Johnny Torrio
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John Donato "Johnny" Torrio (January 20, 1882 – April 16, 1957) was an Italian-American mobster who helped build the Chicago Outfit in the 1920s. It was later inherited by his protégé Al Capone. Torrio proposed a National Crime Syndicate in the 1930s and later became an adviser to Lucky Luciano and the New York-based Italian-American Mafia.
Biography edit
Born in a village near Naples, Torrio was brought to New York City by his widowed mother when he was two. He became a brothel-saloonkeeper and leader of the James Street Boys, allying them with the Five Points Gang. He then rose to become a rackets boss (i.e., engaged in activities involving extortion) in Brooklyn before being called to Chicago in 1909 to operate and expand Vincenzo "Big Jim" Colosimo’s chain of brothels. In 1919 Torrio summoned his old friend Al Capone from New York to manage one of the rothels and, in 1920, had either him or Frankie Yale murder Colosimo. Colosimo was allegedly murdered because he stood in the way of his gang making bootlegging profits, having "gone soft" after his second marriage. Al Capone has also been suggested as the gunman. Colosimo's ex-wife, unhappy with the financial arrangements of the divorce, is also theorized to have arranged the murder.
Torrio thereby inherited Colosimo’s empire and immediately expanded into big-time bootlegging (illegal manufacture, sale, and transport of alcohol) and gambling casinos of the Prohibition era.
On January 24, 1925, Torrio was shot several times outside his home by George "Bugs" Moran and Hymie Weiss, associates of the deceased Dean O’Bannion, an Irish Mob leader whose death had been engineered by Torrio and Capone. Torrio survived and went on to serve several months in the Lake County jail in Waukegan, having been convicted of bootlegging (after being set up by O’Bannion).
While in jail, Torrio effectively bequeathed Chicago to Capone and then, upon his release, ostensibly retired to Italy. Returning to live in New York after Benito Mussolini's crackdown on the Sicilian Cosa Nostra, he invested profitably in real estate and helped create a bootlegging combine, becoming a close associate of Lucky Luciano, Meyer Lansky, and other bosses. Torrio was one of the directors of the National Crime Syndicate formed in 1934.
In 1936 he was charged with income tax evasion, and, after a long trial and many appeals, he went to prison again (1939–41). He subsequently went into virtual retirement, very wealthy, and died of a heart attack in a barber chair in 1957.
Legacy edit
Torrio had several nicknames, primarily "The Fox" for his cunning and finesse. US Treasury official Elmer Irey considered him "the biggest gangster in America" and wrote, "He was the smartest and, I dare say, the best of all the hoodlums. 'Best' referring to talent, not morals".
Virgil W. Peterson of the Chicago Crime Commission stated that his "talents as an organizational genius were widely respected by the organized crime bosses in the New York City area". Crime journalist Herbert Asbury affirmed: "As an organizer and administrator of underworld affairs, Johnny Torrio is unsurpassed in the annals of American crime; he was probably the nearest thing to a real mastermind that this country has yet produced".