratic Social Club Massacre, forced to help dismember the bodies, per court testimony. His right hand man James (Cool Cat) Elliott had been arrested and jailed days earlier, leaving him exposed minus Elliott watching his back. Elliott dated Joanne Clark and testified against Powell and Freeman at trial.

Usher, Powell and Freeman were charged in the triple homicide that fall, with Powell and Freeman being acquitted at trial and Usher being found guilty, later having the conviction overturned on appeal. Powell was gunned down inside La Players Lounge on Detroit’s eastside in 1983 while downing a shot at the bar and holding a fifty dollar bill in his hand. Freeman was jailed in 1988 on a gun case under a habitual offender statute. Campbell died of natural causes in prison in 2001 at 71 years old.

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Death Of An American Gangster: Historic NYC Crime Boss Frank Lucas Passes Away At 88

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Frank Lucas, the Harlem drug lord of the early 1970s portrayed on the big screen by Oscar-winner Denzel Washington in the 2007 film American Gangster, died of natural causes this week at 88 years old. At the peak of his power, Lucas sat atop the Harlem heroin trade, making millions of dollars a month as boss of the “Country Boys Gang.” He was busted in 1975 and turned state’s evidence.

Lucas came to New York from North Carolina in the 1950s and went to work in the rackets, serving as a driver and bodyguard for legendary Harlem black mob boss Ellsworth (Bumpy) Johnson. After Johnson’s death of a heart attack in 1968, Lucas recruited a crew of lieutenants from down south, anchored by several of his brothers and cousins, and began pushing his own brand of highly-potent heroin, known as “Blue Magic.” He lived and dressed lavishly, marrying Puerto Rican beauty queen and purchasing a large, opulent estate to live on in Teaneck, New Jersey.

Famous for once wearing a $100,000 chinchilla mink ensemble to a Muhammed Ali fight in 1971, Lucas was a pioneer in the drug world, although many depictions of him, by Hollywood and in the mainstream media, have been proven to be exaggerated or outright false — Washington’s gentlemanly sophisticated, well-spoken drug don in American Gangster in reality was more reminiscent of Lucas’ Harlem crime lord counterpart Nicky Barnes, not the crass, violence-prone backwoods hoodlum Lucas actually was. What is known for sure is that Lucas was the first African-American dealer in New York to shun using Italian mobsters as his wholesale source, instead developing a lucrative supply-line directly out of Southeast Asia in a powder-rich region called the Golden Triangle.

Lucas’ man on the ground in Asia was Ike (Sergeant Smack) Atkinson, an American serviceman married to his cousin stationed in Thailand who engineered the ingenuous smuggling operation for the Lucas organization. Using a U.S. air force base as his launching point, Atkinson shipped drugs to Lucas in Harlem in coffins of dead soldiers and in military-issued furniture.

Following his arrest, Lucas went into the Witness Protection Program. As part of his cooperation agreement, he helped authorities collect over 100 drug-related convictions based on intelligence he provided. Lucas came out of prison in 1981, but was booted from the Witness Protection Program and put back behind bars after he was caught trying to sell an ounce of heroin in 1984. Since he was released from that case in 1991, Lucas lived quietly in New Jersey.

New York Magazine ran a piece by Mark Jacobson titled The Return of Super Fly in April 2000, which was optioned by Universal Pictures and the basis of the American Gangster film helmed by Ridley Scott. The movie made more than $250,000,000 and inspired an entire album by rap icon Jay-Z.

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Alleged Motown Drug Boss’ DNA Found On Murder Weapon In GF’s Slaying Until Police Re-Test Points In Diff. Direction

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According to an initial Michigan State Police lab report, convicted Detroit drug dealer Jimmy Lattner’s DNA was on the murder weapon tied to the killing of his girlfriend Julii Johnson on the morning of January 13, 2017 in front of his residence in Warren, Michigan. A second test of the 9 millimeter Smith & Wesson handgun used to kill Johnson though didn’t have any trace of Lattner’s DNA on the weapon. Traces of DNA belonging to Eric Gibson, the alleged shooter in what has been described as a contract hit, were present in both tests conducted by the state police lab.

The mix-up by investigators was the focus of testimony at Gibson’s trial this past week in Macomb County Circuit Court in Mt. Clemens, Michigan, just outside of Detroit. Prosecutors contend that Gibson was hired to bump off Johnson at the behest of Lattner’s scorned ex-girlfriend and mother of his children Marcie Griffin and that Griffin used gangster-turned-businessman George (G.G.) Rider as the go-between for the job. Griffin and Rider are standing trial with Gibson. Attorneys for Griffin and Rider believe it was actually Lattner who put out the contract on Johnson and he used a domestic dustup he had with Griffin caught on video in the weeks before the murder as a cover.

The 44-year old Lattner was originally the prime suspect in Johnson’s slaying, per sources, but after a few weeks, police discarded him as a possible “doer” and decided to center their attention on Griffin and Rider, long a target for federal law enforcement since his public reinvention following his release from a prison term in the 2000s. Sources claim the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Eastern District of Michigan pressured Warren police and Macomb County prosecutors to shift their probe towards Griffin and Rider when they learned of an opportunity to ensnare Rider in a murder conspiracy.

