Paul Ricca

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Paul Ricca
Paul Ricca (mugshot).jpg
Ricca's mugshot
Born
Felice De Lucia

(1897-11-14)November 14, 1897
Naples, Campania, Kingdom of Italy
DiedOctober 11, 1972(1972-10-11) (aged 74)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Resting placeQueen of Heaven Cemetery, Hillside, Illinois, U.S.
NationalityItalian
Other namesThe Waiter
Paul Maglio
OccupationCrime boss
Spouse(s)
Nancy Gigante
(m. 1927)
Children3
AllegianceChicago Outfit
Conviction(s)Murder (1917)
Extortion (1943)
Tax evasion (1959)
Criminal chargeTax evasion (1965)
Penalty2 years' imprisonment
10 years' imprisonment
9 years' imprisonment; 27 months served

Paul De Lucia[1] (born Felice De Lucia, Italian: [feˈliːtʃe de luˈtʃiːa]; November 14, 1897 – October 11, 1972), known as Paul Ricca (/ˈrkə/, Italian: [ˈrikka]), was an Italian-American mobster who served as the nominal or de facto leader of the Chicago Outfit for 40 years. In 1958, he was named by a Senate crime investigating subcommittee "the country's most important criminal".[2] Ricca died on October 11, 1972.

Early life[]

Ricca was born Felice De Lucia on November 14, 1897, in Naples, Campania to Antonio and Maria Annunziata De Lucia.[1] He had four younger sisters: Emilia Beatrice, Anna Clementina, Celementina Eleonora, and Luisa Maria.[1] By age 17, he was working for organized crime in Naples (Camorra). In 1915, he stabbed Emilio Parrillo to death on Mafia orders. Ricca later claimed that he killed Parillo for breaking an engagement to his sister. In 1917, Ricca was convicted of murder, serving two years in prison.[3] Once released from prison, Ricca killed Vincenzo Capasso, who had testified against him in the Parillo trial, by slitting his throat.

After killing Capasso, Ricca assumed the name Paul Maglio and fled to the United States by way of Cuba. On August 10, 1920, Ricca arrived in New York City.

In January 1927, Ricca married Nancy Emily Gigante, who was also from Naples, and had three children: Mary Anna, Anthony Paul, and Paul Richard.[1] He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1928, and legally changed his name to Paul De Lucia.[1]

In January 24, 1927, Ricca was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon, which was when his mugshot of him was taken. Though he got arrested a couple of times within his early years in the mob, he was never seriously convicted on any charges up until the 1940s, and before becoming a recognized figure in the Outfit in the 1930s, Ricca's record would be so clean that even his mob associates would convey some envy over his minor police record early on in his career in the Outfit.[4]

Joining the mob[]

While in Cuba, Ricca had met Joseph "Diamond Joe" Esposito, a Chicago bootlegger and restaurant owner. After Ricca arrived in New York, Esposito brought him to Chicago. Esposito put Ricca to work smuggling whiskey from Cuba and moonshine liquor from Kentucky to Chicago. Sensing Ricca's potential, Esposito appointed him as maitre d' at the Bella Napoli, Esposito's Chicago restaurant, earning the nickname "the Waiter". The Bella Napoli was popular with many Chicago gangsters, including the leader of the South Side Gang (the precursor to the Chicago Outfit), Al Capone. Sharing several mutual friends among Neapolitan gangsters who had returned to Italy, Ricca soon gave up his restaurant job and joined the South Side Gang.

Working with Capone and Nitti[]

Ricca rose very quickly in the gang ranks, frequently serving as Capone's emissary to the East Coast gangs. An early factor that contributed to his rise was an event that took place outside of Capone’s Hawthorne Hotel in Cicero, Illinois on September 20, 1926.[5] While Capone was eating in the restaurant next to the hotel, Ricca was about to enter the same restaurant to meet with him when several vehicles being driven by North Side gangsters, Capone’s rivals, were firing several Thompson submachine gun rounds into the air and at the hotel. Ricca, recognizing the oncoming danger, quickly ran to where Capone was sitting and warned him just in time for Capone to get down, thus saving him from getting shot. Ricca suffered a gunshot wound to his left shoulder and when questioned by the police of his identity, he identified himself with an alias name of Louis Barko.[6] Capone recognized and praised Ricca’s actions from that event by becoming close to him and letting him move up the ranks within the Outfit.

