This episode currently has no reviews.
Submit ReviewRetired KCPD Intelligence Detective Gary Jenkins looks at the life of the Chicago Outfit’s Paul Ricca. We learn he probably was responsible for the suicide of Frank Nitti, that he was a “behind the scenes” boss and made decisions with Anthony Accardo for many years. Support the Podcast Hit me up on Venmo for a […]
The post Paul Ricca of the Chicago Outfit appeared first on Gangland Wire.
Retired KCPD Intelligence Detective Gary Jenkins looks at the life of the Chicago Outfit’s Paul Ricca. We learn he probably was responsible for the suicide of Frank Nitti, that he was a “behind the scenes” boss and made decisions with Anthony Accardo for many years.
Support the Podcast
Hit me up on Venmo for a cup of coffee or a shot and a beer @ganglandwire Click here to “buy me a cup of coffee”
To go to the store or make a donation or rent Ballot Theft: Burglary, Murder, Coverup click here
To rent Brothers against Brothers, the documentary, click here.
To rent Gangland Wire, the documentary, click here
To buy my Kindle book, Leaving Vegas: The True Story of How FBI Wiretaps Ended Mob Domination of Las Vegas Casinos.
To subscribe on iTunes click here, please give me a review and help others find the podcast.
but hey are you wirecappers out there I have a story today it’s kind of a rehash I’ve been one of my old audio stories I did the uh just last week I think or a couple weeks ago now I posted a story on YouTube that was primarily uh audio and it was the story of it was an interview of a guy named Carlo Morelliwho was a guy that took Tony accardo’s daughter to the uh to her senior prom a couple other Accardo stories and it’s pretty interesting it’s kind of a one that once in a lifetime gig to get an inside information like that and Carlos deceased since I uh recorded that interview but somebody made a comment in the YouTube or the YouTube posting about and did you ever talk about Paul Rica or Paul the waiter who was a a Chicago boss out of the 40s and early 50s on up into the 60s who stayed way in the background a lot of people don’t know the name of
1:03
Paul Rican he was a really important guy
1:07
in in the Chicago outfit back in those
1:09
days so I dug out my old interview I did
1:12
an interview of him I never put it up on
1:13
YouTube so I dug up some pictures in
1:16
order for you to have some something to
1:19
look at while I tell the story of Paul
1:22
the waiter Rika uh interesting guy you
1:26
know he he stayed in the background just
1:28
like Tony Accardo did he and the cardo
1:31
really would sit together at Norwood’s
1:34
male restaurant that’s Meo restaurant
1:38
and I think the building still exists in
1:40
in Norwood I think is the name of the
1:43
suburb in Chicago anyhow they would sit
1:45
up there and people would come up and
1:47
and bring in envelopes and and they’d
1:50
make decisions and he always stayed in
1:52
the background with ocardo and and they
1:55
let guys like Sam giancana be out front
1:58
and you know he was a like a lightning
2:01
rod for uh for the FBI and and they sat
2:04
back there and never went to jail again
2:05
although the government never really
2:07
quit trying to deport Paul Rica which I
2:10
you know listen to the store and you’ll
2:12
learn a lot more about Paul Rica you
2:14
know one interesting little tidbit about
2:16
him he was once accused of doing a hit
2:18
in Kansas City of a guy who was running
2:22
a bunch of slot machines out in the
2:25
county and not kicking up to the Mob and
2:27
he was warm several times now I don’t
2:29
they showed his picture now why they
2:31
show this picture I don’t know uh but he
2:34
was uh during the 50s he well let’s
2:37
listen to the stories he’s a really
2:39
interesting guy well Paul Rica or Paul
2:42
the waiter Rika was born July 10 1898 he
2:46
died October the 11th 1972. he rose from
2:50
being a small time member of the Kimura
2:54
Mafia in Naples Italy to the boss of the
2:56
Chicago outfit by the time he died in
