Snakes wrote: ↑Wed May 10, 2023 8:07 am
Based on the information I have, I feel like the following is a good summation of the Ferriola/Infelise (Cicero) crew from the late 80s to the early 2000s:
-By at least 1988, Ferriola was described as being "very ill" and "near death" by some informants and Rocky Infelise had effectively taken over the day-to-day operations of the crew
-Gerald Scarpelli was arrested by the FBI in July 1989 (he had just been "made" the previous month) and agreed to cooperate with the federal government, who planned to use him in their ongoing case against the Ferriola crew. Scarpelli later recanted his statement and committed suicide in May 1989 at the Chicago MCC.
-A highly lucrative sports betting operation run by Dominic Cortina and reporting to Ferriola is busted by the FBI. Cortina, Donald Angelini, and Joe Spadavecchio all plead guilty and receive prison sentences.
-Infelise, Sal DeLaurentis, Louis Marino, Robert Bellavia, Robert Salerno, and several other crew members are indicted for racketeering in February 1990. Infelise is held without bond. While in prison, Infelise is regularly visited by Michael Spano, who is apparently relaying instructions to the street on behalf of Infelise, effectively acting as capo of the crew for the time being. Infelise also assigns an unnamed member of the crew to "take care" of James Inendino who had recently been released from prison.
-Due to the indictments mentioned above, the Ferriola/Infelise crew is described by informants as being in "total disarray" in the early part of the decade. In August 1993, Rocky Infelise is given 63 years in prison and is transferred out of Oxford FCI soon after his sentencing. John Monteleone now takes over the Ferriola crew as he is described as the only "old-timer" and senior member left on the street. Monteleone also takes over the Chinatown crew upon James LaPietra's death in September of that same year. According to Frank Calabrese Sr., Monteleone also becomes underboss of the Outfit at this time.
-According to informants, Monteleone becomes boss of the Outfit in 1997. It has been understood that Michael Spano ran the crew from this time until his imprisonment in 2002, although James DiForti has been described as Monteleone's "chief lieutenant" in Cicero and could possibly also have ran this crew. Additionally, Frank Calabrese Jr. (possibly via Frank Sr.) told the FBI that Michael Sarno "took DiForti's spot" in the Outfit upon the latter's death in 2000. "Spot" would seem to indicate a position, but also could have been an area of responsibility (or even an indication of Sarno being "made"). DiForti is also listed as the "capo" of Cicero in a 2000 Chicago Police Department report. It could be that once Monteleone took over as boss, he wanted one of "his guys" in as capo, so he may have installed DiForti in that role. At any rate, by 2002, DiForti is dead and Spano in prison.
-Sometime between 2001 and 2003, the Cicero and Melrose Park crews may have been combined. Federal court documents state that Sarno "took over" the Cicero crew from Anthony Zizzo upon Zizzo's disappearance in 2006 (allegedly at the hands of Sarno). This would seem to indicate that if the prevailing idea that James Marcello was boss of the Outfit after Monteleone died in 2001 is accurate, that he may have combined the crews and placed Zizzo in charge of both (Zizzo was released from prison in 2001). Sarno, possibly taking advantage of Marcello's indictment in 2005, could have used this opportunity to eliminate Zizzo and take over the crew (and possibly the entire Outfit).
-By the mid-2000s, Sarno, Sal Cataudella, James Inendino, and Salvatore DeLaurentis were all out of prison and understood to be involved in leadership of the crew and the Outfit as a whole. As three of the four individuals are still alive, with the fourth -- Inendino -- only recently dying, there is little available concerning the specific roles of the crew and these individuals at this time.