The History of the Kansas City Family
by Allan May
Other than Tammany Hall in New York, the Pendergast machine in
Kansas City was the longest-running and most thorough melding of vice and
politics ever seen in the United States. So complete was the marriage of
underworld to political world, that Tom Pendergast the son of Irish
immigrants and unabashedly known as "Boss Tom" to everyone in town
controlled not just the political machine that bore his family name but the
local Mafia as well.
Before the Pendergast dynasty took root, the early Mafia
influence in Kansas City involved Black Hand extortion, which, as in other
cities, was carried out by Italians against Italians. This activity came to an
end with the onset of Prohibition in 1920. The Mafia faction under control of
the DiGiovanni and Balestrere gang then focused on bootlegging.
Once the Pendergast machine got rolling, the other Italian
hoods that rose to prominence did so under the Pendergast banner. The underworld
bosses, beginning with Johnny Lazia in the late 1920s right through the death of
Charles Binaggio in 1950, were different from their counterparts in other cities
because of their close ties to the Kansas City political scene. It would not be
until the emergence of the iron-fisted Nick Civella in the mid-1950s after
Boss Tom had been dead 10 years that Kansas City would take on a more
traditional organized crime structure.
The Pendergasts Political Machine
The roots of organized crime in Kansas City trace back to the
beginnings of the Pendergast political machine, which had its origins in the
1890s. James Pendergast was born in Gallipolis, Ohio in 1856. Twenty years later
he arrived in Kansas City with little in his pockets. In 1881 he won big at the
local racetrack by betting on a horse named Climax. With his winnings Pendergast
purchased a combination hotel and saloon. The saloon, which he named Climax, was
located on St. Louis Avenue in an area of Kansas City called the West Bottoms,
not far from the banks of the Missouri River.
Kansas City was on the rise. A year before Pendergast opened
his saloon, the population was less then 56,000. By 1910 it was nearing a
quarter million. The population was diverse. In addition to native-born whites,
there was a sizable African-American population as well as large pockets of
Germans, Irish, and Italian immigrants.
In 1884 when Jim Pendergast made his political entrance,
politics in Kansas City were still in their frontier mode, lacking in
leadership, characterized by colorful election days marked by gala events and
parades, as well as fisticuffs. Pendergast was elected a delegate to represent
the "Bloody Sixth" Ward in that years Democratic City Convention.
After that, he stayed out of politics for the next few years. When he got back
involved it was in the restructured First Ward. By 1892, Pendergast was
recognized as the undisputed leader of First Ward Democratic politics. For the
next 18 years, he continually won reelection as alderman. The Kansas
City Star dubbed him, "King of the First Ward."
As an alderman, Pendergast was known as a fighter for the
workingman. Early on, he championed lower telephone rates and construction of a
city park in the West Bottoms. He opposed the citys effort to cut the wages
of city firemen. His popularity was reflected on voting days when his ward
consistently supplied the majority of votes to the citys Democratic
candidates.
Pendergast also supported local gamblers. Once, after a dozen
were arrested for involvement in a bunco game, "Alderman Jim"
personally put up their bond in police court. Many of the laborers in the West
Bottoms liked to gamble and Pendergast was looked upon as a friend. His saloon
served as a bank on payday for the hundreds of railroad and packinghouse
workers. With cash sometimes scarce, Pendergast kept a large supply on hand in
order to cash the workmens checks. Many spent part of their money in his bar
or in the gambling rooms above it.
Pendergast closed the Climax in 1892, but kept open the
Pendergast Hotel. He soon opened two new saloons, each with gambling dens on the
second floor, and placed Edward Findley, one of Kansas Citys most notorious
gamblers, in charge of running them. In August 1894, one of the dens was raided
and 38 men were arrested. The problem, as Pendergast saw it, was with the Board
of Police Commissioners that oversaw the Kansas City Police Department. This was
the type of problem he was adept at solving because the governor appointed the
commissioners. In April 1895, Missouri Gov. William J. Stone appointed a new
Board of Police Commissioners, which promptly removed Police Chief Thomas Speers.
Gambling resumed at Pendergasts saloons. Pressure from the newspapers, as
well as local reform organizations, forced the new chief to make a few token
raids on the Pendergast saloons, but the gamblers were usually tipped off.
In 1895, the Republican candidate for mayor ran on a platform
that pledged to end the gambling and run Ed Findley out of town. Although the
Republicans won, Pendergasts control of the members of the Police Commission
kept the gambling dens from being shut down.
As the "King of the First" ward, Pendergasts
popularity continued to increase as he looked out for his constituents
interest without regard to race, religion, or nationality. In Lyle W. Dorsetts,
The Pendergast Machine, the following description of Pendergast is
offered:
"He had a big heart, was charitable and
liberal
No deserving man, woman or child that appealed to "Jim"
Pendergast went away empty handed, and this is saying a great deal, as he was
continually giving aid and help to the poor and unfortunate. The extent of his
bounty was never known, as he made it an inviolable rule that no publicity
should be given to his philanthropy. There never was a winter in the last twenty
years that he did not circulate among the poor of the West Bottoms, ascertaining
their needs, and after his visit there were no empty larders. Grocers, butchers,
bakers and coal men had unlimited orders to see that there was no suffering
among the poor of the West Bottoms, and to send the bills to "Jim"
Pendergast."
As Pendergast strengthened his political organization in the West Bottoms, he
also was building a power base throughout the North End, a section of Kansas
City referred to as "Little Italy." In this area the "power
elite" consisted of men who were in control of the liquor and gambling
interests. Pendergast got close with these men and began to solidify his power.
Ed Findley, in addition to overseeing the Pendergast gambling houses, was
entrenched in other North End gambling operations. As Pendergasts influence
over the Kansas City Police Department increased, Findley used it to build a
gambling combine. During one of the many investigations instigated by various
reform groups, one independent gambler testified that he was warned by Findley
to either join the combine or be raided. When the gambler refused, the police
closed down his operation.
As Pendergasts influence increased the newspapers began to call him
"Boss Pendergast" To this he responded:
"Ive been called a boss. All there is
to it is having friends, doing things for people, and then later on theyll do
things for you. You cant coerce people into doing things for you you cant
make them vote for you. I never coerced anybody in my life. Wherever you see a
man bulldozing anybody he dont last long."
According to Dorsett, "An important vehicle which was used by Pendergast
for making friends and doing favors was the police department. It brought him
friends by affording protection to the North End gambling interests and by
making jobs available to his followers." The reformers fought back by
trying to strip Pendergast of this power. The mayor, political opponents, the
newspapers, and civic leaders campaigned for "home rule" of the Kansas
City Police Department. An amendment to the City Charter was drafted. A special
election, requiring a three-fifths majority for passage of an amendment to the
City Charter, was scheduled. On election day, the Pendergast machine did what
made it such a powerful force for such a long period of time: it turned out the
vote. The reform was so soundly defeated that "home rule" of the
police would not be advanced again for over a quarter of a century.
In 1896, as political power on the North End shifted, a new prosecuting
attorney was elected. In his first month in office, 57 gamblers were indicted,
including Findley. Pendergast and the saloon and gambling interests in the North
End responded during the next election by running their own candidate, James A.
Reed, for prosecutor. During the elections of 1898, Pendergast, for the first
time, attempted to organize the Italian vote. He appointed Joe Damico, Kansas
Citys "King of Little Italy" to make campaign speeches in Italian
to the North End community. Meanwhile the message Pendergast got to the black
community was that a vote for Reed would mean less police interference in their
shadier activities. Reed won.
With the recent defeat of home rule for the police and the election of Reed
as prosecutor, Pendergast solidified his position of influence over the First,
Second, and Sixth Wards, which at this time made up the West Bottoms and the
North End.
The city elections in 1900 provided Pendergast with even more power when
James Reed was elected mayor. The Kansas City Convention Hall was filled nearly
to capacity with more than 10,000 men and women on election eve. The local
Republican newspaper, the Kansas City Journal, reported, "It was the
largest Democratic meeting of the campaign, but only because scores of Italians
were herded by King Joe Damico and the riff-raff of the North End swarmed
into the hall."
The major advantage for Pendergast in this victory was he now had more
patronage jobs at his disposal, more oil to keep his machine running. Through
these jobs, Pendergasts power grew exponentially. He filled these positions
with loyal supporters who, in order to keep their jobs, became more dedicated
and willing to campaign for any slate of Pendergast candidates. Between 1900 and
1902, Pendergast appointed 123 out of the 173 patrolmen in the police
department.
In 1904, a Republican mayor won office and Pendergasts influence over the
police department dissipated. The Kansas City Journal predicted in
headlines the, "DECLINE & FALL OF PENDERGAST." Although his
political strength, and health, were on the decline, the loyalty of his
followers was still strong. Dorsett writes:
"Even though Jim Pendergast had
lost much of the city hall patronage which he had won by 1900-1902, even though
he had been forced to split his county patronage fifty-fifty with Joe Shannon
after 1900, it is not difficult to see how he continued to maintain his control
over the river wards during the ensuing years. Jims river ward followers did
not forsake him because he no longer had as many jobs to pass out, they loved
him just the same. They never forgot the many ways in which the saloonkeeper had
helped them.
When a devastating flood nearly destroyed the river wards in 1903, families
went to Pendergast for help. Although his own property was destroyed, Pendergast
led the relief effort to provide homes and furnishings for the victims, and
helped many families get back on their feet.
By 1906, Pendergast was playing a less active role in Kansas City politics
and had come to rely heavily upon his brother Tom to carry on the family
enterprise. Tom was 16 years younger than Jim. He had come to Kansas City in
1890 from St. Joseph, Mo., some 50 miles to the north, with brothers Mike and
John. All of the brothers would play an important role in making the Pendergast
machine successful, but Tom would make the machine the stuff of legend; in the
process a protégé of his would ascend to the White House, the Pendergast name
would become synonymous with political corruption, and Boss Tom would die in
disgrace.
For almost two decades Jim Pendergast had tutored Tom in machine politics. In
1900, Mayor James Reed rewarded Tom with one of the most plum patronage
positions the machine earned superintendent of streets.
Like his brother, Tom Pendergast was popular with the voters because he
supported popular issues. Tom had to fight harder to prove himself because many
people believed he achieved his position by riding on his brothers coat
tails. The fact that some people had previously considered him ineffective
helped to fuel his fighting spirit.
Tom did not run for elected office, but instead looked to command the local
Democratic Party. He helped organize new neighborhoods in his move to control
the city. But unlike his brother, Tom used illegal voting tactics to ensure his
success. Early on, this was an indication that Tom would go to any measure to
build his power. James Henry "Blackie" Audett explained part of those
illegal voting tactics in My Life Story:
"My first job in Kansas City was to
look up vacant lots."
