The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony wrote: Mon Jul 04, 2022 11:30 pm
PolackTony wrote: Wed Jun 29, 2022 1:10 pm Image
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Note that the 1993 IOC report states that one of the drug "crews" tied to Chicago LCN and the SCU was running cocaine from Florida.

In 1985, a joint ATF/DEA operation busted an Outfit-connected arms and narcotics trafficking (as well as burglary and hijacking, naturally) ring. The ring included Grand Ave Crew associates Mikey Swiatek and Danny Bambulas, as well as longtime Outfit associate (previously linked to the Daddono crew) Emilio "Emil" Crovedi, and Ed Pedote (a Chicago jeweler and member of the Board of Commissioners of the police in suburban Hinsdale, IL). Along with the ring having sold undercover ATF agent Frank Mazzola 19 firearms, several silencers, and three bombs, Bambulas also allegedly directed Crovedi to sell the agent 3 ounces of cocaine (Bambulas and Swiatek thought that Mazzola was working with them on a plot to rob the Jewelry Exchange Building in Chicago's Loop). The ATF stated that Bambulas was:
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I don't know who this Vito Lombardo was, but given the 1993 IOC report, one wonders if he could've been linked to some of these Baresi guys in Chicago (there were plenty of Baresi in Chicago with the surname Lombardo). Alternatively, one also wonders if he had any connection to the Altavillese Frank Lombardo discussed above.

The ATF at the time also described Crovedi as a "major cocaine dealer" and stated that, along with whoever this Vito Lombardo was, Bambulas was tied to a Miami-based cocaine wholesaler named Peco López (subsequently arrested by the DEA in Miami). Both Bambulas and Crovedi had been tied in the past to notorious cartage hijackers/armed robbers in the Daddono crew (such as Johnny Varelli and Frank DeLegge, Sr), but they were also connected to Rocky Infelice. In a 1969 case, it was stated that Bambulas and Crovedi had been directed to meet Infelice and Anthony Legato in NYC to receive a shipment of stolen merchandise to be transported back to Chicago. In 1971, Anthony Legato was busted in Miami for attempting to board a Chicago-bound plane with 5 lbs of heroin. Legato, who was found as "trunk music" in Chicago in 1981, also worked with longtime Outfit-connected robber Bobby Pullia, who in 1987 was busted for carrying 3 kilos of cocaine in a car following a trip to Schaumburg. Recall that Frank Rappa, who had reportedly returned to Chicago in 1984 and was linked to "Sicilian cocaine traffickers" in Chicago during that period (per a Tribune-cited FBI report), had an address in Schaumburg, and was very likely linked himself to Infelice.
Another potential clue to Bares' involvement in narcotics in Chicago. In 1980, Rocco Filliponio was pulled over while driving in North suburban Buffalo Grove, and caught with 55 grams of cocaine, a fully auto MAC-10, and a 9mm pistol. Subsequently, his home was raided by the DEA. The Cook County States Attorney's office described Filliponio as "a crime syndicate figure with a long record of arrests for drug and gun law violations". The ATF described Filliponio as "an alleged member of organized crime in Chicago [with] an extensive arrest record including [...] firearms violations, and narcotics trafficking", further claiming that Filliponio "also had the reputation as a 'hit-man' for the Chicago organized crime family and was believed to traffic in pound quantities of cocaine". In a 1981 bench trial (surprise, surprise), Filliponio had his state narcotics and weapons charges dismissed after his lawyer, Bruce Roth, put a fake witness on the stand to deliver false testimony and bribed the judge; Filliponio was subsequently convicted on federal charges, however. Roth and Filliponio's courtroom shenanigans only came to light several years later as part of the investigations surrounding Operation Greylord, a major federal attack on judicial corruption in Cook County. Bruce Roth, who was a personal buddy of Filliponio, was also stated to have had close ties to narcotics trafficker Carlos Salgado, another client of his, from whom Roth was alleged to have purchased narcotics.

Now, Rocco Filliponio was born in 1944 in Chicago, but his parents were recent immigrants from Valenzano, Bari, and Valenzano was among the cluster of Bares' comuni that sent large numbers of migrants to Chicago in the following decades as part of the "2nd Wave" of Italian immigration to Chicago (e.g., D'Amato's Bakery on Grand Ave, founded in 1971). Thus, it's very likely that Filipponio's family would have had close ties to their paesani who later joined them in Chicago. As with these other source comuni for Chicago, Valenzano was a hotbed of intense Sacra Corona Unità activity (the Di Cosola and Stramaglia clans).
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony wrote: Fri Jun 17, 2022 1:08 pm
B. wrote: Tue Jan 26, 2021 3:13 pm
PolackTony wrote: Thu Jan 07, 2021 10:22 pm Between Rocky Infelise, DePietto, and Frank Rappa, Rappa is the only Sicilian. I still need to confirm Rappa's date of death. There was a Frank Rappa who died in Henderson, NV in 2007. Obit had him as a retired restaurateur. This guy was born 1932 in Borgetto, Palermo, married a Margaret Calato in Chicago in 1951, and then naturalized in Chicago in 1955. There were also a number of other Rappas in Chicago from Borgetto. So even if it's not the same guy I might suspect that the Rappa of interest was also from Borgetto.

In a 1984 NY Times article after the Pizza Connection bust, a Francesco Rappa was listed as one of the fugitives.
The Pizza Connection Francesco Rappa from Borgetto lived in the US in the 1970s and into the 1980s. I believe he was in Queens during that period. He might be the same Francesco Rappa who was ID'd in the 2000s as boss of Borgetto.

Borgetto boss Francesco Rappa's son Vito Rappa is a Sicilian mafioso who was living in NYC circa 2007 and facing charges for bribing a US immigration official. He was active with his brother-in-law Francesco Nania. They were indicted with members of the Gambino family and believed to be part of the Gambino "zip" faction.

Early Bonanno consigliere Filippo Rappa (murdered 1945 in Queens) was also from Borgetto and related/connected to the family's earliest leaders from nearby Sicilian towns. I looked into the above figures to find a connection to him and couldn't confirm, but we see the Rappa name is deeply linked with the Borgetto family and the USA.

If this Chicago guy was a mafia figure from Borgetto, he might be connected to some of the above figures in NYC / Borgetto.

Good thread -- interested to see how you unravel some of these mysteries.
Was digging into these Rappas again, after looking into Bonanno consigliere Filippo Rappa a bit. Not sure exactly if/how he connects to later Rappas, but given that the Rappa surname has been well-documented since at least the 1920s with the mafia in Borgetto, I'd have to imagine there's some relation.

There were (at least) two Francesco Rappas from Borgetto who emigrated to Chicago. It's possible that neither was the Francesco Rappa who was arrested in NYC in 1971 for receiving a heroin shipment packed into a Jaguar vehicle, as papers reported that the Rappa in question there was born in 1942 (if they had his age right) -- also still not 100% clear about the Francesco Rappa who became boss of the Borgetto family, though Italian articles state that he was born in the 1940s also.

