The Mafia Encyclopedia (48 page)

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Authors: Carl Sifakis

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Page 128
Drucci, Vincent "Schemer" (18951927): Chicago gang leader
The story may well be apocryphal except that Vincent "Schemer" Drucci was involved. It concerned the time the Schemer almost got Al Capone. He cornered him alone in a Turkish bath and almost strangled the notorious gangster to death before Capone's bodyguards showed up. The Schemer ran awaystark nakedjumped in his car, and drove off.
Al Capone considered Vincent "Schemer" Drucci his toughest rival. The Schemer was capable of almost anything, no matter how insane, and Capone often referred to him as "the bedbug."
Drucci, one of the chief lieutenants in Dion O'Banion's North Side mob during the 1920s, was virtually the only Italian gangster in the predominantly Irish gang and certainly the only one O'Banion ever felt at ease with. Drucci took control of the gang after O'Banion and his successor, Hymie Weiss, were assassinated by the Capone forces.
The underworld tagged him "Schemer" because of his bizarre and totally off-the-wall plots for robbing banks and kidnapping millionaires. He was the object of several murder attempts by Capone gangsters and others, but he survived all underworld onslaughts. While trading shots in a gun battle with Capone gangsters, he roared with laughter and danced a jig to avoid the bullets pockmarking the pavement around him. When the ambushers gave up and drove off as the police arrived, Drucci was not about to stop the fight. Despite a slight leg wound, he tried to commandeer a passing automobile, hopping on the running board. He stuck his gun at the driver's head and shouted, "Follow that goddamn car." Police had to wrestle him off the auto.
When Drucci took over the O'Banion Gang, Capone beefed up his personal protectionthe Schemer was capable of the wildest plot to get at him. When Capone was in a building, his machine gunners were stationed in the hallways. When he slept, his most trusted bodyguard slept on a cot placed flush with Capone's bedroom door.
Drucci tried several times to get Capone and is known to have once tracked him to Hot Springs, Arkansas, in hopes of getting him. Frustrated when all his schemes went awry, Drucci decided on some monstrous second-best strategy. He had his boys kidnap Theodore "the Greek" Anton, who owned a popular restaurant over Capone's headquarters at the Hawthorne Smoke Shop. Capone had a genuinely warm regard for the Greek, who, in turn, idolized Capone for his tenderheartedness, such as buying all a newsboy's papers for a large denomination greenback and sending him home. Capone was dining in the restaurant when lurking O'Banionites grabbed Anton, and Capone immediately realized the inevitable consequences. Big Al remained in a booth the entire evening crying inconsolably. Anton's tortured and bullet-riddled corpse was later found in quicklime. Raging, Capone swore he would kill Drucci, but it so happened that the next several moves were all made by the Schemeragainst Capone and his men.
The Capones never, in fact, got Drucci. The dutyand what many Chicagoans called the honorwent to a police detective named Dan Healy, long noted for being rough on big gangsters. Whether he was too rough with Drucci was a matter of considerable speculation. In April 1927 Drucci was arrested while perpetrating some election violence against reformers trying to supplant the William Hale Thompson machine. The unarmed Drucci was put in a police squad car. In some accounts Drucci became violent, but this has been disputed. The fact is that he was in a police car surrounded by armed officers when suddenly, in broad daylight, at the corner of Wacker Drive and Clark Street" for no reason that anyone could ever adduce," one journalist put itHealy simply turned his revolver on him and pumped four bullets into him. The O'Banionites wanted Healy brought up on murder charges. "Murder?" asked Chief of Detectives William Schoemaker. "We're having a medal struck for Healy."
The North Side O'Banions did Drucci up fine at his funeral. There was a $10,000 casket of aluminum and silver, and the body lay in state for a day and a night at the undertaking establishment of John A. Sbarbaro, who moonlighted as an assistant state's attorney. There were so many flowers that the walls in the place were not visible. The chief floral design was a throne of purple and white blooms with the inscription, "Our Pal." Drucci's blonde widow said proudly after the burial, "A cop bumped him off like a dog, but we gave him a king's funeral."
(A postscript must be added about Dan Healy. When he killed Drucci, the Schemer was in deep disfavor with the Capone Gang. After Healy retired from the police force he turned up as chief of police of Stone Park. Stone Park was a West Side suburb noted for investment by syndicate gangsters in cocktail lounges, motels and Vegas-type gambling setups.)
See also:
Standard Oil Building, Battles of the
.
Duke's Restaurant: Mob headquarters
Some newsmen called it the Mafia White House, but it was more the mob's Cabinet Headquarters. The address was 73 Palisades Avenue, Cliffside Park, New Jersey. The name of the place was Duke's Restaurant and it was, in the 1940s and 1950s, the meeting place and safe sanctuary for the leaders of the national crime syndicate. Presiding over Duke's which was situated directly across the street from the Palisades Amusement Park,
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was Joey Adonis, one of the leading mafiosi not only in New York and New Jersey, but also across the country.