"I looked them up precinct by
precinct, and turned them lists in to Mr. Pendergast thats Tom Pendergast,
the man who used to run Kansas City back in them days. When we got a precinct
all surveyed out, we would give addresses to them vacant lots. Then we would
take the address and assign them to people we could depend on prostitutes,
thieves, floaters, anybody we could get on the voting registration books. On
election days we just hauled these people to the right places and they went in
and voted
"
As the Pendergast machine began having problems around the time of Jims
death in late 1911, Tom began to forge alliances with former enemies within the
party and with local Republicans, when he could convince them that both their
interests could be served while agreeing on an issue.
Tom remained a close friend of James Reed, who would eventually be elected a
U.S. senator from Missouri. The two men would exchange political favors for
years. In Toms ever-expanding organization, as more and more Pendergast
candidates were elected, his patronage power grew in both the city and the
county. Neither his loyal workers, nor his constituents were forgotten in his
ascent. Much of the money Pendergast provided as aid to the needy seemed to
exceed the income he received from his legitimate investments, leading many of
his detractors to conclude that he was receiving payments from the prostitution
and gambling that was taking place in his own establishments.
In 1914, the Metropolitan Street Railway Company in Kansas City sought a new
30-year franchise from the city. A special election was held. The issue passed
mainly because of an over abundance of votes from the wards controlled by
Pendergast. Later, during an inquiry, witnesses testified that Pendergast worked
"with the Republicans, and used money, repeat voters, and toughs to produce
North Side majorities that pushed the franchise to victory."
This victory helped Pendergast solidify his relationship with his Republican
counterpart, Thomas Marks, and forge a relationship with businessman and
Republican Party leader Conrad Mann. By the spring of 1914, Pendergast had
gained control of the Democratic City Central Committee.
One of Pendergasts goals was to muster enough votes from his own
organizations efforts to become independent of other ward bosses or faction
leaders. Another goal was to regain control of the police force from rival
Joseph Shannon, who headed the "rabbit" group of the Democratic Party.
In the 1916 political battle, Pendergasts "goat" faction
supporters bragged that they were registering voters at a four-to-one clip
against the Shannon forces. Pendergast received the support of the American
Federation of Labor; in the Italian neighborhood he had Mike Ross working for
him. Ross, though Irish, had a group of tough Italians working for him,
including a rising hood named Johnny Lazia.
Shannon knew he was in trouble. In a last ditch, election-day morning-effort
he had the police herd hundreds of Pendergast supporters from the North End to
the police station for "investigation." The paddy wagons were at work
as early as 3 a.m. The Kansas City Star reported, by 6 a.m.
"two-hundred Pendergast men had been arrested by the Shannonized police
department." The brazen actions of the department would result in the
acting police chief being sent to jail.
Shannons efforts proved futile. Pendergast crushed the "rabbits"
and took control of the Democratic Party in the county. The following November
the entire slate of Democratic candidates was elected. Pendergasts reacquired
power over the Kansas City Police Department and quickly let the police force
know that harassment of his "friends" would result in immediate
firings. The "friends" he was referring to were the citys
prostitutes.
The patronage that Pendergast received from Gov. Frederick D. Gardner in 1917
was used to protect the interests of the liquor men throughout Kansas City.
County and city commissioners were appointed by the governor at Pendergasts
suggestion. With Pendergast men in all of the commission posts, including his
brother Mike, he used his power to gain favor with the citys wealthy
businessmen. Now, not only were the prostitutes, gamblers, and liquor interests
controlled, but business contracts with the city and county were also at his
discretion. Pendergasts own cement company made a fortune in such contracts.
Pendergasts rule did not go unchallenged though, and when that happened he
would resort to shifting allegiances to combat it. When Second Ward leader Mike
Bulger rebelled against him in the 1920 primary, Pendergast made a deal with
former foe Joe Shannon to close him down. As mentioned before, he would also
work with Tom Marks, the Republican boss, to exert his influence.
The Republicans were starting to see this misuse of power and began to use it
to their advantage. Much of this abuse was through Pendergasts control of the
police department. In the 1920 elections, police stood by as both
"rabbits" and "goats" stuffed the ballot boxes in several
Kansas City wards. Nonetheless a Republican was elected governor and Pendergast
lost control of the all-important three-judge county court.
To help regain control of the patronage he lost, Pendergast found it
necessary to relinquish his special favors to contractors. He did so by
supporting Harry S Truman as the machine candidate for county judge. Truman had
been a friend of James M. Pendergast, Mikes son, having served with him
during World War I. Truman won the Democratic nomination in 1922 and won again
in the November election. With Trumans victory, corruption ceased in the
court, but Pendergasts control of the county administration and the
patronage that went with it would last until he was sent to prison in 1939.
Truman became an integral part of the Pendergast machine, but, according to
Dorsett, was not corrupt. Dorsett states:
"Truman would not deal in graft, but he
was successful in running the Pendergast machine in rural Jackson County because
he was an astute organizer who used patronage to the organizations advantage.
In addition, Truman managed the court so efficiently, and accomplished so much
while in office that he won a large following. By leaving Truman alone to manage
the county administration as he saw fit, Pendergast lost the graft which he had
bestowed upon his associates during the Bulger regime. By endorsing honest
government and settling for patronage alone, he (Pendergast) had entrenched his
machine in the county administration by the mid-1920s."
At the same time, Pendergast became recognized as the undisputed leader of
the Kansas City Democrats. In achieving this, the lieutenants of his most
powerful opposition, Joe Shannon, deserted their former boss and climbed on the
Pendergast wagon. Helping Pendergast achieve this goal was Jim Aylward, a Kansas
City attorney who would become Pendergasts right hand man.
By the mid-1920s the Pendergast machine was in a fine-tuning stage. Boss Tom
seemed to be making all the right moves, no matter how wrong they looked to his
confidants. When another reform movement pushed for a new City Charter that was
designed to place control of city government in the hands of a non-partisan city
manager, Pendergast, knowing that most citizens were in favor of it and knowing
that he had enough votes on the City Council to control the appointment of the
new city manager, backed it. On Feb. 24, 1925, the new Charter passed.
Passage of the reform helped create a new-look Pendergast image. As a backer
of the new Charter, Pendergast could now be the poster boy for honest elections.
With this new image he became the symbol for effective city government, and this
gained him prestige in the state as well as additional power in the Missouri
Democratic Party.
Over the next decade, Pendergast helped expand his empire by creating
political clubs in various wards. The clubs provided a social center for many
lower and middle-income citizens who couldnt afford the fees for country
clubs. During this same period, Aylward was named chairman of the Jackson County
Democratic Party and established the Missouri Democrat newspaper in 1925.
While Pendergast moved into a higher social and economic stratosphere, he did
not forget the people who got him there. He kept two offices and was at one or
the other everyday to meet with people from all walks of life who cared to call.
No one was given special consideration; each waited his or her turn to see the
boss.
In 1926, the City Council appointed a Pendergast lieutenant, Henry F.
McElroy, the new city manager of Kansas City. Although he was supposed to act in
a non-partisan manner, McElroy gave most of the citys department head
positions to Democrats.
With Prohibition the law of the land, the Pendergast machine allowed the
local liquor interests to continue unabated in supplying citizens with illegal
alcohol. Even when the "Noble Experiment" ended in 1933, lively night
spots were still protected by Pendergasts influence and there were many
proprietors who were thankful that outsiders flocked to Kansas City for a taste
of the night life that was not available in the outlying Midwestern communities.
Despite the Republican-run country, Pendergast performed a remarkable job in
delivering Democratic candidates. When the Great Depression came and the
Democrats won favor, Pendergast enjoyed his greatest success and was eventually
elevated to direct the Missouri State Democratic Party. Pendergast used his
powers to direct loyalists into positions at all levels. He even supported his
old rival Joe Shannon in his election to the U.S. House of Representatives. With
his ever increasing patronage, Pendergast not only took care of loyal Democrats
in Kansas City, but he also helped Republicans who had supported his efforts
along the way.
In 1932, just weeks before the November election, Francis Wilson, a
Pendergast-backed candidate for governor, became ill and died. Pendergast
quickly endorsed Guy B. Park, a rather obscure county judge for the position. In
three short weeks Park went from an unknown to governor of Missouri. Although he
was not corrupt, Park was overwhelmed and allowed Pendergast to virtually run
the state at least in the areas that were valuable to the machine.
In 1935, at Pendergasts request, Park named Emmett OMalley state
superintendent of insurance. Working with Pendergast, OMalley orchestrated a
compromise between insurance companies and the state of Missouri to increase
insurance premiums. In this settlement, Pendergast received $750,000 for his
services.
With the support that Pendergast had lent to the selection of Franklin D.
Roosevelt as the Democratic nominee for president in 1932, the Roosevelt
administration showed its appreciation by giving Pendergast patronage and
control over Missouris federal relief welfare program. Pendergast used his
influence with the administration to obtain a presidential pardon for his old
Republican friend Conrad Mann, who had been found guilty of involvement in an
illegal state lottery; and to have Judge Harry Truman appointed state director
of federal re-employment for Missouri.
With his grasp of the state Works Progress Administration (WPA), Pendergast
was able to control all jobs funded by the federal program within the state. His
appointment of Matthew Murray to oversee the states administration of the
program would be a tremendous boon to the machine and further strengthen
Pendergasts position throughout the state. Of course this would not have been
possible without Truman winning election as U.S. senator in 1934. Dorsett tells
us:
"The story of Trumans victory in 1934,
and Clarks (Missouri Senator) consequent surrender to Pendergast, is one of
the most fascinating in the annals of Missouri politics. The battle for the
senatorial nomination was unusually bitter. Clark took to the stump for his
candidate, (Jacob) Tuck Milligan
The Senator did all that he could to curb
Pendergasts power. He charged that Kansas Citys municipal employees were
being assessed to support Trumans campaign, and that most of the state
employees were being forced into line. In much the same vein Milligan attacked
Truman by arguing that Gov. Parks administration was doing so much for the
Kansas City machines candidate that the executive mansion would be more
appropriately named Uncle Toms Cabin."
Pendergasts success in routing Milligan would later come back to haunt
him.
With Trumans victory in the 1934 election the newspapers declared, "Pendergast
as the undisputed boss from one end of the state to the other." While the
New Deal added considerably to Pendergasts power, it was Murrays selection
to lead Missouris federal work relief that would prove to be the most
important contribution to the machine. Most of the district directors were
appointed for their loyalty to the boss. With control of the state WPA, federal
employees now worked for Pendergasts candidates and were used to support
them.
