Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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JoelTurner wrote: Sat Jun 10, 2023 8:32 am
cavita wrote: Sat Jun 10, 2023 5:20 am
JoelTurner wrote: Fri Jun 09, 2023 10:51 pm Here’s some info on Tommy Abbott:

- Father was Natale Abbate born Nov 14 1870 in Altavilla Milicia to Gaetano Abbate and Anna Dolce

- Mother was Maria-Stella Gulotta born June 20 1884 in Santa Margherita di Belice to Saverio Gulotta and Maria Sciortino

Father’s obituary:

Image

Mother’s obituary:

Image


- Tommy Abbott was likely born as Gaetano Abbate, married to Irene Hagar

——————-

- His brother Sam lived in Rockford (1907-1984). Abbott was in Rockford shortly before disappearing.

- His sister Anna was married to Salvatore “Sam” Scafidi. He was born May 29 1891 in Altavilla Milicia to Michaelangelo Scafidi and Santa Romano

I wasn’t able to find anything linking these Scafidis with the ones married to Nicola Diana.
What years did his mother and father die?
Mother died in 1949 and father died in 1958
Thanks for the update. I had strongly suspected that Tommy Abbott’s parents were from Altavilla and Agrigento, and that Sam Scafidi was also Milicioto, but it’s good to have confirmation. We can finally settle the whole “who was Tommy Abbot?” question.

I also wasn’t able to connect Sam Scafidi to Nicola Diana’s wife Maria Scafidi, apart from them both being Milicioti. There were a number of other Scafidis from Altavilla in Chicago, so its possible that there may not have been any direct relation.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Looks like I'll have to research Sam Abbate and his connection to Rockford. Thank you for the information!
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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PolackTony wrote: Wed Jun 14, 2023 5:27 pm TJO was no joke, the stories I've heard about those guys are pretty nuts (like when Gary Kellas opened fire with an Uzi on a van full of undercover agents at the old Carson's Ribs on Ridge in the 80s lol). Those guys were supposedly involved in a lot of big drug and weapons trafficking, so it isn't surprising that they had some outfit ties. Also, their founder was Joe Ganci, who was half-Sicilian (I believe his mother was Turkish, but his father's family was from Monreale) and I believe related by marriage to the Buttittas.
I posted the above on another thread about Joe Ganci, a notorious gangbanger and prison gang leader who is credited with founding the Thorndale Jarvis Organization (TJO), a white street gang operating in the Far Northside neighborhoods of Edgewater and Rogers Park in the 1970s and 1980s that was rumored to have had outfit ties. Joe Ganci died of cancer in prison in 2001, having been convicted of the 1974 shotgun slaying and attempted slaying of two rival gang members on Devon Avenue. He was born Joseph John Ganci in 1947 in Chicago to John Ganci and Maria Muschi (born in Chicago to Assyrian parents who emigrated from what was then the Ottoman Empire). John Ganci was born in 1926 in Chicago to Giuseppe Ganci and Maria Palmeri, both of Monreale. John's sister Rosalia Ganci, born in 1922 in Chicago, married Dominic Buttitta, born in Chicago Francesco Buttitta and Luigia Semilia of Casteldaccia. Interestingly, Francesco Buttitta's 1923 naturalization was witnessed by Calogero Costanzo from neighboring Altavilla Milicia and brother of the Matteo "Martin" Costanzo who was an official in the Altavilla Society and a suspect in the 1915 murder of fellow peasan' and apparent mafioso Agostino Giovenco.
PolackTony wrote: Tue Jul 19, 2022 11:20 pm Two days after Agostino's body was discovered, the police arrested Martin Costanzo, "financial secretary of the Congregazione Maria Lauretana", as a suspect in the murder. This was the Società Maria SS Lauretana di Altavilla Milicia, which in those days held its annual Festa at San Filippo Benizi Parish in Little Sicily. It turned out that Giovanni Giovenco was the President of the Society. Costanzo told the cops that Giovanni had sent masked gunmen to force him to hand over funds collected to pay back debts from the prior year's Festa. As locals on Larrabee street had reported that they saw Costanzo arguing with Agostino Giovenco on the day that the latter disappeared, police instead suspected that Costanzo had been stealing funds from the Society and killed Agostino when confronted over it. The cops had nothing more to go on than this, however, and Costanzo was freed the next day by Judge William Dever (who in 8 years' time would be the famous "Reform Mayor" of Chicago). Martin Costanzo was born Matteo Costanza in 1893 in Altavilla; he died in Chicago in 1944.
Francesco Buttitta had a younger brother named Domenico who also settled in Chicago. Domenico married Francesca Cannata, also of Casteldaccia, in Chicago in 1909. while Francesco settled in the Near Northside Little Sicily community, Domenico and Francesca moved to the Westside, at Grand and Central Park Ave in Humboldt Park. Interestingly, Domenico's 1922 naturalization was witnessed by Corleonese mafioso Giuseppe Nicolosi (whose various escapades have been previously discussed in this thread).

