Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Thu Jun 12, 2025 3:52 pm

Great work. LoVerde is one of those guys I always assumed to be a member but after your dissection of Fratto's member identifications it does seem questionable even though he was obviously well-connected.

Didn't know a source linked him to DeJohn's crew. Noteworthy because they both came from Arbereshe towns and the KC tie-in complements the reference to DeJohn's faction in the 1940s war getting support from KC, KC having members from the same region.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Thu Jun 12, 2025 1:44 pm

PolackTony wrote: Fri Dec 02, 2022 7:17 pm
PolackTony wrote: Sun Nov 14, 2021 11:28 pm Frank Loverde was born 1904 in Chicago to Stefano Lo Verde and Domenica Maisano of Piana dei Greci (today Piana degli Albanesi; another Arbereshe town), Palermo province. His brother, George Loverde -- co-founder of Gino's East pizzeria -- was born in Piana dei Greci in 1907.
During the night of December 7th 1915, alleged "Black Handers" targeted the Little Sicily butcher shop of Stefano LoVerde on the 900 block of N Townsend. A bomb exploded in the basement of the shop and threw the family (including a young Butch LoVerde) from the beds in the apartment upstairs. Also thrown from their beds (the blast was reported to have woken the whole neighborhood up) were the LoVerdes' next door neighbors, the Sciortinos. Father Tommaso "Thomas" Sciortino, who was born in 1886 in Bagheria, owned a grocery store on the same block.
A few interesting points from Frank "Butch" LoVerde's FBI file.

LoVerde was convicted on counterfeiting charges in 1936 in KC, MO, where he was using the alias "Frank Russo" (he also used the alias Frank Rizzo ["clean out ya ears, JACKASS"] at times, as well as going by his mother's maiden name of Maisano). He wound up doing 3 years out of his 7 year sentence at Leavenworth before being paroled. In the 1960s, the FBI caught wind of this conviction, though I was unable to find any further info on who LoVerde's collaborators in KC may have been.

By the early 1960s, Frank Loverde was heavily involved in setting up and managing an array of legitimate businesses interests described by FBI sources as "fronts" for the outfit, allegedly operating under the direction of Phil Alderisio. While he was well-known as a mobbed-up figure, LoVerde had carefully cultivated the public image of a legit businessman, residing in well-appointed apartments in high rise buildings on State St and Michigan Ave, in the Near Northside Gold Coast and Streeterville neighborhoods, managed by his own property company. By this time, LoVerde was said to have controlled a number of lucrative companies for which he delegated the management and on-paper ownership of to associates, while LoVerde himself was frequently out of Chicago, wintering at second homes in Miami Beach, AZ, and SoCal. Given his patronage of AZ, it's unsurprising that an FBI CI source claimed that LoVerde and Alderisio were close friends of Detroit outfit member Pete Licavoli, also an AZ resident during this period. Given his patronage of Miami Beach, it's a safe bet that LoVerde would have also been chummy with Detroit member Joe Massei, as well as various affiliates of other LCN Families who frequented FL and AZ. Further, as I noted on another thread, LoVerde was alleged to have been attending meetings with Alderisio, Giancana, and Genovese member Gaetano "Tony Goebels" Ricci, which presumably focused on LoVerde and Alderisio's operation of mob-backed businesses.

Frank and George LoVerde were well-known figures in this period around the Rush St nightlife district, operating the popular 19 Club (located at 19 E Chestnut) and the nearby Gino's East Pizzeria. While FBI sources asserted that the LoVerde brothers were the real interests behind Gino's East (and also alleged to have been running a sportsbook out of a backroom in the restaurant) operation of the historic pizzeria was delegated to Fred Bartoli and Herman "Hymie" Jacobs. "President" of the Gino's East corporation, formed in the 1960s, was Joseph DeFranco, a Recorder of Deeds for Cook County and Clerk of the Cook County Circuit Court. Apart from his patronage jobs with the County, DeFranco -- born in Chicago to parents from Altavilla Milicia -- was also the operator of the Club LaRue on Rush St, a well-known "strip joint" involved in prostitution.