Although part of the New Deal was to eliminate the powerful political
machines that were operating around the country, in the case of Missouri and Tom
Pendergast, the New Deal only served to enhance it. Pendergast and his
organization seemed invulnerable during the mid-1930s. With the machine
controlling Kansas City and Jackson County, and having the WPA employees working
as troops for his benefit, Pendergast reigned supreme.
Above all, Pendergast considered himself a respectable businessman and civic
leader. Once when visiting Chicago he told reporters that Kansas City had less
gambling and racketeering than any comparable city its size. Gloating, the boss
stated, "Ours is a fine, clean, and well-ordered town
"
In 1936, Lloyd C. Stark would begin to tumble the Pendergast ivory tower. By
realizing he needed Pendergasts influence to become governor, Stark sought
the benefits of a relationship with the Democratic boss. He convinced Pendergast
that he was the man to replace Guy Park in the governors mansion.
During the elections of 1934, Italian gangsters in Kansas City murdered four
people. The city experienced the same violence as Chicago had during the 1920s
with gunmen driving around intimidating voters while the Pendergast influenced
police department stood idle. Suspicion of Pendergasts involvement in these
shootings subsided a week later when mobsters tried to gun down City Manager
Henry F. McElroy, one of the bosss men. While these incidents created minor
headlines, they could not compare to the scandals that surfaced after the 1936
elections.
The Undoing of Boss Tom
Prosecutor Maurice M. Milligan had a burning hatred of Pendergast because the
boss had supported Truman rather than Milligans brother Tuck in the 1934
Senate race. The prosecutor led the attack on the Pendergast machine by
conducting a two-year election-fraud investigation. When completed, 259 of 278
defendants were convicted.
Despite the continuing investigations and trials, Pendergasts slate of
candidates again won election in 1938. Gov. Stark was urged to cleanse Kansas
City of its wide open gambling and as he began to campaign for the U. S. Senate
he found this to be the opportune time to strike at Pendergast. Stark felt he
could gain support by his attacks on the Pendergast stronghold the Kansas
City Police Department. His boldest move was to put through legislation to
return the department to state control. Stark believed that the prostitution,
gambling, and illegal liquor activity in the city were protected by the
Pendergast-controlled police department. After the Missouri General Assembly
approved Starks legislation in July 1939, the newspapers began to fill with
tales of corruption in the police department. While many officers refused to
deny that corruption was taking place, they justified their participation
because it granted them continued employment. In the aftermath of the
departmental changeover, 50 percent of the police force was dismissed.
In Starks pursuit of Pendergast, he and Milligan traveled to Washington
D.C. to confer with Elmer L. Irey, the chief of the intelligence unit of the
U.S. Treasury Department. The Treasury man soon began an investigation into the
OMalley insurance compromise. Truman, at Pendergasts urging, tried to
replace Milligan when he came up for reappointment. The FDR administration
frowned on this move and sensing a change in Missouri politics began to throw
its support behind Stark and his anti-Pendergast campaign. By early 1939, five
federal agencies were involved in the investigation of Pendergast.
The investigators confirmed the $750,000 payoff scam Pendergast had been paid
by the insurance interests. The once unassailable Pendergast, the most powerful
man in the history of Missouri politics, was indicted. Agents of the Internal
Revenue Service also discovered that Pendergast had failed to pay income taxes
from 1927 to 1937, and had doctored the books at eight companies where he held a
major interest. A second indictment followed. Placed under such intense
scrutiny, Pendergasts health began to fail. He suffered a heart attack and
over the next several years had surgery three times for abdominal problems.
In May 1939, Milligan presented his case against Pendergast in court. Due to
the overwhelming evidence against him, Pendergast pleaded guilty to two charges
of income tax evasion. He was fined $10,000 and sentenced to 15 months in
federal prison on the first charge. On the second charge, he received three
years, but was let off with five years probation. He was released from prison in
1940, but his career was over.
In addition to Pendergast, the others sent to prison as a result of Milligans
investigations were Emmett OMalley, Matthew Murray, Otto Higgins, the
director of the police department, and Charles Carollo who oversaw the gambling
interests in Kansas City.
Pendergasts demise also signaled the end of the machine. Even Gov. Stark
suffered as few voters respected him for betraying the man who had put him in
office. Harry Truman, by stint of his own personal integrity, survived although
his association with Pendergast would come under numerous attacks from his
political foes. As Vice President Truman, he would cause a national uproar by
attending Pendergasts funeral in Kansas City in January 1945. Three years
later, in one of the great political ironies of all time, Truman, the protégé
of one of the most corrupt public figures in U.S. history, narrowly defeated
crime fighter Thomas E. Dewey for President in 1948.
Johnny Lazia
One of the Italian criminals who rose to prominence during the Pendergast
years was Johnny Lazia. He followed in the footsteps of Joe Damico and Mike Ross
in supplying the Italian vote in the North End.
Lazia was born in Kansas Citys "Little Italy" section in 1897.
When he was 18, he was convicted of armed robbery and sent to the state
penitentiary in Jefferson City. After promising to enlist in the Army and use
his "violent energy" to fight the Germans, a fairly common practice at
the time, he was granted parole after less than two years in prison. Lazia
forgot his promise about joining the Army though and went right back to his life
of crime.
Mike Ross, an Irishman, had been running "Little Italy" for the
Pendergast interests. Around 1927, he moved out of the North End, but attempted
to run it as an absentee boss. Lazia had no interest in answering to an Irish
boss living outside the neighborhood. During a special election day in May 1928,
Lazia made his move. He kidnapped several of Rosss lieutenants, including
Frank Benanti, Anthony Bivona, and Joe Gallucci. A week after the election, the
lieutenants agreed to join Lazia, and Ross gave up his North End leadership.
Although not happy with the North End coupe, Pendergast accepted Lazias
political support and in turn had the police department turn a blind eye to
Lazias bootlegging and gambling activities. Lazia cut the police in for a
slice of the profits. During his rise to power in the 1920s, Lazias gang
included Anthony Gizzo, Charley Gargotta, Charles Carollo, Sam Scola, and Gus
Fascone. Each was a capable gunman and was responsible for helping to oversee
the profitable gambling and bootlegging that occurred in the North End. On
election day they were also in charge of getting out the Democratic vote.
Because of Pendergast and Lazias control of the Kansas City Police
Department, the city gained a notorious reputation for being a "safe
haven" for criminals. In Jeffrey S. Kings The Life and Death of
Pretty Boy Floyd, the author states, "Lazia insisted that he be told
what criminals were in the area, what their plans were, and how long they
intended to stay. Any crooks from out of town who did not pay him off would be
arrested or forced to leave the city. Any money on them would be
appropriated."
Robert Unger, in his recent book, "Union Station Massacre,"
explains:
"Lazia had to fight everyday to
preserve the place hed carved for himself
Lazias big threat was always
from outsiders who saw the sweet deal home rule and bossism
had brought to Kansas City and wanted to muscle in
by gentle persuasion and
ruthless action, Lazia kept them all out. Nothing criminal of any consequence
happened in Kansas City without the knowledge and consent of Johnny Lazia."
Beginning in the spring of 1933, Lazias undisputed control in overseeing
these activities received severe challenges. The first incident occurred on May
27 with the kidnapping of Mary McElroy, the daughter of City Manager Henry F.
McElroy, a Pendergast lieutenant. The attractive 25-year-old Mary, who was
described as slightly disturbed, was in the middle of a bubble bath when she was
hustled out of her fathers home by four amateur kidnappers. A ransom of
$30,000 was negotiated and paid and Mary was home in just under 30 hours.
The kidnappers were captured within days and justice was swift: the leader of
the group was sentenced to death. Because Mary begged that his life be spared,
her father requested life imprisonment for the man, which was granted. Mary
later wrote in a suicide note, "My four kidnappers are probably the only
people on earth who do not consider me an utter fool."
The kidnapping was a blow to Lazias pride and he felt it undermined his
importance to the Pendergast interests. Things would get worse. On June 17,
1933, one of the most celebrated crimes in U.S. history the crime that J.
Edgar Hoover used to launch the Federal Bureau of Investigation was
committed in the parking lot in front of Kansas City's Union Station. There, in
the bustle of early-morning rush hour, four law enforcement officers were shot
to death as they were attempting to transport bank robber Frank
"Jelly" Nash to the penitentiary in Leavenworth. In the hail of
machinegun fire, Nash was also murdered. Although for years Hoover advanced the
notion that he believed the shooters were Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy"
Floyd and Adam Richetti, recent research has proved otherwise. In fact recent
forensic studies indicate that Nash and several of the officers may have been
killed by "friendly fire." Robert Ungers book delves deeply into
this subject.
Verne Miller, who was positively identified as one of the participants in the
shootout, was reputed to have met with Lazia before and after the shooting to
arrange safe passage out of town. Miller would later be murdered and his body
dumped outside Detroit.
By mid-summer, the newly-formed FBI was suspicious of Lazias connections
to the killings. With one of its own federal agents dead, the FBI was desperate
to pin the Union Station Massacre on someone. In addition to this headache, a
small gang headed by Joe Lusco was trying to create a niche for itself with the
local Democratic Party, and another local hood, Ferris Anthon, began to intrude
on Lazias operations.
Anthon was dealt with first, but it would be costly for Lazia. In the early
hours of Aug. 12, 1933, Lazia gunmen cut down Anthon as he was entering his home
at the Cavalier Apartments in Kansas City. Ironically, the apartment building
was being used by the FBI to safe keep Agent Joe Lackey, one of the wounded
survivors of the Union Station shooting. Lackeys first thoughts were that the
gunfire was a warning for him to keep his mouth shut.
Driving nearby at the time of the shooting was Sheriff Tom Bash. The sheriff
and a deputy were on their way home from an ice cream social with Mrs. Bash and
a 14-year-old neighbor girl. Bash slammed on the brakes, grabbed a riot gun and
he and the deputy jumped out and blasted away at the getaway car. Killed
instantly were Sam Scola and Gus Fascone. Charley Gargotta jumped from the car
and emptied his revolver at Bash, missing every shot. Throwing down the gun, he
pleaded, "Dont shoot me Dont shoot me!" A fourth gunman
escaped.
Two of Lazias lieutenants were dead and another was in jail. To make
matters worse, another lieutenant, James "Jimmy Needles" LaCapra,
known as a bomb expert, was now at odds with Lazia over his stingy control of
the gambling rackets in the city. When two of LaCapras associates disappeared
one spirited away from a hospital by the Lazia / Pendergast controlled
police force Jimmy Needles responded by tossing a bomb at Lazias North
Side Democratic Club, demolishing the front of the building.