Lattner has been nailed twice for narcotics trafficking (1997, 2001). When police searched his home in the wake of Johnson’s murder, they found over $500,000 in cash that drug dogs recognized the scent of cocaine on. A search of his truck found a 9 millimeter Ruger pistol in a hidden compartment accessed through a custom-made rigging system. He’s currently charged with being a felon in possession of an illegal weapon and is out on bond awaiting his own trial. He asserted his Fifth Amendment rights upon being called to testify at a pretrial hearing in Griffin and Rider’s case regarding the circumstances surrounding Johnson’s murder.

Michigan State Police crime lab techs tested both the Ruger recovered from Lattner’s truck and the Smith & Wesson used in the murder for DNA. Three lab techs testified Wednesday that on the first go-around they might have inadvertently switched the samples around, recording results from the Ruger as results from the Smith & Wesson and vice versa. This discovery prompted a second set of tests, which in the end provided the official results for the murder investigation.

An email chain between the head lab tech, Jennifer Jones and her superiors in the MSP shows Jones was alerted her first test of the two guns “didn’t make sense” and were “inconsistent with the case facts as described by the Warren Police”, who were “trying to place a (different) suspect on this weapon (the Ruger).” That suspect was Lattner, whose prints were not originally found on the gun he had in his truck.

There were other reasons besides the original DNA evidence for police to be suspicious of Lattner. The description of the shooter’s clothes by an eye witness matched what Lattner was wearing on the morning of Johnson’s murder and a police dog tracked a scent from the shooter making a path away from the scene of the crime and then returning in the direction towards Lattner’s front door. Cell phone records show Lattner made two calls in the minutes before Johnson was shot and at least one call prior to alerting authorities or Johnson’s family of what had happened. When police arrived on the scene, Lattner’s truck was “hot,” appearing to have recently been driven.

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Lattner led the World Domination drug gang. He did six years in prison and came out in 2010.

Around the time of the murder, Griffin was feuding with Lattner and Johnson related to Johnson’s treatment of the pair’s children. Lattner had left Griffin for Johnson. Lattner’s nephew provided police with an IPhone video of Griffin storming into a car wash Lattner owns and threatening Lattner and Johnson.

The only evidence connecting Griffin and Rider is text messages from Griffin to a cell phone registered to one of Rider’s businesses (Midwest Entertainment) expressing anger towards Lattner and Johnson and an exchange on the day Johnson was killed saying it was “a beautiful morning.” The lone link between Rider and Gibson are cell phone “pings” placing them in the same vicinity on the day of the murder.

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Detroit Mobster “Joe Hooks” Hands In His Chips, Dies Peacefully & Free At 87

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June 1, 2019 – Retired Detroit mafia figure Joseph (Joe Hooks) Mirabile died recently of natural causes having avoided many of the pitfalls that come with being part of “The Life.” He took his last breath six weeks ago at home surrounded by family, free from the constraints of the federal governments for the last 34 years.

The 87-year old Mirabile was a confidant of long-reigning Motor City mob don, Giacomo (Black Jack) Tocco, serving as Tocco’s underboss from 2010 until his death of heart failure in 2014. Mirabile passed away at the end of April, having stepped down from his post and into retirement following Tocco being out of the picture. Tocco ruled the Detroit mafia unchallenged for roughly four decades (1977-2014).

“Jack liked having Hooks around, he saw him as loyal…..he trusted him and Jack didn’t trust a lot of people,” said someone familiar with their friendship.

Under Tocco’s regime, Joe Hooks handled the cash-cow pornography racket for the crime family, controlling a majority of the pornographic distribution throughout the state of Michigan and taking pieces of a string of adult bookstores, X-rated movie houses and peep show palaces peppered across Metro Detroit. According to FBI documents related to Tocco and the early days of his tenure on the throne, Mirabile headed a fruitful street-taxing effort of the multitude of strip clubs being built along 8 Mile Road, the northernmost dividing line between the city and the suburbs, in the 1980s.

“Joe was an expert at extortion, he finessed the hell out of people, that’s why they called him Joe Hooks, once he got his hooks into you, it was a wrap, it was over with,” said a former associate.

Per Michigan State Police records, Joe Hooks also maintained a stake in a sizable sports-gambling business and dabbled in loan sharking. His partner in his bookmaking affairs was another Tocco confidant named Frank (Chinky) Versaci according to the records. Versaci was one of Detroit’s biggest handicappers and ran his book out of a butcher shop on the Eastside.

Mirabile’s mentor in the mob was old school Tocco-Zerilli crime family capo Matthew (Mike the Enforcer) Rubino. According to FBI records detailing Rubino’s activities in the 1960s, Mirabile was Rubino’s main collector and troubleshooter for all of his numbers houses. Rubino died of a heart attack in prison in 1972.

Proving adept in staying off wiretaps, Joe Hooks escaped being dragged into the landmark Operation Game Tax indictment, responsible for bringing down Tocco and most of his administration in the 1990s. Tocco emerged from prison in 2002 and went about business atop his vast Midwest mob empire undeterred. It was during this period of time, per sources, that Mirabile’s positioning in the crime family pecking order increased and he became a trusted advisor to the crown.