2:59
1898 Paul the waiter Rica was born
3:01
Felice de Lucia in Naples Italy by 1915
3:05
a 17 year old Felice de Lucia was an
3:09
associate of the Neapolitan Kimura Mafia
3:12
he got his first real taste of mob life
3:14
when he was ordered to murder a man
3:16
named Emilio perilio Elise de Lucia was
3:20
arrested and at trial a sicilian named
3:22
vicenzo capasso testified that he saw
3:26
Delicia murder prillio de Lucia
3:28
testified he had killed perlio because
3:31
berlio had disgraced his sister by
3:33
breaking an engagement with her in other
3:34
words it was an honor killing police
3:36
Delicia served two years in an Italian
3:38
jail before escaping after he escaped he
3:40
found that witness vicenzo capasso and
3:43
and you know what happens when a member
3:45
of the Kimura Mafia finds somebody who
3:47
testified against him he killed him by
3:49
slitting his throat de Lucia changed his
3:51
name to Paolo malio and fled to a small
3:54
town named aprissina about a hundred
3:56
miles north of Naples the heat was still
3:58
on cops are looking for him but Lucia
4:00
left for France once he got to France he
4:03
found passage on a boat to Cuba while in
4:05
Cuba he met a fellow member of the
4:06
Kimura Mafia from Naples a man named
4:10
Giuseppe Esposito Esposito was known as
4:13
Diamond Joe in Chicago and had graduated
4:15
from the Chicago street gangs in the
4:17
early 1900s young Felice de Lucia did
4:19
not know at this time but this
4:21
connection would determine Paula wader’s
4:23
future he arrived in New York shortly
4:25
after August 10 1920 just in time for
4:28
prohibition at that point in time or
4:30
sometimes sure shortly thereafter he
4:31
anglicized his name to Paul Rica 1919
4:34
the Volstead Act was passed and
4:36
prohibition began in January of 1920.
4:39
Giuseppe Esposito or Diamond Joe were
4:42
just beginning to form a bootlegging
4:43
gang in Chicago he recruited his young
4:45
friend from Cuba Paul Rica to come to
4:48
Chicago and and join his bootlegging
4:50
operation he also enlisted members of
4:52
the violent Chicago Street gang known as
4:54
known as the 42 gang and one of these
4:57
members was Sam Mooney giancana when
5:00
Paul Rica first arrived in Chicago of
5:02
course he moved to the Italian section
5:03
close to downtown he managed to get a
5:05
job as a theater Usher and Diamond Joe
5:07
hired him as a waiter for a small family
5:10
restaurant that he owned the easygoing
5:12
and genial Paula wetter was soon on a
5:15
first name basis with many of the
5:16
Mobsters who came in and out the door of
5:18
that restaurant one of these Mobsters
5:20
included Al Capone Rick and Capone had
5:22
several mutual friends among Neapolitan
5:24
gangsters who had returned to the Old
5:26
Country Capone enrika became good
5:28
friends Al Capone regularly visited a
5:30
restaurant and Paul Rica was soon hired
5:32
as a full-time gangster he rose very
5:34
quickly in the Capone organization he
5:36
was admired by Capone for his
5:38
intelligence and ability to obtain
5:40
cooperation from fellow gang members
5:42
they also became close personal friends
5:44
as well as fellow gang members Capone
5:46
was the best man at rika’s wedding in
5:48
5:51
get along with other gangsters other
5:53
other mobsters
5:55
Al Capone named Paul Rica as his
5:58
Emissary to the east coast mafia
6:00
families in connection with his
6:02
bootlegging organization in May 1932 Al
6:05
Capone was sent to Atlanta to the U.S
6:07
Penitentiary thereafter his conviction
6:09
for tax fraud the well-known Frank Nitty
6:12
became the new boss of the Chicago
6:13
outfit nydian Capone had agreed in
6:17
advance that Paul Rica would be the new
6:19
underboss in hindsight historians
6:22
learned that Frank Nitty was a reluctant
6:23
and unskillful boss most people today
6:26
agreed that Paul Rica soon became the
6:29
boss in all but title one problem with
6:31
nitty was that the East Coast mob bosses
6:34
did not think highly of knitting by 1932