To add to Lazias woes, he was convicted of income tax evasion in early
1934. Lazia was fined $5,000 and sentenced to a year in prison, which he
immediately appealed.
Lazias problems came to a brutal end in the early morning hours of July
10, 1934. The night before, Lazia and his wife Marie were returning from Lake
Lotawana, located southeast of the city. Charles Carollo was driving and serving
as a bodyguard for Lazia. Carollo drove into the driveway of the Park Central
Hotel, where the Lazias made their home, at about 3 a.m. When Lazia got out
of the car, two gunmen, hiding in the bushes, opened fire with a machinegun and
a shotgun. Carollo sped off with Lazias wife to safety as the gunmen
continued to blast away at Lazia on the ground. Lazia was taken to St. Josephs
Hospital where he died 12 hours later.
Police ballistics experts stated that the machine gun used to kill Lazia was
also used in the Union Station Massacre. The authorities quickly arrested Joe
Lusco and 27 others, but Lazias killers were never identified. Lazias gang
pinned Lazias murder on LaCapra and tried to kill him the following month
outside Wichita, Kan. LaCapra, terrified and fearing for his life, went to a
local police station and told a fantastic tale that tied Lazia, Floyd, and
Richetti to Verne Miller and the Union Station Massacre. However, associates of
Lazia always maintained that LaCapras statement to police was the
"ramblings of a desperate man out to cut a deal."
LaCapra was still in fear for his life in January 1935 and was advised by FBI
agents to leave for South America where he had family. LaCapra refused and
instead went to New York where his bullet riddled body was found by police on a
highway 10 miles west of Poughkeepsie.
The DiGiovanni / Balestrere Gang
While Pendergast and Lazia were in control of the politicians, the
prostitution, and the gambling going on in the city, there were other Mafia
factions at work in Kansas City.
The DiGiovanni brothers, Peter and Joseph, were born in Sicily during the
1880s. Joseph, the younger, arrived in Kansas City in 1912 and immediately
became involved in Black Hand extortion. In 1915, police arrested Joseph and
more than a dozen other men for their participation in a Black Hand ring that
was extorting money from Italian families and businessmen in the North End. A
diligent Italian detective, Louis Olivero, had worked with the terrified victims
of the gang and was able to gather enough information to make the arrests.
Shortly after the arrests were made Olivero was murdered and the victims he had
cultivated as witnesses refused to testify against the gang.
During World War I the DiGiovanni gang was involved with James Balestrere in
a black-market sugar operation. When the war ended, they found themselves with
an abundance of expensive sugar. According to investigators, Joseph conspired to
get rid of it by torching the warehouse where the sugar was stored. His
amateurish attempt in this arson left his face and hands terribly scarred. For
years he would maintain that he was injured in a gas explosion. He would also
maintain the nickname "Scarface."
When Prohibition went into effect, the gang found themselves right back in
the sugar business again. This time it was the corn-sugar trade and they made a
handsome profit selling it to alky cookers who quickly turned it into alcohol.
The DiGiovanni brothers and their partner Balestrere were considered, along with
Frank "Chee Chee" DeMayo, to be the top bootleggers in Kansas City.
In Ed Reids classic tale, Mafia, he discusses how the DiGiovanni
gang and Balestrere operated during the 1920s:
"It was Scarface DiGiovanni who dictated
whether or not an individual bootlegger could go into business in Kansas City,
and he even laid down the law about "ice" or graft payments to local
police. Balestrere was apparently less powerful in this early period, though he
functioned as the Mafia judge, settling disputes of all kinds among Italians.
They seldom went to court in those early days of the sharpest terror. Instead
they went to Balestrere and his kangaroo court. He summoned witnesses, held
informal hearings and his judgment was widely feared and respected. Scarface
appeared to be head
man of the Mafia in Missouri, with Balestrere tops in Kansas City."
In addition to arrests for extortion and bootlegging, Joseph DiGiovanni was
charged with kidnapping and narcotics, but never convicted. In 1929, a
kidnapping charge included the rape of a young lady. During the 1930s, he helped
organize a profitable narcotics ring. It was broken in 1942 when seven men were
convicted, including Joseph DeLuca, one of the DiGiovannis chief lieutenants.
At the trial one of the governments witnesses was Carl Caramussa, a former
member of the gang. In 1919, Caramussas 11-year-old brother was murdered by
Paul Catanzaro, who was grabbed by a group of bystanders and nearly beaten to
death. Catanzaro avoided conviction for the killing after witnesses were scared
off. He later found work with the DiGiovanni family. When Carl Caramussa
testified in 1942, Catanzaro sat in the courtroom and gave him the "Mafia
death sign," until police threw him out. Caramussa changed his name and
went into hiding after the trial. However, gunmen caught up with him in Chicago
in June 1945 and murdered him.
During the same trial, Joseph DeLucas girlfriend was arrested and charged
with jury tampering. She was convicted after Thomas Buffa, another defendant,
testified against her. Buffa, who at one time had ties to organized crime in St.
Louis, was murdered in Lodi, Calif., in 1946.
Joseph DiGiovanni and his older brother Peter, nicknamed "Sugarhouse
Pete," were partners in the Midwest Distributing Company, one of the
largest wholesale liquor firms in the city. The concern possessed the exclusive
franchise rights for all Seagrams liquor products for Jackson County, which
includes Kansas City. On Dec. 21, 1943, 12 men involved with the company were
arrested in an interstate black-market liquor ring. Among those arrested was
Charles Binaggio, a gang member on the rise. The charges included violation of
federal liquor laws and failing to keep proper records.
The case was dismissed in January 1944 after a U.S. attorney decided that
Alcohol Tax Unit agents did not have sufficient evidence; a claim that baffled
the agents. Later, several of the defendants traveled to New York City to
testify against Jacob Fried, who was involved in the company that was supplying
the illegal whiskey. He was convicted.
During the Kefauver hearings held in Kansas City in 1950, Joseph DiGiovanni
was called to testify and denied that he had ever heard of the Mafia. After a
few more unacceptable answers, Kefauver recommended to the committee that he be
indicted for perjury. Like many of the witnesses who were charged with contempt
of Congress, he avoided indictment.
James Balestrere was a kind of shadowy figure in the Kansas City underworld.
Born in Sicily in 1891, he immigrated to Milwaukee in 1903 where it was said
that he joined "several hundred members" of his family. Of Balestrere,
author Ed Reid states, "In the probe of rackets in Kansas City by federal
agents and grand juries from 1936 to 1940, agents of the government named him as
the most powerful and influential man of Sicilian origin west of Chicago."
During Prohibition Balestrere was involved in bootlegging and owned a
speakeasy that was said to be losing money. He remedied that by having an
arsonist burn it to the ground. Although he was befriended by politicians (from
both parties), law enforcement officers, city officials, and gangsters,
investigations of Balestrere failed to reveal any illegal activities.
The "Crime Committee Report" published after the Kefauver hearings
were complete stated, "The two men believed to be the leaders of the Kansas
City Mafia," were James Balestrere and Joseph DiGiovanni. Kefauver wrote of
Balestrere, "He played dumb and represented himself to us a poor old
jobless fellow who lived on a little income from a piece of business property
and on a few dollars given him by his children."
Balestrere told the committee that he needed a job after Prohibition ended
he had gone out of the business of selling sugar to bootleggers so he
approached Tom Pendergast. Balestrere testified that Pendergast gave him a cut
of a keno gambling game where he walked in once a month and picked up a check
for $1,000. In addition, Balestrere told the committee that Charles Binaggio had
offered him a piece of a gambling operation called the Green Hills. Balestrere,
the godfather of Binaggios only child, replied, "I am not much in the
gambling business. I dont know much about it." One month later he said
Binaggio gave him $5,000 he claimed was won.
The Five Iron Men
With the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, gambling again became the lucrative
activity of the underworld. With Kansas City being a wide-open town there were
tremendous profits to be earned. After Lazias murder in 1934, political
leadership in the North End was assumed by Charles Binaggio, but a group of
gambling lords also wielded power in the Kansas City underworld. In Ed Reids Mafia,
published in 1952, he refers to these bosses as the "iron men" and
identifies them as James Balestrere, Peter and Joseph DiGiovanni, Joseph DeLuca,
and Anthony Gizzo. Except for Gizzo, the others were known for being part of the
Mafia.
During the days following the murder of Binaggio in April 1950, there were
several St. Louis Post-Dispatch articles that mentioned the
"big five." The articles refer to "the principal gang figures
immediately below Binaggio in rank." They identify those figures as Charley
"Mad Dog" Gargotta (murdered with Binaggio), Charles Carollo, James
Balestrere, Gaetano Lococo, and Anthony Gizzo.
In Sen. Estes Kefauvers, "Crime In America," his synopsis of his
14-city crime investigation tour, he states that Max H. Goldschein, a special
assistant U.S. attorney, testified in 1950 that, "the Five Iron Men"
were Binaggio, Balestrere, Gargotta, Gizzo, and Lococo.
While Balestrere has already been discussed and Binaggio will be talked about
in depth later, Carollo, Lococo, Gargotta and Gizzo will be focused on here.
Charles Vincenzo "Charley the Wop" Carollo was born in Santa
Ristino, Italy and never became a naturalized American citizen. He may have been
considered first among equals in the gambling business after Lazias murder.
Carollo had been the closest to Lazia, his loyalty extending back to the 1920s
when he "took the rap" for Lazia after he was indicted in a liquor
conspiracy.
Carollo kept a low profile until the fall of 1933 when a crusading judge,
Allen C. Southern, began a grand jury investigation. The probe not only targeted
the gambling rackets, but also the monopoly the gangs enjoyed in the beer and
beverage distribution business. When the grand jury went to work looking for
slot machines, the slots disappeared with "phantomlike" speed into
storage for the duration of the investigation. In addition to Carollo and Lazia
being called before the grand jury, a pending tax-evasion case against Lazia,
which Pendergast had worked hard to suppress, was reopened.
In June 1934, two minor hoodlums from Los Angeles received permission to open
a gambling den in Kansas City that they named the Fortune Club. Carollo met with
the two men six months later to let them know he was now a half-owner in the
club. He figured the protection he provided for the pair was at least worth that
much. In March 1938, he notified his "partners" that he was buying
them out for $5,000 each. By then the club was making, by conservative
estimates, $60,000 a month. When the authorities launched a cleanup campaign in
January 1939 they were surprised to find out that Carollo was the secret owner
of the club.
While local investigators believed that Carollo became the leader of the
Kansas City mob after Lazias murder, federal authorities considered him to be
only a front for an "even bigger man, another Italian" who they did
not name, although speculation was that it was Charles Binaggio.