One Chicago guy, Francesco Timodeo "Frank Timothy" Rappa, was born in Borgetto in 1932 and arrived in the US in 1949, settling in Chicago in 1950. In 1955, he filed his naturalization documents, listing his occupation as a baker. It is well-worth noting that at the time, this Rappa was living at Keeler and Waveland in the Old Irving Park neighborhood on the NW side (near Schurz HS). From 1950 on, Jim DeGeorge's Chicago home was located immediately around the corner, on Kedvale (while we know that DeGoerge temporarily relocated to WI in the late 1940s, FBI intel had DeGeorge as present and living at his Chicago address at least from the 1950s on. My assumption is that he split his time between his WI cattle ranch and his Chicago home). This Rappa I believe is the former restauranteur who died in Henderson, NV, in 2007. In 1951, he married Margaret Calato, born in Chicago to a Little Sicily family of Vicari and Bagheria heritage.

The likely link to DeGeorge could be very significant if this Rappa was connected to the other Rappas (which I think is quite likely, as the same given name will pop up repeatedly in the same family lineage, of course). When the Jaguar/heroin Rappa was put on trial in the 70s, one of their French connects, Richard Verdin, who testified against Rappa and his partners (Lorenzo D'Aloisio, also of Borgetto, and D'Aloisio's brother-in-law, Giuseppe Giacomazzo), stated that their ring was part of a larger ring under the Cinisi mafia that was shipping large quantities of heroin into the US in cars in the late 1960s/early 1970s (later Sicilian investigation in 1974 linked Badalamenti and Tomasso Buscetta to this operation; there's obviously a lot more to that story that I'm not covering here). We know that DeGeorge connected directly to the Cinisi group in Chicago back in the 1930s/40s, to guys like Onofrio Vitale (and presumably, to other Cinisesi operating in Cal City, such as the Impastatos and Manzellas).

The other Francesco Rappa in Chicago was born in 1935 in Borgetto and arrived in Chicago in 1957, having married his wife Rosa Morici the previous year in Borgetto (the only info I have on her is that her father was a Vincenzo Morici who died fighting in WW2; the Rappa-Morici family has been very active socially in the Chicago-Sicilian immigrant community over the last couple of decades [i.e., feste and other events]). This info is per his 1961 naturalization document in Chicago. This Frank Rappa died in Chicagoland in 2020.

According to a 1980 article in the Newark Star-Ledger, the Jaguar/heroin Francesco Rappa entered the US illegally in 1961 (around the same time that the Outfit-connected Salamone family from Cinisi also fled Sicily -- ostensibly because the mafia were stealing their cattle -- and settled in Chicago). He operated a location of Michael Piancone's "Pizza Palace" chain in Woodbridge, NJ. In 1971, he was living in Flushing, QU, with his father-in-law, Michele Gambino, when he was busted for the Jaguar thing and apparently received a 15-year sentence.

Now, I don't know whether this Francesco Rappa was the same individual mentioned in this 1982 Daytona Beach Morning Journal article:
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To be clear, there is no "Schlumberg, IL". This is the Chicago suburb of Schaumburg, and there are records that the Frank Rappa born in 1935 who emigrated to Chicago in 1957 had a past address in Schaumburg (with respect to Giuseppe Randazzo, there were also Rappas in Chicago from Borgetto married to Randazzos, and the Salamones from Cinisi had/have Randazzo relatives as well). In this light, it's worth reposting this from an early post in this thread:
PolackTony wrote: Mon Jan 04, 2021 7:47 pm According to a Daily Herald article published during the Rosemont casino saga with Vito Salamone:
[…] Salamone is "close" to Frank Rappa and Marco D'Amico, [an FBI] report charged. D'Amico is a bookmaker, the report said, and Rappa, it said, was affiliated with the mob both here and in Sicily and dealt cocaine. He left the Chicago area in 1967 but returned in 1984. At the same time he returned, the report noted, there was a marked increase in Sicilian cocaine dealers in Elmwood Park, Addison and Itasca. In 1971, Rappa was arrested at Kennedy Airport in New York with 80 kilograms of heroin [.]
Now, the Daily Herald article does make it seem that either the FBI report that they cite believed that the Chicago Frank Rappa was the same individual as the 1971 Jaguar/Woodbridge Rappa who was a Cherry Hill Gambino in-law, or that at least the Daily Herald reporters thought so (I'd very much like to see this report myself). Maybe this Frank Rappa was a relative of but not identical to either of the Chicago Rappas I discussed above, but who was also connected to Chicago. Or, the naturalization that he filed in Chicago in 1961 (the same year that it is later stated that Francesco Rappa entered the US illegally) was falsified (shocking, I know). If it was the case that he returned to Chicago in 1984, then it seems pretty unlikely that he was the Pizza Connection fugitive Rappa who then probably became boss of Borgetto. But then, if that Pizza Connection guy was a fugitive, why was he never extradited by Italian authorities to face trial in the US? And if the Francesco Rappa who was busted in Sicily in 1982 was a fugitive from Chicago, did he somehow return to the US in 1984?

I'm not an expert, by any means, on either the Cherry Hill Gambino and Bonanno zip guys from this era; nor am I an expert on the Pizza Connection stuff, apart from looking a bit into the local Chicago/Rockford-area Sicilian-immigrant connections that Pietro Alfano and people around him have had. So, maybe someone else who knows more about these dynamics can figure out what the deal was with this/these Rappa/s. But, at the moment at least, things seem to suggest that the Jaguar/Gambino Rappa could've been the Rappa born in 1935 who initially emigrated to Chicago and then returned in 1984. That guy was very likely a cousin of the other Francesco Rappa, born in 1932. Either way, in the '80s, the FBI and local LE were well-aware that Chicago, Rockford, and adjacent areas in Northern IL had a bunch of Sicilian drug activity tied to both Sicilian Cosa Nostra and local LCN; exact involvement of Rappa, possibly via connections including D'Amico and Infelise, remains opaque, though (per the Daily Herald) this FBI correlated the Chicago-area activity to Rappa's return in 1984. To conclude, given that I just brought up Infelise (and he also figures, along with Rappa, in a number of posts in this thread), it's also worth noting that an FBI informant in the early 1980s stated that the Torello/Ferriola crew was actively involved in financing narcotics operations for the Outfit in the 1970s and 80s. During this period, both Infelise and D'Amico were associates with that crew, of course.
Following up on the broader paesani context, Chicago had many immigrants from the Partinico/Borgetto area during the "2nd Wave" of Italian immigration. The Società Maria SS Addolorata Romitello Borgetto di Chicago remains active today, with the Francesco Rappa who died in 2020, discussed above, seemingly having been an important member. A sister organization, the Maria SS. Addolorata Romitello Borgetto Cultural Association of NYC, is based in Astoria, Queens. Info on the shrine to the Madonna del Romitello in Borgetto, founded in the 15th century, states that today it is maintained by the support of Burgettani in New York and Chicago.

