Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

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Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by JCB1977 » Fri Feb 20, 2015 3:01 pm

That's some good stuff Chicago, I always tended to believe more of the Bill Roemer theories...front bosses but that the Big Tuna had the ultimate say. It actually makes perfect sense and a clever way to throw off LE for the pre-Rico years. Good stuff, thanks man!

Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by JCB1977 » Fri Feb 20, 2015 8:27 am

Chicago wrote:I would agree more with Scott B.
I would say it is the usual panel of 3 set up and it would be: DeLaurentis, Inendino & Cataudella.

D'Amico, Andriacchi, and the DiFronzo Brothers have nothing to do with the blue collar street rackets and are strictly White Collar/ Semi-retired/ Retired.

Cicero is the power in 2015.

Is your source solid? How do you come up with this panel?

Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by MilwaukeePhil » Thu Feb 19, 2015 3:49 pm

That's the difference with me fella's - I have "theories" - apparently others have the "facts" :mrgreen:

Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by MilwaukeePhil » Thu Feb 19, 2015 12:43 pm

Scott says Solly D is running things. My theory is that Marco D'Amico is the most powerful on the street, but runs it on a panel with Solly D and Joe Andriacchi and maybe even Jimmy Inendino. Jonny DiFronzo is likely still the "chairman."

Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by JCB1977 » Thu Feb 19, 2015 11:46 am

MilwaukeePhil wrote:Louie never owned a "canned tomato company." He simply had a supervisor role in Tony Marano's company up until he went to prison - that's where he got all his different cars. Marano remains the largest produce supplier in the Chicago area today. Sam Carlisi, Al Tournabene, the Grieco's and some of the Buccieri brothers also had "jobs" there and the Cicero crew has been using the company to finance its operations as recently as 2000 - Marano was a major financier of that failed golf course/casino that the Outfit tried to finance through Betty Maltese a few years back.

That's still a family company today, so one might wonder - is it still on the arm? :mrgreen:

I have heard more than a few theories on the Outfit. Is John DiFronzo still boss or is Solly D or a panel?

Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by MilwaukeePhil » Thu Feb 19, 2015 11:29 am

Louie never owned a "canned tomato company." He simply had a supervisor role in Tony Marano's company up until he went to prison - that's where he got all his different cars. Marano remains the largest produce supplier in the Chicago area today. Sam Carlisi, Al Tournabene, the Grieco's and some of the Buccieri brothers also had "jobs" there and the Cicero crew has been using the company to finance its operations as recently as 2000 - Marano was a major financier of that failed golf course/casino that the Outfit tried to finance through Betty Maltese a few years back.

That's still a family company today, so one might wonder - is it still on the arm? :mrgreen:

Re: Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by Sol » Wed Feb 18, 2015 11:57 pm

That was a good read, I enjoyed that. Thanks for posting it Wiseguy.......Soliai

Louis Marino taking over North Suburbs

by Wiseguy » Wed Feb 18, 2015 11:45 am

New article by Scott B. on Marino taking over the North Suburbs...


Marino assigned to look after north suburbs for Chicago mob
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The Windy City’s north suburbs now belong to the Illinois mafia’s ‘Top Tomato.’

Chicago mobster Louis (Louie Tomatoes) Marino is officially in charge of the rackets in Lake and McHenry Counties these days, a reward for his loyalty and 25 years behind bars.

While some octogenarians are trying to slow down and do less in their old age, Louie Tomatoes wants to make up for his lost time as a free man.

According to sources on the street and in law enforcement, the 82-year old Marino, sprung from his federal prison cell back in October, was recently promoted to “street boss” of the region by his best friend Salvatore (Solly D) DeLaurentis, the Outfit’s current acting boss.

“Louie had no intentions of hanging up his spurs when he got out, he wanted what he had coming to him,” said one high-ranking associate in the Chicago mafia. “This is not the kind of man that wants to retire to Florida and spend his final days on the golf course. He loves the action and he missed the action while he was away. He’s in heaven being back in the mix.”

Dino Marino, Louie Tomatoes’ son and a reputed “button man”, is allegedly being groomed to eventually assume responsibilities when his dad retires or dies. In 2000, Dino Marino, 57, went down in the Cicero City Hall-and-the-Mob scandal, which imprisoned Mayor Betty Loren-Maltese, her husband and Outfit bookie Frank (Baldy) Maltese and crew boss Michael (Big Mike) Spano, among others, on a variety of racketeering offenses and the raiding of the city’s coffers for millions of dollars.

The younger Marino pled guilty to owning a “no-show” job at the Cicero Department of Public Health and did a year in a federal prison in Wisconsin alongside his dad, in the midst of his two-dozen year stint. Since his return to town, Dino is alleged to have become an increasingly active member of Chicago organized crime and influential in his father’s old suburban stomping grounds, according to sources inside the Illinois State Police. Federal surveillance records show Dino regularly dining with Solly DeLaurentis and sometimes chauffeuring him around on his daily rounds.

Lake and McHenry County fall under the responsibility of the syndicate’s Cicero crew dating back to the days of legendary Windy City Prohibition era mafia don Al (Scarface) Capone. Cicero is run by capo James (Jimmy I) Inendino and syndicate underboss Salvatore (Sally Cards) Cataudella, per the Chicago Crime Commission.

DeLaurentis and the elder Marino came up in the mob under deceased Cicero capo Ernest (Rocky) Infelise and deceased Outfit bosses Joseph (Joe Nick) Ferriola and Sam (Wings) Carlisi. They were a fearsome gangland enforcer tandem for the Cicero crew in the late 1970s and 1980s, implicated in a number of mob murders, but never convicted of any.

“People shook in their boots whenever Louie and Solly walked in the room,” said one street source that grew up around the “bad-cop, worse-cop” team. “If you looked at Louie cross-eyed, he’d pull a knife out of his pocket and stick you with it. He was explosive and surly. One time, I saw him beat a guy to a pulp with a tire iron after he mouthed off to him at a card game. Lately, he’s taking visitors and their kissing his ring.”

Before getting pinched in the 1990 Operation Good Ship Lollipop RICO bust that decimated Infelise’s inner circle, Solly D and Louie Tomatoes had taken control of gambling and loansharking in Lake and McHenry County upon the retirement of Joseph (Black Joe) Amato, according to FBI intelligence reports.

The decision by Amato to retire may not have been completely his choice. Illinois State Police records show that prior to Black Joe’s stepping away from the scene, he and the pair of volatile and power-hungry Infelise lieutenants feuded over territory, resulting in a firebombing war that was ordered stopped by then Chicago mafia don Joseph (Joey Doves) Aiuppa. Throughout the course of the conflict, Amato’s driver and bodyguard Nick Sarillo was the victim of a car bomb attack that he survived.

Marino earned the nickname “Louie Tomatoes” for the fact that he once owned a canned-tomato company. Solly D, 76, was released from prison in 2006 and per sources, assumed day-to-day control over the Outfit around late 2013. Previously, DeLaurentis was in Marino’s slot as north suburbs street boss.

http://gangsterreport.com/marino-tapped ... icago-mob/

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