Carollo was indicted on income-tax evasion charges after the revelation of
his ownership of the Fortune Club. District Attorney Maurice M. Milligan the
same man who brought down Tom Pendergast prosecuted the case. While Carollos
actual position in the underworld was always in question, his trial revealed
that his chief function was as a collector of the "lug." The
"lug" was the tax charged to the gambling houses in Kansas City to
remain in operation. The investigation revealed that from 19 gambling houses
targeted the "lug" had gone from $53,000 annually in 1935, to almost
double, $103,000 by 1938. Carollo admitted during testimony that he,
"collected the lug for Pendergast, among others, making direct payments to
the Boss and his secretary."
At Carollos sentencing, Milligan made the following statement:
"The investigation into the background of
this defendant reveals the fact that after the death of Lazia this defendant
took over the authority exercised by Lazia in his lifetime, relative to gambling
and rackets carried on in Kansas City, Missouri; that he grew in power even
greater than his predecessor; that he had a full entrée into the offices of the
high officials in the city administration. According to the testimony, he was
seen going into and out of the private office of the former city manager; that
he had full entrée into the police headquarters, and almost daily was a visitor
at the office of the director of police."
Carollo was sent to prison at Leavenworth. His sentence consisted of one year
for mail fraud; three years for income-tax evasion; and four years for perjury.
Prison life didnt exactly put Carollo on the straight and narrow. Shortly
after he arrived at Leavenworth he got involved in a smuggling operation
bringing contraband articles into the prison. For these offenses he was
transferred to Alcatraz. After his release from prison, Carollo was deported on
January 7, 1954.
Author Ed Reid wrote that no matter who was running the Kansas City rackets
Lazia, Carollo or Binaggio the enforcement end of the gang fell to Gizzo,
Gargotta, and Lococo, with "Lococo serving as the engineer or
quarterback." While working for the bosses these men were said to be in
constant communication with James Balestrere who, if not in name, functioned
similar to a family consigliere.
Gaetano Lococo, also known as Thomas or Tano, claimed to have been born in
America prior to the turn of the 20th century. Ed Reid described
Lococo as follows:
"Known as a Mafia enforcer in Kansas
City, he was one of the key group of young Italian storm troopers who fronted
for John Lazia in the early days. With Tony Gizzo and the late Charley Gargotta
he served on the mob enforcement squad."
Senator Kefauver had another description of
Lococo:
"Lococo was a mousy, insignificant,
bespectacled little man whose appearance belied his reputation as another of
Binaggios enforcers."
Reid claimed Lococos police record was removed from the files of the
Kansas City Police Department because "he was virtually in control of the
police department in the 1930s." Reid states that Lococo "wriggled out
of the clutches of the law" in 1933 in connection with one gang killing.
Which leaves one to wonder if Lococo was the fourth man involved in the
ill-fated getaway after the murder of Ferris Anthon.
In 1946, Lococo was one of four gang members under Binaggio who muscled in
and took over the race-wire service in Kansas City. In 1948, he traveled to
Nogales, Ariz., where he posed as a retired businessman. Hiring the local mayor
as his attorney, he purchased a hotel for $50,000. When he approached the county
sheriff with a proposal to start a gambling operation there, he was rebuffed. He
quickly sold the hotel and left town.
Reid claims that a meeting took place in Tia Juana, Mexico to plan the murder
of Binaggio and that Lococo may have "helped arrange things." Lococo
had a family tie to the boss. He was the uncle of Binaggios wife.
In addition to his involvement in gambling, Lococo owned several drug stores
in the Kansas City area. He and his wife spent large blocks of time in Arizona
and Mexico due to Lococos bouts with arthritis.
When Lococo was called to testify before the Kefauver Committee, Sen. Charles
W. Tobey asked him about his "ugly reputation," which, according to
Reid, was that he was "probably the most skillful and experienced killer in
the city."
Lococo replied, "You cant give me a single man in Kansas City who
could ever say that I threatened him or said anything wrong to him or anywhere
else."
During the time the Kefauver hearings were in session, Lococo was also on
trial for income-tax evasion. He was convicted and sentenced to two years in
Leavenworth.
And now to Gargotta. According to Sen. Estes Kefauver, "If ever a human
being deserved the title of Mad Dog it was Gargotta."
Born in Kansas City, Gargotta was arrested more than 40 times over a 30-year
period. Those charges included murder, gambling, liquor law violations, carrying
a concealed weapon, robbery, auto theft, extortion, attempted burglary and
vagrancy. Incredibly, all of the charges were dismissed with the exception of an
assault to kill charge for his attempted murder of Sheriff Bash.
While attempting to flee after the killing of Ferris Anthon and the attempted
murder of Bash in 1934, Gargotta was charged with murder, attempted murder, and
the theft of two revolvers from the Army, which were used during the crimes.
When he was tried on the stolen revolvers charge, Leonard L. Claiborne, a Kansas
City detective, switched tags on a gun found on Gargotta and another recovered
near the murder scene. He then lied on the witness stand having been promised a
promotion. Instead Claiborne was sentenced to four years in prison.
The prosecutor selected to handle the murder trial, W. W. Graves, asked for
and received 27 continuances over a five-year period before he dismissed the
charges against Gargotta all together. Graves was later removed from office by
the Missouri Supreme Court for "neglect of duty" for his handling of
the case.
Gargotta was eventually re-indicted for the attempted murder of Sheriff Bash
as part of Gov. Lloyd Starks cleanup drive. Gargotta pleaded guilty and was
sentenced to three years in prison. However, the Missouri Pardon Board
recommended his parole after just 19 months and he was released in January 1941.
Gargotta became Binaggios bodyguard and would be murdered with him in
April 1950 at the North Ends Democratic headquarters.
Anthony Robert "Fat Tony" Gizzo seemed to be associated with
everyone in the Kansas City underworld. In the early 1920s, when he was arrested
on a narcotics charge, he offered a federal officer $10,000 to let it go. He was
convicted and in 1924 served two years in prison.
Gizzo was involved in gambling operations with Lazia, Carollo, and Binaggio.
He was also rumored to be Balestreres "personal representation" in
Wichita, Kan., where he was considered the Mafia boss.
"Fat Tony" could be called a character. During his testimony before
the Kefauver Committee it was revealed that Gizzo was an acquaintance of
numerous top mobsters throughout the country. Kefauver described Gizzo as,
"a boastful, noisy, beer barrel of a man" and, in apparently an
opinion Kefauver developed from interrogating an abundance of underworld
figures, "was the only one whose performance was a reasonable facsimile of
how a gangster is supposed to act."
When Sen. Alexander Wiley asked him about his rumored habit of carrying large
sums of money, Gizzo replied, "Do you want to see it?" From his pocket
the overweight gangster pulled out a roll of bills and counted off 25 $100
bills.
Gizzo had one of the more interesting exchanges with the committee when he
was asked,
"Do you belong to the Mafia?"
"What is the Mafia?" he responded. "I dont even know what
the Mafia is."
Apparently Gizzo forgot this exchange and was later asked if he knew James
Balestrere.
"Yes, sir," Gizzo replied.
"He is rather widely known as a prominent man in the Mafia, isnt
he?" asked the committee.
"Thats what you hear," said Gizzo.
"What did you hear?" questioned the committee.
"The same thing that you just said there," answered
Gizzo.
Reminded of this conversation during public hearings held later, Gizzo cried
out, "I wish to hell I knew what the Mafia is!"
After the murders of Binaggio and Gargotta, and the imprisonment of Lococo,
Gizzo would assume the leadership of the Kansas City underworld. His rule would
be short lived, but it wouldnt be a violent ending. On April 1, 1953, Gizzo
died of a massive heart attack in a hotel room in Dallas. The 52-year-old and
his wife had gone to Texas to visit their son who was serving time for a
narcotics offense.
Charles Binaggio
Charles Binaggio was born in Beaumont, Tex., and moved to Kansas City with
his family while he was still a youth. Not much is known about his early years.
Living on Kansas Citys North Side, Binaggio became acquainted with Johnny
Lazia who found work for him in one of his downtown gambling operations.
Binaggio was determined to follow in Lazias footsteps. He worked at the
business of politics seven days a week building a following by performing favors
for his constituents finding jobs for them, and most importantly, helping
them when they got in trouble with the law. He became an important political
organizer and rose quickly through the ranks. Except for Gov. Forrest Smith,
Binaggio became the most recognized leader of the Democratic Party. His
detractors claimed that his rise came from his connections to the Kansas City
Mafia, who backed him for leadership because of his organizing ability and his
minor criminal record.
On his way to the top, Binaggio merged seven Democratic clubs and seized
control of the North Side from Jim Pendergast, the nephew of Boss Tom Pendergast.
Some believe Binaggios most brilliant political move was supporting Forrest
Smith for the Democratic nomination for governor in 1948. Binaggio and Jim
Pendergast had actually worked together until the mid-1940s before splitting on
who the Democrats would support for governor.
As mentioned earlier, Missouri native son, Harry S Truman was a close friend
of Jim Pendergast and served with him during World War I. Trumans early
success in politics was accomplished under the auspices of Tom Pendergast, a
fact that his political opponents would continually use against him. Later, when
Truman became president, Jim Pendergast was a frequent guest in Washington D.C.
Despite Binaggios prominence in the Democratic Party, he was not welcome at
the White House. Binaggios enemies claimed it was his arrest record, not his
split with Pendergast, which kept him from an invitation to the Oval Office.
In 1946, while Binaggio and Jim Pendergast were still political allies, their
political organization was involved in a well-publicized voting fraud scandal.
It involved the Democratic primary held in August 1946 in which Enos Axtell
ousted incumbent Roger C. Slaughter. President Truman had endorsed Axtell and in
doing so publicly demanded that the defiant Slaughter be "purged."
While a grand jury was investigating the allegations of voter fraud, thieves
broke into the Jackson County Courthouse and used nitroglycerin to blast open a
safe. The intruders removed ballots and election records that supported the
eighty-one vote fraud indictments.
In Jefferson City, the Republican state chairman commented that the theft
indicated that the Pendergast machine "is just as rampant under the
protection of Harry S Truman as it was under Mr. Trumans mentor Tom
Pendergast." As a result of the ballot theft, many of Binaggios aides
escaped prosecution when the vote fraud cases collapsed. The one exception was
Morris "Snag" Klein, an important associate of Binaggios who was
known as one of the top gamblers in the city.
By the late 1940s, Binaggio oversaw a bloc of 30,000 votes and no other
political boss in the state controlled more. Although some politicians were
concerned about Binaggios underworld connections, they still came to him for
the votes he could muster. At least two senators and six representatives were
reputed to be under his control in the Missouri State Legislature.