One of Domenico and Francesca Buttita's kids was Jack Buttita Sr, born in 1918. Jack, who was a well-known car dealer for many years, wound up marrying Helen Pieprznik, born in Chicago to parents from Kraków, Poland. One of their kids was Dominic Buttita, born in 1943, the very same alleged outfit associate and suburban real estate bigshot who we all know for the 2012 case against him and his son Anthony Buttitta for tax evasion at Blackjack's strip club in Elgin, as well as running a large online sportsbook.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Following up on the above. From what I have, Dom Buttitta married Anne Marie Faruggia (an accomplished ballet dancer as a young woman, who performed at the Civic Opera of Chicago when she was 12 -- her husband Dom later went on to become a noted advocate for women in the performing arts, opening Blackjack's Gentleman Club in Elgin with their son Anthony Buttitta), who was born in 1944 in Chicago to Salvatore "Sam" Faruggia and Julia Settanni. Sam Faruggia was born in 1920 in Chicago to Francesco Farruggia (the double r being the original spelling), born about 1886 in Agrigento (either in Agrigento comune or Aragona) and Vincenza Anna Buonasera, of Cefalà Diana. Julia Settanni was born in Chicago in 1923 to Nicola Settanni of Triggiano, Bari (Triggiano is cited numerous times as a hometown in this thread) and a mother from Polish Galicja. Two of Julia's sisters also married DioGuardis from Cefalà Diana who may have been related to Sam Faruggia's mother.

Sam Farrugia was a longtime juice loan operator and jukebox company controller on the Westside who was found dead, repeatedly stabbed and with his throat cut, following his family having reported him as missing after leaving his home in River Forest in 1981. Per FBI investigators, Faruggia had been coming under heavy LE pressure in the period preceding his death over his suspected role in a number of gangland murders. Sam Faruggia first made the papers in 1941, when he was a suspect along with 4 other young Italian guys from Humboldt Park/West Town in the robbery and murder of a Jewish deli owner at Division and Leavitt. In the early 1960s, Sam Faruggia was reported as a person of interest in several gangland murders and a major figure in the Westside juice loan racket under Fifi Buccieri, a close associate of Chuckie English, and a partner in Recorded Music, a jukebox and record company. In 1967, Faruggia was called to testify along with Joe Gagliano at IL State hearings investigating mob control of the jukebox industry (both pled the 5th, of course).

In a report from 1982 in Ronnie Jarrett's file, the FBI discussed Sam Faruggia involvement in the conspiracy to murder Shirley Christine Mavigliano in Indianapolis in February of 1972 in conjunction with Richard Cain. The FBI developed several men, including Ted Virigilio and Gerald Shallows, along with two redacted names, as informants for the Mavigliano murder, who told them that Mavigliano had been shot to death by Cai nand Shallows on orders on behalf of Faruggia. Mavigliano was stated to have been a former girlfriend of Faruggia's who had a falling out with him and began threatening to go to law enforcement with information about murders that Faruggia had been involved in, leading to Faruggia issuing a "murder contract"on her which he gave to Cain. The development of this intel lead to aggressive FBI questioning and several confrontations with Faruggia in the two weeks leading up to his murder on May 11th 1981, and as of 1982 the FBI was actively pursuing further intel regarding the murders of both Mavigliano and Faruggia.

Now, the same report also makes the interesting claim that Sam Faruggia was an "oldtime Chicago LCN member". I have never seen Faruggia identified as an "LCN member" by the FBI, and the same file has Ronnie Jarrett as an "LCN associate". Faruggia was not carried on the 1968 or 1973 FBI Chicago member lists as a member, but as noted above, the report in Jarrett's file had some redacted informants, so it's possible that they had a member source who was able to ID Faruggia as a member, perhaps even after his death.

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Until his death in 1990, Sam's younger brother James "Jimmy Hot Dogs"Faruggia was the longtime owner of the famous Jimmy's Red Hots, a Humboldt Park landmark since 1954 (and a destination for me when I go back to Chicago), still located at Grand and Pulaski, a couple of blocks from where the Faruggias lived near Potomac and Ridgeway (at least until recently, Jimmy's was being run by Billy Randazzo, a first cousin of the Faruggia brothers). In 1946, Jimmy Randazzo was questioned by police when his buddy Frank Tallo, a bartender at a Rush St tavern, was shot and killed while driving Jimmy's car. Although the murder does not seem to have been mob related, as a disgruntled bar patron confessed to killing Tallo after a fight, Tallo was himself a connected guy. Frank Tallo was born in 1919 in Johnston City, IL, and was the younger brother of Mary Tallo, the wife of Jim DeGeorge. At the time of his death, Frank Tallo lived at Beach and Spaulding (better known in more recent decades as the worldwide "Mother Land" of the Almighty Latin King Nation), where DeGeorge had been living prior to relocating farther out on the NW side.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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There's that Johnston City, Illinois connection again.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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cavita wrote: Fri Jun 16, 2023 5:34 am There's that Johnston City, Illinois connection again.
Yes, the Downstate-Agrigento network again. The Tallos were from Alessandria della Rocca.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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As noted above, the FBI only seemed to have identified Sam Faruggia as a Chicago member following his death in 1981, based on redacted CI intel. In 1982, the FBI identified another Chicago member for the first time, this one a total sleeper with no apparent criminal record at age 74: Phil Ponto. It seems that the Feds had first gotten wind of Ponto being a connected guy in 1975, when CI Ralph Pierce told them that Ponto was the Chicago outfit's man in the Stardust Casino and had been a childhood friend of Gus Alex from back on 26th and Wentworth in Chinatown. Ponto was a senior executive at the Stardust for about 15 years, until he was let go in 1979, when the State of NV found him unsuitable to hold a casino license. The Feds continued to surveil Ponto, and in 1981 were able to document Ponto meeting with Stardust executive Robert "Bobby" Stella, who would hand packages to Ponto, who in turn would deliver them to Chicago-based Joseph Talerico (business agent for mobbed-up Teamsters Local 727). In January of 1982, the FBI revealed publically that this was the transfer of skim money from the Stardust to the Chicago outfit, per an affidavit filed in Federal court in Vegas. The affidavit also cited a then-unnamed informant source who identified Phil Ponto as a "made guy" in the Chicago Family. Ponto and Talerico were subsequently indicted and convicted on Federal contempt of court charges in 1984 after refusing to testify at a Vegas Grand Jury after being given immunity from self-incrimination. A document submitted to a Congressional hearing on appropriations for the DOJ references the 1984 indictments and notes that Ponto was a "Chicago LCN member". Subsequent FBI Chicago member lists in 1985 and 1993 identified Ponto as a member, whereas earlier lists in 1968 and 1973 did not.

