The Chicago Syndicate
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Tuesday, April 26, 2005

`Clown' Missing from Mob: Joseph Lombardo Vanishes

For more than 50 years, Joseph Lombardo has called the West Town neighborhood his home--at least, whenever he wasn't in prison. An early riser, he was often seen since his 1992 release from prison riding his bicycle with a small cigar firmly planted between his lips. But when federal agents went to the 2200 block of West Ohio Street Monday morning to pick him up, Lombardo was nowhere to be found.

Lombardo was one of just two of the indicted members of the mob not under arrest when the Operation Family Secrets charges were announced Monday afternoon.

Lombardo, 76, has known he has been a target for months. His attorney, Rick Halprin, has said Lombardo was being looked at as a suspect in the 1974 slaying of Daniel Seifert. Seifert was a Bensenville businessman scheduled to testify against Lombardo and others in a Teamster pension fund fraud case.

Halprin has said Lombardo was at a Chicago police station at the time of the slaying. "We will have to wait and see," Halprin said of whether his client would surrender.

Halprin doubted Lombardo would be wearing the famous newspaper mask he made after a 1981 court appearance. It was that goofiness, and Lombardo's flair for the theatrical, that led police to give him the nickname "The Clown."

The indictment does not spell out what role Lombardo allegedly played in the killings. "It is pitifully sketchy," said Halprin.

Lombardo has done two stretches in federal prison. He was released in 1992 after serving 10 years on two separate federal convictions. He was convicted of conspiring to bribe U.S. Sen. Howard Cannon of Nevada for help in defeating a trucking deregulation bill and convicted in a mob scheme to skim $2 million from a Las Vegas casino.

Robert Fuesel, who worked organized crime for 28 years for the Internal Revenue Service, said Lombardo was not only the chairman of the board, but also an enforcer. He said he once surrounded Lombardo's house with 10 agents as he hid inside to avoid being served with a subpoena. Fuesel told Lombardo's wife that the agents were not going to leave, and Lombardo came out a half hour later and accepted the subpoena. But Monday morning, Lombardo was nowhere to be found.

Among federal indictments announced Monday were charges related to 18 unsolved murders and one attempted murder between 1970 and 1986.

1 MICHAEL FRANK "HAMBONE" ALBERGO

Date of murder: August 1970

How he was killed: Disappeared

Motive for murder: Albergo was a mob enforcer who vanished after being charged in connection with a loan-shark operation.

In 2003, FBI agents excavated a parking lot near U.S. Cellular Field on a tip that his bones were buried there.

2 DANIEL SEIFERT

Date: Sept. 27, 1974

How killed: Seifert was killed with shotgun blasts ouside his Bensenville factory.

Motive: Seifert was scheduled to testify against Outfit leaders accused of defrauding the Teamsters' pension fund.

3 PAUL HAGGERTY

Date: June 24, 1976 (in Chicago)

How killed: Not available

Motive: Not available

4 HENRY COSENTINO

Date: March 15, 1977

How killed: His body was found in the trunk of a car at the Chicago auto pound.

He had been killed by blunt force to the neck.

Motive: Not available

5 JOHN MENDELL

Date: Jan. 16, 1978

How killed: He was found dead in the trunk of his car in Chicago after being tortured and having his throat slit.

Motive: He was wanted by police following the murder of a member of a burglary ring.

6/7 DONALD RENNO / VINCENT MORETTI

Date: Jan. 31, 1978

How killed: Both men were found in the back of Renno's car in Cicero with their throats cut.

Motive: Police suspect Moretti's burglary ring was fencing goods in Las Vegas against the mob's wishes.

8/9 WILLIAM DAUBER AND CHARLOTTE DAUBER

Date: July 2, 1980

How killed: The Daubers were gunned down as they drove on a rural road in Will County.

Motive: William Dauber, a suspected mob killer, had been arrested on federal drug charges and Outfit leaders were afraid he'd turn informant.

10 WILLIAM "BUTCH" PETROCELLI

Date: Dec. 30, 1980

How killed: He was found in the back seat of his car in Cicero with his throat slashed and his face burned.

Motive: Outfit leaders reportedly suspected Petrocelli of skimming collection money and shaking down robbers without permission.

11 MICHAEL CAGNONI

Date: June 24, 1981

How killed: A radio-controlled bomb beneath his car exploded as he drove on a tollway ramp at Ogden Avenue and I-294 in DuPage County.

Motive: Sources said he supervised the mob's produce hauling operations and was suspected of holding back some of the profits.

12 NICHOLAS D'ANDREA

Date: Sept. 13, 1981

How killed: He was found murdered in the trunk of his car in Chicago Heights.

Motive: Mob associates suspect he was involved in arranging a hit on mob figure Alfred Pilotto.

13/14 RICHARD D. ORTIZ / ARTHUR MORAWSKI

Date: July 23, 1983

How killed: Both men were shot to death while sitting in a car outside a Cicero bar owned by Ortiz.

Motive: Not available

15 EMIL VACI

Date: June 7, 1986

How killed: He was found shot in the head in a drainage ditch in Phoenix.

Motive: Weeks before his death he appeared before a grand jury investigating the Spilotro brothers in Las Vegas.

16/17 ANTHONY SPILOTRO AND MICHAEL SPILOTRO.

Date: June 14, 1986

How killed: The brothers were beaten, and buried in a shallow grave in a northwest Indiana cornfield.

Motive: Mob bosses allegedly were not happy with how Anthony Spilotro, an Outfit enforcer, was running operations in Las Vegas.

18 JOHN FECAROTTA

Date: Sept. 14, 1986

How killed: Fecarotta, a longtime mob muscleman, was gunned down outside a bingo hall on Belmont Avenue.

Motive: An informant later told federal agents Fecarotta was killed for botching the burials of the Spilotros.

Note: Charges also include the attempted murder of an unnamed victim in Lake County on April 24, 1982.


Kudos for Detective Robert Moon's Work

When U.S. Atty. Patrick Fitzgerald's office singled out the late Detective Robert Moon for praise during Monday's announcement of sweeping indictments against the mob, the investigator's old friends from the Chicago Police Department were pleased but not surprised.

For 18 years Moon, who died last November, was an awe-inspiring weapon in law enforcement's fight against organized crime in Chicago, his friends and colleagues said. He was a "walking encyclopedia of everything that went on in the mob," said Harrison Area Detective Cmdr. Steve Peterson, who worked with Moon on the federal organized crime task force. "Nobody came even close to what he did in those cases."

Moon died of cancer Nov. 30, months before the case he had worked on with many other detectives and agents for years came to fruition.

His absence was felt by many who were involved in the massive investigation. Prosecutors extended "special thanks" to Moon in Monday's press release. "The investigation would not have been successful without Detective Moon's hard work and dedication," it said.

Moon first began to build his knowledge of the mob in Chicago in the 1980s when he was assigned to a federal task force working on auto theft cases, Peterson said.

Moon was a "bulldog and tenacious, and willing to help with anything," said Chicago Police Deputy Supt. Hiram Grau, who now heads the Chicago Police Department's investigative units.

Thanks to David Heinzmann


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