Sam Giancana

Sam Giancana
Born Salvatore Giangana
June 15, 1908
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Died June 19, 1975(1975-06-19) (aged 67)
Oak Park, Illinois, U.S.
Cause of death Multiple gunshot wounds
Resting place Mount Carmel Cemetery, Hillside, Illinois
Citizenship American
Occupation Gangster, Crime boss
Known for Boss of the Chicago Outfit and Mafia
Spouse(s) Angelina DeTolve (1933–1954, her death)
Children 3 daughters

Salvatore "Mooney Sam" Giancana (born Salvatore Giangana; June 15, 1908 June 19, 1975),[1] better known as Sam Giancana, was a Sicilian American mobster, notable for being boss of the Chicago Outfit from 1957–1966. Among his other nicknames were, "Momo", "Sam the Cigar," and "Sammy."

Early life

Giancana was born as Salvatore Giangana, in The Patch on Chicago's West Side, to Italian Sicilian immigrants from Partanna, in the province of Trapani. His father, Antonino (later simplified to Antonio) Giangana, owned a pushcart and later briefly owned an Italian ice shop, which was later firebombed by gangland rivals of his son.

Criminal career

Sam Giancana joined the 42 Gang, a juvenile street crew answering to political boss Joseph Esposito.[2] Giancana soon developed a reputation for being an excellent getaway driver, a high earner, and a vicious killer. After Esposito's murder, in which Giancana was allegedly involved, the 42 Gang was transformed into a de facto extension of the Chicago Outfit. The Outfit was initially wary of the 42ers, thinking they were too wild. However, Giancana's leadership qualities, the fact that he was an excellent "wheel man" with a get-away car, and his knack for making money on the street gained him the notice of Cosa Nostra higher-ups like Frank "The Enforcer" Nitti, Paul "The Waiter" Ricca, and Tony "Joe Batters" Accardo. In the late 1930s, Giancana became the first 42er to join the Outfit. From the early 1940s through the 1950s, he controlled most of the illegal gambling, illegal liquor distribution, and numerous other political rackets in Louisiana through long time friend, H.A. (Hol) Killian of Rodessa, LA. Killian controlled the mass majority of the liquor license issuance to those who sought one through his connections with long time business associate, Carlos Marcello from New Orleans. The trio's combined political influence reached all the way to the Governors Mansion and to the White House. Killian was such close friends with Giancana, that the latter considered Killian's three sons (David, Mike, and Ned) as his own.

Family

Sam married Angelina DeTolve, the daughter of immigrants from the Italian region of Basilicata, on September 23, 1933. They had three daughters, Antoinette, Bonnie and Francine. Angelina, his wife, died in 1954 and left Sam to raise his daughters. Sam never remarried after becoming a widower and was known as a good family man, despite frequent infidelities, and held his late wife in high regard and respect during their marriage and after her death. All of the Giancana daughters have married at least once. As of 1984, at least one daughter, Antoinette, had taken the "Giancana" name again.[3]

Rise to power

In 1945, after serving a sentence at the Federal Correctional Complex, Terre Haute, Indiana (during which time he told his children he was away "at college"), Giancana made a name for himself by convincing Accardo, then the Outfit's underboss, to stage a take-over of Chicago's African-American "policy" (lottery) pay-out system for The Outfit. Giancana's crew is believed to have been responsible for convincing Eddie Jones to leave his racket and leave the country. Giancana's crew was also responsible for the murder on August 4, 1952 of African American gambling boss Theodore Roe. Both Jones and Roe were leading South Side "Policy Kings". However, Roe had refused to surrender control of his operation as the Outfit had demanded. What is more, on June 19, 1951, Roe had fatally shot Lennard "Fat Lennie" Caifano, a made man in Giancana's crew. Over an FBI wiretap during the early 1970s, Giancana said of Roe, "I'll say this. Nigger or no nigger, that bastard went out like a man. He had balls. It was a fuckin' shame to kill him."[4]

However, the South Side "policy"-game takeover by the Outfit was not complete until another Outfit member, Jackie "the Lackey" Cerone, scared "Big Jim" Martin to Mexico with two bullets to the head that did not kill him. When the lottery money started rolling in for The Outfit after this gambling war, the amount that this game had produced for The Outfit was in the millions of dollars a year and brought Giancana further notice. It is believed to have been a major factor in his being "anointed" as the Outfit's new boss when Accardo stepped aside from being the front boss to becoming "consigliere," in 1957.[5] However, it was generally understood that Accardo and Ricca still held the real power. Giancana was required to consult Accardo and Ricca on all important Outfit affairs. No major business transactions, and certainly no hits, took place without Accardo and Ricca's approval.

