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James T. Licavoli

James T. Licavoli (born Vincentio Licavoli; August 18, 1904 − November 23, 1985), also known as "Jack White" or "Blackie", was an American mobster based in Cleveland, Ohio, and one of the earliest organized crime figures to be convicted under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO Act).

James T. Licavoli
1947 police mugshot of James "Jack White" Licavoli
Born
Vincentio Licavoli

(1904-11-24)November 24, 1904
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S
DiedNovember 23, 1985(1985-11-23) (aged 80)
Resting placeCalvary Cemetery, St. Louis, Missouri
Other names"Jack White"
"Blackie"
OccupationCrime boss
PredecessorJohn T. Scalish
SuccessorJohn Tronolone
RelativesPeter (brother)
Thomas Licavoli (brother)
Criminal chargeFederal RICO charges
Penalty17-year sentence

Early life Edit

Vincentio Licavoli was born in St. Louis, Missouri on August 18, 1904, the third of four children of Dominic and Girolama Licavoli.[1] They immigrated to the United States from Sicily and eventually settled in St. Louis. In St. Louis, James Licavoli along with his cousins, Peter and Thomas also known as "Yonnie" were members of the Russo Gang.[2]

On October 6, 1926, Licavoli was shot in the leg and arrested after a wild chase and shootout with St. Louis Police. Though he had fired on the police, Licavoli was charged merely with carrying a concealed weapon and even that charge was dropped.[3] On August 9, 1927, on the outskirts of Chicago, Licavoli survived a "one-way ride" that claimed the lives of his friends, Anthony "Shorty" Russo and Vincent Spicuzza.[4] Licavoli then went with his cousins to Detroit where, as part of the Detroit Mafia, they wrested control of the city's rackets from the self-destructing Purple Gang, previously dominant in Detroit. There, he was convicted of bootlegging and served a stint at Leavenworth. Upon his release, he joined his cousins in Toledo, where they had moved to avoid heat from the murder of a crusading anti-Mafia Detroit radio broadcaster, Jerry Buckley.

The Licavolis and their cousin, Leo "Lips" Moceri, did not remain in Ohio for long. Five members of the gang including Yonnie were arrested for the murder of a popular Toledo bootlegger. Peter Licavoli returned to Detroit and regrouped - his force retaining the original Purple Gang title. James Licavoli went on the lam and hid in Pittsburgh where he stayed with up-and-coming mob boss John Sebastian Larocca.

Move to Cleveland Edit

One of many in the Licavoli family to become involved in organized crime, James Licavoli first arrived in Cleveland in 1938.[1] There he became good friends with Jimmy "The Weasel" Fratianno and Tony "Dope" Delsanter. Among their exploits at the time, they teamed up to rob northeast Ohio gambling halls. In 1940, Licavoli was made into the Cleveland crime family and quickly established control over illegal gambling and the vending machine industry in the neighboring cities of Youngstown and Warren, Ohio.[1] During this period, Licavoli was a suspect in the murders of Jim "Mancene" Mancini and gambling slot czar Nate Weisenberg.

In 1951, Licavoli was called before the US Senate committee on organized crime, known as the Kefauver Committee. Licavoli refused to answer any questions.

Rise to power Edit

By 1970, James Licavoli had become known as "the king of the hill" - Murray Hill, Little Italy. He never married and remained a lifelong bachelor. He lived with a 70-year-old roommate who was also a bachelor and worked as a carpenter. Since his income had never been declared, he was even able to draw a monthly social security check[citation needed].

Licavoli had been called "Blackie" while he was growing up in Collinwood. Now he was known in the Mob as "Jack White," an ironic reference to his swarthy complexion.

Despite his immense wealth, he had a reputation for being cheap and occasionally foolish to the point of embarrassment. Once at a local mall, he was detained by store detectives for switching the price tags on a pair of pants. After hearing about his background, the department store manager declined to prosecute. Another time, he was caught using slugs on machines. He also used stolen credit cards on vacations.

In 1976, longtime Cleveland family boss John Scalish died, leaving control of Cleveland's lucrative criminal operations, specifically the cities' Teamsters Union locals, up for grabs. Licavoli was Scalish's logical successor, and he became boss of the Cleveland crime family.

Cleveland mob war Edit

During this time, Licavoli had to deal with Irish gangster Danny Greene trying to take control of rackets in Cleveland. Mafia associate John Nardi sided with Greene and switched alliance, strengthening Greene's criminal empire and giving him an advantage on the Cleveland family. This erupted into an all out war with many of Licavoli's supporters being killed in the process.

