matteogalante38 wrote: ↑Thu May 21, 2020 11:27 am
RE: Sam Lima and the Inspector Oldfield & Black Hand Society book, a few excerpts I'd like to dig a little more into...
In 1918, Sam Lima was paroled into the custody of his cousin, Antonio Lima, in Portland (OR)...Salvatore and his family remained in Portland for a decade until his very enterprising nephew, Anthony J. Lima, invited Sam to come to San Francisco. Anthony, who was only twenty-three at the time, was quickly rising up the ranks in the Lanza family, San Francisco’s main organized crime syndicate. Sam jumped at the chance to help his nephew infiltrate the longshoremen on Fisherman’s Warf, strong-arm protection money from various labor unions, and bribe the political establishment in the city.
In 1937, Anthony became the boss of the San Francisco Mafia following the death of founder Francesco Lanza. Nephew and uncle lived large and worked extremely hard building an empire, small by New York standards, but just as brutal and just as calculating. Anthony ran the crime family for approximately sixteen years with his uncle, Sam Lima, by his side. In 1953, when Anthony was tried and convicted of federal tax evasion, he owned car dealerships and several import operations. With his nephew in San Quentin, Sam Lima strengthened his grip on the unions and became a big-time donor to the corrupt San Francisco political machine...Sam Lima died on January 9, 1965. Eighty-seven cars snaked through San Francisco’s narrow streets in the funeral procession, one for every year of his life.
Questions about the bolded sentences:
- What was Sam Lima doing in Portland, OR from 1918 until (1928)? Any documentation on his time there?
- The authors claim that Tony Lima invited his uncle, Sam, to come to San Francisco. According to FBI files, it sounds like Tony Lima's uncle (Sam) and father (Frank) advised Tony to leave Johnstown, Pennsylvania in 1929, following the murder of George Cupp, where Lima was a suspect. So, how was Tony Lima already in SF and "moving up the ranks" if he was still in PA? Am I missing something?
- In 1953, Tony Lima was convicted of grand theft (grape fraud; fixing weight scales). I'm not aware of the tax evasion. Did I miss something else here?
- Is there any evidence, anywhere, that Tony Lima (and/or Sam and/or any other Bay Area mob figure) "infiltrated the longshoremen on Fisherman’s Wharf" and "strong-armed protection money from various labor unions" (at least pre-70s) in the Bay Area? I'm having a tough time finding proof of this...
1. I confirmed through the 1920 Census that he was in San Francisco, District 27, 1707 Taraval Ave with wife Mary and daughter Nancy
2. On 12-14-1928, he was acquitted of the Cupp Murder in Johnstown, PA. In June of 1929, Tony Lima drove 3000 miles from Pennsylvania to California and was stopped by Lodi Police for speeding claiming to be on a grape buying trip. In September of 1930, he is then charged with "Involuntary manslaughter" for the Cupp murder as well as indicted for using counterfeit revenue stamps for whiskey in Erie, PA. He was acquitted in May of 1931 of the involuntary manslaughter charge and the stamp charges.
3. In May of 1955 while serving time at Folsom, the IRS filed a tax lien for over $60k for not reporting taxes in 1944, 1945 & 1946. See article below. Confirmed.
4. Cannot confirm as of yet.
***It appears that Tony Lima traveled quite extensively back and forth between Johnstown, PA and Lodi, CA. In November 1948 when he was wanted for the DeJohn Murder, he surrendered in Johnstown, PA with the attorney he had used in previous Pennsylvania cases.
"I figure I’m gonna have to do about 6000 years before I get accepted into heaven. And 6000 years is nothing in eternity terms. I can do that standing on my head. It’s like a couple of days here."
-Pauly Walnuts, RIP