Even  in Chicago, a city steeped in mob history and legend, the Family  Secrets case was a true spectacle when it made it to court in 2007. A  top mob boss, a reputed consigliere, and other high-profile members of  the Chicago Outfit were accused in a total of eighteen gangland  killings, revealing organized crime's ruthless grip on the city  throughout the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.              Painting a  vivid picture of murder, courtroom drama, family loyalties and  disloyalties, journalist Jeff Coen accurately portrays the Chicago  Outfit's cold-blooded--and sometimes incompetent--killers and their  crimes in the case that brought them down. In 1998 Frank Calabrese Jr.  volunteered to wear a wire to gather evidence against his father, a  vicious loan shark who strangled most of his victims with a rope before  slitting their throats to ensure they were dead. Frank Jr. went after  his uncle Nick as well, a calculating but sometimes bumbling hit man who  would become one of the highest-ranking turncoats in mob history,  admitting he helped strangle, stab, shoot, and bomb victims who got in  the mob's way, and turning evidence against his brother Frank.               The Chicago courtroom took on the look and feel of a movie set as  Chicago's most colorful mobsters and their equally flamboyant attorneys  paraded through and performed: James "Jimmy Light" Marcello, the acting  head of the Chicago mob; Joey "the Clown" Lombardo, one of Chicago's  most eccentric mobsters; Paul "the Indian" Schiro; and a former Chicago  police officer, Anthony "Twan" Doyle, among others.               Re-creating events from court transcripts, police records, interviews,  and notes taken day after day as the story unfolded in court, Coen  provides a riveting wide-angle view and one of the best accounts on  record of the inner workings of the Chicago syndicate and its control  over the city's streets.  | |
Chicago Mob 360
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Another Version...................... Family Secrets ???
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