These murders soon gained the attention of other criminal organizations, particularly the Genovese crime family of New York. Despite the war hurting the Cleveland family's reputation, Licavoli declined Genovese leader Frank "Funzi" Tieri's offers for help; he feared that the Genovese family would try to muscle in on Cleveland's criminal operations if he accepted. Licavoli also had to fend off interference from the Chicago Outfit. Outfit leaders Tony Accardo and Joseph Aiuppa finally declared their neutrality in the Cleveland gang war and ordered their subordinates not to assist Licavoli.

During the early phases of the war, Licavoli was on the defense. Although no attempts were made on his life, many of Licavoli's men and associates were killed in the war. This included one of Licavoli's most powerful allies, consigliere Leo Moceri, whose bloodstained car was found in a hotel parking lot in Akron, Ohio. Repeated attempts to kill Nardi and especially Greene failed. However, in 1977, things started turning in his favor. His men were able to kill Nardi with a car bomb. Later the same year, he hired Ray Ferritto to kill Danny Greene. While Greene was visiting the dentist, Ferritto parked his car attached with a car bomb next to Greene's. When Greene left the dentist's office and went to his car, the bomb was ignited, killing Greene. Licavoli would go on trial for their murders, but was eventually acquitted.

With the deaths of Nardi and Greene, Licavoli assumed complete control of criminal activities in Cleveland. Under Licavoli, the Cleveland syndicate successfully infiltrated the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) Cleveland branch. They accomplished this by bribing a female clerk to update them on organized crime investigations and provide the identities of government informants. In a later conversation with lifelong friend and FBI informant Jimmy Fratianno (described in Fratianno's biography The Last Mafioso), Licavoli commented "Jimmy, sometimes, you know, I think this fucking outfit of ours is like the old Communist party in this country. It's getting so that there's more fucking spies in it than members."

Downfall Edit

Fratianno soon became alarmed that Licavoli would discover he was an informant, so he quickly made a deal with the FBI to testify against numerous Mafia members so that he could be entered into the Witness Protection Program. With Fratianno's help, the FBI closed the leak in their Cleveland Office. Prosecutors now targeted Licavoli for prosecution under the newly created Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. When Licavoli was arrested at his home, police confiscated his cane with a long hidden blade in it and $3,000 in his underwear drawer. On July 8, 1982, Licavoli was tried and convicted alongside John Calandra, described as Licavoli's lieutenant; Anthony Liberatore, Pasquale Cisternino, Ronald Carabbia and Kenneth Ciarcia, of federal RICO charges and sentenced to 17 years imprisonment.[1]

On November 23, 1985, James Licavoli died of a sudden heart attack at Adams County Hospital, near the Federal Correctional Institution, Oxford in Oxford, Wisconsin.[5] He was buried at Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis.[6]

In popular culture Edit

Licavoli was portrayed onscreen by actor Tony LoBianco in the movie Kill the Irishman.

Further reading Edit

  • Shaffer, Terry, "Illegal Gambling Clubs of Toledo", Happy Chipper Publishing, 2012, ISBN 978-0-615-64443-1
  • Jacobs, James B., Christopher Panarella and Jay Worthington. Busting the Mob: The United States Vs. Cosa Nostra. New York: NYU Press, 1994. ISBN 0-8147-4230-0
  • Neff, James. Mobbed Up: Jackie Presser's High-Wire Life in the Teamsters, the Mafia, and the FBI. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1989. ISBN 0-87113-344-X
  • Porrello, Rick. To Kill the Irishman: The War that Crippled the Mafia. Novelty, Ohio: Next Hat Press, 2004. ISBN 0-9662508-9-3

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d "JAMES T. LICAVOLI, CRIME LEADER IN CLEVELAND". The New York Times. November 26, 1985.
  2. ^ Waugh, Daniel. Gangs of St. Louis: Men of Respect. Charleston: The History Press, 2010. ISBN 978-1-59629-905-4, pgs. 75–76.
  3. ^ Waugh, pgs. 96-98.
  4. ^ Waugh, pgs. 110–112.
  5. ^ Lynch, Maxine L. (November 25, 1985). "City Mafia Boss Dies Imprisoned". The Plain Dealer. pp. A1, A10.
  6. ^ "Burial Is Slated For Suspected Mob Boss". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. November 27, 1985. p. 20.
  • Fox, Stephen. Blood and Power: Organized Crime in Twentieth-Century America. New York: William Morrow and Company, 1989. ISBN 0-688-04350-X
  • Kelly, Robert J. Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United States. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2000. ISBN 0-313-30653-2
  • Sifakis, Carl. The Mafia Encyclopedia. New York: Da Capo Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8160-5694-3