6:37
Charles Lucky Luciano and mayor Lansky
6:39
had formed the national crime syndicate
6:41
they refused to deal with knitting Paul
6:43
Rica frequently overruled nitty’s orders
6:46
such a move would normally be
6:48
Unthinkable in any crime family but
6:49
nitty did not object for some reason
6:51
when prohibition ended in 1933 the
6:54
outfit had find other sources of income
6:56
because all East Coast action was
6:58
claimed by the New York and New Jersey
7:00
mobs the Chicago outfit turned its eyes
7:02
West to the open territory of Los
7:04
Angeles California the outfit saw the
7:07
film industry as a huge Cash Cow just
7:09
waiting to be milked nitty sent outfit
7:12
Capo Johnny roselli to Hollywood with a
7:15
plan to extort money from Major Movie
7:17
Studios like RKO Paramount MGM and 20th
7:21
Century Fox at this time Frank Nitty was
7:23
spending all the money he could earn in
7:26
the rackets that he owned he loved the
7:27
dice cars he was a huge Gambler roulette
7:30
wheels horse racing dropped a bunch of
7:32
money on horse racing and he needed more
7:34
and more money all the time roselli went
7:36
to boxing gyms in Los Angeles and hired
7:39
a lot of the old pugs with cauliflower
7:40
ears he used them to make visits to
7:43
Studio Executives and shake them down
7:45
when folks like high-powered Executives
7:47
think their lives and their livelihoods
7:49
are at stake they’ll pay up the outfit
7:51
sent another gangster named Willie byoff
7:54
to California
7:55
buyoff had already created a Shakedown
7:58
operation of Chicago movie theater
7:59
projectionist he had infiltrated the
8:01
national Union of theater projectionists
8:04
and used its extortion plans in many
8:06
cities on the East Coast nitty sent buy
8:09
off to California he was instructed to
8:11
infiltrate the International Alliance of
8:13
theatrical stage employees buy off aided
8:16
by Johnny John handsome Johnny roselli
8:19
eventually became the collector for The
8:20
Syndicate controlled unions in Hollywood
8:22
they extorted millions of dollars from
8:24
major motion picture studios and buyoff
8:27
kept hundreds of thousands of dollars
8:28
for himself Willie buyoff was just a
8:31
small-time Chicago Thug who went to
8:33
Hollywood and it went to his head he
8:35
soon was living in a mansion had
8:36
expensive fancy suits wore a gold
8:39
jewelry drove expensive cars and had
8:42
solid gold business cards made up he
8:44
caused a lot of attention a big stir out
8:46
there in Hollywood and everybody knew
8:48
what was going on and they were afraid
8:50
well-known actor at the time Robert
8:52
Montgomery was a president of the Screen
8:54
Actors Guild and he got tired of it he
8:56
tipped off the IRS California Federal
8:58
grand jury was convened and a witness
9:00
testified that Willie byoff had demanded
9:02
a twenty five thousand dollar payment
9:04
from film executive Harry Warner because
9:06
the boys in Chicago expected a Christmas
9:08
present another witness testified that
9:11
buyoff told movie Mogul Louis B Mayer
9:14
there is no room for both of us in this
9:15
world and I will be the one who is here
9:17
in 1943 buyoff was indicted for tax
9:20
evasion and other related crimes as well
9:22
as extortion and racketeering they also
9:25
indicted several of his associates like
9:28
Paul the waiter Rica Philip d’andrea
9:30
Charlie Cherry knows Joey Johnny roselli
9:33
Lou Kaufman and Frank the enforcer
9:35
knitty from Chicago rather than face
9:38
prison for this buyoff decided he would
9:40
testify against his companions at this
9:43
time Frank Nitty lived in the southwest
9:45
suburb of Riverside Illinois on March 18
9:47
1943 local police would note a group of
9:50
mobster bosses were meeting at nitty
9:53
Suburban home it turns out that Willie
9:55
buyoff was the focus of this meeting at
9:57
that time they feared the buyouts had
9:59
turned government witness since he was
10:01
netty’s man knitty had to deal with a
10:03
