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Mob hit that inspired 'Casino' recounted
AP on Yahoo ^ | 7/18/07 | Mike Robinson - ap

Posted on 07/18/2007 7:11:55 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

CHICAGO - It didn't take Chicago mobster Tony "The Ant" Spilotro long to realize his time was up.

"Time to say a prayer," government witness Nicholas Calabrese quoted Spilotro as saying moments before his fellow mobsters beat and strangled him in a suburban Bensenville basement on a June afternoon 21 years ago.

An eyewitness account of the mob hit that helped inspire the movie "Casino" emerged Wednesday as Calabrese returned to the stand at the trial of his brother Frank and four other alleged members of the Chicago Outfit.

Spilotro was the model for the Joe Pesci character in the movie.

Nicholas Calabrese, an admitted mob killer, said he and two other men were driven to the scene of the crime by James Marcello, one of those on trial.

Spilotro had been lured with the promise he would become a "capo," or captain, in the Outfit — as Chicago's organized crime family is known — and his brother, Michael, would be initiated as a "made guy," Calabrese testified.

Michael came downstairs first, Calabrese testified.

"I said, 'How are you doing, Mike?' because I knew him," Calabrese testified. But he said a few seconds later, "I grabbed his legs and I noticed right away that Louie the Mooch had a rope around his neck."

While they were strangling Michael Spilotro, Calabrese said, he heard what may have been Tony Spilotro's last words. Several of the mobsters involved, including Louie "The Mooch" Eboli, are now dead.

Marcello, 65; Frank Calabrese Sr., 69; Joseph (Joey the Clown) Lombardo, 78; Paul Schiro, 70; and Anthony Doyle, 62, are charged with taking part in a racketeering conspiracy that included gambling, loan sharking, extortion and 18 long-unsolved murders, including those of the Spilotro brothers.

During the last two days, Nicholas Calabrese has taken jurors through more than a dozen mob hits, mostly in gruesome eyewitness detail. On the stand Wednesday, he admitted being the trigger man in two of them.

He began cooperating with the FBI to avoid a death sentence after a bloody glove left at a murder scene was traced to him through DNA evidence.

Tony Spilotro was long known as the Outfit's man in Las Vegas.

But back in Chicago, mob bosses were unhappy with him, Calabrese said. He said Spilotro's deals "were bringing a lot of heat" on the Outfit and he also was having a fling with the wife of a casino executive.

A group of mobsters, himself included, went hunting for Spilotro in Las Vegas in hopes of killing him but couldn't find him, Calabrese said.

They then detoured to Phoenix where they murdered a man named Emil Vaci, whose knowledge of casino skimming made mob bosses nervous, he said.

Calabrese said after several failed attempts to kill Vaci, he surprised him outside a dress shop and pulled him into a waiting van.

"He said, 'Take my money, take my wallet,'" Calabrese recalled. "Then he said, 'Oh, no, I'm not going to say anything.'"

"Did you say anything to him?" lead prosecutor Mitchell A. Mars asked.

"No," Calabrese said. Instead, he said, he shot him in the head.

A desert grave had been prepared for Vaci but the mobsters took a wrong turn and ended up dumping the body in a canal, Calabrese testified. The Spilotro murders came a week later.

Earlier, Calabrese told how he and his brother stalked a man named Richard Ortiz, who had been marked for death by higher-ups in the mob.

They caught up with him on a Cicero street on July 23, 1983, only to find that a man they had never seen before and didn't know was a passenger in his car. They asked for instructions from a mob boss watching nearby.

"Go ahead, both of them," Calabrese quoted Angelo LaPietra, the now-deceased capo of the Outfit's 26th Street crew, as saying.

Calabrese said he and another man blasted away with shotguns at Ortiz and hapless passenger Arthur Morawski, while his brother used a rifle.

He said he had misgivings about killing a man he didn't know and who had done no harm to anyone as far as he could tell. But he said he feared his brother's wrath even more.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; US: Illinois
KEYWORDS: calabrese; casino; chicago; cultureofcorruption; democratscandals; frankcalabrese; harryreid; illinois; inspired; joepesci; lasvegas; mafia; mobhit; northcarolina; pesci; recounted; scorsese; spilotro

1 posted on 07/18/2007 7:11:57 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
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Trial exhibits on the U.S. Attorney’s office Web site: http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/iln/hot/familySecrets.html


2 posted on 07/18/2007 7:12:14 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... Welcome to FR. The Virtual Boot Camp for 'infidels' in waiting)
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Retired Chicago policeman Anthony Doyle, left, arrives with an unidentified person, right, at federal court in Chicago Thursday, July 12, 2007, for his racketeering conspiracy trial. Doyle along, with convicted loan shark Frank Calabrese Sr., 69; reputed mob bosses James Marcello, 65; Joseph (Joey the Clown) Lombardo, 78; and convicted jewel thief Paul Schiro are charged in a racketeering conspiracy indictment that includes 18 murders, illegal gambling, extortion of 'street tax' from businesses and loan sharking. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)


3 posted on 07/18/2007 7:13:51 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... Welcome to FR. The Virtual Boot Camp for 'infidels' in waiting)
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To: NormsRevenge

Relating to these same people portrayed in the movie “Casino”:

Dick Smothers’ character, “Senator”, is partly based on Nevada Senator Harry Reid, who was chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission. The scene in which Sam Rothstein is denied a license by the Nevada Gaming Commission is based on a December 1978 hearing when Harry Reid was the commission’s chairman; some of Reid’s statements are used in Smothers’ dialogue. The scene was shot in an actual courtroom in the Clark County Courthouse, which was later closed in 2005.


4 posted on 07/18/2007 7:21:31 PM PDT by tlb
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To: NormsRevenge

My sources tell me that the real reason Spilotro was also whaked was because of his involvement in the Giancona hit.


5 posted on 07/18/2007 7:30:57 PM PDT by lapster
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To: NormsRevenge

u gotem freep mail


6 posted on 07/18/2007 7:31:03 PM PDT by advertising guy (If computer skills named us, I'd be back-space delete.)
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To: tlb
Dick Smothers’ character, “Senator”, is partly based on Nevada Senator Harry Reid, who was chairman of the Nevada Gaming Commission. The scene in which Sam Rothstein is denied a license by the Nevada Gaming Commission is based on a December 1978 hearing when Harry Reid was the commission’s chairman; some of Reid’s statements are used in Smothers’ dialogue.

Imagine that.

7 posted on 07/18/2007 7:31:59 PM PDT by OSHA (Liberals will lick the boot on their necks if they think the other boot is on yours and mine.)
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To: NormsRevenge
“Casino” had Sharon Stone at her best. I’ve always wondered if she was really acting though.
8 posted on 07/18/2007 7:36:16 PM PDT by BallyBill (Serial Hit-N-Run poster)
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