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From later articles in the Las Vegas Review-Journal, it is clear that the FBI source who identified Phil Ponto as a made guy in 1982 was Jimmy Fratianno. In "The Last Mafioso", Ponto is mentioned several times (as "Phil Ponti" [sic]), with Ovid Demaris's text having Johnny Roselli referring to Ponto as a "sleeper", a "made guy from Chicago", and a "really sharp operator". Russell Dazzio, who worked at the Stardust with Ponto, Frank Rosenthal, and Al Sachs, described Ponto as having "the demeanor and personal appearance of a heart surgeon, which ironically he had aspired to be", underscoring Ponto's clean and professional character. I was unable to find any mention of him in the press in connection to any criminal activities until 1982.

Philip Emil Ponto was born in 1907 in Chicago to Emilio Ponto, a carpenter from Nicastro-Sambiase (today the city of Lamezia Terme), Catanzaro, the hometown of the Rubertos and Liparotas/LaPortes of Chicago Heights, and Maria Concetta Villella, of Simbario, Vibo Valentia, home of the Rotis, Bertuccis, and many others. Maria Concetta died when Phil was young and Emilio remarried Rosa Petruzzo, of San Vito sullo Iònio, Catanzaro, in 1911. In 1920, the Pontos lived at 24th St and Wentworth in Chinatown; the family of Vincenzo "James" Caruso of Termini Imerese, paternal uncle of Frank "Skid" Caruso, were neighbors living on the same block. By 1930, the Pontos had moved farther south to 56th and Shields in the Englewood neighborhood, which at the time had a significant Italian colony. In 1950, Phil Ponto was living at Hirsch and Lorel in the North Austin neighborhood on the far Westside with his wife Evelyn Gill and two daughters; Ponto was employed as the owner of a general contracting firm. Angelo Lonardo and Frattiano's book tell us that Chicago got its piece of the Stardust at a sitdown with the leadership of the Cleveland outfit in the early 1960s, where Cleveland sided with Chicago and ordered Moe Dalitz and Maurice Kleinmann to hand over a cut claimed by Chicago. This would coincide with Phil Ponto presumably arriving in Vegas around that time, given that he was let go as Stardust senior executive in 1979 and said to have been in that position for around 15 years. interestingly, at the time of his 1984 indictment for contempt, Phil Ponto was living in Fon Du Lac, WI, where he remained until he died in 1999. Fon du Lac was, of course, the HQ of Grande Cheese and home of Ponto's fellow amico, Grande owner Filippo Candela, until the latter's death in 1980.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Speaking of sleepers, prominent attorney and former Melrose Park mayor and head of the IANU (the "Unione Siciliana") Joseph Imburgio Bulger, first cousin of Charles Imburgia of the Pittsburgh outfit, was only ID'd as a Chicago member following his death in 1966.

One of the sources for Bulger's membership was an apparent member CI developed by Chicago FBI SA Merle Hamre in 1967, given the code CG 6968-CTE. While the identity of CG 6968 is still unknown, he continued informing into the 1970s and was a source for a number of Chicago member IDs in the FBI's 1968 and 1973 lists.

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Looking over a report in William Aloisio's file that cites CG 6968, I was reminded that he identified a "Sam Farino" as having been a member who died prior to 1967. I've been trying to figure out who this could be, and think that I may have hit on a good bet (unless someone has a better one that I've overlooked). In 1957, Salvatore "Sam" Farina, a longtime prominent resident of Melrose Park, died. In 1946, the Tribune had announced that Salvatore's 50th wedding anniversary with his wife, Rosaria DeMeto Farina, was to be celebrated with a service at Mt Carmel Church in Melrose Park and a party with 400 attendees at a hall in Forest Park. The Farinas were born around 1875 in Villalba, Caltanissetta, the hometown of Philly boss Angelo Bruno and of the famed boss of the Villalba family, Calogero Vizzini. They married in Villalba in 1894 and subsequently immigrated to the US, living first in Philadelphia for a number of years before decamping to Delancey, a coal mining village in Jefferson County, PA, near Punxsutawney, and then Pittsburgh. By around 1913, they were living in the Chicago area; in 1917, they lived at 1019 22nd Ave in Melrose Park.

Salvatore's brother Calogero Farina and his wife Maria Giuseppa Vasta, also from Villalba (the Farina brothers's mother was also a Vasta), settled nearby. Calogero's son Joseph "Joe West" Farina was a notorious stick-up man, who made the papers several times. In 1928, Joseph Farina and an accomplice broke out of jail after being pinched for the robbery of a bank in Villa Park. Joe was wounded in a shootout with police and thought to have been hiding out at the Melrose Park property of Sam Farina, who was being investigated for having assisted in the jailbreak. After doing 8 years in prison for the bank robbery, Joe Farina again made the papers in as the manager of a tavern housing illegal slot machines at 1610 W North Ave in MP. In 1942, Joe Farina was killed in a shootout with the owner of a Forest Park liquor store during an attempted hold-up; the papers noted that local police considered Farina a suspect in numerous robberies of taverns and stores in the area.