A big Burgettano family in Chicago are the Camacis, who owned a successful construction firm, Camaci Building. In 1990, the Tribune profiled Pietro Camaci's lavish, 1000-person feast for San Giuseppe's Day; Pietro Camaci, who arrived in Chicago in 1969, was also the owner of the recently-shuttered Nonna Graziella Cucina Italiana in Stone Park. The Camacis' social networks include a great number of Chicago Siciliani, a few local Bares' families (including, notably, Nittis and DiFronzos), as well as names back in Sicily that connect to the mafia in Borgetto/Partinico, including Salamone, Sorisi, Vitale, and Rappa.

Worth noting here that the Pizza Connection network, apart from Rappa, included other Burgettani: cousins Salvatore and Giuseppe Lamberti, Salvatore Mazzurco, and Giuseppe Soresi. In the light of close collaboration between these guys and Cinisesi in the Pizza Connection operations, it may be worth noting that the Burgettani in Chicago have numerous close social ties to the large Cinisesi community in Chicago.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony wrote: Fri Jul 01, 2022 2:06 pm Members of the BHF are familiar with the infamous "Last Supper" photo. The photo shows the admin and capos of the Chicago family meeting at the old Sicily Restuarant, located at 2743 N Harlem, on the border of Chicago and Elmwood Park:

Image

The Sicily Restaurant was owned by Giovanni Incandela, who was born in 1927 in Altavilla Milicia. Giovanni emigrated to Chicago in 1970 and settled in Elmwood Park, a couple of blocks from the restaurant. The connections between Altavilla Milicia in Chicago are very deep and longstanding; beginning over 120 years ago, there is still back-and-forth migration between Chicago and Altavilla, and essentially everyone in Altavilla has relatives in Chicago.

In 1978, WMAQ TV in Chicago produced this piece on the strong ties between Chicago and Altavilla, which at the time were greatly ramping up again due to cheap airfares and a new wave of immigration ("Now, it's hard to tell where Chicago ends and Altavilla Milicia begins..."):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iD-aTYuqMLk

Some notes:

The Incandelas owned restaurants in both Chicago and Altavilla (there have also been Incandelas named as tied to the mafia in Altavilla).

The Joe Camarda who they show here is today the President of the Società Maria S.S. Lauretana di Altavilla Milicia in Chicago (there are recent photos of him being treated like a visiting dignitary by business partners in Bagheria).

Also note Gaspare Lombardo, who, I believe, was a cousin of the Francesco "Frank" Lombardo who I discussed above.

The mafia in Altavilla Milicia is intimately tied to Bagheria, Villabate, and Ficarazzi, and in the "Second Mafia War" in the early 1980s, Altavilla formed part of what was locally called "The Triangle of Death", along with Bagheria and Casteldaccia (recall that Domenico Lo Cascio, a restaurant owner in Cicero, also from Altavilla and Frank Lombardo's brother-in-law, was kidnapped and apparently disappeared while on a trip back to Sicily in 1983).

In the last decade, Italian reports have named Francesco Lombardo as the boss of the Altavilla family, though since then both Francesco and his son Andrea Lombardo turned pentiti.
Just to follow up on the Lombardos, an account from a Chicago-Altavilles' Lombardo states that the family was involved in the mafia in Altavilla:

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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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Local Chicago TV interview with Giovanni "John" Nitti, owner of Isola Imports and a cousin of Nick Nitti, who arrived in Chicago in 1957 from Triggiano, Bari. As he arrived to an extended family in Chicago with successful business ventures, due in no small part to their close association with the mafia, John Nitti within a couple of years was up and running his own grocery store, Nitti's Italian specialties, at Grand and Ogden (where his paesan' Patsy Spilotro's restaurant had been, naturally). After a couple of decades, John Nitti expanded his business to wholesale importing of Italian foods, with family back in Bari producing olive oil for him.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cT7dSPnEJAM

While I have no knowledge of John Nitti's personal involvement in OC, given who his family in Chicago was (and is today, as his cousin Jason Nitti is alleged to be a current member), and the documented presence of the SCU in Chicago, one wonders. FWIW, the SCU's initial rackets focused heavily on control of olive oil and wine production around Bari. I believe that this Olio Nitti company today was founded by John Nitti's brother Giuseppe Nitti:
https://www.olionitti.com/

The Nittis also seem to control other agricultural businesses in Triggiano today:
https://www.dnb.com/business-directory/ ... 47760.html
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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The mention of the Rockford "Greenhorns" which were the recent Sicilian immigrants. Not only were they dominating the drug trade in Rockford but they had taken over gambling as well. This particular investigation stemmed from the 1991 bombing of an unsanctioned poker game. Also interesting is the mention of Rockford in gambling games in Itasca, Crystal Lake and Lake County as well as the Kenosha, Wisconsin area.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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cavita wrote: Thu Jul 14, 2022 5:13 pm The mention of the Rockford "Greenhorns" which were the recent Sicilian immigrants. Not only were they dominating the drug trade in Rockford but they had taken over gambling as well. This particular investigation stemmed from the 1991 bombing of an unsanctioned poker game. Also interesting is the mention of Rockford in gambling games in Itasca, Crystal Lake and Lake County as well as the Kenosha, Wisconsin area.
Cavita, this information is fascinating. The fact that Rockford had operations in Itasca, Lake County and Crystal Lake which had Chicago Outfit operations from the different crews to this day amazes me. Solly D was away in prison at that time or about to go to prison but he lives in the Crystal Lake area.

You always hear that the Outfit moved in on Milwaukee after the fall of the Balistrieris. It sounds like it was Rockford that moved in on Milwaukee with operations there and in Kenosha, which also had a LCN presence.

What’s more amazing is that there has never been a big indictment of Rockford. The gambling one connected to the Family Secrets was really the only one and most of those guys got probation or very little time.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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cavita wrote: Thu Jul 14, 2022 5:13 pm The mention of the Rockford "Greenhorns" which were the recent Sicilian immigrants. Not only were they dominating the drug trade in Rockford but they had taken over gambling as well. This particular investigation stemmed from the 1991 bombing of an unsanctioned poker game. Also interesting is the mention of Rockford in gambling games in Itasca, Crystal Lake and Lake County as well as the Kenosha, Wisconsin area.
Thanks, man. I’ve seen the term “greenhorn” used in Chicago as well, in general reference to 2nd Wave Italian immigrants newly arrived in the city. I’ve also seen it used in the same fashion in Buffalo in the ‘70s. There was also the use of “the green ones” as a reference to the mafia in STL back in the prohibition era, which was derived from “greenhorn”, so that usage probably goes way back.