Bartoli and Jacobs were also, respectively, the President and Vice-President of the Evanston Cab Co., alleged to have been controlled by Frank LoVerde (who appeared on paper only as a supervisor for the company). LoVerde was additionally said to have controlled the Red Top Taxi, Co., while LoVerde's cab companies were further alleged to have been used to transport and arrange for johns for the high end prostitution racket in the Rush St district. High ranking LCN member's were presumably also invested in these companies, as suggested by a 1960s IRS investigation of Giancana's tax history in relation to the Evanston Cab Co.

While the FBI listed Frank LoVerde as a Chicago LCN member on its 1968 and 1973 member lists, IMO, LoVerde's membership status remains inadequately confirmed, as in both cases the sole source for his membership was Lou Fratto (a source of dubious reliability on his own, as I have discussed several times in the past). LoVerde was a well-connected figure and well-known in underworld circles to have been affiliated with the mafia, so the fact that the Feds had no other sources, even by 1973, to confirm LoVerde's membership casts a real doubt on this for me.

In late 1967, an FBI CI source that we can safely presume was Lou Fratto (LoVerde's files were released under FOIA and thus have CI identification codes redacted) was cited for the claim that "there is no question that LOVERDE is definitely a member of the 'outfit'" (as is typically the case, we are left with the FBI's summary of what the source actually said; here, the only word directly attributed to Fratto was "outfit", and it's unclear if Fratto had actually meant that LoVerde was a made guy, specifically). So far as I can tell, this was the sole basis for the FBI subsequently listing LoVerde as made.

FBI sources in the early 60s had claimed that LoVerde was under the direction of Alderisio and was a "front" for managing business investments made by Alderisio and Giancana. If LoVerde was not, in fact, made, I believe that he was an associate under Alderisio during this time, who himself was a soldier reporting directly to Giancana.

Given that he was a Sicilian guy from the Near Northside, the easy assumption would be that LoVerde would have been affiliated with the Prio crew. In 1965, LoVerde was, in fact, arrested in a gambling raid on the Prio crew's social club, the Ramblers SAC (located at 501 N Clark St) along with Prio crew affiliates Ben Policheri, Carl Pio, Frank Orlando, Larry Buonaguidi, Johnny Liberti, and Nate Zuckerman.

Multiple FBI source, however, had stated over the years that LoVerde's operations were not connected to the Prio crew. in 1969, a CI claimed that LoVerde, who was "close to PHIL ALDERISIO", was "not associated with the ROSS PRIO group as he pays a tax to the Prio group to operate" in the Near Northside territory controlled by Prio. The FBI quoted an old 1947 memo, which claimed that at that time "NICK DE JOHN, [redacted] and LOVERDE were on 'bad paper' with the mob and that De JOHN left town at this time and left LOVERDE and [redacted] to settle the dispute". This old memo aligned with a claim made by a CI years later, in 1971, who stated that LoVerde "was formerly with NICK DE JOHN in Chicago [...] LOVERDE was formerly in the NICK DE JOHN group in Chicago before ROSS PRIO took over DE JOHN's area. Since PRIO has been a hoodlum leader, LOVERDE has not been active in his group [...] Informant understands that PHIL ALDERISIO has a piece of LOVERDE's ownership in Gino's East restaurant".

Several FBI sources, from the late 1940s to the 1960s, indentified LoVerde as a close associate of Chicago LCN member Dominic "Hunk" Galiano (shot to death in 1966 in front of a Near Northside club operated by LCN member Jasper Campisi). Galiano and LoVerde were reputed to have been partnered in the operation of multiple nightclubs and other businesses over the years. In 1962, a CI told the Feds that Galiano and LoVerde "are independent of JIMMIE ALLEGRETTI and ROSS PRIO. LOVERDI [sic] and GALIANO are directly connected with SAM GIANCANA". Again, we othewrise know LoVerde to have been closely connected to Alderisio, who we know was a soldier direct with Giancana, so this claim here merits consideration. As the FBI also noted, while LoVerde had past ties to KC, Galiano was himself "closely associated with the Kansas City group".

Frank LoVerde died in Riverside County, CA, in 2003, a month short of turning 100. LoVerde had ceased to be listed on the FBI's Chicago member lists after 1973, which goes to further suggest that he was likely not a made guy.