problem they demanded that nitty shoot
10:05
by off even if he had to do it in a
10:07
crowded courtroom at this meeting Rika
10:09
ordered nitty to take the fall for all
10:11
of them then he was facing 15 years in
10:13
prison this suggestion did not go over
10:15
well with nitty but he did not know what
10:18
to do and by this point in time Paul
10:20
Rica had really asserted personal as
10:22
well as outfit dominance over Frank
10:24
Nitty Nitty suffered from severe
10:26
claustrophobia and he was terrified of
10:29
confinement in prison the next day March
10:31
19 1943 nitty’s lawyer phoned him to
10:35
tell him that he had been indicted after
10:36
getting that phone call that he hung up
10:38
the phone walked into the other room
10:40
took a pistol out of a drawer put it in
10:43
his coat pocket put on his Overcoat
10:46
walked back into the kitchen and told
10:47
his wife I’m going for a walk his actual
10:49
last words to his wife were I want you
10:51
to go to church this afternoon I want
10:53
you to go to a novena at our Lady of
10:55
Sorrow after that he walked away alone
10:57
Frank Nitty got to a railroad track
10:59
about a mile away and shot himself in
11:01
the head Paul Rica now became the actual
11:04
head of the Chicago mob and name as well
11:07
as in fact he appointed his friend Tony
11:10
Accardo as underboss after the Hollywood
11:12
prosecutions and for the rest of his
11:14
life Paula way to Rika was never caught
11:16
during a crime he always let others do
11:18
the crime for him and took part of the
11:20
money as any well-respecting mafia boss
11:22
would do in the subsequent trial Willie
11:24
byoff testified against all these
11:26
Chicago outfit guys he moved to Phoenix
11:29
under assumed name but Willie buyoff
11:31
always wanted to be a big time guy he
11:33
could not lay low by the 1950s even
11:36
Palling around with well-known
11:38
politician Barry Goldwater but his past
11:40
caught up with him November the 4th 1955
11:43
Willie byoff turned to key in his pickup
11:45
truck and a bomb bloomed to pieces in
11:48
regard to the Hollywood prosecutions on
11:50
December 30th 1943 a Federal grand jury
11:52
returned a guilty verdict for Rick and
11:55
his associates they each got the
11:57
sentence of 10 years in prison Paul Rica
11:59
and Louis Campagna were sentenced to the
12:02
federal penitentiary in Atlanta feeling
12:04
they were too far away from Chicago they
12:06
tried to get transferred to the
12:07
Leavenworth Prison in Kansas their
12:09
request for transfer was denied again
12:11
and again by Atlanta police and
12:13
officials the next request went a little
12:15
higher this time to the bureau prisons
12:17
in Washington D.C again this petition
12:19
was denied then working through
12:21
companion’s wife Charlotte Paul Dillon a
12:23
one-time campaign manager for Harry S
12:25
Truman in St Louis was contacted for
12:27
help in getting the transfer over the
12:29
vigorous opposition of the Atlanta
12:30
Warden the Atlanta prison board and the
12:32
board of prisons in Washington DC
12:35
companion Rica received her transfers to
12:37
Leavenworth Johnny roselli had been sent
12:39
to the federal prison at Terre Haute
12:42
Indiana he contacted a Washington D.C
12:44
lobbyist and gambler Named Sam beard to
12:46
help get the rest of the outfit men sent
12:48
to St Louis years later a memo will
12:51
surface showing that the U.S attorney
12:52
general Tom Clark requested that all the
12:55
Chicago outfit men who had been
12:57
convicted in the Hollywood extortion
12:59
crimes be transferred to Leavenworth
13:01
once their Chicago mob underbossed
13:03
Anthony Accardo and outfit political
13:05
fixer Murray the camel Humphreys paid
13:08
regular visits each time they came they
13:10
would both sign names as Joseph I Bulger
13:13
a mob attorney
13:14
Rica and Campania were now back with old
13:17
mob Associates Johnny roselli Cherry
13:19
knows gioi and Philip d’andrea the group
13:21
now made attempts to get parole even