The two soon became good friends; in 1927, Capone served as the best man at Ricca's wedding. In 1929, Capone and Ricca attended the Atlantic City Conference in Atlantic City, New Jersey, the first meeting of all the major criminal gangs in the United States. In 1930, Capone sent Ricca to New York City to serve as his emissary in peace talks aimed at ending the Castellammarese War between the New York Italian-American gangs. With the establishment of the National Crime Syndicate in 1931, Ricca's prestige and visibility continued to rise.

In 1931, Capone was convicted of tax evasion and sentenced to 11 years in prison. Capone's nominal successor was Frank "the Enforcer" Nitti, with Ricca as front boss. However, according to crime historian Carl Sifakis, Ricca held the actual power in the Outfit. Ricca frequently overruled Nitti's orders by saying, "We'll do it this way. Now let's hear no more about it!". In addition, the leaders of the emerging Syndicate, including Lucky Luciano, dealt only with Ricca, not Nitti.[7] In fact, in April 1932, Luciano and Meyer Lansky, another top leader in the Crime Syndicate, were in the company of Ricca and other Chicago and New York gangsters when they were arrested by the police outside the Congress Hotel in Chicago. All of the men arrested were freed since the police had no reason to keep them contained, not before taking a picture of the gangsters in front of a police line-up however. The fact that the East Coast leaders met with Ricca personally in Chicago demonstrates the New York mob's trust toward him as the leader and voice of the Chicago mob.[8]

Hollywood extortion case[]

In the early 1940s, Nitti convinced Ricca and the rest of the Outfit leadership to participate in a labor racketeering and extortion scheme aimed at the movie studios in Los Angeles, California. Chicago mobster John "Handsome Johnny" Roselli gained control of the Projectors Union and threatened the studios with strikes and other labor problems. To avoid labor unrest, RKO, Paramount, MGM and 20th Century Fox paid several hundred thousand dollars to the Outfit. However, two Outfit men were arrested for extortion and agreed to testify against the Outfit leadership. In March 1943, Ricca, Nitti, and other mob leaders were indicted for extortion.

On March 18, 1943, Ricca and the Outfit leadership met with Nitti. Since the movie studio racket was Nitti's idea, Ricca and the Outfit leaders demanded that Nitti plead guilty to extortion charges to save them from prison. Terrified at the prospect of prison due to his severe claustrophobia, Nitti shot himself to death the next day. Ricca now became the official boss of the Outfit with enforcement chief Tony Accardo as underboss. Ricca and Accardo would run the Outfit for the next 30 years.

Ricca was fairly soft-spoken, but was as ruthless as any crime boss. As opposed to the flamboyance and media attention-seeking behaviors that both his former bosses, Esposito and Capone, exhibited that had brought about their downfalls, Ricca, along with Accardo, preferred to be more low profile in order to avoid attention from the media and law enforcement.[8] Whenever he wanted someone rubbed out, he said, "Make-a him go away." Crime historian Joe Sifakis described him as one of the most stereotypical gangsters ever produced by the Chicago Outfit.[7]

Extortion conviction[]

On December 30, 1943 Ricca and his associates were convicted of extortion and sentenced to ten years each in federal prison. Ricca began his sentence at the federal penitentiary in Atlanta, but was soon lobbying to a transfer to Leavenworth Penitentiary in Kansas. The Atlanta warden, reportedly prejudiced against Italians, had severely beaten Outfit mobster , making Ricca and the others fearful for their lives. After a series of contacts, St. Louis, Missouri lawyer Paul Dillon allegedly offered the head of the federal parole board payment to approve a transfer to Leavenworth for the Outfit mobster.

In May, 1945, against the recommendations of both wardens, Ricca and the other mobsters were moved to Leavenworth. During this period, the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) accepted a cash settlement from Ricca for back taxes. On August 13, 1947, after a one-week deliberation, the parole board released Ricca and his co-defendants from prison on parole. However, as a condition of his parole, Ricca could have no contact with mobsters. Accardo replaced Ricca as boss. It was generally acknowledged, though, that Accardo shared power with Ricca, who stayed in the background as a senior consultant. No major transactions, and certainly no hits, took place without Ricca's knowledge. It was one of the few known instances of a power-sharing arrangement in organized crime.