Binaggios base of operations on the North Side was the First District
Democratic Club. Newspapers gave the following description of the location and
the activity that took place there:
"The political headquarters of Binaggio
was in a large meeting hall on Truman Road in a neighborhood of cheap hotels and
restaurants, second-hand furniture stores and used car lots. On election days
squadrons of ghost voters were assembled in that room and dispatched to various
polling places to vote in the names of absent or long dead citizens."
As far as Binaggios arrest record, it began in 1930. Some of his early
arrests seemed to indicate that the Kansas City mob could have had a strong
influence in Colorado during the 1930s. On Jan. 18, 1930, Binaggio was arrested
in Denver along with Anthony Gizzo for carrying a concealed weapon. Their
sentences were suspended after they agreed to leave town. One year later,
Binaggio was arrested in Denver again, this time for vagrancy. In Kansas City he
was arrested twice for bootlegging, in both cases the charges were dropped. In
August 1939, he was arrested in Denver for again carrying a concealed weapon.
Another well-publicized arrest occurred in 1945
when Binaggio was involved in operating the Green Hills Country Club, a gambling
resort in Platt County, Mo. Also involved with the club were Gus Gargotta, the
brother of Charley, Nick Penna, Anthony "Slick" Bondon, Binaggio's
father-in-law, and Fred Wedow, who was described as a "veteran
gambler."
During the 1940s, Binaggio was reputed to be the man in charge of the Harmony
News Service, the Capone syndicates race-wire operation in Kansas City. The
newspapers called Binaggio the "king-pin of state-wide gambling."
Binaggio was also involved in the distribution of the Capone syndicates
Canadian Ace Beer. He once admitted to a reporter that he received a 25-percent
"cut" from the profits of the Duke Sales Company, the wholesaling firm
that distributed the beer. He then refused to divulge his other business
interests stating, "you will only crucify them in your newspaper."
When Binaggio swung the vote and won the Democratic nomination for Forest
Smith in the governors race in 1948, he convinced the gambling interests
throughout the state that with their financial support Smith could win in the
November election and they could "open up" the state. The amount of
money the gamblers put up was estimated to be between $50,000 to $200,000, most
of it from the St. Louis/East St. Louis area. Smith won the election, but after
he took office on Jan. 10, 1949, "the word" came from Jefferson City,
the Missouri State capitol, that the gambling interests would have to wait six
months for the new administration to settle in.
Some gamblers didnt wait and this indiscretion resulted in their
operations being raided by the police. Other gamblers set a date of July 1, to
see what would happen with Smith. When that day came and went, gamblers were
told there was an additional 30-day moratorium due to unforeseen circumstances.
When the 30-day period ran out, angry gamblers were looking for someone to
blame. It was Binaggio who had handled the campaign financing and made the
promises. Whether he made those promises on his own, or on someone elses
assurances, would never be known.
On the evening of April 5, 1950, Binaggio was picked up by his chauffeur Nick
Penna. The two men drove to the Last Chance Tavern in which Binaggio had an
interest with Charley Gargotta, who he planned to meet there. The tavern, a
gambling house, was located on the borderline between Kansas and Missouri.
Whenever raiders from one state came to close the operation, the players would
just move to the opposite side of the room. Law enforcement officers from both
states could never seem to synchronize their raids in order to arrive at the
same time.
Shortly after Binaggio arrived at the club, around 8 p.m., he received a
telephone call. He then asked one of the employees at the club if he and
Gargotta could borrow his automobile. As the two men started to leave, Nick
Penna began to follow.
"You neednt come, Nick," Binaggio told him. "Well be
back in 15 or 20 minutes."
Penna later told police that when the pair had failed to return, he waited
until 4 a.m. and then went home.
Binaggio and Gargotta then drove to the First District Democratic Club. Who
they met there is not known, but around 8:30 three residents of the Como Hotel,
located above the club, heard what sounded to them like gunfire.
The bodies of Binaggio and Gargotta were found around 4 a.m. the following
morning. Police believed the killers were known to both men as neither one was
armed. Binaggios body was sprawled in a swivel chair at his desk. His
assassin pressed a .32 caliber automatic to his head and pulled the trigger four
times. All four wounds bore powder burns.
Police theorized that Gargotta then ran for the front door to escape. The
first of four bullets hit Gargotta in the back of the head from several feet
away. After he fell to the floor, his killer stood over him and fired three more
bullets into his head at close range.
The sensational double murder made headlines across the country,
reverberating all the way to the Capital Building in Washington D.C. The day
after the killings, Missouri Republican Dewey Short addressed the House of
Representatives and inferred that Binaggio had been "bumped off"
because he opposed the nomination of President Trumans hand-picked candidate
for senator.
The funerals were held on April 10. Foremost among the mourners that day was
Frank Costello from New York. Costello was rumored to have been negotiating with
Binaggio to place slot machines in Kansas City. Costello was in the company of
"several Chicago representatives of the Capone syndicate." Anthony
Gizzo, the heir apparent to Binaggio, hosted the group.
Nick Civella
Guiseppe Nicoli Civella was born on March 19, 1912 in the North End section
of Kansas City known as "Little Italy." In 1922, at the age of 10, he
was taken before local juvenile authorities for "incorrigibility."
Shortly after this incident he dropped out of school, however, in later life he
would be described as a well-read man who enjoyed classical music. Before he
reached the age of 20, Civella had been arrested for auto theft, gambling,
robbery, and vagrancy. In 1932, he was arrested for bootlegging and served two
months in prison.
During the early 1940s, Civella became a Democratic precinct worker for
Charles Binaggio in the North End. After World War II Civella moved up the crime
family ladder. He served as a bodyguard and chauffeur for Anthony Gizzo, who at
the time was working as an enforcer for Binaggios gambling operations.
After Gizzos death there was a vacuum left in the leadership that didnt
last long. During the Kefauver Hearings held in Kansas City during 1950, Civella
was identified as a "figure to watch" in organized crime in the city.
He attended the infamous conclave in Apalachin, N.Y., held on Nov. 14, 1957,
where Civella was more fortunate than most of his criminal colleagues at the
meeting. He and fellow Kansas City mobster Joseph Filardo were able to avoid the
roadblocks and make their way to a Binghamton, N.Y., railroad station where they
took the first train home.
Several months after the Apalachin incident, Civella was served with a
subpoena to appear before a U.S. Senate committee to discuss his attendance at
the now famous summit. Civella testified, but like most of the men investigated
for being there, nothing came of it.
Roy Lee Williams, future president of the International Brotherhood of
Teamsters, met Civella in 1952 when the two were both chairmen of Democratic
political clubs in Kansas City. Williams would later testify that he and Civella
talked about the Apalachin meeting. According to Williams, Civella told him that
"among other things, territory and cooperation were discussed." Roy
Williams would also talk about Civellas influence on him in the Teamsters
union. He testified that in the late 1950s, a few years after the pension fund
was established, he left a meeting one night and was shoved into an automobile,
blindfolded, and driven to a location where a bright light was shone on him. He
was warned that he had better start cooperating with Civella on his requests for
pension fund loans or his wife and children would be killed. "You will be
the last to go," he was told.
Civella was next called in front of a Chicago grand jury that was
investigating organized crime activities in the Midwest in 1959. He would also
be charged in two Missouri State tax evasion cases. In one case he was convicted
and fined $150. The second case was dismissed.
Civellas brother Carl, nicknamed "Cork," was his closest
confidante over the years. On June 13, 1960, Civella and his brother had the
dubious distinction of being named charter members in the famous "Black
Book" of Nevada along with nine other gambling figures. An article in The
Kansas City Times said that Civella was, "one of three men who
crossed the country regularly as couriers for the grand council of the Cosa
Nostra." The Civellas and the others were banned from all Nevada
casinos.
In The Black Book and the Mob, authors Ronald A. Farrell and Carole
Case reveal:
"The first 11 men were placed in the
Black Book without any formal notification or hearing. All were reputed to be
notorious associates of organized crime
Without apparent sanction of the
commission, the board and its chairman, former FBI agent R. J. Abbaticchio, Jr.,
decided that these individuals presented a threat to the industry, and
instructed the enforcement agents to distribute the List of Excluded Persons to
all state-licensed gaming establishments."
In 1966, Civella was called to appear before a Clay County grand jury.
Afterwards, the news media asked him why it took him 15 minutes to address the
group. Civella replied that he, "stopped in the mens room," where
he, "was drawing dirty pictures on the wall." Law enforcement agencies
did not appreciate Civellas humor or his ability to elude conviction. This
would result in their constant surveillance of him for the rest of his life.
In 1969, Civella was identified by a Senate committee as being a principal
member of the Kansas City Crime Family. During a 10-day period in mid-January
1970, the FBI picked up information through listening devices to indict Civella
and several others on gambling conspiracy charges involving the recent Super
Bowl between Kansas City and Minnesota. One of the men indicted, Sol Landie, a
prominent Kansas City gambling figure, was called before a grand jury and given
immunity from prosecution for his testimony. In November 1970, four black men
invaded Landies home on the pretense of robbing him. Landie was murdered and
his wife viciously raped by the intruders. The men were soon arrested and it was
revealed that they were hired to kill Landie because of his testimony.
While Civella was not tried for Landies murder, he was convicted of the
gambling charges in 1975. After a long appeals process, Civella was finally sent
to prison in 1977. It was the first time since the 1920s that he found himself
behind bars. Civella served just 20 months before he was given an early release
due to poor health. Civella had been treated for cancer during the long trial
and appeals process and had pelvic organs removed during surgery. He would be
operated on again in 1978.
In 1974, after an elaborate arrangement involving the Kansas City, Cleveland
and Milwaukee Crime Families, and their ties to the Teamsters and the Teamsters
pension fund, Allen Glick, through the Argent Corporation, assumed control of
the Stardust and Fremont hotel/casinos in Las Vegas. Civellas control of
Teamsters pension fund trustee Roy Williams was essential to Glick obtaining
the loan to make the purchase. After the loan was approved for Glick in 1974,
Roy Williams stated he then became Civellas "boy" and received
payments of $1,500 each month for his cooperation in getting the loan put
through.
When Frank Fitzsimmons, Jimmy Hoffas hand picked replacement as president
of the Teamsters, was dying of cancer in early 1981, Civella let the underworld
know that Williams, now a high ranking official in the Teamsters
organization, was under his control. Permission was quickly obtained from the
Chicago and New York mob bosses and when Fitzsimmons died in May 1981, Williams
replaced him.
