Feeling disrespected and unappreciated, a rogue Chicago mob burglary crew robbed the suburban mansion of longtime Windy City Godfather Tony (the Big Tuna) Accardo 40 years ago this week, in the early morning hours of January 6, 1978. The fallout was swift and savage – a protégé of iconic Prohibition Era Outfit boss Al Capone, Accardo ordered a combined 10 revenge slayings and cover-up murders tied to the daring pre-dawn break-in.
The price for the misdeed would be paid in blood. Buckets of it. And bodies began dropping within days.
Accardo was vacationing in California at the time of the robbery. He had recently instructed a burglary crew led by mob associate John Mendell to return a bundle of cash, gold and diamonds acquired in a jewelry store heist pulled off in the days before Christmas 1977. The store was owned by a friend of Accardo’s who was a Jewish bookie paying the Big Tuna protection money. Mendell decided to show his extreme displeasure by brazenly robbing the ritzy, well-manicured estate built by the legendary Outfit kingfish more than a decade earlier.
It proved an ill-conceived endeavor and it didn’t take long for Accardo to seek his proverbial pound of flesh.
An expert at deactivating complex alarm systems, known throughout the city as the most skilled “bypass man” in the whole Outfit, Mendell was the first to go, disappearing on January 15. He was eventually found in the trunk of his car, stabbed and strangled to death weeks later.
Five days after Mendell went missing, his second-in-charge, Bernard (Buddy) Ryan was discovered dead behind the wheel of his car with four bullets lodged in the back of his head. Ryan’s right-hand man, Stevie Garcia, made it until February 2 when he popped up as “trunk music” at the Sheraton Hotel next to O’Hare Airport.
The hit parade continued and got more brutal.
On February 4, Vince Moretti, the marked burglary crew’s fence for all of its stolen property, and a small-time crook friend of his named, Don Renno, were lured to a Cicero, Illinois bar and beaten and stomped to death. Renno had nothing to do with the Accardo robbery and simply happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The double homicide went on to be referred to as the “Strangers in the Night Murders,” because of the Johnny Mathis song playing on the jukebox as Moretti and Renno were heinously slaughtered by an Outfit hit team. Moretti, a former cop, had been seen wearing Accardo’s solid gold cufflinks around town in the days before he was killed.
There was a two-month reprieve from the bloodshed and then the final two members of Mendell’s crew, Bobby Hertogs and Johnny McDonald, me their own gruesome fate. Hertogs was found in the trunk of his car on April 6. He had been badly beaten and had his throat slit. McDonald was shot in the back of the head, his body dumped in an alley on April 14.
With the perpetrators out of the picture, in order to cover his tracks and cut ties from the purge he set in motion, Accardo turned his wrath towards his own inner circle and the execution squad he had dispatched to do his bidding. In October, Accardo’s houseboy, native Sicilian Mike Volpe, vanished weeks after testifying in front of a grand jury investigating the slayings linked to the January break-in – Accardo was famously protective of his beloved River Forest mansion, having even bumped off the architect that built it for the suspicion he had shared blueprints with the FBI.
Months later, Anthony (Little Tony) Borselino and Gerald (Jerry the Dinger) Carusiello were both slain with bullets to the back of the head. Borselino and Carusiello had been triggermen for Accardo in carrying out his hit list and the epic bloodletting of the burglary crew that dared to boost the boss. Borselino was a member of the notorious westside “Wild Bunch,” a group of grizzled Cicero mob enforcers tasked with the Outfit’s most difficult jobs. Carusiello was a driver and bodyguard for Accardo’s street boss, Joseph (Joey Doves) Aiuppa.
Nobody was ever arrested for any of the murders that resulted from the robbery of Accardo’s home. Volpe’s eyeglasses would be recovered in a safe inside the residence during a raid years later, but his body has never been unearthed. The Big Tuna himself died peacefully in 1992, having served close to a half-century at the helm of the mafia in Chicago and never doing any significant time behind bars.
The post Chicago Mafia Don Accardo Fulfilled Death Wish Towards Burglars Who Dared To Rob Him 40 Years Ago appeared first on The Gangster Report.