Based on this fragmentary body of intel, a good guess is that LoVerde was originally an associate with Nick De John's crew. After De John was forced to flee Chicago and subsequently murdered, LoVerde was probably with Galiano, who may have later reported directly to Giancana. At some point, prior to or following Galiano's murder, LoVerde was probably with Alderisio. By the time of Alderisio's later imprisonment and 1971 death, LoVerde was reported by CI sources to have been largely "retired" and inactive, unknown to publicly associate with other outfit figures.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by cavita » Tue May 27, 2025 5:28 am

B. wrote: Mon May 26, 2025 7:49 pm
cavita wrote: Mon May 26, 2025 2:06 pm
B. wrote: Mon May 26, 2025 11:50 am Great work. Anything we can learn about earlier Aragonesi is valuable especially when they connect to the mafia in Sicily.
Cannistraro and Galluzzo were Aragonesi but it's interesting that the Frank Longo in the car accident with them was most likely THE Frank Longo that was hooked up with Vincenzo Troia in New Jersey.
Yep, great detail. Shows the various Rockford paesani groups were already closely associating.

Aside from Longo and Immordino are you aware of any other Rockford guys who spent time in Frankfort / Utica? Chicago guys like Joe Aiello and Michele Mineo did but trying to recall if any other Rockford guys were ever there. Immordino's father was there very early on, around the turn of the century, and given Immordino was active in the San Giuseppe Jato Family before coming here I imagine his father associated with the mafia if he wasn't a member himself.

Salvatore Polizzi is relevant to those connections as he was in the Utica area and fled a murder investigation to Wisconsin which fits these networks but I don't remember seeing anything about Illinois with him. When I looked into him many years ago I don't think I confirmed his origins but suspected he was from San Giuseppe Jato given his surname and presence in Jatino-linked areas.
I'm not aware of any other Rockford people that spent time in the Frankfort/Utica area... I can only think of Anthony Basile, Rockford member who was born in Rochester, NY but that is quite a distance from there. I'm not ruling out that some may have spent time there and I haven't found it buried in some FBI files, but maybe some day.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Tue May 27, 2025 12:00 am

Thanks for confirming the suspicion. I figured he had to be from SGJ. I first found him about 7 or 8 years ago and meant to dig into him more but never followed up. Glad you were able to fill in some other details.

He apparently confessed to the murder of John Aiello in Frankfort in 1912 after having an alleged argument with John's brother Joe. Difficult to untangle the relations between various Aiellos and the ones in Frankfort/Utica used multiple spellings but the infamous Joe Aiello and early Utica member/leader Domenico Aiello lived in the area by then.

Polizzi was then accused of the Frankfort murder of night watchman Albert Dade in 1921, and along with fleeing to Rome, NY, and Windsor, Wisconsin, he also went to California where he was accused of another murder, the victim being an alleged underworld killer himself. He then shows up in New Haven as you said where he was reportedly involved in bootlegging. This is followed by Brooklyn where he was again connected to a murder in some capacity. He was also running gambling operations during his time in Rome, NY. Everywhere he went he appears to have been involved in illegal activity and violence.

The stay in Windsor, WI, makes sense given it is just outside of Madison where Jatini were active in the local Family and he would have found paesans in NYC but I'm not sure where in Brooklyn he stayed. Would be good to know as SGJ / San Cipirello had ongoing links to the Bonannos. There was a Salvatore Polizzi from SGJ of the same age who in 1906 arrived to Brooklyn right where Bushwick, Bedford-Stuyvesant, and Brownsville meet. He apparently had an uncle "John Zucci" in Rome, NY, and Rome being so close to Utica had many links to Utica underworld figures, including the early Calabrians.

I didn't know he returned to Sicily for a time in the 1920s. His return to Sicily would have followed his legal trouble and lamming it around the country so easy to imagine he went back to escape the heat although he'd have quickly found out Mori was dishing even more heat in SGJ. He was described in newspapers as a "Black Hand member" with "Sicilian friends from coast to coast" -- I'm confident he was a member of the Utica Family / decina (likely both since he died in 1954).

I'd say it's a given he knew Troia, Longo, Riela, Immordino, etc. He initially caught my interest too because of the possibility of a relation to Frank Polizzi, himself connected/related to Riela.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Mon May 26, 2025 9:01 pm

Salvatore Polizzi was indeed Jatino; confirmed by birth and marriage records in SGJ. There was a Salvatore Polizzi, born in 1881, who died in 1954 in Frankfort, NY, where he had operated a gas station for years. He had previous addresses in Rome, NY, and a stint in New Haven, which matched the known history of the mafioso Salvatore Polizzi.