13:23
though less than one-third of their
13:24
sentences had been served a stumbling
13:26
block for Rika and Campagna was their
13:28
non-payment of back taxes toned almost
13:30
six hundred thousand dollars when a
13:33
cardo and Humphreys arrived in Kansas
13:35
City on the train to visit the prisoners
13:37
a young up-and-comer with the Kansas
13:40
City crime family named Nick Sabella
13:42
would meet them and drive in Leavenworth
13:43
next of Allah would go on to be the boss
13:45
of Kansas City and eventually become an
13:47
equal partner with outfit boss joy iupa
13:49
in the Vegas casino skim conspiracy in
13:52
the 1970s an attorney named Eugene
13:54
Bernstein was a former employee of the
13:56
eternal revenue he arranged for the six
13:58
hundred thousand dollars in backpacks
14:00
from money that he asserted was
14:02
Anonymous donations this was immediately
14:04
after the war
14:06
1946-47 Al Capone will die January the
14:09
8th 1947. the outfit will mobilize their
14:11
political machine in Chicago to work for
14:13
the election of Harry Truman and 1948
14:16
they make connections with political
14:17
fixtures close to the Truman campaign
14:19
again with the help of Paul Dillon a
14:22
former campaign manager for President
14:23
Truman a petition was filed for parole
14:25
this is about three years after they
14:27
were sentenced one week later Campagna
14:30
Rica Geo Deandrea and roselli were all
14:32
released on parole they all took the
14:34
train back to Chicago and a huge party
14:36
was held in their honor this travesty of
14:39
Justice caused a public outcry and the
14:41
men were warned to stay away from
14:42
Chicago through the efforts of their
14:45
attorneys the men were soon able to
14:46
return to their homes and businesses
14:48
however as a condition of his parole
14:50
Rika could no longer be present in the
14:53
company of other Mobsters Rika then on
14:55
the surface gave the appearance that he
14:58
was going into retirement what he did in
15:00
fact he continued to serve as a senior
15:03
consultant to the Auschwitz leadership
15:04
Tony Accardo and no decision would be
15:07
made again during his lifetime without
15:09
his knowledge the early paroles in the
15:12
case enraged the Chicago press which
15:15
published rika’s claim that his
15:16
influence extended clear into the White
15:18
House printed Accounts at Rika
15:21
instructing his lawyers to find out who
15:23
had the final say so in granting him a
15:25
early parole and he was quoted saying
15:27
that man must want something money
15:29
favors a seat in the Supreme Court find
15:31
out what he wants and get it for him
15:33
while several of the Chicago newspapers
15:35
were bitter enemies of President Harry
15:37
Truman the fact was that attorney
15:39
general Tom Clark who had been appointed
15:42
by Harry Truman did allow the early
15:44
parole of Paul Rick and the others Clark
15:46
was appointed to the next opening on the
15:48
Supreme Court 1952 the conservative
15:51
Chicago Tribune called for the
15:52
impeachment of the now Supreme Court
15:54
Justice Tom Clark because of his utter
15:57
unfitness for any position of public
15:58
responsibility and especially for a
16:01
position on the Supreme Court hits
16:02
vitriolic editorial race we have been
16:05
sure of his unfitness ever since he
16:07
played his considerable role in
16:09
releasing the Capone gangsters after
16:10
they served a bare minimum of their
16:12
terms once Rika was back in circulation
16:15
he became a real power in Chicago
16:16
underworld because of the parole
16:19
restriction he appointed Tony Joe
16:21
batters Accardo to be the boss remember
16:24
that Accardo had visited Rika and
16:26
Leavenworth by masquerading his his
16:28
attorney and had kept reconform to
16:30
Syndicate activities all along Rico
16:32
remained as a senior advisor and the
16:34
real power behind the business decisions
16:36
made in the outfit he and ocardo both
16:38