Giancana was present at the Mafia's 1957 Apalachin Meeting at the Upstate New York estate of Joseph Barbara.[6] Later, Buffalo crime boss Stefano Magaddino and Giancana were overheard on a wire saying the meeting should have taken place in the Chicago area. Giancana claimed that the Chicago area was "the safest place in the world" for a major underworld meeting because he had several police chiefs on his payroll. If the syndicate ever wanted to hold a meeting in or around Chicago, Giancana said, they had nothing to fear because they had the area "locked up tight."[7]

Alleged CIA connections

It is widely reputed, and partially corroborated by the Church Committee Hearings, that during the Kennedy administration, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) recruited Giancana and other mobsters to assassinate Cuban president Fidel Castro. Giancana reportedly said that the CIA and the Cosa Nostra were "different sides of the same coin."[8]

Judith Campbell Exner claimed to be the mistress of both Giancana and JFK, and that she delivered communications between the two regarding Fidel Castro.[9] However, Giancana's daughter, Antoinette, has stated her belief that her father was running a scam in order to pocket millions of dollars in CIA funding.[10]

Documents released in 1997 revealed that some Mafiosi worked with the CIA on assassination attempts against Cuban leader Fidel Castro.[11] CIA documents released in 2007 confirmed that in the summer of 1960, the CIA recruited ex-FBI agent Robert Maheu to approach the West Coast representative of the Chicago mob, Johnny Roselli. When Maheu contacted Roselli, Maheu hid the fact that he was sent by the CIA, instead portraying himself an advocate for international corporations. He offered to pay $150,000 to have Castro killed, but Roselli declined any pay. Roselli introduced Maheu to two men he referred to as "Sam Gold" and "Joe." "Sam Gold" was Sam Giancana; "Joe" was Santo Trafficante, Jr., the Tampa, Florida/Tampa /Miami Syndicate boss and one of the most powerful mobsters in pre-revolution Cuba.[12] Glenn Kessler of The Washington Post explained: "After Fidel Castro led a revolution that toppled the friendly government of Fulgencio Batista in 1959, the CIA was desperate to eliminate Castro. So the agency sought out a partner equally worried about Castro—the Mafia, which had lucrative investments in Cuban casinos."[13]

Jimmy Hoffa, president of the Teamsters Union, and mobsters Carlos Marcello, Sam Giancana, Johnny Roselli, Charles Nicoletti, and Santo Trafficante Jr.—all of whom say Hoffa worked with the CIA on the Castro assassination plots—top the House Select Committee list of Assassinations Mafia suspects.[14]

According to the recently declassified CIA "Family Jewels" documents, Giancana and Santo Trafficante, Jr. were contacted in September 1960, about the possibility of an assassination attempt by a go-between from the CIA, Robert Maheu, after Maheu had contacted Johnny Roselli, a Mafia member in Las Vegas and Giancana's number-two man. Maheu had presented himself as a representative of numerous international business firms in Cuba that were being expropriated by Castro. He offered $150,000 for the "removal" of Castro through this operation (the documents suggest that neither Roselli, Giancana, nor Trafficante accepted any sort of payments for the job). According to the files, it was Giancana who suggested using a series of poison pills that could be used to doctor Castro's food and drink. These pills were given by the CIA to Giancana's nominee, Juan Orta, whom Giancana presented as being a corrupt official in the new Cuban government and who had access to Castro. After a series of six attempts to introduce the poison into Castro's food, Orta abruptly demanded to be let out of the mission, handing over the job to another, unnamed participant. Later, a second attempt was mounted through Giancana and Trafficante using Dr. Anthony Verona, the leader of the Cuban Exile Junta, who had, according to Trafficante, become "disaffected with the apparent ineffectual progress of the Junta". Verona requested $10,000 in expenses and $1,000 worth of communications equipment. However, it is unclear how far the second attempt went, as the entire program was canceled shortly thereafter due to the launching of the Bay of Pigs Invasion in April 1961.[15][16][17]