Polizzi was born in SGJ in 1881 to Giuseppe Polizzi and Vita Gianniantonio. He married Rosa Davi of SGJ (matches the name of the wife of the guy in Frankfort also) in 1904, before immigrating to the US in 1905. Polizzi also returned to Sicily for a bit in the 1920s before returning to the US in 1929, arriving at NYC bound for Frankfort. Passenger manifest states that he was born in SGJ and gives his FIL, Battista Davi, as his contact back in SGJ.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Mon May 26, 2025 7:49 pm

cavita wrote: Mon May 26, 2025 2:06 pm
B. wrote: Mon May 26, 2025 11:50 am Great work. Anything we can learn about earlier Aragonesi is valuable especially when they connect to the mafia in Sicily.
Cannistraro and Galluzzo were Aragonesi but it's interesting that the Frank Longo in the car accident with them was most likely THE Frank Longo that was hooked up with Vincenzo Troia in New Jersey.
Yep, great detail. Shows the various Rockford paesani groups were already closely associating.

Aside from Longo and Immordino are you aware of any other Rockford guys who spent time in Frankfort / Utica? Chicago guys like Joe Aiello and Michele Mineo did but trying to recall if any other Rockford guys were ever there. Immordino's father was there very early on, around the turn of the century, and given Immordino was active in the San Giuseppe Jato Family before coming here I imagine his father associated with the mafia if he wasn't a member himself.

Salvatore Polizzi is relevant to those connections as he was in the Utica area and fled a murder investigation to Wisconsin which fits these networks but I don't remember seeing anything about Illinois with him. When I looked into him many years ago I don't think I confirmed his origins but suspected he was from San Giuseppe Jato given his surname and presence in Jatino-linked areas.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by cavita » Mon May 26, 2025 2:06 pm

B. wrote: Mon May 26, 2025 11:50 am Great work. Anything we can learn about earlier Aragonesi is valuable especially when they connect to the mafia in Sicily.
Cannistraro and Galluzzo were Aragonesi but it's interesting that the Frank Longo in the car accident with them was most likely THE Frank Longo that was hooked up with Vincenzo Troia in New Jersey.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by B. » Mon May 26, 2025 11:50 am

Great work. Anything we can learn about earlier Aragonesi is valuable especially when they connect to the mafia in Sicily.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Mon May 26, 2025 8:39 am

Excellent find.

He did, in fact, enter the US in 1923 at NYC bound for Chicago, under the name Giovanni Cannistraro. If what he later said was true and he used his brother’s passport, this subterfuge would indicate that he was fleeing serious legal trouble in Sicily, consistent with him having been charged with triple homicide back in Aragona.

In 1924, he applied for naturalization as Alfonso Cannistraro, stating that he operated a grocery store in Chicago’s Little Sicily and lived on the 400 block of W Division (Aiello Ground Zero). He subsequently filed his petition for naturalization in 1929, at which time he stated that he was living at Sedgwick and Division in Little Sicily. The petition was witnessed by two paesani from the Southside Aragonese colony, Alfonso Rotolo and Vincenzo Scifo. The former was president of the Società Aragona Sicula (the Southside Aragona Society, whereas the Northside also had its own Aragona Society). Both surnames have connections to figures subsequently involved with Rockford and Chicago LCN, as noted previously in this thread.

I’d agree that he was deported to face trial in Sicily and did not re-enter the US, as no subsequent records appear for either Alfonso or Giovanni Cannistraro.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by cavita » Mon May 26, 2025 6:23 am

After some research I may have stumbled across an early Rockford mafia member named Alfonso Cannistraro, who was born around 1885 most likely in Aragona, Sicily as that name is fairly common in that village.

Best I can tell, Cannistraro appears in Rockford as early as March 22, 1926 when he was arrested on Rock Street near Loomis Street for carrying a .32 caliber pistol which he stated he used for protection when he wanders the streets after dark. He was arrested as Alfano Comistros.

By the summer of 1926 he was the proprietor of a small store at 411 Lincoln Avenue, which was alternately owned by Rockford LCN boss Tony Musso and Vincenzo Troia.

July 25, 1926 there was a car accident in which Frank Longo, John Galluzzo and a Ben Cannistraro were injured in Rockford. All three men were listed as living at 922 Ferguson Street. Since Ben Cannistraro never appears again in Rockford records, this was probably an alias for Alfonso.

