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headquarters, Duke's Restaurant in Cliffside Park. The political and police situation in New Jersey had become far more hospitable than in Brooklyn, and Adonis readily switched from Democratic politics to Republican, the dominant power in Jersey.
Despite a long and dishonorable career in crime, Adonis avoided prison until 1951 when, in the aftermath of the Kefauver hearings, so much heat was generated that he was forced to plead guilty to violation of state gambling laws. He was hit with a two-year sentence. In 1956, pressed hard by the federal government and facing perjury charges, Adonis agreed to accept a deportation order once his foreign birth was established. Adonis lived out his days in lavish comfort in exile in Milan. Occasionally he met with Luciano who was in exile in Naples, but relationships between the two men deteriorated badly. Adonis was in far better financial shape than Luciano but pointedly never asked Lucky if there ever was anything he needed. More important, he did not aid Luciano's efforts to prevent Vito Genovese from making a play for preeminence in the Mafia in America.
By the 1960s the two men had more or less fallen out of touch. However, when Luciano died in 1962 Adonis procured permission from Italian authorities to attend a requiem mass for Lucky in Naples. Tears flowed down his cheeks as Adonis presented a final tribute to his old criminal leader: a huge floral wreath with the obligatory mob farewell, "So Long, Pal."
See also: Broadway Mob; Duke's Restaurant.
Aiello, Joseph (1891–1930): Chicago Mafia leader and Capone foe
Just as Lucky Luciano wiped out the Mustache Pete influences in New York to create a new Mafia along multiethnic syndicate lines, Al Capone did the same in Chicago, wiping out the Aiello family—especially Joe Aiello, often described as the Mafia boss of the city. Aiello was a Castellammarese and sided with Salvatore Maranzano in the great New York Mafia War against the then-dominant forces of Joe the Boss Masseria. Aiello dutifully forwarded the Maranzano forces $5,000 a week for the war chest. According to informer Joe Valachi, this meant Capone was supporting Masseria and what happened to Aiello was determined by the Chicago gang wars.
As Aiello and Capone jockeyed for supremacy Aiello and his brothers, Dominick, Antonio and Andrew, fought hard and allied themselves with other Capone enemies, especially the North Side Mob, the O'Banions, then under the control of Bugs Moran. Aiello carried the murder campaign against Capone to intriguing heights, once trying to persuade the chef of a favorite Capone restaurant, Diamond Joe Esposito's Bella Napoli Cafe, to put prussic acid in Capone's minestrone soup. Although the fee escalated from $10,000 to $35,000, the chef shrewdly figured that if the fatal recipe did the job, he would not live long enough to enjoy his money. He reported the poison plot to Big Al. The frustrated Aiello promptly spread the word that $50,000 awaited anyone who killed Capone.
These hostile efforts proved annoying to Capone and stoked his own determination that Aiello get his "real good."
One October evening Aiello stepped outside his expensive West Side apartment building, on North Kolmar Avenue, right into the cross fire of a sawed-off shotgun and two Thompson submachine guns. They dug 59 slugs weighing well over a pound out of the ventilated corpse.
See also: Campagna, Louis "Little New York."
Aiuppa, Joseph John (1907– ): Chicago Outfit leader
Although he never got beyond the third grade in school, Joe Aiuppa had plenty of criminal smarts as well as old-style Capone muscle. These traits propelled him to the top position in the Chicago Outfit, where he bowed to no one except the semi-retired Tony Accardo. Operating out of Cicero, always the Chicago mob's stronghold, he started out as a gunner for the Capones and so was questioned in several murder investigations.
Aiuppa may have used raw power to maintain the mob's rackets in Cicero but, at the same time, he mastered the big fix. He was once thought to be paying $500 a month to have secret copies of intelligence reports, from the Chicago Crime Commission to the sheriff's office, sent to him. And he was once recorded in a conversation with a "wired" police officer as saying he could obtain secret grand jury testimony. The extent of Aiuppa's fixing ability was further highlighted in another taped conversation, when an underworld aide informed the same officer that Aiuppa had learned the lawman had been wired for sound.
Aiuppa bears two nicknames. One is "Ha Ha" because he is a dour-looking, menacing mobster who seldom cracks a smile. The other is "Mourning Doves" since one of his few convictions was three months in a federal prison for illegally possessing and transporting over 500 mourning doves from Kansas to Chicago. In the underworld he developed a reputation for hunting rabbits and ducks with a shotgun.
When Sam Giancana was removed from active control of the syndicate in the mid-1960s, leadership reverted to the semi-retired leaders, Paul Ricca and Tony Accardo, who in time brought in Aiuppa to run the mob. After Ricca's death, Aiuppa was in active con-

 


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