Interesting info on the card games. From the page you posted, the CI states that he attended these games with a redacted name, but doesn’t state who was operating them, so it’s unclear to me if these were just Rockford guys attending games run by Chicago (or possibly Milwaukee for the WI ones), or if Rockford had any role in operating these games. Any further info on it?
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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Bari and the surrounding murge region in Italy is very vital to italys economy, specifically the south. Puglia is mostly very flat and semi arid land, good for growing some of the best, if not the best, produce in the whole country. Olives, tomatoes, wheat, ect. It is italys breadbasket. The land owners use immigrants and refugees for cheap under the table labour. They get away with paying these people just a few dollars to survive, which was better than what they would get from where they come from but still unfair. So the land owners of these farms, several which are mob connected, make the big bucks.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony wrote: Wed Jun 29, 2022 1:10 pm Image
It should be no surprise that the Nuova Famiglia (an LE term; the insider term was "Nuova Fratellanza Napoletana") had ties to Chicago, as Chicago was likely intimately tied to the founding of the NF.

As reported above, Chicago restaurateur Giuseppe Spavone -- father of Tony Spavone -- was a Cammorrista from Naples. Giuseppe was also the brother of Antonio Spavone, a famed Camorrista who was instrumental in the founding of the NF and reputed liaison between the Camorra and the American mafia.

Giuseppe (born 1919) and Antonio (born 1926) were in a Camorra clan headed by their elder brother Carmine, aka 'o Malomm' ("the bad man"), in the years following WW2. Carmine's nickname was reportedly inherited from their grandfather, Ciro Spavone, aka 'o Malomm', said to have also been a feared Camorra boss in the Spavone's home turf in the Arenaccia slum in Naples. The Spavone clan was heavily engaged in the important smuggling rackets in Naples during the post-war Allied forces occupation. In 1945, Carmine was murdered by rival Camorrista Giovanni Mormone; when Antonio Spavone then exacted revenge by stabbing Mormone to death in front of a party of Mormone's relatives, he reportedly inherited the moniker Totonno 'o Malomm', having upheld his family's tradition of honor and violence. In Italian accounts, Giuseppe Spavone was tortured by the police while Antonio was on the run from the Mormone murder, and subsequently fled to the US. Giuseppe's official legal entry to the US, per his naturalization records at least, was in 1960 at Miami. He then established a popular Italian restaurant, Seven Hills (as in ancient Rome) at Peterson and Lincoln on the Northside of Chicago (Chicago newspaper accounts of Giuseppe stated that he worked as a chef on an Italian cruiseliner in the '50s, and there is a marriage record for him in Vegas in 1955). Antonio was apprehended for the Mormone murder and incarcerated in the infamous Poggioreale prison, where Italian accounts describe him as being treated like a "king". After being transferred to the Murate prison in Florence, Antonio received a pardon from the Italian President in 1967 for heroic acts during a flood of the prison in 1966.

The release of 'o Malomm' in 1967 followed on the heels of the Italian Parliament's 1965 Law 575, which targeted Sicilian mafiosi with forced resettlement in mainland Italy. While this plan was implemented under the assumption that mafiosi would no longer engage in criminality if settled in areas of Italy "uncontaminated" by the mafia, we know that it wound up simply spreading Cosa Nostra influence further across Italy. To compound the stunning foolishness of this plan, Italian authorities also resettled Sicilian mafiosi in Campania, of all places, including important mafia figures such as the Bontades of the Santa Maria di Gesù family. The presence of Sicilian mafiosi in Naples greatly ramped up Cosa Nostra-Camorra cooperation in the cigarette smuggling racket, and directly led to the "mafia-ization" of the Camorra, as Sicilian mafiosi inducted important Napolitan' allies such as Michele Zaza in Cosa Nostra. These smuggling connections also gave rise to large-scale narcotics trafficking networks in the coming years, initially laid by Camorra-Mafia connections to Marseillaise traffickers residing in Naples.

After his release from prison, Antonio Spavone entered this new Camorra dynamic, engaging in smuggling and narcotics trafficking, along with allies such as Zaza and Umberto Ammatura. Italian sources also state that Spavone had himself forged close ties with Sicilian mafiosi. In the 1970s, tensions were ratcheting up between this group of Camorristi, allied to Cosa Nostra, and the followers of Raffaele Cutolo. Cutolo was in the process of establishing the Nuova Camorra Organizzata, which began essentially as Cutolo's personal "cult of personality" enacted through overtures to reconstitute the old Neapolitan "Onorata Società" by borrowing heavily from the rituals and structures of the Calabrian 'Ndrangheta, into which Cutolo was initiated in prison. Now, there was already apparently bad blood between Cutolo and Spavone, as they had been incarcerated together in Poggioreale in the '60s after Cutolo was convicted for the senseless murder of a fireman. After Spavone was arrested again in the 1970s, he was again incarcerated in Poggioreale with Cutolo, who, as a rising star, apparently took aim at Spavone as a respected older statesman of the Camorra. From John Dickie's "Blood Brotherhoods" (p. 455):

Image

Whether real or fabricated by Cutolo, Spavone was released from prison after this incident. In 1976, Spavone was attacked by two assailants on a scooter on the street in Naples and hit in the face with a shotgun blast. Spavone survived the hit attempt, but was horribly disfigured, and fled to the US for reconstructive surgery (he reportedly underwent a series of dozens of surgeries). While a couple of Italian accounts claim that the Spavone hit attempt was carried out by rival Sicilian mafiosi, so far as I know his assailants were never apprehended or identified, and there may be nothing more to the Sicilian angle than the apparent MO of a shotgun blast. Other Italian accounts state that the attempt was carried out by Cutolo's men, which I find much more plausible, given both the personal angle and the broader organizational tensions between Cutolo and the Camorra network that Spavone was part of.

While several accounts simply state that Spavone fled to NYC, others note that he stayed with his brother, Giuseppe. Giuseppe was, of course, in Chicago, and in later trial testimony, Antonio stated that his time in the US was spent "between New York and Chicago". A Chicago record proves that Antonio Spavone (same birthdate) in fact had a Chicago address at 3001 W Peterson. This was a commercial restaurant address, which had been the location of Chef Alberto's (which subsequently moved to Belmont and LSD), owned by Alberto Papia, a Bagherese-Chicago restauranteur (his mother's maiden name was Greco, the same as the men who were running the Bagheria mafia family during this period, of course). It was also in the immediate vicinity of Giuseppe Spavone's Seven Hills restaurant and Giuseppe's home on N Troy.