remained in the background as best they
16:40
could they remained well insulated from
16:42
any law enforcement investigations into
16:45
outfit activities the keep offer
16:47
committee hearings came along in the
16:49
1950s as they investigated the organized
16:53
crime families in each of the major
16:55
Eastern and Midwestern cities by the
16:57
time they got done in Chicago they were
16:59
to put out a statement and say that Paul
17:01
Rica was a national head of the crime
17:03
syndicate a few years later the
17:05
McClellan committee investigating
17:07
organized crime referred to
17:09
Rika as America’s most important
17:11
Criminal Rica’s testimony on the witness
17:13
stand before each of these committees
17:15
was punctuated by frequent pleas of the
17:17
fifth amendment in 1957 the government
17:20
was still after him Paul Rico was
17:22
stripped of his citizenship and two
17:23
years later deported he resorted to a
17:26
myriad of appeals and delaying actions
17:27
even getting a court order to stay on
17:30
deportation to Italy by bringing an
17:32
action before an Italian Court demanding
17:34
that his Italian citizenship be dropped
17:36
in a remarkable action the Italian
17:39
government would not take Rika back even
17:41
to serve out his old murder term
17:43
presumably because he might adversely
17:45
influence Italian prisons and Italian
17:47
criminals in Italian Kimora and Sicilian
17:51
mafia members frustrated American
17:53
Immigration officials ordered Rika to
17:56
apply to other countries to Grant him
17:57
Refuge following instructions Rika sent
18:00
letters to some 60 countries supposedly
18:02
seeking Asylum but apparently in an
18:05
idealistic desire for full disclosure he
18:07
also included a packet of news clip
18:09
instincts to explain why the United
18:10
States wanted him to immigrate elsewhere
18:13
no Nation expressed the slightest
18:15
interest in accepting him the government
18:17
was still trying to deport Rico when he
18:19
died in 1972. by then Rika might have
18:22
well-accepted deportation to Italy he
18:25
spent many hours at the Alitalia
18:27
terminal at O’Hare Airport listening to
18:30
Italian tourists speaking the native
18:32
tongue the consensus was that Rica had
18:35
turned a bit senile spending so much
18:36
time at the airport federal agents were
18:39
suspicious they believed he was
18:41
arranging meetings with Smugglers of
18:42
Contraband or drugs during the 1950s
18:45
Rika threw a cardo as the boss of the
18:48
outfit oversaw the outfit moving into
18:50
slot machines vending machines
18:52
counterfeiting cigarette and liquor tax
18:54
stamps expanding narcotic smuggling
18:56
Accardo plays slot machines in gas
18:59
station restaurants and bars throughout
19:01
the outfits territory which again
19:02
Chicago all the way up to Milwaukee all
19:05
the way down into Ohio Iowa outside of
19:08
Chicago the outfit expanded into Las
19:11
Vegas a car made sure that all the legal
19:13
Las Vegas casinos used his slot machines
19:16
in Kansas and Oklahoma that took
19:17
advantage of the of the official ban on
19:19
alcohol sales to introduce bootlegged
19:21
alcohol the outfit eventually dominated
19:24
organized crime in most of the western
19:25
United States to reduce the outfit’s
19:28
exposure to Legal prosecution Accardo
19:30
phased out some traditional activities
19:32
such as labor racketeering and extortion
19:34
he also converted the outfit’s brother
19:36
business into call girl Services the
19:39
result of these changes was a golden era
19:41
of profitability and influence for the
19:43
outfit cardo Enrique continued to
19:45
emphasize keeping a low profile they
19:47
allowed men like Sam giancana to attract
19:50
attention instead one great example of
19:52
this was in 1961 there was a wrestling
19:54
tag team getting a lot of attention two
19:57
men named Lou Albano and Tony altamare
19:59
were wrestling as a mafia inspired tag
20:02
team called the Sicilians Tony Accardo
