The is the second installment about the life of a Chicago Outfit thief, enforcer, juice loan collector and killer named Harry “The Hook” Aleman.
Historically the Chicago Outfit has been able to control judges and politicians, control big businesses like Vegas hotel casinos and dominate rank and file members to control national unions like the Teamsters. A lot of high-powered businessmen, lawyers, accounts and normal men can make deals, make the hard business decisions and attract capital to create powerful companies. Outfit men like to do these same things, but they would be unable to create anything without hard faced, empty eyed killers like Harry Aleman. Men who have no problem saying, “I will kill you” and their eyes show they mean it. Harry Aleman was one of the best. A small man who could switch from an easy-going intelligent personable demeanor to projecting a menace and threat with no remorse in a split second.
Harry Aleman and Butch Petrocelli were a powerful duo, not the dynamic duo, but they were a powerhouse pair of Outfit killers. One of the earliest murders they were suspected of was Sam “Sambo” Cesario. Actually, “Sambo” had once been an uncle of Harry’s by marriage and before he divorced Aleman’s aunt Viola Ferriola, his boss Joe Ferriola’s sister. “Sambo” was a well-known and feared Outfit member who had been described as a Capone man and a middle echelon mobster in the 1950s. In June 1971 Sambo married a woman named Nan Partipilo. He had kept this relationship hush hush because she had been the girlfriend of Felix “Milwaukee Phil” Aldersio who was on a death bed in prison at that time. Many young mobsters wanted the approval and favor of a guy like “Milwaukee Phil.” On October 19, 1971, a one warm October evening, the newly married couple were relaxing on lawn chairs on the sidewalk in front of their Brownstone at 1071 West Polk. Two masked men approached them, and one was carrying what was described as a .30 cal. Carbine. The man with the carbine “butt stroked” Sambo onto the ground and beat him mercilessly. The other man fired 4 pistol shots into Sambo killing him.
Louis Alemeida tells a story about Aleman that gives us some insight into his thinking. In April 1972, they are drinking espresso at the Survivors club when Harry read an article about the murder of Crazy Joey Gallo. Masked men entered Umbertos Clam house on Mulberry street in lower Manhattan and pumped several rounds into Gallo, killing him instantly. Louie would later say that Harry could not stop talking about the hit saying things like,
“Now that was how you do a hit”
“that is the way to do it, in a restaurant in front of many witnesses, make an example!”
By this time, Harry was the leader of his own crew. He had used money from other scores to collect police radios, guns, disguises and several stolen cars with cold license plates. He had many sources who gave him tips on good home invasion robbery scores or tractor-trailer thefts. He researched and investigated the targets, plotted the strategy and put together the teams, gave the orders and fenced the merchandise. Like his first crew chief, Joe Ferriola, he gave each crew member $500.00 for their efforts, no matter the outcome of the score.
His orders were to get in and out quickly, wear a hat and mask and to carry shoestrings to tie up victims. He explained the shoestrings would not draw extra attention from cops if they happened to get stopped, they were easy to carry and would do the job. On one occasion Lou Almeida reported that Harry ordered them to rob an older couple and leave them tied and gagged. Once they were safely away from the scene, Harry stopped and called the cops, so the old couple would be found soon. Harry did not want to add murder to the robbery charges.
A tipster once told Harry about a guy took the concessions cash from the Chicago Blackhawks’ stadium and kept it in his house until he got to the bank. The tipster claimed the only person home with this money most of the time was the guy’s wife. Harry instructed them where to find a work car he had stashed, and to get in and out quickly, to use shoelaces to tie up the woman and bring the money back to him. So, two of Harry’s guys go find the house and inside they find the wife and three kids. (they did not figure the kids) They tie up the wife and children and proceed to search the house. The robbers cannot find any big concession money. They found $1,800.00 and brought it back to Harry. True to his word he gave each of the thieves $500.00 leaving him holding an $800.00 score. In the next caper the same two guys were sent to the house of a wealthy doctor in Indianapolis. They were supposed to find several hundred thousand in a safe but could only find some diamond jewelry and about $25,000.00. Again, Harry was disappointed but gave them each $500.00 and complained he would have to piece out the diamonds to make any money on the score.