Now, here's where things get even more interesting. Several Italian sources (including "Gomorrah" author Roberto Savaiano) have stated that Antonio Spavone was the "compare" of Genovese boss Funzi Tieri, himself born in Naples (erroneously described by these sources as the "capo dei capi" of the US mafia following Carlo Gambino's death). These sources state that Tieri was himself active in the Napolitan' underworld and that Spavone's sojourn in the US was under Tieri's protection, who was alleged to have had longstanding ties to Spavone. While staying in the US, 'o Malomm' was tried in absentia in Italy for the 1971 murder of his erstwhile friend and partner, narcotics trafficker Giovanni Ferrigno, who had been responsible for operating a cocaine pipeline from Peru. While prosecutors alleged that Spavone killed Ferrigno over control of narcotics operations, Spavone's lawyers succesfully won his acquittal by arguing that Spavone had killed Ferrigno in self-defense, as Spavone had been sleeping with Ferrigno's wife. The claim of cuckoldry, at least, was probably true, as after being acquitted, Spavone returned from the US to Italy in '79 and took up residence at a compound on the Neapolitan island of Ischia with Ferrigno's widow. Italian sources state that after his return, Spavone held summits of leading Camorra figures in Ischia ('o Malomm', beloved and gregarious man that he was, later stated that his friends simply wanted to come and see him after his journey to NYC and Chicago). According to an article on the history of the Camorra in the paper "Napoli Today":
By now the war [with Cutolo] has broken out even though it has not been officially declared. The latest attempt at mediation to try to stop the escalation brings to the field the main bosses of the Sicilian and Italian-American mafia, as well as the Campanians.

A summit was convened in Rome in a hotel on September 30, 1980. It is chaired by Antonio Spavone, alias "o' malammo'", a Camorra historian who found refuge in the United States under the protection of the boss Frank Tieri. He is a sort of "noble father" of the Camorra and also acts as a guarantor with the Italian-American mafia. The summit is attended by Zaza, Bardellino, Giuliano, Sicilian mafia families, the Lucchese of New York, the Priziola of Detroit and other mafia of New Jersey and Las Vegas. A proposal is made to Cutolo who, however, refuses the agreement and in fact war is declared."
Info on this summit, and the attendance of both Sicilian and US mafia figures, was first reported in a 1981 article in "Il Tempo". We know that there was no "Las Vegas mafia"; given Spavone's close ties to Chicago, I think it's likely that this was a reference to Chicago. Italian sources credit the Rome summit chaired by Antonio Spavone as the official founding of the Nuova Fratellanza Napoletana, referred to as the "Nuova Famiglia" by Italian LE and the press. In the early 1980s, the Italian and US press referred to Spavone as the capo of the "Nuova Famiglia", and stated that the bloody war between the NCO and NF was a struggle between Spavone, Zaza, and their allies, and Cutolo and his men over the control of narcotics trafficking and tobacco smuggling operations.

In 1984, Spavone, along with ~100 other Camorristi in Naples and Northern Italy, was arrested for "criminal association" based on intel provided by Camorra pentiti. Described by pentiti as "'a judge without a toga' and 'a boss above rivals'", Spavone was convicted in 1985 and sentenced to 9 years (Gaetano Spavone, Antonio's nephew and son of the long-deceased Carmine Spavone, was sentenced to 7 years). Apparently, `o Malomm' got his conviction overturned somehow, and was released after serving two years. He was tried and acquitted again in '93, before succumbing to cancer that same year. His brother Giuseppe Spavone died of natural causes in Chicago in 2010.

Given his documented residence in Chicago and close ties to NYC as well (and likely to BK specifically, given his reputed personal association with Funzi Tieri), it's possible that the NF capo cited in the '93 FBI report, with ties to Jackie Cerone, Jr, may have been Antonio Spavone. I don't know what he was doing between his release from prison in '87 and his re-arrest and death in '93; the info in the '93 report was dated from 1990, and it wouldn't at all surprise me if Spavone was still traveling to the US in that period or retained business interests in Chicago. The report itself was dated March 1993, and Antonio Spavone died in May of '93.

To conclude, a couple of things to consider. In 1973, Accardo (with a party that included his friend and Napolitan'-Chicago restaurateur Al Meo) was confirmed by Italian LE to have visited Naples; in '74, Al Pilotto told Frank Bompensiero that he had been instructed by Accardo to deliver messages to Accardo's "friends" in Italy during an upcoming trip. At this time, Accardo's personal associate, Sicilian-Chicago wine import magnate Antonino Paternò, was actively being investigated by LE in Italy for reputed ties to the mafia; specifically, Italian LE told the FBI that they believed that Paternò was linked to Sicilian mafiosi who had been resettled in mainland Italy. Giuseppe Spavone's son, and nephew of Antonio Spavone, Chicago singer and restaurateur Tony Spavone, has long been alleged to have close ties to the Chicago mob. For years, rumors have floated that Tony Spavone's Ristorante in suburban Bloomingdale (part of what I call "zip central", along with Addison, Elmwood Park, Wood Dale, and Itasca) was used by the Outfit for making ceremonies in the 1990s. In more recent years, the Italian Parliament's Antimafia Commission has released information stating that the Alleanza di Secondigliano Camorra group has operations and business investments in Chicago. In this light, it's worth noting that a Ciro Spavone (same name as the Spavone brothers' infamous grandfather) has been named repeatedly in the last several years as a capo of the Camorra in Secondigliano by the Italian press. A Gaetano Spavone (same name as Tony Spavone's cousin, who was convicted in the 80s for Camorra association) was named in 2016 as linked to an Italian-Albanian narcotics trafficking ring operating in Naples and Bari.

A clip of Tony Spavone's restaurant from 'Wild Chicago", a goofy local show produced by Chicago PBS-affiliate WTTW. Giuseppe Spavone appears briefly at 1:28, singing the classic canzon' napolitan' "torna a Surriento":
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

Post by Patrickgold »

:!:
PolackTony wrote: Fri Jul 15, 2022 11:23 am
cavita wrote: Thu Jul 14, 2022 5:13 pm The mention of the Rockford "Greenhorns" which were the recent Sicilian immigrants. Not only were they dominating the drug trade in Rockford but they had taken over gambling as well. This particular investigation stemmed from the 1991 bombing of an unsanctioned poker game. Also interesting is the mention of Rockford in gambling games in Itasca, Crystal Lake and Lake County as well as the Kenosha, Wisconsin area.
Thanks, man. I’ve seen the term “greenhorn” used in Chicago as well, in general reference to 2nd Wave Italian immigrants newly arrived in the city. I’ve also seen it used in the same fashion in Buffalo in the ‘70s. There was also the use of “the green ones” as a reference to the mafia in STL back in the prohibition era, which was derived from “greenhorn”, so that usage probably goes way back.

Interesting info on the card games. From the page you posted, the CI states that he attended these games with a redacted name, but doesn’t state who was operating them, so it’s unclear to me if these were just Rockford guys attending games run by Chicago (or possibly Milwaukee for the WI ones), or if Rockford had any role in operating these games. Any further info on it?