Ricca and Giancana[]

As the 1950s began, Ricca started passing more of the day-to-day operation of the Outfit to Accardo. However, in 1957 Ricca suddenly told Accardo that he wanted Sam Giancana, a Ricca protégé, to take Accardo's position. Accardo was facing tax evasion charges and Ricca allegedly wanted him to disappear from public view. Although unhappy about the demotion, Accardo accepted it, joining Ricca in semi-retirement. However, it was understood that Giancana had to get Accardo and Ricca's approval for all major transactions, particularly hits. By staying in the background, Ricca and Accardo avoided further imprisonment far longer than Capone had.

As Ricca aged, Accardo began to make more of the high level decisions, ultimately pushing Giancana out in favor of Sam Battaglia in 1966.

Later years[]

In 1957, the Federal government of the United States charged Ricca with illegally entering the United States under the alias Paul Maglio, and his citizenship was revoked. Three years earlier, the government had located the real Paul Maglio in Chicago and now brought him to testify against Ricca. Although the government won a deportation order, it was later overturned.

In 1959, Ricca was convicted of tax evasion and sentenced to nine years in federal prison. After serving 27 months of his sentence, Ricca was released. In 1965, Ricca was again indicted for tax evasion. In court, Ricca maintained that his total income for 1963, $80,159, was earned at the race track. Ricca was eventually acquitted.

Ricca died of a heart attack on October 11, 1972 at St. Luke's Hospital in Chicago.[2] He is buried at Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois.

In popular culture[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e "UNITED STATES v. DE LUCIA". Leagle. Retrieved June 4, 2020. he used another name which was "Paul De Lucia" because he "got married on that name" and desired that his name be changed to Paul De Lucia; [...] The certificate of naturalization was granted to Paul De Lucia whose name was changed from Paul Maglio. [...] The government has presented in the next division of exhibits documentary evidence that one Felice De Lucia was born in Naples, Italy, on November 14, 1897, whose parents were Antonio and Maria Annunziata (Ex. 28), whose children were a son, Felice, born in Naples, and four daughters born in Ottaviano, Italy, named Emilia Beatrice, born 1898, Anna Clementina, born 1901, Clementina Eleonora, born 1905, and Luise Maria, born in 1907. [...] he was married January 3, 1927 and his wife's name was [...] Nancy Emily Gigante, born October 2, 1906 or 1905 in Naples, Italy [...] this defendant had three children name Mary Anna, Anthony Paul, and Paul Richard.
  2. ^ a b "PAUL RICCA DEAD; GANG FIGURE, 74". The New York Times. October 12, 1972. Retrieved June 4, 2020. CHICAGO, Oct. 11 (UPI)— Paul (The Waiter) Ricca, often called the elder statesman of the Chicago crime syndicate, died today of a heart attack, at Presbyterian St. Luke's Hospital. He was 74 years old. [...] A Senate crime investigating subcommittee named Ricca the country's “most important criminal” in 1958.
  3. ^ Hailey, Jean R. (October 13, 1972). "Paul Ricca Dies, Led Capone Gang" (PDF). The Washington Post. Retrieved June 4, 2020. He had been convicted there in 1917 of murdering two men, and served two years in jail.
  4. ^ Binder, John J (2003). The Chicago Outfit. Arcadia Publishing. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-7385-2326-2.
  5. ^ "The Hawthorne Hotel". www.myalcaponemuseum.com. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  6. ^ Waugh, Daniel. "The Mother Of All Drive-By Shootings". Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  7. ^ a b Sifakis, Carl (1987). The Mafia Encyclopedia. New York City: Facts on File. ISBN 0-8160-1856-1.
  8. ^ a b "MOB STORIES". 2006-12-16. Archived from the original on 2006-12-16. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  • Nash, Jay Robert (1992). World Encyclopedia of Organized Crime. New York: First Paragon House.

External links[]

American Mafia
Preceded by Chicago Outfit
Boss

1943–1947
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chicago Outfit
Consigliere

1947–1957
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""