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book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop #752225
12/08/13 01:51 PM
12/08/13 01:51 PM
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billythekid Offline OP
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what's the general thoughts on this guy Corbitt---is this book considered to be mostly true or is the guy full of shit?

thanks

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: billythekid] #752231
12/08/13 02:42 PM
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Corbitt was a piece of shit. Some of the mob murders he talks about in his book didn't happen the way he claims they did. For example Butch Petrocelli he claims was killed by James Keating when the Calabrese brothers did the deed.
A book was written about the Alan Masters case and a lot of dirt is talked about Corbitt in the book that of course Corbitt fails to mention in his book.
Corbitt talks about Hy Larner like he is the most important person in the world. I don't doubt Harner was a big earner but I don't believe that Hy Larner was as powerful as Corbitt makes him out to be.

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: Geek899273] #752233
12/08/13 02:52 PM
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definitely a complete scumbag, no two ways about that

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: billythekid] #752252
12/08/13 04:02 PM
12/08/13 04:02 PM
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I wish there was more information about Hy Larner. Corbitt made him out to be Meyer Lansky, with more power and money.


You shit-kicking, stinky, horse-manure-smelling motherfucker you! If you ever get out of line over there again, I'll smash your fucking head so hard you won't be able to get that cowboy hat on. You hear me? Fucking hick. -Nicky (Casino)
Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: LittleMan] #752361
12/09/13 08:42 AM
12/09/13 08:42 AM
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Ya, not a lot has been written about Hy Larner. I believe in the 1983 OC chart he is listed as a soldier under Joe Ferriola's crew. Corbitt makes him out to be some sort of boss which I have a hard time believing.
In the book about the Dianne Masters murder they discuss how corrupt and what a piece of shit Corbitt really is. He fails to talk about all the extortions, arsons and other cover-ups he did in his own book.
Corbitt died about a year or two after his book came out. I heard him interviewed on the radio promoting his book and he still claims Spilotro killed Giancana. I have no clue on why a lot of people think Spilotro did the job when it was clear that Butch Blasi did it.

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: billythekid] #752400
12/09/13 01:00 PM
12/09/13 01:00 PM
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I read the Double Deal book and have done my own research on Hy Larner. Larner was born around 1911 or 1912. Until the late 1950s, most of his endeavors centered around pinball machines, gambling, horse racing, etc.

When he was subpoenaed in 1959, he was identified as the owner of an amusement company (makes slot machines, pinball games, etc). At that point, he was already "semi retired" living in Miami.

To me (my opinion), there is no question he was big time, but there is a question as to his rank in the Outfit. The Outfit obviously shared in a lot of his wealth, but it appeared he had a lot going on his own as well.

At least according to Corbitt, Larner was in charge of all of the Outfit casinos in South America, Europe and the Middle East. Plus, he had a huge share of Las Vegas. He was identified as being a close friend of President Johnson, Manuel Noriega and the Shah of Iran. He also was identified as being a narco trafficker and arms dealer. The story where LBJ sprung Giancana from the can in exchange for support for Israel during the 1967 war with the Arabs is true. Obviously then, Larner had major pull.

I do believe that Corbitt was somewhat on the money, but again, was this all Outfit related? Probably not. The casinos were likely run (at least partially) by Larner, but the rest of the enterprises were probably his own endeavors, only marginally tied to the Outfit.

Corbitt identifies Larner's son Bruce as an airline pilot who assisted them in trucking back $1 million in cash from Vegas in 1985 to pay Outfit legal bills. Bruce Larner was a former pilot for years. He is now a Mormon missionary and close to 70 years old.

Corbitt reports that Larner was looked at by the feds in the mid 1990s, but the investigation was quashed. There is no reason that I can think of as to why Corbitt would trump up Larner so much. Larner passed away in Miami in 2002, around the age of 90 or so.

The question really is, was Hy Larner a high ranking member of the Outfit, or merely a soldier associate that also ran his own huge enterprise?

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: Mmalioni] #752494
12/09/13 07:38 PM
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My guess is Hy kicked back a lot of money to the Outfit in order to operate his machines in the Chicago area. I think he had his own rackets going all around the world that the Outfit was aware about but Hy operated them alone and would send back money to keep the outfit happy.
He had plenty of powerfull friends and even Corbitt stated that no one besides Hy knew how much money he was bringing in. I think Hy had the Bastones as his main contact to the Outfit.