On December 27, 1926 a fire at the 322 Buckbee Street home of Albert Olzowski was thought to be an outcrop of a booze war and authorities stated that the suspect arsonist was Cannistraro.

In May 1927 the trial was going on into the attempted murder of Alex Dotz, liquor spotter, and his brother David. Phil Caltagerone, George Saladino and Tony DiGiovanni were suspects and were the ones on trial. Cannistraro testified that he owned a REO Speedwagon vehicle that he made sugar deliveries in from his store at 411 Lincoln Avenue and it was not Tony DiGiovanni making deliveries as everyone thought.

April 1929 a real estate transaction of August J. Strandberg and his wife to Alfonso Cannistraro, etal, lot 20, block 4, replat of Grant Park Subdivision was noted in the Rockford newspapers.

On August 22, 1930 Cannistraro was arrested at 1007 South Main Street on charges of murdering three people in Aragona, Sicily and for suspicion of being a leader of a “blackhand” gang that terrorized people in Rockford and Chicago. He was also suspected of being a local booze runner and manufacturer. He was listed as living at 428 Kent Street and was alleged to have a roadhouse at 601 Barnum Road and supposedly entered the country on his brother’s passport. Cannistraro told police he entered the country in 1923 and lost his passport in a rooming house fire in Chicago in 1925 and came to Rockford in 1926.

Nothing more was heard about this case after a hearing on whether Cannistraro was to be deported and it is unknown if he was or not but this most likely happened as nothing more was heard from him in the Rockford area.

June 1936 Cannistraro was named in a foreclosure in the newspapers for lots 17-20, block 4 of the Grant Park Subdivision.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by JoelTurner » Sat May 17, 2025 5:28 pm

cavita wrote: Fri May 16, 2025 5:34 am Good connections. Too many to ignore that the Alfano family may have been early connected members. I'm not aware, does New Jersey have a large population of Sambuca people in the LCN?
Nope not that I know of. If there were any, I would guess that they would have been with the DeCavs rather than Newark

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by cavita » Fri May 16, 2025 5:34 am

Good connections. Too many to ignore that the Alfano family may have been early connected members. I'm not aware, does New Jersey have a large population of Sambuca people in the LCN?
Screenshot_20250516-073056.png

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by JoelTurner » Thu May 15, 2025 11:05 pm

cavita wrote: Thu May 15, 2025 8:57 am And here's a little more Rockford/NJ connection- Domenico Alfano had a brother Angelo Alfano born 1881 who was a tavern operator in Newark, NJ and he died in October 1957. His bar was located at 463 5th Street in Newark. Also, there was a Margaret Giovingo who married Jasper Alfano in Sambuca in 1913. They immigrated to NJ from Sambuca in 1913 and lived there a year before coming to Rockford in 1914. Certainly another strong NJ/Rockford tie especially if their families were mafia members in the old country. Jasper was also a brother to Domenico and Angelo Alfano.
Wow that’s a really great find!


John D’Amico & family lived roughly 2 1/2 blocks away at 520 N 7th St, Newark, NJ. Makes a lot more sense that they could have connected.

I didn’t find an exact date for Angelo’s immigration but his 1920 census record says he arrived in 1894. That would make him one of the earliest figures in Newark. He got shot by an in-law in June 1911.

Side note: His bar was at an important location. In the ‘60s, Tony Boiardo’s headquarters Club Fremont was at this address (463 N 5th St, Newark, NJ). There was a major shootout here in 1960 too.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by PolackTony » Thu May 15, 2025 2:04 pm

Great updates. We can see that some of these Rockford-NJ ties may well have had a deeper history preceding Riela and Troia even.

Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

by cavita » Thu May 15, 2025 8:57 am

And here's a little more Rockford/NJ connection- Domenico Alfano had a brother Angelo Alfano born 1881 who was a tavern operator in Newark, NJ and he died in October 1957. His bar was located at 463 5th Street in Newark. Also, there was a Margaret Giovingo who married Jasper Alfano in Sambuca in 1913. They immigrated to NJ from Sambuca in 1913 and lived there a year before coming to Rockford in 1914. Certainly another strong NJ/Rockford tie especially if their families were mafia members in the old country. Jasper was also a brother to Domenico and Angelo Alfano.

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