Snakes wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 10:29 am
Not sure if this has been posted but RICO-era Chicago guys who fit the subject. I'm sure that many of these guys served shorter sentences in their younger years but this will mainly focus on their careers after being made:
No indictments (it should be noted that at least four of those listed here died in their 50s or 60s of cancer or other illnesses):
Joseph Andriacchi (still alive; 88 years old)
Peter DiFronzo (died in 2020; 87 years old)
Louis Eboli (died of cancer in 1987; 52 years old)
Joseph Ferriola (served three years on gambling charges in early seventies; would have been indicted in 1990 but died the year before of heart problems; 61 years old)
James LaPietra (died of cancer in 1993; 66 years old)
Lee Magnafichi (died of cancer in 1989; 62 years old)
Vincent Solano (died in 1992; 73 years old)
Al Tornabene (died in 2009; 86 years old)
Indicted but either died before trial or were acquitted:
Anthony Accardo (acquitted 1982)
Frank "Toots" Caruso (indicted for extortion in 1982; charges later dropped)
Anthony Centracchio (died before trial)
Michael Glitta (indicted on felony gun possession; died before trial)
Pat Marcy (died before trial)
Albert Vena (acquitted of murder, 1992)
Convicted of RICO or other crimes but served short sentences (5 year or less)
John DiFronzo (convicted of RICO charges; served one year before being released on appeal)
Rudy Fratto (served two separate one-year terms for bid-rigging and tax evasion)
John Matassa, Jr. (pled guilty to embezzlement; served one year)
John Monteleone (served four-year term in late eighties for contempt of court)