Snakes wrote: ↑Wed Feb 26, 2025 4:08 pm
The
cause of death was asphyxiation so I think the beating was largely supplemental. The reason they looked so fucked up in the autopsy pics was because they were in the elements for several days in June.
This is true. I've looked at the reporting in June 1986 when the bodies were discovered and while they were noted to have had some bruising, these were also reported as having been superficial and not deep or penetrating. It is pretty clear that they were garotted, and it seems likely to me that any other physical force used against them was largely conducted in the course of subduing them for this purpose.
We can go back to Nick C's testimony here (and for anyone reading, I'd like to reiterate and emphasize that we had an actual LCN member who participated in the planning and execution of these murders testify on the stand about them, so we actually know a lot more here than we do for the vast majority of mob-related murders).
After Michael S entered the Bensenville residence, he greeted Nick, whom he knew. Nick then abruptly tackled him at the legs, while Eboli strangled Michael to death with a rope. I'm sure that during the course of the struggle, Michael incurred some contusions. Nick -- who doesn't exactly shy away from the gruesome details of his various crimes on the stand -- never said anything about guys beating or stomping Michael or anything of that nature. While he didn't see Tony get taken down, he also doesn't report any beating (let alone a group of guys beating him to death or whatever). He just says that all he heard was Tony ask for a prayer and then nothing else, which sounds consistent with Tony having been garotted as well.
It also bears emphasizing that from what we know of the murders, the actual method of dispatch was not out of line with many other Chicago murders, including a number that Nick hard participated in, where victims were forcibly tackled/restrained and garotted. Some of those were in fact bloodier, as the target had their throat slit after strangulation (the "Calabrese necktie").
The gathering of members was fully consistent with a mock induction ceremony and as I've already gone over, totally in line with the ceremony that Nick himself underwent. Further, the method of dispatch was not at all out of the ordinary for Chicago. If anyone thinks that all Chicago hits were a clean, silenced .22 to the back of the head "gangland style", well, c'mon lol. You had guys getting blown to pieces in the middle of a busy suburban expressway on-ramp, guys who were garotted, guys who had their throats slit, Aleman et al. blowing guys away in crowded restaurants with shotguns like they were in the OK Corral (they didn't get monikered "The Wild Bunch" for being precision surgical assassins). Nick C testified that every guy present at the mock ceremony wore gloves, while blood evidence (and I doubt any significant blood was let at the Bensenville residence anyway) was much less of an issue in the days before DNA forensics. And, again, the original hit team dispatched had initially planned to Schwarzenegger these two with an Uzi, but were unable to do this in Vegas so Plan B was floated to lure them into a trap back home (I would also stress that while flamboyant public hits happened back in the day in Chicagoland itself, it would have been much more difficult for Schweihs et al to have pulled off a brash public hit in Vegas, as they simply did not have the kind of pull with local LE and the court system in the same way. They tried for weeks to make it happen and it was too risky there).
I think that some of the coverage of these murders was sensationalized a bit by the media, while the fictionalized portrayal of the murders in the film "Casino" has probably further exaggerated the gruesome or exceptional nature of it. While LE was saying that the cause of death was asphyxiation and other wounds were minor, you had our old pal Bill Roemer (then retired from the FBI and heading the CCC) bellowing to reporters that the Spilotro brothers had been "tortured to death", which probably helped set the stage for this event being narrativized in the way that it came to be.