“We’d see Joe Hooks with Jack, they’d huddle up on the golf course or in the back of a steakhouse…….we knew he (Mirabile) was the porn boss and paid a great deal of tribute to the Tocco family,” retired FBI agent Mike Carone said. “That’s the only language these guys understand or care about it. If you are an earner, you’re always in good standing with the bosses.”

Joe Hooks’ uncle was Anthony (Papa Tony) Mirabile, sent to California by the Detroit mob in the years after Prohibition to plant a flag for the Tocco-Zerilli clan in San Diego. Papa Tony Mirabile was slain in 1958. The Mirabile family bloodline dates back to the earliest days or organized crime in Michigan.

Mirabile had ties to mafia families in California and New York. Most of the wholesale porn he peddled came via his connections in New York’s Gambino mob. He did a short prison term in the 1980s and was released in 1985.

The post Detroit Mobster “Joe Hooks” Hands In His Chips, Dies Peacefully & Free At 87 appeared first on The Gangster Report.


Mr. Untouchable Bids Adieu: Fabled NYC Drug Boss Nicky Barnes Died In Witness Protection

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June 8, 2029 — New York gangland legend Nicky Barnes died seven years ago and it was just revealed this weekend by The New York Times. The storied and famously dapper drug kingpin ran the Harlem heroin trade in the 1970s, heading a consortium of African-American crime bosses known as, “The Council.” Barnes succumbed to cancer in 2012 at 78 years old per a Times interview with members of the Barnes family published Saturday.

The “paper of record” and the flashy black mob don go way back:

At the height of his power in 1977, Barnes graced the cover of The New York Times Magazine in a finely-tailored double-breasted designer denim suit and a red, white and blue tie with a headline reading “Mr. Untouchable.” The audacious nature of the cover shoot and accompanying profile piece drew the ire of the Feds and President Jimmy Carter, who reportedly called the Justice Department once he read the article and demanded an escalation of resources put towards bringing Barnes down for good. Less than a year later, he was indicted for narcotics and racketeering.

Following a guilty verdict and feeling betrayed by his lieutenants on The Council, Barnes stunned the New York underworld and became a witness for the government. With Barnes’ help, U.S. prosecutors dismantled the drug world ruling body he himself conceived and constructed.

While serving time in prison in the 1960s, Barnes forged ties to juiced-in Italian mobsters like “Crazy Joey” Gallo of the Colombo crime family and Matty Madonna of the Luchese clan. Gallo acted as an advisor to Barnes as he implemented a mafia-like business structure in the Harlem drug racket he ran upon his release. Madonna was his main supplier.

Quietly leaving prison in the summer of 1998, Barnes was given a new identity. A decade later, he penned a book titled Mr. Untouchable that was released in 2007. A well-received documentary based on the book followed.

Barnes’ protege and successor as top dog of The Council, Guy Fisher remains behind bars. Fisher began romancing one of Barnes’ girlfriends once Barnes was locked up, eventually leading to Barnes cutting a cooperation deal. The woman at the center of the love triangle was slain in December 1982.

Oscar winner Cuba Gooding, Jr. gave a cartoonish portrayal of Barnes in the film 2007 American Gangster about his Harlem heroin chief counterpart Frank Lucas played by Denzel Washington. Lucas, also a cooperator, passed away last week at 87.

The post Mr. Untouchable Bids Adieu: Fabled NYC Drug Boss Nicky Barnes Died In Witness Protection appeared first on The Gangster Report.

They Finally Got Their Man: Detroit Drug Don Turned Real Estate Mogul, G.G. Rider, Others, Convicted Of Murder

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The month-long trial of Detroiters George (G.G.) Rider, Marcie Griffin and Eric Gibson for the 2017 murder of Julii Johnson ended late last week with guilty verdicts across the board in Macomb County Circuit Court. The verdicts bring the curtain down on an intricate and compelling saga of a lover scorned on a rampage of vengeance, two convicted Motor City drug dealers on opposite sides of a drama-intensive domestic quarrel, a DNA testing mishap and what appeared to be a string of conflicting agendas. All three will be sentenced to life in prison next month.

While the feds have been itching to stick G.G. Rider behind bars for the rest of his life for decades, it was state authorities – most likely with prodding from the FBI and U.S. Attorneys’ Office – that finally accomplished the feat. Nonetheless, the feds in Detroit are certainly slapping high fives this weekend in celebration.

The 60-year old Rider is a shadowy figure and local eastside street legend, who had successfully reinvented himself into a legitimate businessman and real estate entrepreneur until his arrest two and half years ago. Rider was found guilty of acting as the middleman for Griffin in hiring the 26-year old Gibson to kill Johnson, who was dating Griffin’s ex-boyfriend and father to her children, Jimmy Lattner, like Rider, a formidable presence on the streets of Detroit for a number of years.

Johnson, 34, was slain on the morning of January 13, 2017, gunned down as she exited Lattner’s residence in Warren, Michigan. She and Lattner were in a beef with Griffin. Lattner had left Griffin for Johnson in 2015. Prosecutors contended that Rider was courting Griffin and offered his help in exacting revenge as a means of currying favor with her. Griffin was caught on video threatening Lattner and Johnson at Lattner’s car wash nine days before Johnson was killed.