james, licavoli, born, vincentio, licavoli, august, 1904, november, 1985, also, known, jack, white, blackie, american, mobster, based, cleveland, ohio, earliest, organized, crime, figures, convicted, under, racketeer, influenced, corrupt, organizations, rico, . James T Licavoli born Vincentio Licavoli August 18 1904 November 23 1985 also known as Jack White or Blackie was an American mobster based in Cleveland Ohio and one of the earliest organized crime figures to be convicted under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act RICO Act James T Licavoli1947 police mugshot of James Jack White LicavoliBornVincentio Licavoli 1904 11 24 November 24 1904St Louis Missouri U SDiedNovember 23 1985 1985 11 23 aged 80 Oxford Wisconsin U SResting placeCalvary Cemetery St Louis MissouriOther names Jack White Blackie OccupationCrime bossPredecessorJohn T ScalishSuccessorJohn TronoloneRelativesPeter brother Thomas Licavoli brother Criminal chargeFederal RICO chargesPenalty17 year sentence Contents 1 Early life 2 Move to Cleveland 3 Rise to power 4 Cleveland mob war 5 Downfall 6 In popular culture 7 Further reading 8 ReferencesEarly life EditVincentio Licavoli was born in St Louis Missouri on August 18 1904 the third of four children of Dominic and Girolama Licavoli 1 They immigrated to the United States from Sicily and eventually settled in St Louis In St Louis James Licavoli along with his cousins Peter and Thomas also known as Yonnie were members of the Russo Gang 2 On October 6 1926 Licavoli was shot in the leg and arrested after a wild chase and shootout with St Louis Police Though he had fired on the police Licavoli was charged merely with carrying a concealed weapon and even that charge was dropped 3 On August 9 1927 on the outskirts of Chicago Licavoli survived a one way ride that claimed the lives of his friends Anthony Shorty Russo and Vincent Spicuzza 4 Licavoli then went with his cousins to Detroit where as part of the Detroit Mafia they wrested control of the city s rackets from the self destructing Purple Gang previously dominant in Detroit There he was convicted of bootlegging and served a stint at Leavenworth Upon his release he joined his cousins in Toledo where they had moved to avoid heat from the murder of a crusading anti Mafia Detroit radio broadcaster Jerry Buckley The Licavolis and their cousin Leo Lips Moceri did not remain in Ohio for long Five members of the gang including Yonnie were arrested for the murder of a popular Toledo bootlegger Peter Licavoli returned to Detroit and regrouped his force retaining the original Purple Gang title James Licavoli went on the lam and hid in Pittsburgh where he stayed with up and coming mob boss John Sebastian Larocca Move to Cleveland EditOne of many in the Licavoli family to become involved in organized crime James Licavoli first arrived in Cleveland in 1938 1 There he became good friends with Jimmy The Weasel Fratianno and Tony Dope Delsanter Among their exploits at the time they teamed up to rob northeast Ohio gambling halls In 1940 Licavoli was made into the Cleveland crime family and quickly established control over illegal gambling and the vending machine industry in the neighboring cities of Youngstown and Warren Ohio 1 During this period Licavoli was a suspect in the murders of Jim Mancene Mancini and gambling slot czar Nate Weisenberg In 1951 Licavoli was called before the US Senate committee on organized crime known as the Kefauver Committee Licavoli refused to answer any questions Rise to power EditBy 1970 James Licavoli had become known as the king of the hill Murray Hill Little Italy He never married and remained a lifelong bachelor He lived with a 70 year old roommate who was also a bachelor and worked as a carpenter Since his income had never been declared he was even able to draw a monthly social security check citation needed Licavoli had been called Blackie while he was growing up in Collinwood Now he was known in the Mob as Jack White an ironic reference to his swarthy complexion Despite his immense wealth he had a reputation for being cheap and occasionally foolish to the point of embarrassment Once at a local mall he was detained by store detectives for switching the price tags on a pair of pants After hearing about his background the department store manager declined to prosecute Another time he was caught using slugs on machines He also used stolen credit cards on vacations In 1976 longtime Cleveland family boss John Scalish died leaving control of Cleveland s lucrative criminal operations specifically the cities Teamsters Union locals up for grabs Licavoli was Scalish s logical successor and he became boss of the Cleveland crime family Cleveland mob war EditDuring this time Licavoli had to deal with Irish gangster Danny Greene trying to take control of rackets in Cleveland Mafia associate John Nardi sided with Greene and switched alliance strengthening Greene s criminal