During the early 1970s, Harry was building his crew and doing bigger jobs and he was becoming Joe Ferriola’s chief enforcer in lining up all the Chicago bookies to pay a street tax to the Outfit.
The Chicago Crime Commission would publish a list of mobsters who were suspected to be victims of Harry Aleman.
Oct. 19, 1971: Samuel “Sambo” Cesario, 53, clubbed and shot to death by two masked men as he sat with his wife in lawn chairs in front of 1071 W. Polk St.
Sept. 27, 1972: William Logan, 37, a Teamsters union shop steward and ex-husband of Aleman’s cousin, shot to death with a shotgun in front of his home at 5916 W. Walton St.
Dec. 20, 1973: Richard Cain, 49, a top aide to then-high-ranking organized-crime boss Sam “Momo” Giancana, shot gunned at point-blank range by two masked men in Rose’s Sandwich Shop, 1117 W. Grand Ave. An Outfit friend of Cain’s named Michael Gilardi picked up Cain to go to a luncheon meeting with Marshall Caifano at Rose’s Sandwich Shop, a small Italian cafe. Usually Gilardi would join Cain for lunch, but on this day, Gilardi claimed he had to go to his doctor. Cain and Caifano talked over lunch, and Caifano asked Cain to leave and get something. When Cain returned to Rose’s at 12:30 P.M., Caifano was gone. He was met by two men wearing ski masks carrying a two-way radio; they held four customers, a waitress and the owner at gunpoint against the wall. Cain was ordered to stand against the back wall with his back to the kitchen. Cain faced the shooter; no words were exchanged. The shooter shot Cain with his double-barreled shotgun, the buckshot went upwards to Cain’s chin, tearing away the right side of Cain’s face. Death was instantaneous. The Outfit had learned of a plan Cain was hatching a plan to kill several Outfit bosses, so he and his mentor Sam Giancana could take over the entire Chicago Outfit. When these Outfit bosses discovered Cain’s plan, they had him murdered.
Feb. 24, 1974: Socrates “Sam” Rantis, 43, a counterfeiter, found with his throat slashed and with puncture wounds in his chest in the trunk of his wife’s car at O’Hare airport. Sam was killed because he had killed two Outfit juice collectors, Samuel Marcello and Joseph Grisafe. Sam Rantis had enlisted a couple of local minor criminals to put the bodies in 55 gal. drums. One of these guys must have talked because shortly after these murders, Rantis’ body was found in a car at the airport. In an interesting sidelight, the drums containing the dead bodies of the Outfit collectors, Marcello and Grisafe, were left in the back room of a snack shop owned by Rantis. These bodies were not found until several months after the body of Rantis was found.
April 21, 1974: William Simone, 29, a counterfeiter, found in the back seat of his car near 2446 S. Kedvale Ave., with his hands and feet bound and a gunshot wound in the head.
July 13, 1974: Orion Williams, 38, a suspected mob informant, found shot gunned to death at 70 E. 33rd St., in the trunk of his girlfriend’s car.
Sept. 28, 1974: Robert Harder, 39, a jewel thief and burglar who had become an informant, found shot in the face in a bean field near Dwight, Ill. He previously escaped an assassination attempt by Aleman and a partner, James Inendino.
Jan. 16, 1975: Carlo Divivo, 46, a mob enforcer, cut down by two masked men who opened fire with a shotgun and a pistol as he walked out of his home at 3631 N. Nora Ave.
May 12, 1975: Ronald Magliano, 43, an underworld fence, found blindfolded and shot behind the left ear in his burning home at 6232 S. Kilpatrick Ave. Sounds like a Aleman crew home invasion robbery.
June 19, 1975: Christopher Cardi, 43, a former police officer who made high-interest loans to gamblers, shot eight times in the back and once in the face by two masked men as his wife and children looked on inside Jim’s Beef Stand in Melrose Park.
Aug. 28, 1975: Frank Goulakos, 47, a federal informant, shot six times by a masked man who stepped out of a car as Goulakos walked to his car near DiLeo’s Restaurant, 5700 N. Central Ave.,
where he was a cook.
