Pasqualino Lolordo
Pasquale Lolordo (1887 – January 8, 1929), also known as Pasqualino or "Patsy", was an Italian-born American organized crime figure from Ribera, Sicily, and head of the Chicago chapter of the Unione Siciliana a "front" organization for the Mafia, of which Lolordo was considered one of the most powerful bosses during the late 1920s.
Lolordo succeeded Antonio "The Scourge" Lombardo, an associate of Al Capone, as chapter president. Lombardo had been killed only months before after he refused to turn the presidency over to Mafia mobster Joe Aiello. Lolordo was supported by the national Unione Siciliana president, Frankie Yale, in New York. Some speculate that Lolordo wanted to reform the organization like another former chapter leader, Mike Merlo.
However, Lolordo did not have sufficient time to do anything. On January 8, 1929, he was shot and killed by unidentified gunmen in his home. The "hit" (killing) was arranged by George "Bugs" Moran, a leader of the North Side Gang and a bitter rival of Capone, as a preface to a planned assassination of Capone. Moran, working in concert with Joe Aiello, was convinced that such a move would remove the bulk of Capone's Mafia protection.[1]
Notes
- Alphonse "Scarface" Capone & The St. Valentine's Day Massacre: Booze, Bribery, and Bloody Thursday in Chicago 1929 at webcache.googleusercontent.com
External links
- Chicago’s Unione Siciliana 1920 – A Decade of Slaughter (Part Seven) by Allen May
- The American "Mafia": Who was who ? - Pasqualino Lolordo
Preceded by Antonio Lombardo (1925-1928) |
Chicago Mafia Boss 1928-1929 |
Succeeded by Joseph Giunta (1929) |