Gibson’s DNA was found on the murder weapon. The case against Griffin and Rider was circumstantial and didn’t include any physical evidence.

The investigation encountered twists and turns from the very start.

In the Michigan State Police crime lab’s initial testing of the murder weapon (9 millimeter Smith & Wesson), Lattner’s DNA was found alongside Gibson’s. The lab was also testing a gun discovered in a secret compartment of Lattner’s truck (9 millimeter Ruger) and Macomb County prosecutors and the lab techs responsible for the testing claimed the samples were accidentally switched. A retest resulted in just Gibson’s DNA being traced to the weapon and no traces of Lattner’s DNA there anymore.

At first, Lattner was considered the prime suspect in the investigation – he faces a stiff prison term for being a felon in possession of a gun unearthed along with a half-million bucks in cash in a police search of the property in the aftermath of Johnson’s slaying. An eyewitness’ description of what the shooter was wearing matched Lattner’s wardrobe when police arrived at the crime scene.

After a few weeks though, the probe pivoted to Griffin and Rider, connected by prosecutors through a series of texts between Griffin and a phone registered to a company Rider and Gibson had ties to and cell phone “pings” placing them in the same area in the days and hours surrounding Johnson’s homicide. The seizure of the phone via a traffic stop of Rider proved controversial, leading to the original judge in the case stepping aside related to a conflict of interest.

The jury deliberated for two days, returning its verdict Friday afternoon. Rider and his co-defendants declined to offer the jury the option of coming back with convictions for second degree murder instead of first degree.

Rider denies any relationship with Griffin and believes the government manufactured the charges against him in a vendetta to his past ability to dodge major convictions and high priority inquiries into his dealings by law enforcement. Attorneys for Rider and Griffin, pointed the finger at Lattner as the person responsible for Johnson’s death.

The case itself was a 30-month web of twists and turns, fraught with delays, recusals and legal red tape. The start date for the trial was pushed back four times, once having already chosen a jury. The original judge overseeing the case, Jennifer Faunce, was forced to rescue herself by order of the state appellate court late last year due to her sister having been the judge who signed the warrant at the district court level allowing police to seize the cell phones in Rider’s possession on a vehicle stop in February 2017, two weeks before he was indicted and taken into custody.

A cryptic text wishing Griffin a good morning on the day of Johnson’s murder was a key piece of evidence presented to the jury. Moments later that same morning, Griffin received a text reading, “I hope you understand,” and she responded “I understand everything about it.”

Rider served eight years in federal prison for narcotics trafficking. Upon his release from prison, he re-crafted his public image, establishing himself as a real estate investor and community activist at a time when the city of Detroit was on the verge of experiencing an economic revitalization.

In the months preceding Johnson’s murder, he sold the historic Fine Arts Theatre for 1.3 million dollars. Urban myth in Michigan has long considered the Fine Arts Theatre haunted for the oddly high number of untimely deaths linked to the property.

Lattner, 44, has two drug dealing convictions on his rap sheet from when he was the leader of the World Domination Gang in the late 1990s and early 2000s. He did six years in prison and got out in 2010. Lattner invoked his Fifth Amendments rights against self incrimination and refused to testify at Griffin and Rider’s trial.

The post They Finally Got Their Man: Detroit Drug Don Turned Real Estate Mogul, G.G. Rider, Others, Convicted Of Murder appeared first on The Gangster Report.

Detroit’s Mafia Made Jack Tocco Boss As Feds Watched On In ’79 Inauguration Ceremony

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The upper crust of the Detroit mob gathered at a plush hunting lodge near Ann Arbor 40 years ago this week to officially anoint Giacomo (Black Jack) Tocco the new boss of the Tocco-Zerilli crime family. And how do we know that? The FBI was on hand to snap photos. It was the first and only mafia boss’ inauguration ever witnessed and documented first-hand by the federal government.

On the afternoon of June 11, 1979 at the Timberland Game Ranch in Dexter, Michigan, just outside Ann Arbor, several powerful captains or “capos” in the Detroit mafia came together to select a don for the first time in more than four decades. The dark-skinned, business-savvy Tocco was the obvious choice. He had been acting boss for the past five years. His bloodline was pure mob royalty, being the nephew of longtime Godfather Joe Zerilli and the son of the crime family’s founding father, Vito (Black Bill) Tocco.

Black Bill Tocco died of natural causes in 1972. Zerilli followed him peacefully to the grave in 1977, having never served a night behind bars in his more than half-century lording over underworld affairs out of his tiny bakery on the eastside of Detroit.

Three years before he went to the grave, the cagey Zerilli, a member of the American mob’s national “Commission” tapped his nephew Tocco as his successor. The razor-sharp and heavily-insulated Tocco was a formidable adversary.

The FBI had an ace in the hole though, a leg up on Tocco in a race that hadn’t even started yet. Wait, we’ll get to that in a minute.