empire and giving him an advantage on the Cleveland family This erupted into an all out war with many of Licavoli s supporters being killed in the process These murders soon gained the attention of other criminal organizations particularly the Genovese crime family of New York Despite the war hurting the Cleveland family s reputation Licavoli declined Genovese leader Frank Funzi Tieri s offers for help he feared that the Genovese family would try to muscle in on Cleveland s criminal operations if he accepted Licavoli also had to fend off interference from the Chicago Outfit Outfit leaders Tony Accardo and Joseph Aiuppa finally declared their neutrality in the Cleveland gang war and ordered their subordinates not to assist Licavoli During the early phases of the war Licavoli was on the defense Although no attempts were made on his life many of Licavoli s men and associates were killed in the war This included one of Licavoli s most powerful allies consigliere Leo Moceri whose bloodstained car was found in a hotel parking lot in Akron Ohio Repeated attempts to kill Nardi and especially Greene failed However in 1977 things started turning in his favor His men were able to kill Nardi with a car bomb Later the same year he hired Ray Ferritto to kill Danny Greene While Greene was visiting the dentist Ferritto parked his car attached with a car bomb next to Greene s When Greene left the dentist s office and went to his car the bomb was ignited killing Greene Licavoli would go on trial for their murders but was eventually acquitted With the deaths of Nardi and Greene Licavoli assumed complete control of criminal activities in Cleveland Under Licavoli the Cleveland syndicate successfully infiltrated the Federal Bureau of Investigation s FBI Cleveland branch They accomplished this by bribing a female clerk to update them on organized crime investigations and provide the identities of government informants In a later conversation with lifelong friend and FBI informant Jimmy Fratianno described in Fratianno s biography The Last Mafioso Licavoli commented Jimmy sometimes you know I think this fucking outfit of ours is like the old Communist party in this country It s getting so that there s more fucking spies in it than members Downfall EditFratianno soon became alarmed that Licavoli would discover he was an informant so he quickly made a deal with the FBI to testify against numerous Mafia members so that he could be entered into the Witness Protection Program With Fratianno s help the FBI closed the leak in their Cleveland Office Prosecutors now targeted Licavoli for prosecution under the newly created Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act When Licavoli was arrested at his home police confiscated his cane with a long hidden blade in it and 3 000 in his underwear drawer On July 8 1982 Licavoli was tried and convicted alongside John Calandra described as Licavoli s lieutenant Anthony Liberatore Pasquale Cisternino Ronald Carabbia and Kenneth Ciarcia of federal RICO charges and sentenced to 17 years imprisonment 1 On November 23 1985 James Licavoli died of a sudden heart attack at Adams County Hospital near the Federal Correctional Institution Oxford in Oxford Wisconsin 5 He was buried at Calvary Cemetery in St Louis 6 In popular culture EditLicavoli was portrayed onscreen by actor Tony LoBianco in the movie Kill the Irishman Further reading EditShaffer Terry Illegal Gambling Clubs of Toledo Happy Chipper Publishing 2012 ISBN 978 0 615 64443 1 Jacobs James B Christopher Panarella and Jay Worthington Busting the Mob The United States Vs Cosa Nostra New York NYU Press 1994 ISBN 0 8147 4230 0 Neff James Mobbed Up Jackie Presser s High Wire Life in the Teamsters the Mafia and the FBI New York Atlantic Monthly Press 1989 ISBN 0 87113 344 X Porrello Rick To Kill the Irishman The War that Crippled the Mafia Novelty Ohio Next Hat Press 2004 ISBN 0 9662508 9 3References Edit a b c d JAMES T LICAVOLI CRIME LEADER IN CLEVELAND The New York Times November 26 1985 Waugh Daniel Gangs of St Louis Men of Respect Charleston The History Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 59629 905 4 pgs 75 76 Waugh pgs 96 98 Waugh pgs 110 112 Lynch Maxine L November 25 1985 City Mafia Boss Dies Imprisoned The Plain Dealer pp A1 A10 Burial Is Slated For Suspected Mob Boss St Louis Post Dispatch November 27 1985 p 20 Fox Stephen Blood and Power Organized Crime in Twentieth Century America New York William Morrow and Company 1989 ISBN 0 688 04350 X Kelly Robert J Encyclopedia of Organized Crime in the United States Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 2000 ISBN 0 313 30653 2 Sifakis Carl The Mafia Encyclopedia New York Da Capo Press 2005 ISBN 0 8160 5694 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James T Licavoli amp oldid 1124296412, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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