At the same time, Giancana, according to the "Family Jewels", approached Maheu to bug the room of his then-mistress Phyllis McGuire, whom he suspected of having an affair with comedian Dan Rowan. Although documents suggest Maheu acquiesced, the bug was not planted due to the arrest of the agent who had been given the task of planting the device. According to the documents, Robert Kennedy moved to block the prosecution of the agent and of Maheu, who was soon linked to the bugging attempt, at the CIA's request.[17] Giancana and McGuire, who had a long lasting affair, were originally introduced by Frank Sinatra.[18] During part of the affair, according to Sam's daughter Antoinette, McGuire had a concurrent affair with President Kennedy.[19]

Downfall

Giancana's behavior was too high-profile for Outfit tastes and attracted far too much federal scrutiny. He also refused to cut his underlings in on his lavish profits from offshore casinos in Iran and Central America. Both of these factors resulted in much bitterness among the Outfit's rank-and-file. Giancana was the subject of many hours of wiretaps. On one, he was heard to say, "We're whacking a lot of the wrong guys lately."

When Giancana was called before a grand jury in 1966, he was ordered to stay silent, which put him in prison for over a year. Meanwhile, Giancana was deposed as day-to-day boss by Ricca and Accardo, and replaced by Joseph "Joey Doves" Aiuppa.[20]

International gambling success and dispute with the Outfit

After arriving in Mexico, Giancana managed to make money from various gambling operations, among them in Iran..

When Tony Accardo demanded that he give a share of the profits to The Outfit, Giancana refused, claiming that he did it all by himself and outside the The Outfit's jurisdiction. In response, Accardo asked someone to "explain him the facts of life. And I mean life." Giancana, however remained adamant and refused to pay.[21]

Return to Chicago and death

After his release from prison, Giancana relocated to Cuernavaca, Mexico in order to avoid further grand jury questioning.[22][23] He was arrested by Mexican authorities on July 19, 1974 and deported to the United States.[22][23] He arrived back in Chicago on July 21, 1974.[24]

Giancana had another sitdown with the Outfit with no resolution. The Outfit requested he give a share of his money, and he refused.[21]

After Giancana's return to the U.S., the police detailed officers to guard his house in Oak Park, Illinois. However, on the night of June 19, 1975, someone recalled the police detail.[25] A gunman later entered Giancana's basement kitchen and shot him in the back of the head as he was frying sausage and peppers.[26] After Giancana fell to the ground, the gunman turned him over and shot him six more times in the face and neck. Investigators suspected the murderer was a close friend whom Giancana had let into the house. One reason for this suspicion was that Giancana, due to his heart problems, could not eat spicy foods. Therefore, he might have been cooking for a friend. Giancana was killed shortly before he was scheduled to appear before the Church Committee[27][28] investigating CIA and Cosa Nostra collusion in plots to assassinate President John F. Kennedy.

Hit man Nicholas Calabrese told the FBI in the 2000s that he knew that Tony Accardo was part of the killing, and Angelo LaPietra got rid of the gun. The gun used to kill Giancana was equipped with a silencer that Frank Calabrese, Sr. and Ronnie Jarret had made.[29] However, LaPietra couldn't have gotten rid of the gun used, as it was recovered very shortly after the killing on the side of the road in River Forest.