Duke's appeared to be little different from thousands of other Italian restaurants, with a long bar and booths and serving typically tasty meals. However, at the rear of the public dining area there was an "ice box door," nearly indestructible and totally soundproof, that led to a large hidden roomoften called the control roomfrom which the Mafia and much of organized crime planned and directed their operations.
Here on various days Adonis or Albert Anastasia marshaled their criminal activity, collecting the proceeds from various rackets, handling "table matters"trials of syndicate mobsters for various alleged offensesand deciding on hits. But on Tuesday, the most important day of the week, the top leaders of American crime converged on Duke's for their cabinet meetings. Generally these leaders were the so-called Big Six, the men who dominated the national commission. Winging in from the Midwest were Tony Accardo and Greasy Thumb Guzik, the representatives of the Chicago Outfit; Adonis; Frank Costello, running matters for the imprisoned and later deported Lucky Luciano; Meyer Lansky, who came from almost anywhere since he handled mob activities from Saratoga, New York, to Florida, the Caribbean and Las Vegas; and Longy Zwillman, the boss of New Jersey, noted as being a power in naming that state's governors andof supreme interest to the mobits attorneys general.
Duke's attracted considerable interest during the historic Kefauver Committee's hearings of the early 1950s, but probers came away with little hard evidence. Gangster Willie Moretti assured the committee the only reason he went to Duke's was for the cuisine and the ambiance, which, he said with a delightfully straight face, was "like Lindy's on Broadway." Mobster Tony Bender took the Fifth Amendment rather than say if he'd ever been in Duke's, insisting that even a visit to a restaurant could be incriminating.
A lot of law enforcement agencies kept an eye on Duke's, some trying to learn its secrets, others trying to protect them. Surveillance was carried out by the Internal Revenue Service, the Bureau of Narcotics and Manhattan District Attorney Frank Hogan's investigators. It was never easy. Law enforcement agents found that once they had crossed the George Washington Bridge into New Jersey, they were shadowed, hounded, badgered and sometimes even arrested by various local police departments. Investigators parked in a car outside of Duke's to log the various alleged diners entering Duke's were ordered to move by police, even after they displayed their credentials. Duke's was virtually in foreign territory.
After the Kefauver hearings, Duke's lost its value to the mob and the crime leaders abandoned it. It closed shortly thereaftera menu of pasta minus the Mafia was not enough to keep it going.
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E
Eboli, Thomas "Tommy Ryan" (19111972): Genovese aide
Although he rose extremely high in organized crime circles, including sitting on the so-called commission as Vito Genovese's proxy when the latter went to prison, Tommy Eboli was clearly over his head. After Genovese's death in 1969, Eboli proved incapable of holding the crime family together. It was basically a case of a muscleman trying to do a brain's work.
Actually, it is often a myth that a crime family boss can long continue to hold control of his family's affairs from behind bars. But in the case of Genovese it was true. He knew how to pick subordinates he could cow so that they would never dream of trying to dethrone him. Eboli, a volatile and violent man, was always in awe of Genovese, considering Vito to be even more fearsome than himself. With such a personality, Eboli was extremely valuable to Genovese, a faithful retainer always eager to do his master's bidding.
But, despite fealty to Genovese, Eboli was too hot-headed to rule successfully. Under his own name and the alias of Tommy Ryan, Eboli made numerous forays into the sporting world as a sometime prizefight manager. He was eventually barred from boxing, not because of his underworld connections, but rather for jumping into the ring to deck a referee over a decision against his fighter. With his temperament he was always eager to do mayhem himself when he should have assigned it to underlings, thus qualifying as another underworld "cowboy," like Bugsy Siegel. When Genovese, from his jail cell, ordered Eboli to have another top aide, Tony Bender, erased, Eboli, underworld whispers had it, did the job himself. Even in an affair as hot as the attempted assassination of Frank Costello, Eboli, according to a police theory, insisted on personally driving the escape car.
Eboli was not the only Genovese lieutenant put in charge when the boss went to prison. Control of the old New York Luciano-Costello family was left to a two-man regency of Eboli and Gerry Catena. Neither of them, in spite of whatever personal ambitions they had, were capable of running the family, placating the organization and still kowtowing to Genovese, who raged and spat orders from his Atlanta jail cell.
Eboli demonstrated little tact in dealing with other mafiosi. As a member of the commission he sometimes spoke mindlessly, insulting other members with comments Genovese had given him privately. As a result, even after Genovese's death in 1969 and Catena's imprisonment in 1970, Eboli had few allies to prop him up in power.
But Eboli did manage to build himself a private racket empirenightclubs, music and records, vending machines, jukeboxes and Greenwich Village bars catering to homosexuals. He showed a pronounced disinclination to cut any of his troops in on the gravy and did little to lead them in other ventures or even supply them with financing in drug deals.