In 1963, 27-year-old Salvatore Joseph Farina was facing charges for the 1962 robbery of a bank in Downstate Champaign County when he was hit with Federal charges for allegedly traveling to Bellevue, IA, to extort a man there to raise funds to attempt to get Nick Guido out of prison. Guido, an outfit associate and leader of a notorious "torture robbery" gang who was also involved in narcotics, was incarcerated in Stateville at the time. Salvatore Joseph Farina was the grandson of Salvatore Farina, son of Salvatore's son Cataldo "Caddy" Farina and Antoinette Crisarà (family possibly from Campobello di Mazzara).

Apart from criminal activities in the family, Salvatore Farina caught my eye as a potential ID for "Sam Farino" given his close relationships with the Aiuppa family. Salvatore's 1925 naturalization was witnessed by Antonino Aiuppa, of Làscari, and his wife, Frances Abbate Aiuppa (born in Tunisia to parents from Licata and Villalba). Antonino Aiuppa was the paternal uncle of Joey Aiuppa. Salvatore's brother Calogero Farina's 1922 naturalization, in turn, was witnessed by Antonino Aiuppa and brother Salvatore Aiuppa, another of Joey O's uncles.

Was Salvatore Farina an old-time Chicago member who died in 1957 and ID'd by an FBI member source 10 years later? Or was it another guy?
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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Nothing to add, only that this investigation into "sleepers" who were identified by FBI sources as made members is phenomenal. It's the most fascinating aspect of Chicago, where so many names have been overshadowed by more infamous names
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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cavita wrote: Wed Jun 21, 2023 4:12 pm
PolackTony wrote: Wed Jun 21, 2023 11:32 am
cavita wrote: Wed Jun 21, 2023 9:46 am And it calls to mind Pietro Sanfilippo, born in Santa Flavia, who first appeared in Milwaukee, then Madison and then in Rockford where he was involved with the LCN there possibly being an early member. Sanfilippo was accused of murdering a man by the name of Tomasello, I believe, in Chicago but was found not guilty. The Wickersham Report stated he was a very active bootlegger in southern Wisconsin and that he may have even been related to Charles Sanfilippo of the Unione Siciliano in Chicago. After serving time in Leavenworth for bootlegging in the huge Rockford conspiracy case, Sanfilippo moved to California where he died in the 1950s. It would be interesting to know he was involved in the rackets there.
S S Fairfield (
Good call on Pietro SanFilippo, I agree that he’s a figure that deserves more scrutiny.

Do you have any more info on the Charles SanFilippo associated with Unione mentioned in this report? The first name that comes to mind for me is that Charles “Cutilla” SanFilippo who was Vincenzo Benevento’s FIL and also involved in Mike Genna’s murder in 1925. He was from Partanna, however, so I’m guessing that either the report was referring to a different guy or it was erroneously assumed that there was a relation due to the surname.
Additionally, Pietro was in Milwaukee by 1910 where he married Antonina Licari there. By 1913 they had moved to Madison, however. January 18, 1931 Joe Tomasello, noted as a minor gangster, was shot and killed and it was said Tomasello's son witnessed it but backed down on the witness stand when many of Sanfilippo's associates lined the courtroom and stared down the son.
Cross-posting this from the Milwaukee thread.

As Cavita notes, Pietro SanFilippo of Rockford/Santa Flavia was ID'd as the killer of Joe Tomasello in Chicago in 1931 by one of Tomasello's sons, who witnessed the shooting. SanFilippo, who was at that time also facing charges for a major Rockford bootlegging ring in Freeport, IL, along with Tony Musso and a couple of dozen other defendants, got off on the Tomasello murder when the Tomasello kid got cold feet and refused to identify SanFilippo in court.

Giuseppe Tomasello was born about 1879 in Roccapalumba, immigrating with his wife, Anna Mercurio, also from Roccapalumba, to Chicago, where they settled first in Little Sicily and then the Taylor St Patch. As reported in the Chicago Daily News, Tomasello, described as a "minor gangster" was shot and killed over a debt at 901 S California (at Arthington), immediately around the corner from the Tomasellos's apartment at 907 S Fairfield. I was unable to verify the 901 S California address, but 903 S California was listed (likely the same building; the entire block has been long since leveled). In 1930, a Pietro SanFilippo, born about 1877, was living at 903 S California with his wife Francesca. This guy died in Chicago in 1932, so he was not the Pietro SanFilippo from Santa Flavia/Rockford, though it seems like quite an odd coincidence that he happened to be living where the other SanFilippo allegedly murdered a guy. There were a ton of SanFilippos from all over in Chicago, so I'm not 100% sure, but I believe that this Pietro SanFilippo and his wife were from Burgio. This could be important, as later STL boss Pasquale Miceli, from Burgio, was living in Chicago and naturalized in 1929 listing his address as 903 S California (presumably, he was a Chicago member during this time). In 1930, one of the families occupying an apartment in 903 was that of "Alex Mitchell", born around 1872 in Italy. This was evidently Alessandro Miceli of Burgio, who had lived previously in Johnston City before relocating to Chicago, the same as Pasquale Miceli had done. We can presume that he was a relative of some sort, given that Pasquale appears to have been living with him during at least part of his time in Chicago.

