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Patrick Spilotro, dentist with a pinky ring and brother of two slain Outfit
hoodlums, testified in federal court that he's been informing to the FBI for the
last two decades.
"About that," he said, discussing the murders of
brothers Michael and Anthony, "and other things."
He paused for a bit on
Tuesday, an old man now, blue suit, white hair, his face a map to his brothers.
He'd been fixing teeth for Outfit families for decades and kept his ears open.
He considered a bit, and spoke again."And about other things," said the dentist. "About other things."
What
could those other things be? Spilotro didn't say.
The 1986 murders of his
brothers, like all the other murders being dissected in the government's Family
Secrets trial, have received most of the publicity, as have any references to
animals, barking dogs, and tiny mice hung from a windshield as a
warning.
But it's the "other things" that send a wave through
Chicago.
Not like a pebble dropped in the federal pool, but more like a
washing machine falling off a truck into a puddle, splashing on political
shoes.
Mayor Richard Daley is furious, since his trucking boss friend and
fashionista Freddie Barbara was mentioned from the witness stand by a hit man as
a bomber driving Angelo "The Hook" LaPietra to arson parties.
So Barbara
is hot and the mayor wants Freddie cooled down, so look for a settlement to be
announced in the big feud over Tavern on Rush, the profitable nightspot in the
Viagra Triangle.
The owners of the Tavern real estate -- Barbara and
Bridgeport developer Tommy DiPiazza -- allegedly used Tavern partner Marty
Gutilla to try and push restaurateur Phil Stefani out of his own
place.
Barbara and DiPiazza are close to mayoral brain Tim Degnan. And
Daley does not need Degnan heated up any more. If Degnan gets hot, the mayor
could get crisp. So a splash in federal court in Family Secrets will most likely
lead to a happy ending for Stefani.
Not everything about this town is in
a press release. You have to study the waters, the tributaries, the pools, and
that boiling caldron that is now the 36th Ward Democratic
Organization.
The 36th keeps getting mentioned in Family Secrets, not by
its official title, but through the individuals who run it, the guys who pick
judges in Cook County and put people in the right places, cleaning the streets,
expanding the airports, and other stuff.
But the names of their 36th Ward
political superiors have been mentioned in the trial, including that of ward
boss Sam "Pastries" Banks.
Banks in the old country means Panebianco
(white bread), although now it's quite toasty.
Banks was brought up by a
federal witness, a burglar friend of Joseph "The Clown" Lombardo, as a guy
criminals go to, and pay to take care of the cops. Banks and his brother Ald.
William Banks (D-Zoning) have also installed their own candidates for judge.
"Pastries" did not return our calls Tuesday.
Another 36th Warder
mentioned the other day is State Sen. James DeLeo (D-How You Doin'). And
another, zoning lawyer James Banks, the son of Sam.
DeLeo and James Banks
bought the Spilotros' restaurant, Hoagies, from Michael Spilotro's widow, Ann,
after the brothers were murdered in 1986.
From the witness stand this
week, Ann Spilotro, who also runs The Back Room, a jazz club on Rush Street,
said Jim Banks and DeLeo ripped her off in the purchase.Jim Banks and DeLeo are also involved in the Tavern on Rush feud, with Banks on
the DiPiazza/Barbara side. DeLeo is an investor in the restaurant. But a funny
thing happened when I asked DeLeo who the landlords were at Tavern.
He
told me he didn't know.
DeLeo probably meant he didn't know that the son
of Sam was one of the landlords, even though they hail from the same political
organization, and bought Ann Spilotro's place together, which actually belonged
to the wife of the Clown.I suppose I should tell you that another name came up in the trial
Tuesday:
Mine.
One of the Outfit bosses on trial, James Marcello,
was videotaped in prison discussing my column with his good friend, Nick Vangel,
nicknamed "The Caterer" by his Outfit pals and known to many in DuPage County as
the former owner of The Carlisle banquet hall in Lombard.
"I just saw the
last thing in the Trib," Vangel tells Marcello, also an avid reader of
mine.
FBI Agent Edward "Ted" McNamara was questioned about this reference
to the newspaper, and he said they were talking about my column published Feb.
21, 2003.
It was about mobster Nicholas Calabrese entering the federal
witness protection program, and some of the murders he'd testify about in the
case that became Family Secrets.
That made a little splash. But now, in
the hands of prosecutors and the FBI, it's a tsunami.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-kass08aug08,1,5815208.column
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