College educated and fully diversified into the legitimate business world, Tocco represented the white collar wing of the crime family, while the notoriously-lethal Giacalone brothers (“Tony Jack” and “Billy Jack”) and his underboss and first cousin Anthony (Tony Z) Zerilli handled blue-collar duties. The considerably more high profile Tony Zerilli had once been the heir apparent to his father “Joe Uno’s” throne, but was passed over in favor of his more understated cousin Black Jack when he got nailed by the feds and sent to prison for stealing six million bucks from The Frontier casino and hotel in Las Vegas. Tocco began running the Detroit mob on an acting basis in around late 1973 or early 1974.

Lucky for the FBI, they had a mole feeding them intelligence from the inside: Anthony (Fat Tony) Zito, Tocco’s cousin, driver and bodyguard. Zito was developed as a confidential informant in the 1960s.

In the summer of 1979, Zito told the feds that something “big was in the works” in regards to Tocco, but didn’t specify what that was. So when FBI surveillance units began noticing unusual activity on the morning of June 11, they knew something important was brewing.

That morning, FBI agents Greg Stejskal and Keith Cordes were assigned to monitor the Detroit mafia’s consigliere’s Raffaele (Jimmy Q) Quasarano, a dapper, silver-haired drug trafficker and reputed hit man who headquartered out of Motor City Barber Supply in Roseville, Michigan. They watched as Billy Giacalone and Giacalone’s right-hand man Frank (Frankie the Bomb) Bommarito arrived to meet Quasarano at his office. Billy Jack’s surveillance team soon set up shop at a nearby street corner. With prying eyes fixed on Billy Jack and Jimmy Q talking in the parking lot, Bommarito left, only to quickly return with the crime family’s “CFO” Michael (Big Mike) Polizzi and soldier Tony (Champ) Abate in tow.

The five-pack of mobsters didn’t hang around Motor City Barber Supply for long. Stejskal and Cordes, flanked by the Giacalone surveillance team, followed them for close to an hour’s drive west to Dexter, Michigan in Washtenaw County and the Timberland Game Ranch hunting lodge owned by the Ruggirello family. The Ruggirello brothers, “Tony Cigars,” “Toto,” and “Louie the Bulldog,” ran a crew that covered the rackets in Washtenaw and Genesee Counties. Dexter is a rural community neighboring Ann Arbor, home to the prestigious University of Michigan.

When the FBI surveillance teams arrived at the ranch, they were met by other surveillance teams. Specifically the units responsible for tracking the Corrado and Tocco brothers.

“We hit the holy grail,” Stejskal said. “We knew pretty fast we had a major breakthrough in the FBI’s war against organized crime. I feel honored and proud to have been a part of it.”

All of the highest priority targets for the Detroit FBI’s “mob squad” were in the same place. More than a dozen of Detroit’s most powerful mafiosi were having a top secret meeting of the minds in the main clubhouse on the Timberland Game Ranch property, just barely visible from the public road bordering the ranch, and the feds watched on salivating.

“You don’t forget that type of day,” said retired FBI agent Mike Carone, who was assigned to the Giacalone tail that morning. “Seeing everyone in the Family all together in that manner was very rare. You’d see it at weddings and funerals, birthday or holiday parties but never randomly in the middle of the week. We knew something important was being decided.”

Carone, Stejskal and the other surveillance agents on the job that morning hit the jackpot – the coronation of a new mob king was going on, practically before their very eyes. All of the crime family’s top powers had traveled to Timberland Game Ranch to elect their next leader.

And unbeknownst to anybody in attendance until well into the 1990s, it was memorialized for posterity by federally-issued surveillance equipment.

Stejskal grabbed his camera and snuck into the backyard of the clubhouse to snap a historic photo. Tocco was being greeted and congratulated by his subjects, one by one, on the back porch as a bright, beaming sun shined down on the freshly minted Godfather’s already-tanned face.

On one side of him was Billy Giacalone, on the other side was Dominic (Detroit Fats) Corrado, a capo and childhood confidant of Tocco’s in charge of the numbers business and prostitution for the Family. Giacalone was there representing himself and his brother, Tony Jack, the syndicate’s steelyard-eyed street boss off serving a federal prison stint in Atlanta for extortion and tax evasion. Billy Jack was “acting” street boss until his older sibling got home. The landmark image of Tocco, Corrado and Giacalone was kept under wraps for the next 17 years.

As the caravan of mobsters left the hunting lodge and headed back to Detroit, the FBI had the Michigan State Police conduct traffic stops to identify the ceremony’s participants. Tocco was being chauffeured by Detroit Fats’s not-so-little brother Anthony (Tony the Bull) Corrado, the equally rotund and gregarious head of a syndicate collection and enforcement crew. Detroit Fats Corrado drove behind in another car carrying Tocco’s brother-in-law, mob soldier Carlo Licata, Greektown capo Peter (Bozzy) Vitale and old-school hoodlum Salvatore (Monkey Sam) Misuraca, who had been overseeing rackets in Canada for the crime family the past several years and had ties to the Chicago Outfit. Tocco’s brother, mob capo Anthony (Tony T) Tocco, had left earlier in the afternoon, the first one to depart the ceremony. Billy Giacalone, Jimmy Quasarano, Mike Polizzi and Tony Abate left in Frank the Bomb’s van.