Now, two doors down, at 907 S California, one of the apartments was occupied by Antonino Bullaro and his wife, Vita Greco, of Villafranca Sicula. Several of Antonino's relatives had lived downstate in Williamson County in the area around Johnston City/Herrin/Marion, including his brother Giuseppe Bullaro. Giuseppe was married to Lucia Miceli of Burgio, and one of their daughters was Martha Bullaro, born in 1908 in Herrin. Martha Bullaro was the wife of Chicago Heights-based member Nicola DiGiovanni, brother of likely capodecina Sam DiGiovanni.
cavita wrote: Wed Jun 21, 2023 4:12 pm All I know is they listed him as Charles I. Sanfilippo and they stated he was head of the Unione Siciliano in Chicago.
There were a ton of SanFilippos in Chicago, though I'm not aware of any having a leadership role in the Unione/IANU. Sources also conflated the "Unione" and the mafia frequently (and of course the tow organizations were linked), so that one source of confusion. Another is that they may have been describing someone that was head of one of the constituent lodges (many of which were pre-existing paesani societies) that formed the IANU. Benevento was described in the press as the head of the "Unione" though again, this could be referring to him having a laeadership position in the mafia, though some other accounts do make it seem that he led a paesani society, presumably one based on Partannesi or other Trapanesi. Given that his stepfather was Calogero "Charles" SanFilippo, who was a businessman and clearly connected to the mafia if not a member himself, he would seem to be the most likely candidate for the person this report was referring to, without any further info to go off of. I wasn;t able to find a Charles SanFilippo from Santa Flavia in Chicago either, so whoever they were referring to, he may not have actually been a relative of Pietro SanFilippo of Rockford.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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All of this fits in with Pasquale Miceli's circle in St. Louis. He was close to the LoPiparos from Villafranca Sicula and Tony LoPiparo was allegedly Miceli's underboss and successor. LoPiparo's stepfather was member Mariano Costa from Palazzo Adriano, same hometown as the Chicago DiGiovannis. Johnston City was a colony from both Burgio and Palazzo Adriano. Looks like his time in Chicago was no different.

In 1936 a "distant relative" of Pasquale Miceli named Leo Miceli was killed outside St. Louis and his father was identified as Alex Miceli of Chicago, but it seems to be an older Alessandro/Alex. Pasquale and his son Anthony identified Leo's body and I'm sure held his services at their funeral home. Pasquale's other son Philip named one of his own sons Leo, so it shows up in Pasquale's line as well. Alex's son Leo Miceli was born in Illinois in 1898 and buried in Chicago.

Pasquale Miceli was living in Chicago between 1919 and 1929, not sure the exact year he left, but he was in St. Louis by at least 1934.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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PolackTony wrote: Thu Nov 10, 2022 6:35 pm Joseph Enea was born in 1931 in Milwaukee to Milwaukee member Giacomo “Jack” Enea and Jennie Carbone. Jack Enea was born in 1908 in Chicago to Giuseppe Enea and Vita Carollo of Bagheria. Jennie Carbone was born in 1911 in Lima, OH. Her father was, I believe, Rosario “Ross Anthony” Carbone of Sant’Eufemia d’Aspromonte in Reggio Calabria, and an apparent “Black Hander” in Lima; her mother was Rosina Bastaldi, born in Cleveland to parents from Potenza province, Basilicata. Joseph Enea married Frances LoGalbo, younger half-sister of Milwaukee-Chicago member Frank LoGalbo. LoGalbo and Jack Enea had been allies of John DiTrapani (murdered in 1954) in attempting to oust boss John Alioto and take over the Milwaukee outfit; Jack Enea was murdered in 1955, while LoGalbo was able to transfer to Chicago for protection. Joseph Enea was sponsored for membership by Joseph Spero and died of a heart attack at 44 years of age in Milwaukee in 1976.
1965 report from Michele Mineo's file, where Maniaci claimed that Giuseppe Enea, father of Jack Enea, had been a Chicago member. Giuseppe Enea died in Milwaukee in 1943. The report doesn't state that Giuseppe Enea was subsequently a Milwaukee member; in "The Milwaukee Mafia", Gavin Schmitt notes in passing that both Giuseppe and his brother Michelangelo Enea were "members".

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Giuseppe Enea was born in 1866 in Bagheria and arrived in the US in 1903, bound for Chicago; given his age at the time, we can surmise that he was very likely a member in Bagheria before arriving in Chicago. Worth noting that a Giuseppe Aiello, also bound for Chicago, was on the same ship, along with a Domenico Sciortino, bound for McKeesport, PA (where Pizza Joe Aiello told the Feds he went after fleeing Chicago in 1932 and before relocating to Madison). The Eneas lived in Chicago at least as late as 1919, when youngest daughter Francesca Enea was born there (she later married Peter Cefalu, brother of Milwaukee member Sam Cefalu). By 1930, they were living in Madison, and by 1935, at the latest, Milwaukee.