Aug. 30, 1975: Nick “Keggie” Galanos, 48, a bookmaker, found shot nine times in the head in the basement of his home at 6801 W. Wabansia Ave.
Oct. 31, 1975: Anthony Reitinger, 34, a bookmaker, shot to death in Mama Luna’s restaurant, 4846 W. Fullerton Ave., by two masked men.
Jan. 31, 1976: Louis DeBartolo, 29, a gambler deeply in debt, found shot in the head and with his neck punctured four times with a broken mop handle in the rear of the store where he worked at 5945 W. North Ave.
May 1, 1976: James Erwin, 28, an ex-convict who was suspected in the murders of two other reputed mobsters, cut down by two masked men with a shotgun and a .45 caliber pistol. He was shot 13 times as he stepped out of his car at 1873 N. Halsted St.
July 22, 1976: David Bonadonna, 61, a Kansas City, Mo. mob associate who was fatally shot and found in his car trunk there. His murder was one of several unsolved mob-related slayings that year in an apparent mob attempt to extort money from a Bonadonna’s son, Freddy Bonadonna.
March 29, 1977: Charles “Chuck” Nicoletti, 60, a top mob hit man, shot three times in the back of the head while sitting in his car parked at Golden Horns Restaurant, 409 E. North Ave., Northlake.
June 15, 1977: Joseph Frank Theo, 33, a burglar involved in stolen auto parts, found with two shotgun wounds to the head in the back seat of a car parked at 1700 N. Cleveland Ave.
Harry Aleman created quite a reputation during the 1970s. he was the go-to guy for Outfit enforcement activities. With Harry’s help, Joe Ferriola organized all the bookies like Capone had had organized all the speakeasies and independent booze smugglers during prohibition. A bookie could work independent of the Outfit, but they had to give them 50% of all profits plus a yet to be determined “Street tax.”
A good example of this is a situation concerning Frank Rizza, a Chicago traffic cop in the early 1970s. In 1976, he was caught trying to buy cocaine in Mexico and got lucky because he was just kicked out of the country. He was forced to resign. While still a police officer, Rizza had already branched out into the bookmaking business. Joe Ferriola would read news accounts about a race wire room being raided by Chicago police in late 1974. In early 1975, Rizza received a visit from Aleman and fellow Taylor Street crew member James Inendino. Rizza would later testify that Aleman and Inendino he was asked to meet in a restaurant on Chicago’s Southwest Side. He said that Aleman and Indendino sat across from him and, at first, said nothing, fixing him with ominous stares from coal black emotionless eyes. After some preliminary talk about whether Rizza could be wired or not, they soon got down to business. Rizza said that Aleman began the conversation.
“We are organizing Chicago like it was organized back in the 1930s and you owe me a street tax, 40 thousand dollars.”
Rizza did not argue and said he would get back to Aleman. Rizza had his own clout in the ranks of organized crime: He knew Angelo LaPietra, the boss of the Chinatown neighborhood. Rizza went to LaPietra and explained his plight, asking for help. Rizza would later say that LaPietra told him he was in a very serious situation ad he might be able to help. Rizza gave LaPietra a paper sack stuffed with several thousand dollars. LaPietra promised to deliver the money to Aleman and negotiate a compromise deal. Rizza later said, a deal was hammered out where Aleman and his pals became partners in his bookmaking business. Rizza said he would be required to pay the Outfit 50% of his winnings and Aleman promised Rizza that the Outfit would pay all Rizza’s losses. Aleman also demanded that Rizza pay an additional $1,000 a month in street tax. Bookmaking must be lucrative because Rizza continued to operate at a profit, a lesser profit but he stayed in business and if he had a bad week and suffered a loss, the Outfit covered that loss.
Rizza became part of Aleman’s network and met with him and Inendino almost daily. They recruited him to help them ferret out other independent bookmakers for extortion. He told them about a guy named Anthony Reitinger. Aleman investigated Reitinger and found that he was doing very well with lots of bettors. He sent a message though Rizza that he knew Reitinger had a $100,000.00 a month bookmaking operation and the Outfit demanded a street tax.
