Showing posts with label criminals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label criminals. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

The Canadian Mafia Boss -- Vito Rizzuto -- Back On Top

Vito Rizzuto is once again considered the Don of Montreal, 13 months after he was released from a U.S. prison.

 After spending six years in Prison and having many people doubt that he would every be a force in the Canadian underworld again - police investigation specialist Richard Dupuis says thanks Rizzuto's associates standing by his side the whole six years he is now back on top.

"The Sicilians who were part of his family did not leave the underworld, but we can say they did stay out of trouble during Rizzuto's incarceration," and goes on to say, "this is not the case anymore."

Since Rizzuto's arrest in 2004, his lifestyle looks to prove he has gained much of his underworld influences back and he is once again enjoying the power of being a mob boss.

Upon his release, Rizzuto was mostly laying low and bought a $100,000 armored car after his return to Montreal from the Colorado prison system in 2012.

But now he is back in the public eye, showing no fear for his safety and largely receiving the respect that a feared and powerful Don would receive.

Montreal's La Presse newspaper reports that Rizzuto was seen many different times in Canada's Little Italy, smiling and laughing - shaking hands with old friends. He has also been seen playing golf in the early morning, again with little to no security.

In 2010, Rizzuto's father was murdered by a sniper (alleged) by his enemies, shortly after on the morning of  his funeral a box was placed on the steps of the church where the services were held - no word what was in it. The box was said to be sent from Woodbridge, Ont., this is where his alleged family (Calabrian) rivals are based.

But, so far there is no more evidence that the power that Rizzuto or his family (Calabrian) has is being contested by anyone from Ont. or anywhere else in Canada - leaving most authorities to believe his power now reaches to and beyond Ont.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Hollywood/Criminal: Sometimes We Forget What The Difference Between The Two Are




It's easy to confuse fiction with reality. Drug dealing are glorified in rap and hip hop music/videos and  being a mobster is portrayed in the movies as better then being the President.

Who would want to be a president opposed to a gangster? 
A president has to spend years in college and then more years working his way up the cooperate leader, kissing asses, smiling for the camera, doing for the people etc.
 What about the perfect family; the wife and kids, protecting your infidelity with your your life, or bye-bye perfect image.
 Of course that perfect image also comes along with: getting up early in the morning, off to bed at a reasonable time, boring formal dinners and parties, constant authority presence, not to mention you actually have to do work from day-to-day. 


Let's not forget one more big down fall to this prestigious job,  your income sucks. Most drug dealers and or high ranking organized crime figures make much more money than a president or someone close to that type of job. 




So let's say your not into going to school, your not one of the 1% of athletes that make it to a professional status, your not an actor or a musician and going to work every day does not really peak your interest, what do you do?

 Why not become a Gangster? 

Party all night, wake up when you want, considering your boss lives the same lifestyle, not much to worry about, like a morning meeting; and your definitely not waking up to go and punch the clock. Womanizing is a must, or you would probably be considered gay, which might just lead to your demise. Drinking and drug use, for the most part is excepted, party at your will, no media to hide from or smile for. 
If you have problems with someone, it can be taking care of with street justice, swift and to the point. If you have problems with the law, if everyone follows the street code, you won't have problems with the law; a license to steal, kill, rape, rob, etc. 

 

The obvious gangster lure is: The Lifestyle
The rules that the general public follow don't apply
If your a true Gangster you're a 1%er

But in the end, is the lifestyle of a gangster worth it? You can always watch the famous gangster flicks and find out for yourself. For the most part you end up leading yourself to an early grave or in a prison cell for the rest of your life.



Do with that as you will. Very few people like Tony Accardo can spend a full life as a gangster and die of old age as a free man. Especially if your crimes are committed in or against the U.S.

So if you want to take this risk, how do you get started? Get Connected!

Just Remember
 Most mobsters, drug dealers, organized crime figures etc. die broke, prematurely, and looney.




Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Tony Accardo: 50 Years plus - A True Mafia Don

Born Antonino Leonardo Accardo on April 26, 1906, in Chicago, Illinois, to a shoemaker and his wife. Accardo dropped out of grade school and quickly adapted himself to a life a thug and a criminal. Accardo rose through the ranks as a worker for Al Capone who allegedly played a part in the Valentine's Day Massacre. Prosecuted many times by the government, Accardo, unlike many high-profile mobster, would deny any ties to the mob and avoid all jail completely, completing his life as a free man and dying of natural causes.