Brother Michelangelo Enea was likely a Chicago member early on as well. He was born about 1871 and arrived from Bagheria in 1904, bound for Giuseppe, who was living on Oak St in Little Sicily. By 1919, he was living in South Bend, where he owned a grocery store, but by 1921 was in Milwaukee, where he died in 1941. Michelangelo's wife was Paola Debarnardo, also of Bagheria. One of their daughters, Mary Enea, born in 1912 in the Kensington neighborhood on the Far Southside of Chicago (and where Tony D'Andrea's brother was the local parish priest), later married Chicago-turned-Madison member Pizza Joe Aiello.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

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B. wrote: Tue Dec 27, 2022 9:53 pm Here's an interesting guy:

- Joseph Romano of Youngstown was described as the Sicilian facton's leader before surviving a 1960 shotgun attack then moved to Chicago. He spent time in Sharon PA after that where he associated with "members" previously involved with Sal Marino who by then was in San Jose.

- It looks like this is a Joseph Romano born in Altavilla Milicia in 1900 and living in Youngstown circa 1950 but died in Chicago in 1969. His wife was the sister of Angelo LaMantia of Chicago, who in turn was married to the sister of Milwaukee member Vito Aiello. The Aiellos' mother was the sister of Milwaukee boss Vito Guardalabene and their father Isidoro Aiello was a likely Milwaukee member.

Anyone familiar with Romano or seen other references to him? He appears to have been a Pittsburgh member but was obviously tied in with the Milwaukee and Chicago Families. He apparently spent the last 9 years of his life in Chicago.
JCB1977 wrote: Sun Feb 26, 2023 9:50 am Joseph "Stoneface" Romano was very close to Charles "Cadillac Charlie" Cavallaro in Youngstown. Back in the 1960's, there was a war between the Calabrian faction in Youngstown headed by Dominic Mallamo and Paul Romeo and the Sicilians and Neapolitans. Romano was shot in his front yard on June 4, 1960 which was about 2 years prior to the Cavallaro bombing death. By the time this happened, Sal Marino was already in California. Marino's key lieutenants in Sharon-Farrell PA were John Scardina and his brother, Philip, also very close to John LaRocca. They assumed control of Marino's rackets which at the time, was undr New Kensington and Kelly Mannarino. The daily take in the late 50's and early 60's from numbers was $2k per day where John Scardina delivered to Kelly Mannarino weekly on Sundays.
As discussed on the board before, in February of 1931, 30-year-old Frank Aiello of Milwaukee was killed by a blast from a sawed-off shotgun through a window of his home, while he sat and played cards with two of his Polish brothers-in-law. Though mistakenly identified by Chicago and Milwaukee papers as a nephew of Chicago's Joe Aiello, Frank was the son of Milwaukee member Isadoro Aiello, apparently of Santa Flavia, and Antonina Guardalabene, daughter of prior Milwaukee boss Vito Guardalabene, also of Santa Flavia. Frank's brother Vito Aiello was made into the Milwaukee Family as well. An investigation uncovered evidence that Frank Aiello was killed by Angelo LaMantia, the husband of Frank and Vito's sister Josephine Aiello and a notorious Chicago/Milwaukee/Racine mafioso from Altavilla Milicia (the motive was said to have stemmed from Frank arguing with LaMantia after the latter married Josephine at a justice of the peace, instead of a formal wedding officiated by a priest). In the 1960s, a Milwaukee CI told the FBI that LaMantia had ordered the killing of Frank Aiello and that the hit was carried out by Jack Enea, leading to bad blood between Vito Aiello and Enea that later came to a head when Enea was himself murdered in 1955, with one of the shooters reputed to have been John Aiello (a younger brother of Frank and Vito).

LaMantia, at that time known for having fled Chicago during the Capone-Aiello war and surfacing as a major player in the bootlegging racket in Racine, promptly went on the lam for the next several years, as law enforcement searched the US, Canada, and Europe for his whereabouts. In 1939, a man going by the name of "Joseph Rizzo" was identified by police in Philadelphia as Angelo LaMantia, and sent to Milwaukee to face charges for the murder of Frank Aiello. In 1940, a witness in Pittsburgh identified Angelo and his brother Pietro LaMantia as the shooters in the June 1931 murder of Morris Curran, a "yeast and sugar baron" during the bootlegging era in Pittsburgh. It would seem that after Frank Aiello's murder, LaMantia had fled to Pittsburgh, which is significant given that his brother-in-law Joe Romano was a longtime gangster based in Youngstown. Pittsburgh police issued a bench warrant for LaMantia, then being held in Milwaukee County jail, and the press reported that apart from his notoriety during the Capone-Aiello war in Chicago and the Frank Aiello murder, LaMantia and his brother were also suspects in a number of "mafia killings in Italy". That same year, immigration authorities began deportation proceedings against LaMantia in Milwaukee, to face trial in Italy for a 1921 murder that LaManatia had allegedly committed when he was 18 (he arrived in Chicago from Altavilla in 1922).

For whatever reason, the deportation proceedings evidently fell apart and LaMantia seems to have either not been charged, or not convicted, on the Aiello and Curran murders, as Angelo LaMantia was soon back living in Chicago with Josephine and their two sons, John and Isadore LaMantia. In 1944, he filed his petition for naturalization, stating that he had married Josephine in 1940 in Philadelphia and that he and his family lived at Huron and Racine in Chicago. Angelo's naturalization was witnessed by Salvatore Fricano, a Lakeview grocer from Altavilla, and Carlo Canale, born in Chicago to parents from Altavilla and Casteldaccia. Canale was a brother of Salvatore Canale, mentioned above in a recent post, a reputed affiliate of Joe Aiello shot to death in Little Sicily in 1928.