Giancana was interred next to his wife, Angelina, in a family mausoleum at Mount Carmel Cemetery, in Hillside, Illinois.[30]

Earlier speculations as to how Giancana died

Some commentators have alleged that the CIA killed Giancana because of his troubled history with the agency. However, former CIA Director William Colby has been quoted as saying, "We had nothing to do with it."[31]

Another theory is that Trafficante crime family boss, Santo Trafficante, Jr., ordered Giancana's murder due to mob fears that Giancana would testify about Cosa Nostra and CIA plots to kill Cuban president Fidel Castro. Trafficante would have needed permission from Outfit bosses Tony Accardo and Joseph Aiuppa to kill Giancana. Johnny Roselli, whose body was found to have been shot, dissected, then stuffed in an oil drum floating off Miami, was definitely killed on Trafficante's orders.

Most investigators believe Aiuppa ordered the Giancana murder. Giancana was still refusing to share any of his offshore gambling profits with the Outfit. In addition, Giancana was reportedly scheming to become Outfit boss again.

Longtime friend and associate Dominic "Butch" Blasi was with Giancana the night he was murdered and was questioned by police as a suspect. FBI experts and Giancana's daughter, Antoinette, do not consider him Giancana's killer.[32]

Other Mafia suspects are Harry Aleman, Charles "Chuckie" English, and Charles Nicoletti. In the movie Sugartime (1995), Dominic "Butch" Blasi, as portrayed by Elias Koteas, is shown murdering Giancana.[33]

Michael J. Corbitt's account

According to former Mafia associate Michael J. Corbitt, Aiuppa seized control of Giancana's casinos in the aftermath of the murder, strategically sharing them with his caporegimes.

Within days of Giancana's murder, Willow Springs police chief and Outfit associate Michael J. Corbitt discussed the murder with capo Salvatore Bastone. Bastone told him, "You know, Sam sure loved that little guy in Oak Park... Tony Spilotro. Yeah, he was fuckin' crazy about him. Sam put Tony on the fuckin' map, thought he was gonna be a big fuckin' man someday. Did you know that after Marshall Caifano got out of Vegas, it was Sam who wanted Tony Spilotro out there? Even lately, with all the problems with the skim and all, Sam always stood behind the guy. Tony was over to Sam's house all the time. He lived right by there. Did you know Tony even figured out a way where he could get in through the back of Sam's place without anybody seeing him? He'd go through other people's yards, go over fences, all sorts of shit."[34]

Corbitt responded, "Sam wouldn't open the door for just any son of a bitch. I mean there's Butch, Chuckie English... He'd let them in alright, but shit, no way they'd ever do anything to hurt Sam. No way."[35]

Bastone then said, "Yeah, Sam and Butch were real close. And the same thing with him and Chuckie. Besides, neither one of them had the balls to do somethin' like that. There's only one guy that had the balls to do Sam."[35]

When Corbitt asked for the reason, Bastone quipped, "There's never just one reason for shit like what happened to Sam. There's a million of 'em. Let's just say that Sam should've remembered what happened to Bugsy Siegel."[35]