Not that Eboli wasn't deeply involved in drug trafficking himself. In 1972, Eboli helped finance a major deal with Louis Cirillo, tabbed by federal authorities as the largest wholesaler in the nation. Because he could not swing the required $4 million up front himself, he cut in Carlo Gambino and the leaders of other crime families. Possibly, he was seeking to ingratiate himself with them, but authorities cracked the plot. Cirillo got
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25 years in prison. At that he was luckier than Eboli. The crime families' $4 million had gone down the drain. Gambino and the others blamed Eboli for the loss and suggested he make good. Eboli refused, under the illusion that the mob operated on some sort of luck-of-the-draw philosophy.
Intense discussions were held on replacing Eboli, the somewhat errant boss of the Genovese family. Gambino saw that his drug-money losses would be insignificant if he could get a cut of what the Genovese family should net from their rackets. Gambino had by this time gained varying degrees of control over the three other New York families, and, with his own man heading the Genovese family, his position as de facto boss of bosses would be virtually secure. Gambino decided on Funzi Tieri as Eboli's successor.
Eboli was not bright enough to gauge how perilous his situation was. In the early morning hours of July 1, 1972, the 61-year-old Eboli left the apartment of one of his many mistresses, in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn. His bodyguard-chauffeur, Joseph Sternfeld, was opening the rear door of his Cadillac when a gunman in a red and yellow van put five shots in Eboli's face and neck at a range of about five feet. Eboli had not even time to grab the gold crucifix he wore around his neck. Eboli's bodyguard insisted he had hit the pavement at the sound of the first shot and had not seen who had done the shooting, a line that led to a perjury indictment. It eventually was dropped.
The saying in the underworld was that Eboli was granted the full "respect" of a boss in his hit. After all, it was said, he could have been popped on his way in to see his lady friend, but it was decided to let him have his joy before dying.
Egan's Rats: St. Louis gang
An independent criminal gang given a "new life" with the onset of Prohibition, Egan's Rats became the most powerful mob in St. Louis in the 1920s, working closely with the Capone gang in Chicago and the Purple Gang of Detroit.
Egan's Rats was founded around 1900 by Jellyroll Egan, who specialized in offering his army of hoodlums as "legbreakers" to anti-union businessmen. As with other criminal gangs around the country, these activities sharply decreased just before World War I and remained only a minor activity in the immediate postwar period. Had it not been for Prohibition, it is highly unlikely that Dinty Colbeck, who took over on the death of Jellyroll Egan, could have held the organization together. Bootlegging meant enormous profits, more than the Rats had ever made before, and Colbeck emerged as the most important crime figure in the city.
Like criminals elsewhere who had once operated on the benevolence of politicians, Colbeck now became the dispenser of enormous bribes to crooked politicians and police so that his enterprises could operate without harassment. Dinty operated much like the cock-of-the-walk, approaching a policeman on the street, pulling out a huge wad of bills, and asking, "Want a bribe, officer?"
Dinty remained all his life a multi-purpose thief. He took his gang into safecracking and jewelry thefts, using Red Rudensky, a gang member who was the best safecracker of the 1920s. Colbeck also loaned out his men to other criminal gangs when they needed "out of town talent." There is considerable speculation that the Rats supplied some of the killers in the infamous St. Valentine's Day Massacre. Another Rat, Leo Brothers, may have been the murderer of Chicago newsman Jake Lingle or may simply have been loaned out to Capone who felt he needed a "fall guy" to take the heat off the case.
Just as Prohibition gave Egan's Rats a second crime life, Repeal took it away. The gang lost its importance when it could not adjust to the post-bootlegging era. It was left to others to organize gambling in St. Louis, and Mafia elements, greatly factionalized in the city previously, came together in narcotics activities. Dinty Colbeck himself was assassinated in the late 1930s by rival mobsters, and the last of the Rats scurried off to join other criminal combinations in other cities.
Egg, Break an: See Whack.
Eighth of the Eighth: Crime spawning area
In the early part of the 20th century, there was probably no more fertile breeding ground in America for the overlords of organized crime than a tiny waterfront district in Brooklyn. Called the "eighth of the eighth," a phrase for the Eighth Election District of the Eighth Assembly District, the area was overstocked in saloons, vile brothels, dreary tenements and other unsavory dens, and was labeled by one crime historian "a depraved, crime-ridden Barbary Coast of the East." More important, it was a veritable institution of higher education for a cadre of teenagers who emerged as top leaders of organized crime. The roster from just this single district included:
Johnny Torrio, the mastermind who first brought a high degree of unity to the warring mobs of Chicago in the 1920s.
Al Capone, Torrio's successor and certainly the most successful crime boss to rule a major American city.
Frankie Yale, the national head of Unione Siciliane and, for a time until his assassination in 1927, the most powerful gangster in Brooklyn.

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