Apparently Glick didnt realize that by being tied to the mob he would have
little say in running the operations. The mob put Frank Rosenthal in charge of
overseeing its interests. When Glick and Rosenthal clashed, Glick tried to fire
him. Rosenthal threatened Glick, who then went to Frank Balistrieri of Milwaukee
to complain.
Glick was ordered to meet with Civella in Kansas City in March 1975. The two
met in a hotel room where Civella told him that he owed the Kansas City Family
$1.2 million dollars for getting the loan approved. The naïve Glick was not
aware of mob operating procedures in regards to procuring loans from the
Teamsters pension fund, which the mob considered its own private bank.
According to Glick, he was told by Civella, "Cling to every word I say
if it would be my choice, you wouldnt leave this room alive. You owe us $1.2
million. I want that paid. In addition, we own part of your corporation, and you
are to do nothing to interfere with it
We will let Mr. Rosenthal continue
with the casinos, and you are not to interfere."
Shortly after his release from prison for health reasons, Civella was
indicted on bribery charges. Civella, who seldom had anything to say to grand
juries or other investigative committees, had been recorded in November 1978
discussing the bribing of a prison official to get his nephew, Anthony
"Tony Ripe" Civella, transferred to a federal prison in Fort Worth.
Civella was taken back into custody and was convicted of bribery charges on July
18, 1980. He was sentenced to four years in prison.
With the information from the listening devices the FBI was able to revoke
Civellas parole and he was sent to Leavenworth Penitentiary. There agents
tapped the telephone in the visiting room, which provided further proof that
Civella was calling the shots for the Kansas City mob.
Civellas last years had been spent battling in the federal courts. With
dozens of court motions filed by his lawyers, Civella fought to stay out of
prison; to transfer within the prison system; and to get out of prison early.
Citing poor health reasons, family and friends collected 800 signatures on a
petition, including those of politicians and clergymen, in hopes of getting
Civella another early release.
The request for his release in 1982 was turned down. In February 1983,
Civella, who had been at the federal medical facility in Springfield, was
transferred back to Leavenworth so he could be closer to his attorneys. Four
days after the transfer he was returned to Springfield for treatment. Federal
authorities released him to his family on March 1 and Civella was quickly
admitted to the Menorah Medical Center in Kansas City where he died on March 12,
1983.
River Quay Incident
In 1971, Marion Trozzolo, a local college professor and inventor, began the
River Quay Corporation to redevelop 19th century buildings in an area
around the Kansas City riverfront. The area was situated next door to the City
Market section, in which Nick Civella kept a headquarters. In 1972, Fred
Bonadonna opened a restaurant that catered to the areas businessmen and local
political leaders. Bonadonna was the son of David Bonadonna, Sr., a long time
friend and member of William Cammisano, Sr.s gang.
By November 1974, the River Quay area was a thriving thoroughfare of almost
70 retail establishments including specialty shops, art galleries, restaurants,
theatres, antique shops, and small boutiques. Fred Bonadonna was named president
of the River Quay Bar and Restaurant Association and vice president of the
Market Area Businessmens Association, a group of civic and business leaders
in the River Quay neighborhood.
Meanwhile, urban renewal projects had begun in the 12th Street
section of Kansas City, an area of cheap hotels, strip joints and street
prostitution that had once been home to the best jazz clubs in the United
States, featuring Charlie Parker and Count Basie. One of the bars in this area,
owned by Joseph "JoJo" Cammisano, the brother of William, was forced
to relocate. Joseph Cammisano sub-leased a warehouse in the River Quay area and
divided it into four separate bars. Fred Bonadonna urged the owner of the
property not to allow strippers on the premises and began a drive to oppose
adult entertainment in the district.
Joseph Cammisano started a petition of his own. When Fred Bonadonna refused
to sign it, a bitter argument ensued. Soon Bonadonna received a phone call from
his father David, who was at the auto garage headquarters of the Cammisanos,
imploring him to support the petition. Fred Bonadonna, with the help of City
Councilman Robert Hernandez, was able to fight the effort of the Cammisanos to
create a "combat zone" atmosphere similar to Bostons adult
entertainment section.
After threats were made against Fred Bonadonna, he proposed a plan to help
out the Cammisanos. Bonadonna brought Hernandez to talk with William Cammisano.
When Hernandez tried to defend Bonadonnas actions, Cammisano became incensed
and threatened to kill both men if the plans didnt go through.
In the meantime, during 1974 and 1975 the Cammisanos were also pressuring
Fred Bonadonna about the leases he had with the city for free parking in the
River Quay area. During a River Quay tavern owners meeting, Joseph Cammisano
stood up and threatened Bonadonna. Soon vandalism was reported in the lots and
in March 1976 thugs broke into Bonadonnas home and beat his teenage son with
baseball bats. Later, Bonadonna was warned that unless he put a stop to
Hernandezs meddling that David Bonadonna would be killed.
In May 1976, Joseph Cammisano applied for a license for a new bar and was
turned down through the efforts of Bonadonna and Hernandez. On July 22, 1976
David Bonadonnas body was found in the trunk of his car. He had been shot
five times in the head.
David Bonadonnas death was followed by several other murders of Fred
Bonadonna associates. In March 1977, Bonadonna was persuaded to enter the
Witness Protection Program and was relocated. This did not end the violence as
associates of Bonadonna battled back. The River Quay district turned into a real
combat zone with bombs being placed by the rival groups.
William and Joseph Cammisano were indicted on June 16, 1978. Fred Bonadonna
testified and both brothers received five-year prison sentences in 1979. The
real losers were the businessmen who helped create the River Quay section. By
1980, the once thriving entertainment district had turned into a virtual ghost
town and was described as an area of vacant, bombed out and burned out
buildings.
Fred Harvey Bonadonna defied the mob and made a
name for himself. However, Bonadonna paid a price for his heroism until the day
he died.
In addition to the mob's murder of his father,
Bonadonna had to uproot his family from their Kansas City home to enter the
Witness Protection Program, relocating to Naples, Fla., in the late 1970s. In
Florida Bonadonna and his wife Virginia purchased a restaurant, sold real
estate, and operated a pawnshop. Their business ventures were unsuccessful and
the couple was forced to live off the money Virginia made as a receptionist for
a local law firm.
In April 1980 Bonadonna was called for the last
time to appear before a U.S. Senate committee investigating organized crime.
During his testimony Bonadonna stated, "I know why people aren't too
concerned with the Mafia. They think that it is a story and that it could never
happen to them. I never thought it could happen to me. It happened to me. It
could happen to you."
During the mid-1980s Bonadonna left the Witness
Protection Program because he wanted more freedom to visit his mother, who lived
in California. He kept his whereabouts secret, according to reporter Mark Morris
of The Kansas City Star, although he occasionally made himself available
to select reporters to discuss the River Quay days.
In February 2001 Bonadonna's mother passed
away. Bonadonna's handling of her estate drew criticism from other family
members who responded by filing a civil suit against him. On April 8, 2002 Judge
Thomas William Cain, of Santa Clara County, "issued an order that sided
with" family members. The judge accused Bonadonna of "pretending"
to still be in the protection program in order to help keep his mother isolated.
Responding to the "pretending"
accusation, Gary Hart, chief of the FBI's organized crime squad in Kansas City
during the 1970s, stated, "Fred and his family remained in constant danger
from the time he began cooperating to the day of his death. The judge did not do
his homework. Just because you're out of the program doesn't mean you're
out of danger."
A distraught Bonadonna read the ruling Thursday
morning April 11. He called David Helfrey, a former federal prosecutor from
Kansas City – now a lawyer in St. Louis. Helfrey was out of town. His
secretary wrote down Bonadonna's short message.
"Please help, I am going to die," he
stated.
A sobbing Bonadonna then told his wife, who had
remained loyal to him through all the years, "I've put you through so
much. I can't do it anymore." A short time later Bonadonna – a husband,
father and grandfather – ended his life with a bullet.
Las Vegas Skimming and the Strawman Cases
During mid-1978, FBI agents in Kansas City were investigating a local murder
when one of their listening devices picked up a conversation between Carl
"Cork" Civella and Carl "Tuffy" DeLuna in which they were
discussing mob activities in Las Vegas. After widening the investigation, the
agents intercepted conversations about other families that were attempting to
buy into the Argent Corporation of which Allen Glick was president and sole
stockholder.
In November 1978, agents bugged the home of a Civella relative and recorded a
six-hour-long meeting that took place. Attending the meeting were Nick Civella,
DeLuna, Joseph Vincent Agosto, and Carl Wesley Thomas. Chief among the topics of
discussion were the skimming methods being used by Agosto and Thomas at the
Tropicana.
Agosto worked at the Tropicana where he coordinated the skimming activities.
Under the direction of Thomas, the casinos manager and assistant manager
removed the money from the playing area and handed it to Agosto. The skim money
was then given to Carl Caruso who transported it to Kansas City. The money,
normally in amounts of $40,000, was handed over to DeLuna or Charles D. Moretina.
DeLuna and the Civella brothers would then split the money between themselves
and members of the Chicago Family.
On Feb. 14, 1979, FBI agents executed a search warrant at the Kansas City
International Airport and arrested a courier carrying $80,000 in skim money. The
same day, agents searched the home of DeLuna and, due to his
"meticulous" record keeping, hit the jackpot. William Roemer states in
The Enforcer, that the records "turned out to be devastating
evidence, implicating mobsters in several cities, connecting them to the skim.
Their seizure played a key role in the two major trials that would result from
the investigation."
The first Strawman case resulted in the indictments of the entire hierarchy
of the Kansas City Family on Feb. 7, 1984. The RICO indictments included the
familys hidden interests in skimming from the Argent Corporation, the
Tropicana casino, and the local bingo industry. Key testimony came from Joseph
Agosto who became a government witness. On Sept. 4, 1984, Carl Civella was fined
and sentenced to 10-to-30 years in prison and his son, Anthony Civella, received
five years and was fined. Both DeLuna and Moretina received long sentences also.
The second Strawman case involved mostly the Chicago Family. Key information
for that prosecution was also obtained in 1978 when Nick Civella called to set
up a meeting at the home of his nephew, Anthony Chiavola, a Chicago police
officer. The FBI intercepted the phone call and bugged the Chiavola home where
the meeting was held. The four-hour-plus meeting revealed that Civella attempted
to buy out the Chicago Familys interests in the Stardust and the Fremont for
$10 million dollars. The Chicago attendees rejected the bid feeling that the
skim they would collect over the years would far exceed the offer.
During the second Strawman trial, former Cleveland Family acting boss, now
government witness, Angelo Lonardo testified. On Jan. 21, 1986 in U.S. District
Court in Kansas City, Joseph Aiuppa, Jackie Cerone, Joseph Lombardo, and Angelo
La Pietra, all of Chicago, were convicted along with Frank Balestrieri of
Milwaukee.