It mentions Gullotta running a game in the last paragraph and he was basically the boss of Rockford in the 90s I believe. It’s unclear if he was running all the games they are talking about but the way the report is written it makes it seem all those games are linked to Rockford. Interesting possible connection, I believe Marco D’Amico has been linked to Rockford in the past and it says that games were being run in Itasca where I know D’Amico had some ties to. I believe he had some type of connections to D’Marcos restaurant in Itasca.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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Patrickgold wrote: Fri Jul 15, 2022 6:14 pm :!:
PolackTony wrote: Fri Jul 15, 2022 11:23 am
cavita wrote: Thu Jul 14, 2022 5:13 pm The mention of the Rockford "Greenhorns" which were the recent Sicilian immigrants. Not only were they dominating the drug trade in Rockford but they had taken over gambling as well. This particular investigation stemmed from the 1991 bombing of an unsanctioned poker game. Also interesting is the mention of Rockford in gambling games in Itasca, Crystal Lake and Lake County as well as the Kenosha, Wisconsin area.
Thanks, man. I’ve seen the term “greenhorn” used in Chicago as well, in general reference to 2nd Wave Italian immigrants newly arrived in the city. I’ve also seen it used in the same fashion in Buffalo in the ‘70s. There was also the use of “the green ones” as a reference to the mafia in STL back in the prohibition era, which was derived from “greenhorn”, so that usage probably goes way back.

Interesting info on the card games. From the page you posted, the CI states that he attended these games with a redacted name, but doesn’t state who was operating them, so it’s unclear to me if these were just Rockford guys attending games run by Chicago (or possibly Milwaukee for the WI ones), or if Rockford had any role in operating these games. Any further info on it?

It mentions Gullotta running a game in the last paragraph and he was basically the boss of Rockford in the 90s I believe. It’s unclear if he was running all the games they are talking about but the way the report is written it makes it seem all those games are linked to Rockford. Interesting possible connection, I believe Marco D’Amico has been linked to Rockford in the past and it says that games were being run in Itasca where I know D’Amico had some ties to. I believe he had some type of connections to D’Marcos restaurant in Itasca.
Yeah, I hear you, I just don't see that the page provides enough info to conclude whether or not Rockford was specifically involved in operating the games in Crystal Lake, McHenry, or WI. Could be, but we need more info than what's there; hopefully, Cavita can shed more light on it. Also depends on who the CI was. From my reading, he could've just been a gambler from the Rockford area who knew some street gossip about the zips there and traveled around to play card games in the general region.

If Rockford was involved in operating some of those games, it would be very good to know. I agree that D'Amico would be a prime suspect for someone who may have been partnered with the Rockford guys if they were involved in games in the Chicago suburbs. D'Amico, I believe, may have been like a bridge between Elmwood Park, Taylor St/Cicero (who, as we know, had by then taken over rackets in McHenry County), Rockford, and the Italian OC guys in the area. I think D'Amico was closely connected to all of these networks.

The connection to DeMarco's could also be important. The owner of DeMarco Ristorante, Gennaro "Jerry" De Marco, is an immigrant from Altomonte, Cosenza, Calabria. Tons of Outfit guys over the years have had ancestry from Cosenza, of course, but there are a number of "2nd Wave" immigrants from Cosenza province who have been in Outfit circles in recent decades, such as the Grecos (the food wholesaler Grecos, like Eddie Greco) and the Rovitos. Kenosha (where some of these card games were held) has had a large concentration of Cosentini, and I believe that the Kenosha area also had a number of "2nd wave" migrants from Cosenza province (as elsewhere, later immigrants settled where their family/paesani settled in the prior wave of immigration) who opened restaurants and other businesses. If D'Amico had connections to DeMarco's and to Kenosha, that would make sense. Jerry DeMarco's social media network links him to Vito Salamone, Lappos (I mention several Lappos above, but one of them owned the infamous Cafe Cappucino), as well as Sicilian immigrants from Cinisi, Ficarazzi, and Bagheria. Always the same names and places popping up with these guys.

Unrelated, but in 2005, Jerry Demarco's kid, Gianluca, was arrested when a bottle full of gasoline ignited and then exploded in his locker at Roselle HS. Seems like the kid was trying to burn the school down or something, I dunno.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony wrote: Wed Jun 29, 2022 1:10 pm Image
B. wrote: Wed Jun 29, 2022 2:48 pm Carmine Esposito must be the Camorra member arrested in March 1987:

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1987/03/14 ... 099544630/
PolackTony wrote: Wed Jun 29, 2022 4:10 pm Yeah, I neglected to mention it but Carmine Esposito, who was the capo of the Acerra clan in the NCO, was the guy arrested in ‘87. Esposito was running a very popular restaurant in a trendy area of the city, near the Rush St area. No way did he just show up in Chicago with no contacts and get that up and running, IMO.
PolackTony wrote: Wed Mar 09, 2022 2:50 pm Another thing to note about Carmine Esposito. When he was in Chicago, he was chef and co-owner with his wife (Giuseppina LaVentura) of Bravissimo, a very popular Italian restaurant located at Clark and Grand in River North. According to a 1987 article in the Chicago Reader, the liquor license at Bravissimo was held by an Agostino Siciliano, who told employees that he bred racehorses for a living. This was true, as in the late 80s Agostino Siciliano was banned by the IL racing commission after his horses tested positive for illegal drugs at the Hawthorne Racetrack. Siciliano was also the President of Bravissimo, Inc., incorporated in 1986. Looks like he was born about 1936, and today lives in Lake Barrington, so he seems to remain well off. Given his name (and his wife, Maria Siciliano), I think it's a good bet that he is from Italy himself, though I haven't confirmed his place of origin (I'd guess either Calabria or Puglia).
After taking a deep dive into Antonio Spavone, it's worth adding a few comments about Carmine Esposito as well.

Like Spavone, Esposito wasn't just some run-of-the-mill Camorrist'. Also, like Spavone, we can assume that Esposito didn't just happen to randomly wind up in Chicago. Esposito was from Acerra, and as anyone here familiar with the history of the Chicago mob and the work that we've done on the "Chicago Origins" thread will know, Acerra has been intimately linked to the Outfit for many decades. "Diamond Joe" Esposito, an Acerres' who may have been the head of a Chicago Camorra society himself, was the first known mainland Italian inducted into the Chicago mafia. Fast forward to today, and Solly D and Jimmy I both trace their heritage back to Acerra. As with many other Italian paesi that sent large numbers of people to Chicago in the first wave of Italian immigration in the late 19th through early 20th century, Acerra sent many immigrants to Chicago in the second wave of Italian immigration in the decades following WW2; Chicago's Acerresi remain a notable and active contingent within Chitalia today. While the Società San Cuono e Figlio di Acerra no longer stands, Taylor St remains something like a "spiritual home" for Chicago's Acerresi, both older generations and the newly arrived. Acerra has also long been a major Camorra center. Like the Villabate-Bagheria-Casteldaccia area in Palermo province (also intimately tied to Chicago and its mafia), Acerra forms a hub of an area called "the triangle of death", due to a plague of heavy Camorra activity and attendant violence for decades (as well as the notorious dumping of toxic waste by Camorra clans in this region of Napoli province, leading to high cancer rates).