In popular culture

Films

Literature

Music

Television

See also

Notes

  1. "Sam Giancana (Original name: Salvatore Giancana)". Find a Grave. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
  2. The name of the 42 Gang came from associating themselves with Ali Baba and the 40 Thieves. They thought they were one better, hence 42.
  3. Giancana 1984.
  4. Ron Chepesiuk, Black Gangsters of Chicago, Barricade Books, 2007. Page 95.
  5. Roemer 1995, pp.125-129.
  6. Giancana 1984, pp. 190, 195-197.
  7. Sifakis, Carl (1987). The Mafia Encyclopedia. New York City: Facts on File. ISBN 0-8160-1856-1.
  8. Giancana 1992, p.215.
  9. Michael O'Brien (1999-12-01). "The Exner File. (Judith Campbell Exner, John F. Kennedy's mistress)". Washington Monthly. Archived from the original on March 11, 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  10. Television documentary Mafia Women, Discovery Channel.
  11. CIA offered money to Mafia. Retrieved December 3, 2006.
  12. Memorandum for the Director of Central Intelligence, Subject: Roselli, Johnny, November 19, 1970.
  13. Kessler, Glenn (June 27, 2007). "Trying to Kill Fidel Castro". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. Retrieved May 23, 2013.
  14. "The Assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy". The Crime library. Archived from the original on May 10, 2008. Retrieved 2010-09-17.
  15. Steve Holland and Andy Sullivan (2007-06-27). "CIA tried to get Mafia to kill Castro". Reuters. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  16. Thomas Blanton (2007-06-26). ""Family Jewels" Archive". National Security Archive. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  17. 1 2 Alex Johnson (2007-06-27). "CIA opens the book on a shady past Declassified 'family jewels' detail assassination plots, break-ins, wiretaps". MSNBC. Retrieved 2008-04-11.
  18. Giancana 1984 pp.259-284, 287-293, 347-348.
  19. Giancana 1984 p.179.
  20. Carl Sifakis (2005). The Mafia Encyclopedia. Infobase Publishing. pp. 6. ISBN 978-0-8160-6989-7.
  21. 1 2 Roemer, Accardo: The Genuine Godfather
  22. 1 2 "Crime boss' death linked to his discomfiture to mob". The Spokesman-Review. 93 (38). Spokane, Washington. June 21, 1975. p. 16. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  23. 1 2 Glionna, John M. (November 21, 2014). "Sam Giancana's daughter aims to cash in on gangster's memorabilia". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 30, 2014.
  24. Michael Branigan (2011). A History of Chicago's O'Hare Airport. The History Press. pp. 134. ISBN 978-1-60949-434-6.
  25. "Chicago". Underworld Histories. History Channel.
  26. Congress 1983, p. 182
  27. http://tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/program.pl?ID=240608
  28. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=m2pPAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wiQEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6699%2C5312620
  29. Family Secrets: The Case That Crippled the Chicago Mob
  30. Giancana family mausoleum location: 41°51′51″N 87°54′51″W / 41.8642299°N 87.914274°W
  31. Godwin 1978, p.145.
  32. Giancana 1984, p.367.
  33. Sugartime. IMDb. 1995.
  34. Michael J. Corbitt, Double Deal: The Inside Story of Murder, Unbridled Corruption, and the Cop who was a Mobster, 2003. Page 196.
  35. 1 2 3 Corbitt (2003), page 196.
  36. Giancana 1984
  37. Peters, Steve (2013). The Outlaw Sandra Love. Star Hill Publishing. ISBN 9780615760315.
  38. https://books.google.hn/books/about/Double_Cross.html?id=F2FaOcblitoC&hl=en
  39. "Mafia's Greatest Hits (series 1)". televisioncatchup.co.uk.

References

Further reading

  • Brashler, William. The Don: The Life and Death of Sam Giancana. New York: Harper and Row, 1977. ISBN 0-06-010447-3
  • Cain, Michael J. The Tangled Web. New York: Skyhorse Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-1-60239-044-7
  • Dark, Tony. The FBI Files Sam Giancana, H H Productions, Chicago, 2004. ISBN 0-615-12720-7
  • Hersh, Seymour M. Dark Side of Camelot. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1997. ISBN 0-316-35955-6
  • Inserra, Vincent L. C-1 and the Chicago Mob. Xlibris, 2014. ISBN 978-1-4931-8278-7
  • Morgan, John M. Prince of Crime. New York: Stein and Day, 1985. ISBN 0-8128-8297-0
  • Nash, Jay Robert. Bloodletters and Badmen. New York: M. Evans & Co. 1973. ISBN 0-87131-777-X
  • Sifakis, Carl. Encyclopedia of Crime. New York: Facts On File, 1982. ISBN 0-8160-5694-3
  • Talbot, David. Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years. Free Press. May 2007. ISBN 0-7432-6918-7
  • Thompson, Nathan (2003). KINGS The True Story of Chicago's Policy Kings and Numbers Racketeers. The Bronzeville Press. ISBN 0-9724875-0-6.
  • Zion, Sidney. Loyalty and Betrayal: The Story of the American Mob. San Francisco: Collins Publishers, 1994. ISBN 0-00-638271-1

External links

Business positions
Preceded by
Anthony Accardo
Chicago Outfit Boss
1957-1966
Succeeded by
Sam Battaglia
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