Abate was voting on behalf of his father-in-law, Arizona based old timer Peter (Horseface Pete) Licavoli, the Detroit mob’s underboss in the final years of the Joe Zerilli era. Licavoli helped the elder Zerilli and Tocco establish the modern day mafia in Michigan at the end of Prohibition, going into semi-retirement on his swanky, 80-acre Grace Ranch property in Tucson in the 1950s.

FBI informants would later place capos Vincent (Little Vince) Meli, Salvatore (Sammy Lou) Lucido and Salvatore (Little Sammy) Finazzo at the ceremony as well. Tony Zerilli skipped the festivities, still smarting from losing his chance at the crown years earlier. Fat Tony Zito confirmed the purpose of the ceremony to the feds in the days that followed.

Besides being absent for Tocco’s Timberland Game Ranch inauguration, Zerilli, per federal documents, also turned down an invitation to his 25th wedding anniversary party. Relations between the pair would soon thaw though and Tony Z went on to accept the underboss position in Black Jack’s administration.

Tocco and Zerilli were the lead co-defendants in the groundbreaking 1996 Operation Game Tax indictment and both were convicted at trial. The visual centerpiece of the case’s evidence trove was the photo of Tocco, Billy Giacalone and Tony Corrado taken by FBI agent Greg Stejskal back in the summer of 1979 at the Timberland Game Ranch. Giacalone and Corrado were brought down in the bust too. Everybody did time behind bars, except Tony Tocco, the lone co-defendant in Operation Game Tax to be acquitted at trial. Tony T took the reins of the crime family on an acting basis between 1998 and 2002 when his brother dealt with his legal issues and a two-year prison term.

Almost everyone present at Black Jack Tocco’s coronation as don is dead and gone. The lone remaining participants on the mob side of things are the hosts, Tony and Toto Ruggirello. The 85-year old “Tony Cigars” Ruggirello is believed to be the Detroit mafia’s consigliere today.

Tocco died of heart disease at 87 years old in July 2014, having served 35 years as boss of the crime family bearing his name. Zerilli died of dementia in retirement down in Florida less than a year later in March 2015.

“Jack Tocco was always a tough nut to crack for us at the FBI, that’s one of the reasons that the Timberland Ranch episode is so significant…..that day was a clear victory for the good guys.”

The post Detroit’s Mafia Made Jack Tocco Boss As Feds Watched On In ’79 Inauguration Ceremony appeared first on The Gangster Report.

The Animal Is Out Of The Cage Again: Pagan’s MC In Philly Has “Gorilla” Back At Helm

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The Gorilla has climbed his way back to the top of the Pagan’s Motorcycle Club in Philadelphia. Famous biker boss Steve (Gorilla) Mondevergine was reinstalled as president of Philly’s Pagan’s chapter in recent years, according to the new episode of Mob Talk on Youtube hosted by award-winning Philly crime reporters Dave Schratwieser and George Anastasia.

The thick-necked, broad-shouldered Mondevergine, 65, ruled the biker world in the City of Brotherly Love during the 1990s and most of the 2000s until he lost a power struggle within in his own club and subsequently his freedom in 2011 for a related assault. As Gangster Report first told you last year, new Pagan’s national president Keith (Conan the Barbarian) Richter, based out of New York, has ordered an aggressive expansion of the club’s affairs, currently focusing on pushing into areas like North Jersey and Rhode Island. Schratwieser and Anastasia emphasized this strategy in their Mob Talk video, speculating Richter views the veteran Gorilla Mondevergine as integral to his plans to widen the Pagan’s reach.

The 59-year old Richter and hundreds of other Pagan’s from across the east coast descended on Philadelphia over Memorial Day weekend last month for what law enforcement is describing as a “show-of-strength” get together at the Pagan’s Northeast side clubhouse in Tacony. Mob Talk cameras were rolling at the shindig and Schratwieser and Anastasia flashed a surveillance photo of Richter from the event.

Richter did more than a decade in prison for taking out a murder contract on a strip club owner refusing to pay extortion demands to Richter’s Long Island Pagan’s chapter — he was sprung from the can in 2012 and rose to the club’s national presidency in 2015 or 2016, per sources in law enforcement. Prior to heading to prison, Richter was the club’s national Sergeant at Arms.

A former police officer booted from the force in 1982 for allegedly selling protection to area gambling networks, Gorilla Mondevergine took the Pagan’s Philly chapter to great heights in his first tenure as boss, establishing close ties to the city’s Italian mafia, the Bruno-Scarfo crime family, and the chapter itself as the cornerstone of the club’s east coast empire. Mondevergine forged a close friendship and working relationship with Philly mob don Joseph (Skinny Joey) Merlino and the pair mended fences for their respective organizations after a feud involving Merlino’s dad in the early 1980s fractured a previously-symbiotic coexistence between the groups.

Salvatore (Chuckie) Merlino, Skinny Joey’s pops and the one time underboss of the Philly mafia, clashed with the Pagan’s in 1984, ramming his Mercedes into a Pagan’s Harley Davidson bike in a drunken fit of anger. The elder Merlino died in prison in 2012. Skinny Joey is in the midst of a two-year “college” stint for gambling offenses.

Mondevergine ran into trouble when he was taken off the streets in 2001 via a racketeering conviction and had to serve three years in federal prison. His absence weakened the club’s hold over the Philly biker world and the rival Hells Angels from the west coast exploited it, setting up their own chapter in the city and poaching Pagan’s from the Tacony camp.