Thus, the infamous Angelo LaMantia was in Chicago during the height of the 1940s "Cheese War" between Benevento and Accardo, and living in the Grand Ave Patch no less. I think it is a very good bet that LaMantia was another "sleeper" Sicilian Chicago member, along the lines of guys like Joe Priola, Sam Aiello, "Little Joe Aiello", and Frank Mulea, who made few headlines and kept a low profile.

Angelo owned and operated the LaMantia Garment Factory, located at 230 S Franklin, though he seems to also have remained involved in illegal rackets. In 1944, Angelo LaMantia was nabbed alongside Joe Gagliano in a police raid on a gambling operation at Chicago Ave and Western said to be headed by Tony Capezio (this intersection was the location of Capezio's floral shop as well). This, coupled with his place of residence, could indicate that LaMantia was a member of the Elmwood Park crew. Also worth noting that Gaspare "Jasper" Trappani, who was also arrested in the 1944 gambling raid with LaMantia and Joe Gags, lived on the 1500 block of N Mohawk. Trappani, who died in 1951, was born in 1905 in Palermo and arrived in Chicago in 1929, where he married Rosa Muscia, born in Chicago to parents from Altavilla.

By 1950, the LaMantias were living on the 1500 block of N Mohawk (at Blackhawk) on the Near Northside, where Gaspare Trappani lived. Son Isadore LaMantia was an army corporal who served in combat during the Korean War and was wounded that year. Isadore, who was born in 1931 in Milwaukee, attended Wells HS along with Joey Lombardo and Johnny DiFronzo.

In 1965, Josephine Aiello LaMantia died in suburban Arlington Heights, where the LaMantias were living at that time. In 1977, Angelo's sister Angela LaMantia Romano, widow of Joe "Stoneface" Romano, died in Chicago. That same year, an immigration document was recorded for Angelo LaMantia in Sao Paolo, Brazil (it gave his parents' surname as Romano, which was the maiden name of his mother, Carmela Romano La Mantia). From my info, Angelo LaMantia died in 1985 in Altavilla Milicia. Sons John and Isadore LaMantia became highly successful real estate agents in the suburbs, running the Arlington Heights-based Lamantia Realty Co.

Assuming that LaMantia was a Chicago member, at least transferring back to Chicago after arriving there again in the early 1940s, his ties to Altavilla could be important. As I've underscored before, Altavilla is a comune with a long and intimate connection to Chicago, going back through over 130 years of chain migration and back-and-forth movement. Angelo LaMantia traveled several times between Chicago and Europe in the 1950s and '60s; presumably, he visited Altavilla during these trips. These connections become all the more salient in light of the fact that the Chicago Family was holding apparent Consiglio meetings in the 1970s in a restaurant owned by the Incandelas, a prominent family of restauranteurs in Altavilla (i.e., the "Last Supper" photo).
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

Post by B. »

PolackTony wrote: Sat Sep 24, 2022 5:25 pm
B. wrote: Sat Sep 24, 2022 4:19 pm Again a random name ends up opening a whole new door.

So just to break it down, correct me if I'm off given how confusing this web is:

- Sam "Dispenza" Siragusa Sr. was from Vallelunga and lived near Buffalo, where the local Family had strong Vallelunga members.
- Family moves to Chicago and Sam Sr. uses multiple aliases and they fake a death/divorce and remarriage.
- One of the aliases he uses is Dispenza, making his new name essentially Rosario "Sam" Dispenza like the early boss.
- Sam Jr. was involved in the wedding of likely Springfield member Vincent Salvo's kid, Salvo being from Castelvetrano and sharing the familial surname Tilotta with Tony Accardo.
- Sam Sr. was also close to Frank Zito, boss of Springfield.
- Giancana approached Sam Jr. earlier on to see if he was interested in politics, and Sam Jr. said he didn't want to hurt "our friends" if he did go into politics.
- Years later Sam Jr. meets directly with Cerone and Giancana where they again discuss Sam going into politics, with concern over him being traced to his father's true name.
- Sam Jr.'s family intermarries with the Corrados and Toccos of the Detroit Family elite.
- Sam Jr. also practiced law with Jackie Cerone Jr.

I agree they come across like possible sleeper members, at least the father. The son saying "our friends" a couple of times is clearly a reference to the organization but not as convincing as Costello's language on his tape as far as his own membership goes. Shows he was very much in tune with the Family though and his father definitely comes across like a possible member.
You got the gist of it, yes. Sam Syracuse's father Rosario Siragusa, who Anglicized his name to Russell Syracuse, seemingly disappeared from public records after 1930 until his death in Elmwood Park in 1991. He appears in later Obits for the family as "Sam R Dispenza". The family relocated to Chicago sometime around 1940, apparently, as Sam's older brother Robert Syracuse (presumably named after Rosario's dad Liborio Siragusa) was listed as living in Chicago by 1942. In 1950, the mother and kids were all using "Dispenza" as their surname, but father Rosario/Russell was not reported as living with them.

In 1962, Sam Syracuse states that it was Cerone ("jack") who had earlier asked him about holding some political office. Syracuse reiterates that he wouldn't be a good candidate to withstand public scrutiny (lots of attention mounting in this period of outfit control of local politics and industries), and feels that if he were put under the spotlight, it might lead to outcomes that could hurt "our friends". In itself, this isn't diagnostic of membership but suggests that Sam saw himself as part of their network.

