The Mafia Encyclopedia (62 page)

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Authors: Carl Sifakis

Tags: #True Crime, #Organized Crime, #test

BOOK: The Mafia Encyclopedia
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Spilling into the catacombs were 11 other men who were arrested as players
....
It was the third time in slightly more than a year that the big barboot game had been knocked over
.
The raiders found an underground passageway leading to the Towne Hotel
....
On February 17, 1970, the mob had had enough of the Towne. A fire totally destroyed the hotel. When state officials questioned Aiuppa about the ownership of the place, he pleaded the Fifth Amendment 60 times.
Heitler, Mike "de Pike" (?-1931): Whoremaster and mob victim
Probably few criminal setups lent themselves better to syndicate control than whorehouses. But first, the major syndicate mobs had to take over or squeeze out independents in the field. Many, if they were valuable enough, were absorbed into the syndicate operations and paid well for their services. Others were simply discarded.
In Chicago in the 1920s, Mike "de Pike" Heitler was a special case. If ever there was what could be called a "grand old man" of flesh peddling, it was de Pike, whose career spanned more than half a century.
Heitler's nickname of de Pike derived from his operation of the cheapest fancy house in Illinois (he was a piker). De Pike's price was 50¢ and in his joint at Peoria and West Madison, he was believed to have been the first to offer sex on an assembly-line system. De Pike sat by a cash register and had the customers lined up waiting their turn. As a girl came downstairs with a satisfied customer, the next man in line handed de Pike 50¢. He gave the girl a brass check that she could later redeem for 25¢.
The idea was to keep the traffic moving at high speed. De Pike employed another picturesque character, Charlie "Monkey Face" Genker, who, as his nickname indicates, was not a natural beauty. In contemporary accounts, he was said to resemble a Surinam toad. Monkey Face's duty at de Pike's joints was to chin up the door and poke his ugly face through the transom to urge the prostitute and her client to speed things up. Monkey Face was very effective. His sudden appearance was not something customers enjoyed; even his possible appearance encouraged some to carry through on their chores rapidly to beat Genker to the punch.
Heitler operated with relative freedom from the law for decades, and, for the most part, his bribes were generally limited to no more than passing out some brass checks to the police. He did have to take a few busts and convictions for white slavery now and then, but the punishments were of little consequence. However, when Johnny Torrio and then Al Capone enveloped the entire prostitution racket in Chicago and its environs, de Pike lost his influence with the police. Heitler's choice was either to become a paid Capone employee or simply be declared "out." De Pike opted to stay in, but his situation continued to deteriorate through the 1920s. Capone relied more and more on Harry Guzik to look after his whorehouse affairs, and de Pike felt slighted over the lack of respect for a man of his years in the field.
Page 175
Itching for vengeance, Heitler began ''ratting" on the mob and many of Capone's affairs. He informed Judge John H. Lyle about the doings in a Capone resort called the Four Deuces. As Lyle recounted in his book
The Dry and Lawless Years
, de Pike related: "They snatch guys they want information from and take them to the cellar. They're tortured until they talk. Then they're rubbed out. The bodies are hauled through a tunnel into a trap door opening in the back of the building. Capone and his boys put the bodies in cars and then they're dumped out on a country road, or maybe in a clay hole or rock quarry."
Heitler was not being imprudent informing Judge Lyle, who was a Capone hater and an honest judge, a rather rare breed for the era. However, Heitler was a little less selective at other times. He wrote an anonymous letter to the state attorney's office, outlining many facets of the Capone brothel operations. De Pike's anger had clearly got the best of him if he believed that affairs in the state attorney's office were secret from Capone. Within a short time, Capone ordered de Pike to appear before him at his office in the Lexington Hotel. The letter Heitler had written was on Capone's desk. Capone correctly deduced that the information in it could only have come from Heitler. He told him, "You're through."
Undoubtedly de Pike was marked right then for execution, but a certain etiquette was followed by the mob when they received information from their own informers inside official agencies. These sources generally emphasized they would not be a party to homicide, and thus it was not doneat least not for months.
Heitler might even have lasted a half year longer than he did had he not continued his troublesome letter-writing. In one, he named eight Capone figures as having been involved in the plot to murder
Chicago Tribune
reporter Jake Lingle. He gave a copy of that letter to his daughter. Unfortunately, he passed another copy to the wrong parties. On April 30, 1931, two boys found de Pike's charred torso in the smoldering wreckage of a house in a Chicago suburb.
Hijacking
Ever since the advent of Prohibition, hijacking has been a regular activity of organized crime. Hijacking existed before Prohibition, but the lure of a liquor-laden truck attracted gangster activity at a level never before witnessed in the United States. The crime continued almost as a force of habit after Prohibition ended and today still constitutes an important source of revenue for organized crime. Crime families remain especially active in hijacking cigarette shipments, especially because they have the wherewithal to dispose of such loot through gangland enterprises of various sorts.
Syndicate hijacking is not haphazard. Even if the actual hijackers are freelancers, the crime family functions as their patron, guaranteeing to handle the merchandise, as well as providing protection and "squaring" an arrest if operations go awry. The organized crime functionary tells the hijackers the specific items to be stolensuch as color television sets, electronic equipment, clothing. Usually the hijackers do not pick a truck to loot at random, but intelligence is supplied them by the mob when particularly valuable shipment can be hit. Often such information comes from "inside men," sometimes planted in key jobs or else recruited through other mob activities. For instance, through the mob's gambling and loan shark operations, the gangsters can put pressure on men owing them money and order them to supply information on shipments. If the victim happens to own the business, it makes matters all the more simple as the mobsters inform the businessman that insurance will cover his losses. Under such circumstances, the businessman can become an eager accomplice and is induced to make a targeted shipment all the more valuable.
Equally important to major syndicate hijackings is the fact that they tend to be perpetrated with police protection in one form or another. Because of good rapport with many police officers who accept "clean-graft"payoffs for allowing such activities as gambling to operateorganized crime has little trouble inducing police officers to stay away from certain areas when a hijacking is scheduled. The Knapp Commission, which investigated police corruption in New York City, reported that this was standard operating procedure.
Generally recognized as the foremost hijacking mob in American history is Detroit's fabled Purple Gang, probably the most feared bootleg hijackers of Prohibition days. Many members kept on hijacking other types of goods after the dry era. In fact, it is stated by law enforcement officials that some Purple Gang oldtimers, now in their 70s and 80s, still mastermind a large number of hijackings in Michigan and surrounding states.
Hill, Virginia (19181966): Syndicate bagwoman
There have been many women in American criminal history, but none quite like Virginia Hill. The newspapers insisted on calling her the Queen of the Mob. It wasn't that accurate. Mistress of the Mob, perhaps. She paraded around with money to burnwith $100 bills that filled her purse and her pocketspaying for a champagne party in a nightclub or for barefoot rumba dancing. In 1951 in executive session before the Kefauver Committee Virginia Hill was asked by that self-proclaimed moralist of the panel, Senator Charles W. Tobey of New Hampshire: "Young lady, what makes

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