One of Mondevergine’s top lieutenants, Tommy (Thinker) Wood became the Hells Angels vice president. Wood was slain gangland style in 2005, shot dead on the expressway following leaving a local strip club.

Some members of the Pagan’s didn’t like the way Gorilla Mondevergine was handling the Hells Angels problem and began plotting against him. Soon, two factions of the Philly Pagan’s formed, one backing Mondevergine and the other supporting Timothy (Casual Tim) Flood Internal dissent reached a boiling point in January 2008 when Flood called for a vote to oust Mondevergine from his chapter president post at a club meeting and Mondevergine responded by shooting and stabbing him.

Casual Tim Flood grabbed power anyway. And Gorilla Mondevergine went to state prison for the attack. While behind bars, rumors circulated that Mondevergine was going to jump ship to the Hells Angels and be given his own chapter.

Flood went on to enter the Witness Protection Program. Mondevergine came out of prison in late 2014 and rejoined the Pagan’s in Philly, putting the Hells Angels defection talk to bed.

The post The Animal Is Out Of The Cage Again: Pagan’s MC In Philly Has “Gorilla” Back At Helm appeared first on The Gangster Report.

GR Guest Column: Did Murder Of Black Disciples Boss”Big Law” Loggins In Chicago Square 30-Yr. Cycle?

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Gangster Report correspondent Dave McEvers reports on a generational divide in Chicago’s Black Disciples street gang and an accompanying gangland assassination that took place back in the winter on the Windy City’s Southside.

November 13, 1989 was an unseasonably warm day for Chicago, temperatures reaching close to 70 degrees by the afternoon and matching the heated vibe spawning from the tough-as-nails south side. The homicide rate in the Windy City jumped from 660 to 742 that year, the tipping point in what would be a near-decade reign of terror in Chicago street gang affairs.

The south side’s Englewood neighborhood is Ground Zero for Chicago street gang culture, dating all the way back to the 1960s and historic shot-callers Larry Hoover and David Barksdale. Hoover’s Gangster Disciples and Barksdale’s Black Disciples gangs merged to form the Black Gangster Disciples Nation, which has grown to become one of the biggest, most powerful and ruthless street gang empires in the United States, boasting over 25,000 members nationwide.

On Monday, November 13, 1989, a fight between rival factions of the BGD Nation broke out in Lowe Park located on Englewood’s north edge next to the sorting yards of the Norfolk Southern Rail Yard complex. In a neighborhood like Englewood, the sight of 20 or so young, African-American males scuffling in a park hardly creates any attention. That was until four gun shots rang out, sending the elementary and junior high school aged kids playing in the park and walking home from schools nearby scattering in different directions.

When the dust settled that warm late fall day, one man lay dead: his name was Gregory Freeman, a cousin of the undisputed boss of the Black Disciples Jerome (Shorty) Freeman, busted earlier that year for heroin trafficking and on his way to prison when his baby cousin was gunned down. Gregory Freeman had been fighting on behalf of his cousin’s “BDs” against an offshoot group within the Black Disciples family known as the Renegade Disciples.

Fast forward three decades to this past winter. Twenty blocks south of Lowe Park, by Hamilton Park on Englewood’s southern tip, a 46-year old man stood near the open door of his SUV. He had a lot on his mind, trying to make sense of the chaos he saw on the street. The sky was dark and it was a little past 9:00 p.m. on February 6, 2019 when the man was gunned down, shot in the head in front of his Nissan Rogue truck.

Police found Black Disciples “OG” Lawrence (Big Law) Loggins face down in a pool of his own blood sprawled across the truck’s driver’s seat. Thirty years ago, it was Loggins who had killed Gregory Freeman in the fight at Lowe Park.

Big Law himself admitted to Freeman’s murder, but claimed self-defense. Three young female witnesses who had been on their way home from school as the violence erupted in front of them, contradicted Big Law’s version of events and Loggins was convicted at trial. He served 20 years in prison and was released in 2009, managing to stay out of trouble and off the police radar for a decade before the streets finally caught up with him in February.

At the time he was killed, Big Law was the highest-ranking Black Disciple on the “outside.” Big Law’s son, 29-year old Lawrence (Lil’ Law) Lee, runs a subset of the Black Disciples called the Lamron crew, based on Normal Avenue in Englewood (Lamron is Normal spelled backwards), and is in the midst of a 15-year state prison bid for an attempted murder.

Lil’ Law is viewed as the fastest-rising young power in the Black Disciples today, reportedly having enough respect and deference from his soldiers to run day-to-day Lamron business from his prison cell. Not only was his dad an OG, his mom has been described in court records as a female shot caller in the Black Disciples. Popular Chicago-born rappers Chief Keef and Lil’ Durk, pioneers of the “drill rap” movement, often shout out the Lamron crew on their records. Lil’ Durk put out a “RIP Big Law” message on his social media accounts in the hours after Loggins was slain.

The exact motive for Big Law’s murder isn’t known for sure. The old timers in Englewood immediately speculated it was Shorty Freeman’s vengeance from the grave for killing his little cousin. Shorty Freeman died of kidney failure in 2012, but still had plenty of loyalists roaming the streets of the south side.