Sam Syracuse was the personal lawyer for Accardo (and represented him in the case that famously kept JB out of prison) and the Cerone family. He was then the partner of Cerone Jr when the latter became a lawyer. In the 80s, Syracuse was a business partner of Cerone Sr, Solano, and Paolo Butera. In subsequent years, he was a very prominent part of the Italian social/cultural community in Chicago. And yes, 3 of his daughters married made guys from Detroit from elite lineages. Worth keeping in mind that Tony LaPiana is from Melrose park, where Sam Syracuse lived for many years. Second, Syracuse was clearly very close to Cerone and Accardo -- Cerone protege Johnny DiFronzo was in turn personally close to Jack Tocco.

Even as an "associate", Sam Syracuse was a "sleeper". He was linked to leaders of the Family, to the Springfield Family, and to Detroit. And until Scott B mentioned him to me, I only casually recognized his name as someone ostensibly totally "civilian".
I already discussed this with Tony off-board, but I discovered why Rosario "Russell Syracuse" Siragusa changed his name (multiple times) and lived in obscurity in Chicago:

- After living in Jamestown NY as a likely Buffalo member through most of the 1920s, he shows up in Ohio by 1929 where he was arrested in Columbus. He's then arrested in Detroit in 1931 followed by Toledo later that year. In the Toledo area he became a core associate of the Licavoli group for several years before being indicted in the 1933 murder of bootlegger Jack Kennedy. One of his closest associates was his paesan from Vallelunga, Serafino "Wop English" Sinatra (a likely relative of future Vallelunga boss Calogero Sinatra) who originally came from Buffalo. He was also close to John Mirabella (1928 Hotel Statler attendee) and the Licavoli-Moceri clan.

- While his associates like Yonnie Licavoli, Serafino Sinatra, and others received life sentences for the Jack Kennedy murder, Siragusa successfully escaped the law and for the remainder of his life was still wanted for the Kennedy murder. His son Sam Jr. makes reference to first changing their name in California during his taped conversation with Jackie Cerone and Sam Giancana but there is currently no way to confirm when/where they lived in CA. In 1943 the Jamestown PD sent word to Toledo letting them know they believed Siragusa was back in the area but he eventually shows up permanently as a Chicago resident under the name Sam Dispenza where his son Sam Syracuse Jr. became part of Jackie Cerone's inner circle and eventually the law partner of Jack Cerone Jr. It's very likely Rosario Siragusa was a "sleeper" member of Jackie Cerone's crew.

- What originally brought "Sam Dispenza" to my attention was a 1974 FBI report where he (Siragusa) was seen visiting Springfield where he was driving in the same car with local boss Frank Zito. He obviously remained well-connected to the Midwestern elite despite living in hiding.

- Siragusa's history in Toledo and Detroit also explains the intermarriage between his grandchildren and the Toccos and Corrados of Detroit. The Corrados in particular had a presence in Toledo so clearly this relationship goes back to Rosario Siragusa's association with Toledo/Detroit. Depending on how independent Toledo was, Siragusa was probably a Detroit member for a time after leaving Buffalo and later settling in Chicago.

- The presence of Siragusa and Sinatra in Ohio also brings to mind their Vallelunga compaesani Lorenzo and Vincenzo "Jimmy" Lupo, two cousins who joined the Cleveland Family in the 1920s. Lorenzo Lupo was a capodecina under Joe Lonardo before he was killed and was also a cousin of Joe DiCarlo who later moved to Youngstown in the 1940s. Lupo was also a successful boxing promoter and Serafino Sinatra had been a professional boxer so along with their heritage, mafia affiliation, and Buffalo connections I'm sure all of these guys knew one another.
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Re: Chicago Outfit Places of Origin

Post by PolackTony »

As you note, we have no confirmation when Sam Syracuse was in California. His sister Laura Syracuse was still living in Jamestown around 1939, while older brother Robert Syracuse seems to have already been in Chicago by the early 1940s. Rosario Siragusa was a fugitive from justice on a murder charge for almost 60 years, until he died in Elmwood Park in 1991. while his son was a prominent attorney and close personal associate of Jackie Cerone and Jack Cerone Jr for decades. Apparently the FBI never figured it out, but we did; another BHF exclusive lol.

Loretta Conti, Rosario Siragusa’s wife and Sam Syracuse’s mother, was born in Independence, LA, to parents from Vallelunga; I noted this in a prior post. Her older sister, Grazia Conti, was born in 1890 in Chicago, however. So the family presumably had connections to Chicago, which had a colony of immigrants from Vallelunga, already, possibly part of the context for what brought them to move there in the 1940s.

As a reminder from some of the posts in this thread in the last couple of days: it seems like a real possibility that both Angelo LaMantia and Rosario Siragusa were “sleeper” members in the Elmwood Park crew. Again, we have to keep in mind how little we still know about the formal organization in Chicago and its membership in the past.

One more thing to add. When Calogero Sinatra was headed to the US, a Philly bug captured that he was going to visit both Buffalo and Chicago. As B noted, Serafino Sinatra was born in Buffalo to parents from Vallelunga and was quite likely a relative of some sort of Calogero, as Vallelunga is not a large town and the Sinatra surname is not terribly common there. There were other Sinatras from Vallelunga in Buffalo as well, including men elected as officers in the 1920s of the Società Maria SS di Loreto, the Buffalo Vallelunghese paesani society. Given his origins in Vallelunga, association with Serafino Sinatra, and very likely mafia membership, I’d think that Rosario Siragusa would likely have met with Calogero Sinatra when the latter visited Chicago.
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