Unlike Spavone, however, Esposito was a young man, only 31 when he was arrested in 1987 at his successful Chicago restaurant. His Camorra career, at that point in time, was also much shorter than Spavone's, though Esposito's life as a Camorra leader didn't stop when he was extradited back to Italy. Around 1980, apparently, Esposito cliqued up with Raffaele Cutolo's Nuova Camorra Organizzata, which was, as noted above, in the middle of an escalating war mounted against an older generation of Camorristi in Naples who were allied with Sicilian Cosa Nostra; Cutolo's rivals formed the Nuova Fratellanza Napoletana, aka "Nuova Famiglia", in 1980, to combat the attacks of Cutolo's acolytes on their massive cigarette and heroin trafficking rackets. Unlike Cutolo himself and most of his adherents, who were no more than unvarnished street thugs, Esposito was a municipal employee of the comune of Acerra and an auto mechanic who ran his father's body shop (Esposito told the Chicago Tribune in 1988 that he actually couldn't even have been a Camorrista, because of his legit career). It can be surmised that Esposito's initial connection to the NCO came via Nicolà Nuzzo, then the capo of the powerful Nuzzo-Carusiello Camorra clan in Acerra that allied itself to the NCO (while Esposito, of course, told the Tribune that he had no affiliation with the Camorra, he admitted to knowing Nuzzo and Vincenzo Casillo, NCO capo over the province of Avellino. There was also a Domenico Esposito who was a capo of the Nuzzo clan, though I don't know if there was any close relation). According to Italian sources, the NCO put Esposito's business acumen to work, as he is described as the "treasurer" (contarulo, an old Camorra Society administration rank that Cutolo borrowed from the 'Ndrangheta in his attempt to revive the trappings of the decayed "Honored Society" of Naples) and "managing director" of the NCO. As such, sources stated that Esposito was responsible for overseeing the investments of the vast sums of money the NCO brought in, as well as managing narcotics trafficking (heroin, coke, and multiple tons of hashish that the NCO was handling) and ordering murders. It should be underscored that for the duration of the heyday of the NCO, Raffaele Cutolo was incarcerated; thus, men like Esposito and Casillo were the guys out in the world running the NCO at the top level of the organization.

Due to the high profile and savage nature of the war between the NCO and NF, Italian LE launched mass arrests and manhunts for NCO members, leading to Campania's own "Maxi Trial". Carmine's uncle (some sources say cousin), Benito Esposito, was arrested for extortion charges and turned pentito, fingering Carmine as responsible for directing the extortion incidents in that case. At that point, around 1983-84, Carmine Esposito fled Italy with his wife and kids and landed in Chicago. He initially worked at a body shop and ran a sausage factory in suburban Bellwood, and then opened up Bravissimo, a popular and acclaimed restaurant in the hot River North neighborhood, in 1986. Esposito's wife, Giuseppina La Ventura, co-ran the restuarant with him. Interestingly, the Italian paper "Repubblica" stated in 1987 that Giuseppina was herself related to some "prominent exponents of the Italian-American mafia", without going into further detail. As noted above, the holder of the liquor license at Bravissimo was Agostino Siciliano, a shady figure associated with horse racing in Chicago and himself apparently an immigrant from Bari (presumably, as both he and his wife have Italian given names and there are other Sicilianos in Chicago from Ceglie de Campo, Bari). It's also worth noting that, along with a number of 'Ndrangheta 'ndrini, the NCO was closely allied with the Nuova Grande Camorra Pugliese, the precursor to the Sacra Corona Unità, founded under the direct influence of Cutolo's NCO on Pugliesi criminals.

Although Esposito was living in Chicago under the assumed name of "John Michael Phelan" (lol), born in Milwaukee (friends at Bravissimo called him "Giovanni"), Italian authorities somehow caught wind of the fact that he was in Chicago; US federal authorities agreed that the charges and evidence against him in Italy - 12 murders and directing international narcotics and weapons trafficking, which had been brought in absentia -- warranted extradition to face trial. Esposito fought the extradition order through appeals, all the while running a sad sap storyline (I don't know why the Camorra has blamed all of this on me, etc.) for the local press.

I'm not sure exactly how Esposito's charges shook out once he was finally extradited back to Italy in 1991, after four years of legal battles in Chicago. I don't know if he was actually convicted or did any prison time. By the time he returned, however, Cutolo's NCO was defunct, its top leaders ravaged by murders at the hands of the NF (including Nuzzo and Casillo) and heavy LE action. Esposito's career in the Camorra wasn't over though, as he subsequently took up the helm of capo of the De Sena clan, a vicious local successor family of NCO affiliates in Acerra. In 2002, Carmine Esposito, De Sena capo, was murdered in Acerra, one of a number of killings during a bloody war between rival clans in the area of Acerra and Casalnuovo di Napoli.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

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PolackTony wrote: Fri Jul 15, 2022 8:35 pm
Patrickgold wrote: Fri Jul 15, 2022 6:14 pm :!:
PolackTony wrote: Fri Jul 15, 2022 11:23 am
cavita wrote: Thu Jul 14, 2022 5:13 pm The mention of the Rockford "Greenhorns" which were the recent Sicilian immigrants. Not only were they dominating the drug trade in Rockford but they had taken over gambling as well. This particular investigation stemmed from the 1991 bombing of an unsanctioned poker game. Also interesting is the mention of Rockford in gambling games in Itasca, Crystal Lake and Lake County as well as the Kenosha, Wisconsin area.
Thanks, man. I’ve seen the term “greenhorn” used in Chicago as well, in general reference to 2nd Wave Italian immigrants newly arrived in the city. I’ve also seen it used in the same fashion in Buffalo in the ‘70s. There was also the use of “the green ones” as a reference to the mafia in STL back in the prohibition era, which was derived from “greenhorn”, so that usage probably goes way back.

Interesting info on the card games. From the page you posted, the CI states that he attended these games with a redacted name, but doesn’t state who was operating them, so it’s unclear to me if these were just Rockford guys attending games run by Chicago (or possibly Milwaukee for the WI ones), or if Rockford had any role in operating these games. Any further info on it?

