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Deep Diving DiFronzo: FBI Records Put Fmr. Chicago Outfit Godfather “No Nose” DiFronzo’s Daily Routine On Display

October 30, 2021 — Recently released FBI files related to deceased Chicago mafia don John (Johnny No Nose) DiFronzo provide insight into the Midwest mob titan’s day-to-day routine in the early 1980s.

At that point in time, DiFronzo, who died of natural causes in May 2018, was the captain of the Outfit’s Elmwood Park crew. He became the Chicago mafia’s overall boss in the early 1990s, according to the Chicago Crime Commission. Notoriously slippery and savvy in his gangland affairs, DiFronzo’s regime was respected nationwide and the man himself was famous for his razor-sharp business instinct in the boardroom, political shrewdness on the street and money-making ways in both.

Here are some of the highlights of the feds’ near-400 page document dump on No Nose DiFronzo to the Chicago Sun-Times and Gangster Report:

In December 1981, FBI agents observed Outfit gambling bosses Dominic (Large Dom) Cortina and Donald (The Wizard) Angelini visiting DiFronzo at his home in River Grove. Cortina and Angelini controlled the Chicago mob’s network of bookmakers and backdoor casinos and coordinated logistics for the different gambling wings of the crime family. In March 1982, informants told the FBI that DiFronzo’s sports gambling and loan sharking businesses were being handled by Marco (The Mover) D’Amico out of the S&A Club on Diversey Avenue in Elmwood Park.

DiFronzo kept a tight circle and a tight schedule. He began his day arriving between 8:00 and 9:00 a.m. at Gene’s Deli on North Harlem, owned by his driver and right-hand man Eugene (Lefty) Cacciatore. He then made his way to his office at Elmwood Motors on W. Grand Avenue at around 10:30 a.m. Some days, he would make appearances at D&P Trucking & Construction on N. Clinton Avenue and United Delivery Service on N. Otto Avenue, in the afternoons. FBI records indicate DiFronzo maintained silent ownership interests in Elmwood Motors, D&P Trucking & Construction and United Delivery Service, as well as dozens of other legitimate business fronts and ventures.

DiFronzo’s companions for breakfast and lunch at Gene’s Deli and powwows in his office at Elmwood Motors, consisted of Lefty Cacciatore, Marco D’Amico, his younger brother, Peter (Greedy Petey) DiFronzo and his top “juice loan” guy, Peter (Chevy Pete) Destito, per the documents. For decades, Greedy Petey DiFronzo looked after affairs at D&P Trucking & Construction.

D’Amico would become DiFronzo’s consigliere in the 2010s. Greedy Petey would alternate between Johnny No Nose’s underboss and acting boss during that time period. Both D’Amico and the younger DiFronzo succumbed to the COVID-19 pandemic last year.

In June 1982, FBI agents observe Outfit underboss John (Jackie the Lackey) Cerone meeting with DiFronzo at Gene’s Deli. DiFronzo is driven to the meeting by Chevy Pete Destito. The following month, FBI agents followed DiFronzo to a another meeting with Cerone, this one held in the backroom at the Rosanova Tailor Shop on North Avenue, owned by Outfit soldier Luigi (Lou the Tailor) Rosanova, a former Chicago Bears football player turned mob enforcer and labor union liaison. The discussion at Lou the Tailor’s place of business was allegedly regarding Red’s Grill in Stickney, Illinois, the pick-up and drop-off location for DiFronzo and Cerone’s loan sharking operations, per CCC records.

On February 21, 1983, DiFronzo’s FBI surveillance unit tracked him to stops at nine different Chicagoland car dealerships the government believed help make up a good chunk of Johnny No Nose’s myriad of flush legitimate companies, which also included a vast real-estate portfolio and interests in restaurants and horse and dog race venues; Irving Park Chrysler-Plymouth, Twin Buick, Stella Buick, Montclaire Pontiac, Cullerton Cadillac, Manrolf Cadillac, Lauren Motors, Downers Grove Motors and Downers Grove Mitsubishi were all visited by the rising mob powerhouse that day almost 40 years ago. Johnny No Nose himself was driving a new-model white-colored Chrysler New Yorker.

In a March 1983 debriefing, one FBI informant told agents that Cerone was grooming DiFronzo to take over the whole Outfit in the future. According to the informant, DiFronzo watched over Cerone’s rackets when he went away to prison in the 1970s and would do the same if Cerone had to go to prison in the Las Vegas casino-skimming Operation Strawman case. Cerone served ten years in prison on the Strawman case and died of lung cancer in the days after he was set free in the summer of 1996.

The post Deep Diving DiFronzo: FBI Records Put Fmr. Chicago Outfit Godfather “No Nose” DiFronzo’s Daily Routine On Display appeared first on The Gangster Report.


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