This seems unlikely though once you scratch beneath the surface of the vengeance theory. It’s hard to fathom that Big Law could serve 20 years in the same Illinois State Prison System and at times, the same actual prison itself, as a boss at the level Freeman and his hundreds of inmate soldiers and emerge completely unscathed as Big Law in fact did. And not only did he survive under Freeman’s prison dominance, he actually gained rank in the Black Disciples hierarchy, as Larry Hoover’s “Folk Nation” alliance of gangs was starting to bear fruit.

If Shorty Freeman had wanted revenge, it’s more than likely Big Law would have been murdered in the first few days of his arrival in the state prison system, not 30 years later. Furthermore, if avenging the Gregory Freeman murder played any part in the Big Lay hit, it only served as a symbolic justifiable cover for what was really at play.

The most probable reason for Big Law’s murder was a failed consolidation effort he was spearheading in an attempt to bring all the varying and increasingly-estranged Black Disciples sets from the south side under one banner. Big Law’s vision, per sources, was met mostly with confusion and contempt. He had gained some traction in the years preceding his slaying, bringing together smaller sets from the Englewood, South Shore, Burnside and Roseland neighborhoods, however his overall plan was failing to materialize at the speed and rate he had anticipated, according to sources.

Big Law sealed his fate by pressing his luck and the numerous set bosses for an answer, per sources. He called for a meeting of all the Black Disciples shot callers on the day he was killed. The meeting, per multiple news reports, took place on the late afternoon of February 6, 2019 in Englewood, and according to witnesses that were present at the street gang summit, it didn’t go well. A number of shot callers didn’t show, sending Big Law into a tirade, screaming at the ones who did appear before him. In no uncertain terms, he went on to lay down the gauntlet, demanding a new gang structure and street tax.

One person that attended the meeting characterized it as “bizarre” and said, “It was like we were all shaking our heads agreeing with him, but we were all thinking the same thing.”

That “thing” was that Big Law had to go.

Within hours he was dead.

The clash he lost his life to was at least partially generational. The “BGs” (baby gangsters) had knocked off the OG. Rigid hierarchal structure was a thing of the past and the Black Disciples’ BGs wanted it to stay there.

How much of a role ‘Lil Law did or didn’t play in his father’s assassination remains a hazy subject. What we do know is that Lil’ Law was caught in the so-called “Great Sicilian Conundrum,” was he to side with his street family or his blood family?

On one hand, avenging his father’s death is acceptable, even necessary to maintain standing in some cases. On the other hand, Lil’ Law is high enough in the Black Disciples organization that it’s reasonable to believe he could of or would have had to have either ordered or sanctioned the hit on his dad. You have to remember, this is a father he never knew possibly using his name to street tax his friends and allies.

The world Big Law knew when he came out of prison in 2009 had drastically changed. Where there had once been an organized army of soldiers, the new street-gang landscape on the south side of Chicago was intensely factionalized and free from formal structure and overall leadership. Big Law decided to try and bring order back to the streets and devised a plan to consolidate all of the Black Disciple cliques, spanning from Englewood to the “Wild Hundreds,” into a consortium of interconnected sets reminiscent of Shorty Freeman’s heyday in the 1980s.

In the two decades Big Law was locked up and off the streets, the entire international economy of drug trafficking had changed though. When he was incarcerated in 1989, crack cocaine was still relatively new and coming in from everywhere. Aggressive state and federal legislation aimed at combatting what had turned into a nationwide crack epidemic, sent droves of African-American gang bangers to prison, creating massive leadership voids. Upon his return to the streets 20 years later, the Mexican Sinaloa Cartel had what amounted to total control of wholesale distribution in the American drug game and Chicago was the cartel’s nerve center in the United States.

Back in Big Law’s younger days of the 1980s, a vast array of small street gang sets spread throughout the city relied on their respective street gang hierarchy to acquire and pass along product down the chain of command and filter money back up. While this structure still exists to some extent, any crew can basically get the same drugs for the same price in Chicago, negating the need for the kind of structure Big Law and the OG’s needed in the past. This new economic climate basically renders an entire generation of OG’s without leadership spots to hold when they return to the streets from long prison stints. From the perspective of many BGs today, the OGs have outlived their relevance, they’re relics from another place and time in history and serve little purpose for the here and now.

Lil’ Law, the king of the Black Disciples’ BG generation, is eligible for parole in 2022. At the very latest, he’ll be home by 2025. We will probably never know the full story of why Big Law was killed or if Lil’ Law played any role in his dad’s bloody demise, but almost everyone agrees that the contract and the shooters themselves came from within the Black Disciple family and not a rival gang. This fact in itself speaks volumes.

If the story of Big Law teaches us anything, it’s how difficult the cycle can be to escape. When you think about it, Lil’ Law never had a chance to be anything but a gangster.

And the vicious cycle continues.

By Dave McEvers, managing partner, DRS Chicago, LLC

The post GR Guest Column: Did Murder Of Black Disciples Boss”Big Law” Loggins In Chicago Square 30-Yr. Cycle? appeared first on The Gangster Report.

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