In Tony's Early Days

Mr. Accardo grew up in an Italian neighborhood on the West Side of Chicago, the second of six children born to Francesco Accardo, an immigrant shoemaker, and his wife, Maria, both of whom emigrated from Sicily, Italy, during the late 1890s.
At the age of five, Tony began grade school at the James Otis Elementary School, not far from where he lived. But by 1920, when Accardo was 14 years old, school no longer held any fascination for the young boy. His parents, Francesco and Maria, were not impressed with his progress, either. As was a common practice at the time, Accardo's family filed a delayed birth record affidavit stating that Tony was born in 1904, which made him the legal age to drop out of school and begin work. His first job was as a delivery boy for a florist, and he later worked as a grocery clerk. By most account, those two jobs probably constituted his only legitimate employment.

After two years of working, on March 22nd, 1922, Tony was arrested for a motor vehicle violation. This started what would be the first of a long list of criminal activity for Accardo. In 1923, Accardo was fined $200 for disorderly conduct at a local pool hall where prominent mob figures were known to hang out. He was then convicted of disorderly conduct two more times in the next year. It was then that his violent antics caught the eye of notorious mobster Al Capone.

 

Getting Connected With Al Capone

At this age in his life, Accardo got involed with the Circus Cafe Gang, named after the group's local hang out, The Circus Cafe. Other members of the gang included Claude Maddox, "Tough Tony" Capezio and Vincenzo De Mora, later known as "Machine Gun" Jack McGurn. This group of thugs would eventually become hooked with Al Capone and the Chicago syndicate.

While still a young man before before his twenty even, Tony used his legitimate job as a truck driver and delivery boy to tote illegal moonshine for Capone from family-run stills in Little Sicily to speakeasies around Chicago. With his foot in the criminal door, Accardo progressed to mugging people, pick pocketing, burglary, steeling cars, armed robbery and assault. In the next several years, Accardo was in trouble with the authorities more than eight times,yet avoiding jail time on every account.

Tony's best friend and fellow Circus Gang member, Vincenzo DeMora, was soon promoted to Capone's syndicate, where he was employed as a hitman. As Capone's syndicate grew, he enlisted yet more soldiers, and turned to McGurn for new recruits. McGurn suggested Tony Accardo who, through his smart thinking and pride in his work and his gang, soon earned a place in the Capone gang as a bodyguard for Capone.


After taking a step up to Capone's group, Accardo was implicated in the 1929 St. Valentine's Day massacre. On February 14 of that year, Accardo and four other member disguised themselves as policemen. Then, they allegedly raided the SMC Cartage Company garage on North Clark Street, killing six of seven rival gang members inside. The seventh died later in hospital. Although law enforcement officials could never tie Accardo to the murders, he was seen in the lobby of Capone's headquarters with a machine gun.

 

Making It to Boss

Accardo was no stranger to violence being involved in other violent murders, including the brutal killing of two traitors to the Outfit that he beat to death with a baseball bat and then stuffed them in a trunk, earning him the nickname "Joe Batters." He was also part of a hit on a former associate of Capone's named Frankie Yale, Yale was gunned down in Brooklyn, New York, by machine-gun fire.

After Capone was jailed for income tax evasion in 1931, Accardo was reputedly put in charge of his own gang, which helped control the Capone family's gambling operations in Florida and Chicago. That same year, Accardo made No.7 on the crime commission's Public Enemy list.

In 1943, Accardo's other close friend, Paul "the Waiter" Ricca, allegedly assumed control of the entire Capone crime family, and appointed Accardo as underboss. Watching other bosses go to jail over racketeering and extortion, Accardo encouraged Ricca to pull the organization away from these methods of income. Instead, he moved the outfit into slot and vending machines, counterfeit cigarettes, illegal wire services, and global narcotics smuggling. When Las Vegas expanded, Accardo made sure the casinos used only his slot machines and that bookmakers used his wire service to supply racing information to other bookies. His business decisions made the Chicago Syndicate millions in profits.

Accardo allegedly took over as mob chief when Ricca retired in 1968, but he would always deny it, saying that he was never involved with the mob. Federal wiretaps and other sources of intelligence, however, revealed that Accardo was deeply tied to the Chicago Syndicate.




Retirement and Death

After Accardo's retirement, IRS agents began to probe deeply into his lavish income and its potential sources. He was indicted in 1960 of tax evasion, and was subsequently convicted, sentenced to six years in prison, and fined $15,000. The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago later overturned the conviction, however, citing prejudicial media publicity that occurred during Accardo's trial.