Rizza reported back that Reitinger responded with an obscenity and said he would never pay any street tax. Rizza testified that Aleman responded with, “I will kill that motherfucker.” Rizza said he tried again to persuade Reitinger to change his mind, but Reitinger dug in his heels.
“He said he wouldn’t pay. He wasn’t interested,” Rizza said.
Rizza then met with Aleman. “I told him it’s a dead deal, that Reitinger wasn’t coming in,” Rizza recalled. “Aleman told me to forget about it, that Reitinger was a dead man anyway.” He said he was going to whack Reitinger. Rizza said Aleman planned to kill Reitinger on Halloween because he would not attract much attention wearing a mask. On that night, Rizza was at home watching a television news report about Reitinger’s death. Then, he recalled,
“The phone rings. It’s Harry Aleman: `We killed that son of a bitch. I told you we would kill that guy.”
On the night he would die, Reitinger entered a well-known Northwest Side restaurant named Mama Lunas at 5109 W Fullerton Ave, Chicago, IL 60639. The police reported he was worried about Aleman and the Outfit and had told his daughter that if anything happened to him, she should go to her grandmother immediately. Witnesses reported that when he got inside, he stopped and looked back out the front window to make sure he was not being followed. After appearing satisfied he did not have a tail, he settled into a booth and began studying a menu. Shortly after, witnesses would see a red Mercury Montego pull up and park on the curb directly in front. Two men, both wearing ski masks, emerged. They were seen slowly and deliberately walking up the sidewalk and entering the restaurant.
Reitinger saw them enter but it was too late. The men quickly closed the distance from the front door to their victim’s booth and as he tried to rise, one masked man shoved him back down. The Chicago Tribune described the scene as a murder conducted with calm precision. One masked man pointed a .30 caliber carbine and fired four times into Reitinger’s chest. The customers dived for cover as the smell of gunpowder filled the air and blood erupted from Reitinger’s chest. The witnesses said the second masked man pushed his shotgun against Reitinger’s head and fired two rounds. After these multiple blasts, the two men, slowly and calmly turned their weapons toward the horrified customers as a warning. They exited Moma Lunas’ slowly and deliberately as they entered. The customers remained frozen as the Montego slowly pulled back into the traffic from its curbside parking spot. As a matter of interest, in the first hit attributed to Harry, the murder of “Sambo,” there were two masked suspects, one with a .30 carbine rifle. Another interesting thing is that Harry Aleman thought the Joey Gallo hit in Unbertos’ Clamhouse was so cool and in this murder, the execution team reenacted that same “New York” style hit.
Another interesting sidebar is the fact ex-cop Frank Rizza’s daughter, Pia Rizza, was on the short-lived TV show Mob Wives – Chicago. Ordinally, I don’t like to go into mafia relatives who want their privacy protected, there are a few who exposed themselves in Mob Wives – Chicago.
Also, on that show was Nora Schweihs is the daughter of Frank “The German” Schweihs, a notorious hit man for the mob and who was rumored to be involved in the death of Marilyn Monroe. Schweihs, who died in 2008, allegedly had his remains confiscated by the government, which made Nora return to Chicago to attempt to find them. Another cast member was Christina Scoleri, the daughter of Raymond Janek, a one-time thief and fence for the Chicago Outfit. This show never really had Outfit wives rather they had Outfit associate’s daughters. This was quite an exciting show for its one and only season. It seems that Nora Schweihs berated Pia Rizza trouble because her father had been a cop and a government witness. In one show Christina got drunk offended Nora. In another show the situation quickly deteriorated to Pia and Christina’s getting into an argument and a glass is thrown. Pia attacks Christina. Hair-pulling and punching occurs, and the two women are pulled apart.
Except for one daughter, Harry Aleman’s stepchildren all stayed out of the lime light. One of them, a daughter named Franky Forliano wrote a book titled “They Can’t Hurt Him Anymore.”
- The Trial of Al Capone – How the Real Untouchables Brought Him Down - March 24, 2019
- Harry “The Hook” Aleman: Chicago Outfit Enforcer (Part 4) - January 17, 2019
- Harry “The Hook” Aleman: Chicago Outfit Enforcer (Part 3) - January 10, 2019