20:05
supposedly went to them and asked them
20:07
to drop the gimmick in order to avoid
20:09
any mob-related publicity by being aware
20:12
of negative publicity and keeping a low
20:14
profile ocardo and Rika commanded the
20:16
outfit much longer than the Flasher Al
20:18
Capone this alleged that Paul Rica once
20:21
said Accardo had more brains for
20:22
breakfast than Capone had in a lifetime
20:24
in 1957 the IRS made it evident that
20:27
Tony Accardo was in their sights he and
20:30
Rika agreed to turn the official
20:32
position as outfit boss over to rika’s
20:34
Old bootlegging gang member Sam Mooney
20:37
giancana many suspected a large number
20:39
of Chicago area murder victims were men
20:42
who had been killed by giancana merely
20:45
because Paula waiter wished that they
20:48
would go away it is believed that
20:49
Accardo became giancana’s consiglieri
20:52
and removed himself from the day-to-day
20:54
running of the organization law
20:56
enforcement did note that ocardo
20:58
retained great respect they believed
21:00
that genkana still had to obtain the
21:02
approval of ocardo and Rika on major
21:04
business including all murders unlike
21:06
ocardo Enrique Sam diancana lived in
21:09
ostentatious lifestyle a frequented Posh
21:12
nightclubs he dated high-profile
21:14
well-known singer Phyllis McGuire and he
21:17
refused to distribute some of the
21:19
profits from outfit controlled casinos
21:21
in the Caribbean to other members it was
21:23
during this time that FB agent Bill
21:25
Romer and his top hoodlum Squad started
21:27
what became known as operation lockstep
21:29
Operation lockstep had agents assigned
21:32
to it and they were to
21:35
follow giancana everywhere I went right
21:37
behind him if he left in a car they
21:40
drove they pulled away from the curb in
21:42
their car and didn’t even let one car
21:44
get in between them if he walked out and
21:46
walked down the street they walked a few
21:48
feet behind him if he went into a
21:50
restaurant the agents obtained a table
21:52
as close as possible Gen Con and his
21:54
party if he played golf they horned
21:56
their way in so they’ve become they
21:58
force them directly behind giancana if
22:00
he went to a movie they sat behind him
22:02
Rika and others in the outfit believed
22:04
that Jen Connor was tracking too much
22:05
attention because of this genkana was so
22:09
frustrated by this he sued the FBI in
22:11
civil court for harassment and then the
22:14
final decision the court ordered the FBI
22:16
agents had to at least maintain one
22:18
foursome between their foursome and
22:20
giancana soon after that soon after the
22:23
bureau was able to put giancana in jail
22:25
for federal contempt of court he got one
22:28
year for this in 1966. this was the
22:30
final straw in ocardo and Rika replaced
22:32
giancana with a much lower profile
22:36
hard case named Joy ayupa Rica died in
22:39
his bed October 1972. this was an event
22:42
that would cause some Shock waves in the
22:44
outfit now ousted outfit boss Sam
22:46
giancana and Paul Rico went back to the
22:48
42 gang days in Diamond Joe Esposito’s
22:51
bootlegging Empire for so long as Paul
22:53
the waiter was alive Jen Connor was safe
22:56
as were some of Jen Connor’s more
22:58
erratic backers like our friend mad Sam
23:00
DeStefano within months of rika’s death
23:03
DeStefano was murdered by other mob
23:05
members a couple of years later Jen
23:07
Connor was assassinated as well rika’s
23:10
hand was all-powerful but not from the
23:11
grave thus sends a story of Paul the
23:14
waiter Rika well-known mobster but spent
23:17
all of his life basically in the shadows
23:20
in the background thanks folks I hope
23:23
you enjoy that
The post Paul Ricca of the Chicago Outfit appeared first on Gangland Wire.
This episode currently has no reviews.
Submit ReviewThis episode could use a review! Have anything to say about it? Share your thoughts using the button below.
Submit Review