It mentions Gullotta running a game in the last paragraph and he was basically the boss of Rockford in the 90s I believe. It’s unclear if he was running all the games they are talking about but the way the report is written it makes it seem all those games are linked to Rockford. Interesting possible connection, I believe Marco D’Amico has been linked to Rockford in the past and it says that games were being run in Itasca where I know D’Amico had some ties to. I believe he had some type of connections to D’Marcos restaurant in Itasca.
Yeah, I hear you, I just don't see that the page provides enough info to conclude whether or not Rockford was specifically involved in operating the games in Crystal Lake, McHenry, or WI. Could be, but we need more info than what's there; hopefully, Cavita can shed more light on it. Also depends on who the CI was. From my reading, he could've just been a gambler from the Rockford area who knew some street gossip about the zips there and traveled around to play card games in the general region.

If Rockford was involved in operating some of those games, it would be very good to know. I agree that D'Amico would be a prime suspect for someone who may have been partnered with the Rockford guys if they were involved in games in the Chicago suburbs. D'Amico, I believe, may have been like a bridge between Elmwood Park, Taylor St/Cicero (who, as we know, had by then taken over rackets in McHenry County), Rockford, and the Italian OC guys in the area. I think D'Amico was closely connected to all of these networks.

The connection to DeMarco's could also be important. The owner of DeMarco Ristorante, Gennaro "Jerry" De Marco, is an immigrant from Altomonte, Cosenza, Calabria. Tons of Outfit guys over the years have had ancestry from Cosenza, of course, but there are a number of "2nd Wave" immigrants from Cosenza province who have been in Outfit circles in recent decades, such as the Grecos (the food wholesaler Grecos, like Eddie Greco) and the Rovitos. Kenosha (where some of these card games were held) has had a large concentration of Cosentini, and I believe that the Kenosha area also had a number of "2nd wave" migrants from Cosenza province (as elsewhere, later immigrants settled where their family/paesani settled in the prior wave of immigration) who opened restaurants and other businesses. If D'Amico had connections to DeMarco's and to Kenosha, that would make sense. Jerry DeMarco's social media network links him to Vito Salamone, Lappos (I mention several Lappos above, but one of them owned the infamous Cafe Cappucino), as well as Sicilian immigrants from Cinisi, Ficarazzi, and Bagheria. Always the same names and places popping up with these guys.

Unrelated, but in 2005, Jerry Demarco's kid, Gianluca, was arrested when a bottle full of gasoline ignited and then exploded in his locker at Roselle HS. Seems like the kid was trying to burn the school down or something, I dunno.
My belief is that the gambling in other areas outside of Rockford were done in partnership with the Outfit and any profits were shared. I do know that in the early to mid 1990s Rockford’s Jimmy Kasputis was arrested along with many, many others for gambling under the guise of charity casino nights which the feds were investigating. Kasputis owned Rockford Casino Players, Inc. which supplied gambling equipment for fundraising events. These operations and arrests in 1995 occurred in Rockford, Schaumburg and Des Plaines and one of the more notable arrests was Joseph Zeno, age 60 of Melrose Park. Now, within Rockford’s area from what I’ve seen in FBI files was that the Sicilian element in Rockford had not only taken over the narcotics trade but all the organized gambling as well.

Sebastian Gulotta, who was made in 1965, was promoted to Rockford LCN lieutenant, or capo, around 1981 and he was in charge of all Rockford’s gambling games and collections of gambling proceeds. This was typically the duties of the Rockford capo going back for years. Another 1993 FBI file stated that Gulotta “works for people that are higher up in the group than him.”

When boss Joe Zammuto died in 1990 it seemed the recent Sicilian immigrants got more aggressive. An April 1991 FBI file said “[REDACTED] stated prior to the death of Mr. JOE (whose last name [REDACTED] believed to be ZAMMUTO, after some possible suggestions by the interviewing agent) [REDACTED] said he was approached by SEBASTIAN “KNOBBY” GULOTTA. [REDACTED] stated that during the tenure of Mr. JOE, that the atmosphere within the “mob” was live and let live. However, about six to 12 months after Mr. JOE’s death [REDACTED] GULOTTA, who stated that he wanted a portion of the action [REDACTED] and that up until approximately August of 1990, GULOTTA was a nightly player. [REDACTED] GULOTTA told [DAVID HALL] that the “boys” wanted a piece of the action.”

All this falls in line with the Sicilian immigrants taking over aggressively after Joe Zammuto’s 1990 death and underboss Frank Buscemi’s 1987 death. Originally it was underboss Frank Buscemi who not only sponsored most of the Sicilians from the immigration wave in the early 1970s and again in the early 1980s but he directed them as well. What I knew at the time and what was indicated in FBI files was that after the death of Buscemi, Salvatore Galluzzo took over these responsibilities. Galluzzo worked closely with his brother Natale in this regard and they met often with Gulotta as to the gambling matters. The narcotics and distribution took place within the area pizzerias from Rochelle and Byron to the south on up to Beloit, Wisconsin to the north.

With Galluzzo confirmed as meeting with Sam Carlisi and Jimmy Marcello in 1989 it lends support that Rockford at least was working with the Outfit in partnership on various matters. And yes, the Rockford guys seemed to avoid any big indictments save the 2006 bust which only saw probation for all involved except Joe Saladino who was already in prison and he received an extra three months.
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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

Post by B. »

1967 info on Rockford member Phil Priola's involvement with Alfano's pizza. There's a clear reference to Pietro Alfano (moved to Oregon, Illinois) and it appears the FBI interviewed him, though I'm a bit confused over who owned which branches (Cavita could educate no doubt) but they all appear connected. Phil Priola was definitely an investor in the pizzeria.

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Re: The Mystery of Chicago's "Zips": Potential links to Italian OC?

Post by PolackTony »

B. wrote: Sat Jul 16, 2022 3:54 pm 1967 info on Rockford member Phil Priola's involvement with Alfano's pizza. There's a clear reference to Pietro Alfano (moved to Oregon, Illinois) and it appears the FBI interviewed him, though I'm a bit confused over who owned which branches (Cavita could educate no doubt) but they all appear connected. Phil Priola was definitely an investor in the pizzeria.

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Great info here. Note that the 1993 FBI IOC report stated that Alfano was known to have had ties to the Rockford family prior to all the Pizza Connection stuff, so this provides the detail to flesh that out. As I’ve written above, it really does seem that Alfano actually returned to IL after serving time in Italy, and died there. His family retains many ties to other Sicilians in Rockford and Chicago, so his ties there went deep. When thinking about the Pizza Connection stuff, people probably assume that guys like Alfano and the other Cinisesi were being “sent” by Badalementi to these little towns. But their ties were obviously much more organic and were tightly connected to larger Cinisesi immigrants communities in Chicago and Detroit. It’s both more nuanced and more interesting than these guys simply being deployed or something just for the Pizza Connection trafficking stuff. The Cinisi mafia already had an installed network in IL and MI, so they used that existing network to bring heroin into the US under the radar of LE that was focused on the major cities.
"Hey, hey, hey — this is America, baby! Survival of the fittest.”
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