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Paul Vario Biography

Posted By: Don Cardi

Paul Vario Biography - 05/28/05 02:06 PM

Paul Vario was born in New York on July 10th, 1914. He first got involved with the mob during the mid 1920s, quickly developing a reputation as a ruthless leader that would take down anyone betraying him without hesitation. He was involved in a massive variety of crimes, including murder, robbery, illegal gambling, and selling stolen goods. The federal prosecutors that put him in prison said it all by calling him "one of the most violent and dangerous career criminals in the city of New York."

Paul, or "Paulie" as his friends called him, was known for his size. He was about six feet tall and weighed close to 250 pounds over the majority of his life. His appearance resembled that of a sumo wrestler, with jowls hanging below his chin, likening his appearance to that of a ferocious bulldog. He moved slowly through life because he felt that he didn't have to move quick for anyone and figured things would bend to his will, one way or another. His speaking often consisted of short grunt-like responses.

Paulie owned a flower shop at Fulton Avenue in New York as well as a number of other businesses, including an auto junkyard, and bar-restaurant, where he and his cronies liked to hang out. At the bar, men asked Paulie for help and many deals were made, even severe punishments. Paulie lived with his wife Phyllis and three sons: Paul Jr., Peter, and Lenny.

Paulie was considered to be a glutton by many who witnessed his eating habits. He would go out to fancy restaurants and consume entire meals by simply tipping back the bowl or plate and eating everything at once. Despite his eating habits, his cooking skills were well known and his pasta fagiole was renowned by many as the best in New York City.

Paulie was also well known for his paranoia. He was very careful about putting his name on things and making phone calls. He never used private telephones, only public pay phones on the street. Even his boat docked in Sheepshead Bay had no name. He didn't like to speak out loud in public about dealings, instead always whispering.

At the height of Paulie's career, he was raking in $25,000 a day in earnings from his illegal operations. He had a massive network of gambling, bookmakers, loansharks and numbers operators throughout NYC and beyond. Paul Vario was also the "owner" of the Kennedy Airport and conducted all truck hijacking operations there with his underling - James Burke.

Paulie was very good at keeping the other families from going to war with his outfit. He had a diplomatic skill that allowed him to run his businesses without too much trouble and settle differences before they erupted into war. His diplomatic skills also assisted him in union corruption operations where his crew extorted millions of dollars every year from businesses that did not want union strikes to lose them their place in the market. When things got too hot, witnesses disappeared and people with outstanding loans received "encouragement".

In 1972, Paulie was put in prison for three years after the police bugged his headquarters and gathered 54,000 photos in addition to hours and hours of film.

After his release, Paulie was very unhappy to find out that he had been passed over to replace Lucchese as the head of the crime family. Out of prison, he found that a number of his businesses had been ruined and he organized a large drug shipment worth 1.5 million dollars from Colombia. However, an informant tipped off the DEA and the entire load was seized in Queens (30 tons of narcotics), making Paulie very furious.

After the tipoff, Paulie had James Burke organize the famous Lufthansa Heist from the Kennedy Airport, netting over eight million dollars for the crew. Paulie was obviously very happy and returned to business as usual, until his former friend, Henry Hill, eventually testified against him in court, putting Paulie away for life. Paulie was sent to Fort Worth Prison and stayed there until his death in 1988 at the age of 73..

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Don Cardi
Posted By: Enzo Scifo

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/28/05 05:26 PM

So Jimmy the Gent = James Burke?
Posted By: Turnbull

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/28/05 07:09 PM

Very interesting, DC. Paulie was bigger than I thought.
Posted By: Don Lights

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/28/05 07:10 PM

corret James Burke is Jimmy the Gent. They use the name Jimmy Conway in the film Goodfellas, due to legal copyright issues instead of Jimmy Burke, his actual name.
Posted By: Don Cardi

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/29/05 02:14 AM

Quote:
Originally posted by Turnbull:
Very interesting, DC. Paulie was bigger than I thought.
Yes TB, I also never realized how big he was either. I did some other searches to corroborate this bio, and several other sites confirmed that he was a pretty big man.


Don Cardi
Posted By: Enzo Scifo

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/29/05 09:38 AM

I was thinking the same thing as Turnbull and DC.
In Goodfellas, he seemed nothing more than a local one city-mobster, like Sonny in A Bronx Tale.

But in reality, he almost became boss of one of the Five families. Impressive.
Posted By: Don Lights

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/29/05 05:20 PM

yeah and also his ban on drugs in the film Goodfellas, would make you think he definetly would not deal in that himself. In the novel even, I thought of him as a respected mafia member, but never someone as high in power.
Posted By: Enzo Scifo

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/30/05 06:28 PM

Quote:
In the novel even, I thought of him as a respected mafia member, but never someone as high in power.
Novel? Which novel?
Posted By: Moscarelli

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/30/05 08:20 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Enzo Scifo:
[quote] In the novel even, I thought of him as a respected mafia member, but never someone as high in power.
Novel? Which novel? [/quote]The movie, Goodfellas, was based on the book, Wiseguy by Nicholas Pileggi. Its a very good read and I suggest that anyone interested in the Mafia should read it.
Posted By: Don Smitty

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 05/30/05 08:20 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Enzo Scifo:
[quote] In the novel even, I thought of him as a respected mafia member, but never someone as high in power.
Novel? Which novel? [/quote]The name of the novel is "Wise Guy" I think.

DS
Posted By: Yogi Barrabbas

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 06/12/05 02:43 PM

Don't forget the sequel to Wiseguy as well!
Gangsters & Goodfellas it's called & paulie Vario gets more coverage there too!
Posted By: Vito The Godfather

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 06/12/05 05:10 PM

Any picture of this thug??

Posted By: DonMichaelCorleone

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 06/12/05 05:34 PM

and Sorvino who played him in Goodfellas
Posted By: Enzo Scifo

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 06/15/05 11:44 AM

Can you post that second picture again, I want to compare them.
Posted By: DonMichaelCorleone

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 06/15/05 11:48 AM

Posted By: Don Cardi

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 10/10/07 02:56 AM

Just reviving some bios so that some of the new people who are interested in Oragnized Crime can read them.
Posted By: chopper

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 10/10/07 04:43 PM

Thanks for this Don Cardi the bios are always interesting and imformative
Posted By: Zaf-the-don

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 10/12/07 12:49 PM

Thanks for that DC.
Posted By: DE NIRO

Re: Paul Vario Biography - 10/21/07 08:32 PM

Out of all the wonderful biographys here, ive noticed there isn't one for Meyer Lansky..
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