Accardo was also a three-time target of the U.S. Senate's permanent subcommittee on investigations into the mob, but the boss invoked the Fifth Amendment guarantee more than 172 times, preventing self-incrimination. At his last appearance before the committee in 1984, he denied any role in the Chicago mob. "I have no control over anybody," Accardo testified. He did acknowledge his friendships with a number of high-profile organized-crime figures in Chicago, but said he had "never been a boss."

Before his death, Accardo divided his time between Palm Springs and an estate in the Chicago suburb of Barrington. He died May 27, 1992, of heart and lung disease, making him one of only a few mobsters who died of natural causes. Accardo was entombed in the mausoleum at Queen of Heaven Cemetery in the suburb of Hillside in Chicago, Illinois.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

K. Kilpatrick, Ferguson and B. Kilpatrick: Detroit's Politicians/Criminals

 To prison they go.

No Bond.

Just a bunch of people happy to see them go
get the news here 
Bobby Ferguson - convicted on 9 of 11 charges
Kwame Kilpatrick - convicted on 24 0f 30 charges



Bernard Kilpatrick - convicted of 1 account Tax fraud 
Their prison terms are yet to be determine, but for Kwame and Bobby chances are they are not going to get just a slap on the wrist. 
Kwame's father, Bernard, may get lucky and avoid jail time. 





Friday, February 22, 2013

Four Successful Bosses of the Underworld

Here are four mobsters you may of never heard of, but that's probably because that's the way they wanted it. Strong and quiet bosses run strong and quiet criminal organizations.


Semion Mogilevich

One of the FBI's 10 most wanted fugitives, Semion Mogilevich cuts a frightening figure. Called the "Brainy Don" (he has an economics degree), the Ukrainian-born mobster's gang has a multinational reach, with his hands allegedly in everything from a Pennsylvania-based company that defrauded investors of $150 million to the East European gas trade. His other reputed crimes include murders, arms dealing and drug trafficking. Mogilevich was arrested in Moscow in 2008 for tax evasion, but, brainy and crafty as he is, was released the following year.








Hisayuki Machii

 The Korean-born mobster got his start in the Japanese underworld after settling in Tokyo following World War II. Hisayuki Machii became a regular fixture in the black market and made his name in everything from tourism and prostitution to oil importing. He founded the Tosei-kai gang, which reached its height in the 1960s. The organization allowed Machii to become an essential fixer between Japan and South Korea. His exploits eventually made it possible for him to acquire a ferry service that connected Japan and South Korea along the shortest distance between the two countries. The gang was later disbanded, but Machii followed that up by forming two front organizations, Toa Yuai Jigyo Kumiai and Toa Sogo Kigyo. Machii retired in the 1980s, virtually unscathed by the law, and died in 2002.








Salvatore Riina

"Gentleman, you are making a big mistake," is what Sicilian mobster Salvatore Riina told police when he was apprehended in January 1993 for his dark deeds over more than 20 years as a fugitive and operative in the Sicilian Mafia. He was wanted for his connection to more than 100 killings perpetrated during his climb to the top of the organized-crime gang. Riina, also known as "Toto," was said to have started his career as a hit man. He went into hiding in 1969 after being acquitted of triple homicide. But that didn't stop him from allegedly orchestrating the bloody Mafia wars in 1980s Sicily, which claimed dozens of lives and sealed his post at the top of the organization. In October 1993, despite his attempt to claim a case of mistaken identity, Riina was sentenced to life in prison, the harshest punishment allowed in Italy.

 

 

Dawood Ibrahim

  Mustachioed and portly, it's hard to imagine that Dawood Ibrahim is one of the most dangerous people in the world. Long heralded as the don of the Mumbai underworld, the shadowy Ibrahim went from being a classic extortionist huckster and gold smuggler in the Indian seaside metropolis to a man now implicated in a ring of global terrorist networks that include ties to al-Qaeda. Ibrahim is suspected as a potential suspect in masterminding a 1993 terror attack in Mumbai, which killed hundreds, and may have had a hand in the 2008 attacks on a number of prominent, ritzy Mumbai hotels. What adds to his mystique is that his whereabouts remain unknown — Indian intelligence officials suspect he is in Pakistan, possibly in the port city of Karachi, but the Pakistanis reject those claims. Some estimates of his wealth number into billions of dollars, tracing him to assets and properties from Malaysia to East Africa. In 2008, Forbes ranked him among the top 10 most wanted fugitives; the following year, Ibrahim made the magazine's list of the world's most powerful people.