Leadership after Nick Civella
In the wake of Nick Civellas death, law enforcement officials believed
Carl Civella took over the leadership of the family. Even before his brother
died there was evidence to suggest that Carl Civella was running the day-to-day
operations and serving as acting boss with the advice and support of Carl DeLuna.
Carl Civella began accepting leadership duties when his younger brother was
facing mounting legal and health problems in the mid-1970s.
Nicknamed "Cork," due to his violent temper, the newspapers claimed
"he was easily the most visible and talkative of the mob figures who
reigned during the 1960s, 70s and 80s." He was once called
"impulsive" by a FBI agent; this undoubtedly came from an incident in
1960 when, after leaving a courthouse and being surrounded by newspaper
reporters and photographers, he unzipped his pants and exposed himself.
Civellas first brush with the law came in 1929 when he was fined $500 for
stealing tires. In 1934, police searched for him after the murder of a bank
messenger who was robbed of $200,000. Even with a $10,000 reward being offered
Civella evaded arrest for three years. However, after being captured and
questioned by police, he was released. In 1939, he was convicted for possession
of morphine and served one year in prison.
Setting up his headquarters in the City Market area, Civella described
himself to reporters as a "peddler." He was arrested over the years
for various gambling charges and was called before several grand juries to
testify. In 1982, he tried to impress his girlfriend by muscling in on a Kansas
City, Kan., strip joint. When he was rebuffed, he allegedly ordered two of his
men to blow up the owners Lincoln automobile. Civella was later acquitted for
lack of evidence.
Shortly after his conviction and 30-year sentence in the Strawman case, he
and his son Anthony and two others were charged with operating a continuing
criminal enterprise. Civella pled guilty and was sentenced to an additional 10
years.
Suffering from a variety of illnesses, Civella was treated at prison medical
facilities in Minnesota and Texas. He was eventually confined to the
low-security Fort Worth facility that housed long-term care inmates with chronic
medical problems related to old age. Carl Civella died there on Oct. 2, 1994 of
complications from pneumonia at the age of 84.
There is some confusion as to who assumed leadership of the Kansas City
Family after the conviction of Carl Civella in 1983. His son Anthony was also
sent to prison at the same time. Some insight into the situation was provided in
July 1992. When one time Lucchese Family boss Alfonso DArco testified via
written statement that he had met Anthony Civella when they were both imprisoned
at the federal facility in Springfield, Mo., during 1984 and 1985. There he
claims Paulie Vario, Sr., the Lucchese capo of the movie Goodfellas fame,
introduced DArco to Civella, calling him the "boss" of the Kansas
City Mafia.
DArcos statement said a William Cammisano visited Civella at
Springfield. Civella introduced Cammisano to DArco as a made member of the
Kansas City Family. However, DArcos statement did not identify which
William Cammisano was introduced senior or junior.
The statement also claimed that DArco was asked by Civella to mediate a
dispute between the Kansas City and Pittsburgh Families over the proceeds of a
rock concert. Civellas attorney at the time, famed mob lawyer Oscar Goodman,
who would be elected mayor of Las Vegas in 1999, called DArco a
"punk." Goodman said DArcos statement was unfair because Goodman
wasnt present and there was no way to refute DArcos testimony.
William Cammisano, Sr. was as a four-time felon. By 1966 he had been arrested
more than 100 times. FBI agents believed he operated a
"semi-independent" arm of the Civella crime family. Of Cammisanos
long criminal career, The Kansas City Star reported, "he
stared down a U. S. Senate committee, threatened the life of a Kansas City
councilman and helped kill off an entire business district (River Quay).
Although authorities accused or suspected him of taking part in several
killings, he was never formally charged with any of them."
As early as 1929, Cammisano had been labeled an incorrigible juvenile. His
rap sheet included arrests for carrying a concealed weapon, bootlegging, pistol
whipping a robbery victim, running a still, being AWOL from the Army, disturbing
the peace, and gambling. It was said that he had stolen everything from the
wheels off a truck to the rings off a womans fingers. Cammisano once served a
felony sentence at a prison in El Reno, Okla. In the 1940s, he opened a tavern
and called it the El Reno Bar, stating that had been the name of his favorite
prison.
Like many of Kansas Citys organized crime figures, Cammisano and his
brother, Joseph, worked as gunmen for Charles Binaggio. During that time the
brothers muscled their way into a lucrative policy wheel operation. Later, in
the 1960s, the Cammisano brothers operated a tavern that catered to gambling and
prostitution in the downtown area of the city. In the 1970s, they moved the
establishment into the aforementioned River Quay business district.
In 1978, Cammisano pled guilty to federal charges of extortion. He was
sentenced to five years in prison. When he refused to testify before a U.S.
Senate committee in 1980, he was sentenced for contempt and given an additional
two years. In 1983, he was just being released from prison as Carl Civella and
his son Anthony were going in. The FBI believed that Cammisano became the acting
boss at this time and that his son, William "Little Willie" Cammisano,
Jr., ran the day-to-day operations.
This arrangement didnt last long as Cammisano, Jr. was arrested and
convicted of beating his girlfriend, who at the time was a federal witness in a
murder investigation. Before he went to prison in 1989, Anthony Civella had
already been released and was taking back control of the crime familys
operations.
With Anthony Civella back in the picture, the senior Cammisanos influence,
as well as his health, deteriorated. On Jan. 26, 1995 the 8- year-old William
Cammisano, Sr. died from lung disease.
By 1983, law enforcement officials believed that Anthony Civella was being
groomed for the day-to-day leadership of the family in the belief that his
father, Carl, as well as Carl DeLuna would soon be going to prison to serve long
sentences for the Strawman convictions. Authorities claimed that as early as
1977 Anthony Civella was controlling a portion of the gambling enterprise for
his uncle, Nick Civella.
Also being looked at for a leadership position was James Duardi, another
Kansas City mob associate who had a reputation as an enforcer. In 1983, sources
were quoted in The Kansas City Star as stating that Duardi had,
"significant ambitions for leadership and support among the rank and file
soldiers of the family."
One source stated, "Theyre grooming him to be not the boss but giving
him more things to ensure his loyalty. If those guys (Carl Civella or DeLuna)
would go in (prison) it could be that a guy like Duardi could be a caretaker for
a while
" Duardi, who at the time was 61, was convicted in 1972 of
attempting to set up prostitution and gambling operations in Grove, Okla.
Law enforcement people were concerned about a power struggle in the Kansas
City underworld due to the likelihood that the entire leadership of the family
was heading to prison. Their concerns were realized on Jan. 9, 1984 when Carl
Spero, a Civella Family rival, was murdered after a bomb exploded in his used
car lot. The following month, Anthony "Tiger" Cardarella, a Civella
associate, was found in the trunk of his car. Cardarella, a record storeowner,
had been sentenced to prison in 1961 for obstruction of justice after the murder
of a prosecution witness during a drug case. In 1977 he was convicted and
sentenced to five years for receiving stolen goods.
Anthony Civellas first conviction was in 1964 when he was found guilty of
driving an automobile without the owners consent. In 1974, he was found
guilty of conspiring to run an interstate gambling operation. He pled guilty in
1983 to sports bookmaking and running a continuing criminal enterprise. At the
same time he also signed a statement prepared by the government admitting that
he was involved in a Las Vegas skimming operation, stealing money from local
charity bingo games, and setting up companies to act as fronts to hide his
hidden ownership.
Civella was released from prison in January 1988 and resumed his leadership
of the Kansas City Family. He avoided legal troubles until the early 1990s. In
December 1991, Civella was convicted by a federal jury on eight counts of fraud
involving the resale of prescription drugs. Civella and two others purchased
over $1 million dollars worth of pharmaceuticals at low prices after they
claimed the drugs were to be used in nursing homes. The drugs were then resold
to West Coast wholesalers at higher prices. Two co-conspirators, Louie Ferro,
Jr. and Wilbur Swift, became government witnesses and testified against Civella
and two others. In July 1999, Ferro, Swift and two others were charged with
operating a similar scheme.
On July 14, 1992, Civella was sentenced to four-and-one-half years in prison
for his part in the fraud and fined $7,500. At the time of his sentencing, the
FBI believed that Civella had already appointed Johnny Joe Sciortino as acting
boss. The Kansas City mob was still a tight knit family operation. Civella, who
was married to Carl DeLunas sister, was the godfather of Sciortino, a felon
and longtime mob associate.
In June 1996, Anthony Civella was released from a federal prison in Texas and
it was believed that he resumed his leadership role in the family. He
immediately began proceedings to appeal his recent entry into the Missouri
Gaming Commissions Black Book, which prevented his involvement and presence
in the states recently allowed riverboat gambling casinos. At the same time,
Civella was about to be included in Nevadas more famous Black Book.
Just before Civella went to prison in 1992, authorities were concerned about
the release of William Cammisano, Jr. in June of that year and what affect it
would have on the leadership picture. Complicating the situation was the fact
that one of Civellas top lieutenants, Peter J. Simone, had been sentenced in
April 1992 to more than four years in prison after he pled guilty to laundering
money from a video poker operation.
In May 1997, Simones name drew media attention again after a Nevada State
Gaming Control Board investigation tied the late Ted Binion in with Peter Joseph
Ribaste. In 1989, Ribaste was sentenced to six months in prison for mail fraud.
He then moved to Las Vegas where he allegedly looked out for the Kansas City
Familys interests. During the investigation it was reported that Ribaste was
"influenced" by Peter Simone. A December 1999 Kansas City Star
article stated that Ribaste was a "one-time Kansas City mob boss."
Simone was released from prison in 1996 and was placed on three years
probation. At 3:30 a.m. on Jan. 2, 1999, just two months before his probation
ended, Simone was found playing craps at Harrahs North Kansas City Casino
& Hotel. A judge ordered him to spend one day in jail and extended his
probation an additional twelve months, four of which were to be spent in
electronically monitored home detention. In this newspaper article The Kansas
City Star referred to Simone as the "reputed Kansas City crime
boss."
In an August 1999 article in The Kansas City Star, columnist Mike
Hendricks stated, "A lot of folks once did what the mob wanted in Kansas
City, but no more, or at least wed like to think that part of our history is
over. Id almost forgotten about the mob in Kansas City. Consider that
progress."
Editor's Note: This work could not have
been completed without the valuable research assistance provided by Jude A.
Knudson. For more information about the Mafia's involvement in River Quay, see
J. J. Maloney's article on this same web site.
Allan Mays e-mail address is: AllanMay@worldnet.att.net
(Updated 10/10/02)