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: billythekid] #752530
12/10/13 12:30 AM
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Mmalioni Offline
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I feel like the Bastones were assigned to "protect" Hy. Corbitt wrote that Carmen used to complain sometimes about having to work for Hy. Plus, assuming Hy did facilitate the $1 million in cash from Vegas to Chicago in 1985 for Aiuppa indicates that Hy was probably connected with some of the more higher ups.

Likely after Giancana was killed in 1975 (at which point Hy was already in his 60s), Hy was reassigned to upper echelon of the Cicero crew, namely Ferriola and Aiuppa. This would make sense because the Bastones were part of Cicero and middle management.

Last edited by Mmalioni; 12/10/13 12:31 AM.
Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: Mmalioni] #752563
12/10/13 09:02 AM
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Aiuppa probably assigned the Bastones to be Hy's outfit contacts. The book "Pay, Quit or Die" has a chapter about Hy and the Bastones. Apparently a low level soldier was assigned to meet Sal Bastone once a month with Hy's overseas money to give his cut to Aiuppa.

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: Mmalioni] #752877
12/11/13 02:59 PM
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Originally Posted By: Mmalioni
The story where LBJ sprung Giancana from the can in exchange for support for Israel during the 1967 war with the Arabs is true. Obviously then, Larner had major pull.


Is Michael Corbitt the only source for this story, along with Larner's involvement in the Iran Contra deal? Have the stories been supported by other sources?


You shit-kicking, stinky, horse-manure-smelling motherfucker you! If you ever get out of line over there again, I'll smash your fucking head so hard you won't be able to get that cowboy hat on. You hear me? Fucking hick. -Nicky (Casino)
Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: LittleMan] #753425
12/14/13 11:29 AM
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As far as I know Corbitt is the only one to share those stories about Hy Larner. I don't doubt that Larner was a important figure for the Outfit but Corbitt referred to Larner as the most important figure in Organized Crime. I highly doubt that. Everytime one of these ex-cons write a book they try to make themselves to be around or know some of the biggest mobsters of all time.

Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: billythekid] #813766
11/15/14 06:35 AM
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this gives a good info


Michael Corbitt

Michael Jerome Corbitt (b. March 17, 1944) is a former police chief of Willow Springs, Illinois and a high ranking associate of Chicago Outfit mobsters such as Sal Bastone and Tony Accardo. He became a cooperating witness after being convicted of the murder of Diane Masters. He has authored a book about his experiences, with author Sam Giancana, entitled "Double Deal: The Inside Story of Murder, Unbridled Corruption, and the Cop Who Was a Mobster".

Michael Corbitt was born to an Irish American family in Chicago, Illinois. After a several years in a Roman Catholic parochial school, he was transferred to public school at the age of nine. He would later recall that, without a Catholic school uniform to hide behind, it was obvious just how poor his family was. Humiliated by the poverty of his parents and tired of hand-me-down toys and clothing, he turned to shoplifting and later graduated to running with an Italian-American street gang.

His bravado soon drew the attention of the Chicago Outfit, who recruited him into running errands around one of their social clubs. After several years of owning a Sunoco gas station which doubled a mobster hang out, Outfit boss Sam Giancana offered him a position inside the police in Willow Springs, Illinois. According to Corbitt's memoirs, Giancana told him after he accepted the position, "But just remember kid...don't forget who your friends are." Shortly thereafter, Corbitt was sworn into the Willow Springs police department by notorious political boss Doc Rust.


Crooked cop's mob ties
October 14, 1997

BY ROBERT MANOR STAFF REPORTER

Copyright 1997, Chicago Sun-Times

For 22 years Michael Corbitt wore a badge and a police uniform as he served the mob as bagman, supervisor of vice and spy.

In recent testimony from behind prison walls, provided as part of a Laborers International union hearing into allegations of organized crime influence in its Chicago District Council, Corbitt described in colorful detail his life in the mob.

By his own account, he fell in with the Outfit as a teenager and rose to become chief of police in southwest suburban Willow Springs--and did the mob's bidding every step of the way.

The Laborers International is attempting to expel mob figures from the union here. Hearings on possible trusteeship for the union's Chicago council began in August. A spokesman for the 19,000-member council says its officials are not involved in organized crime.

In his testimony, a transcript of which was obtained by the Sun-Times, Corbitt, serving a 20-year term in an out-of-state prison for racketeering, describes a crooked life in law enforcement that stretched from 1965 to 1987, beginning with the day mob boss Sam Giancana first tapped him to be a cop.

He admits involvement in the notorious 1982 murder of Palos Park resident Dianne Masters, saying he put her body in the trunk of her Cadillac and rolled it into the Chicago Sanitary & Ship Canal.

And he describes how as police chief of Willow Springs, he oversaw the town's brothels, casinos and after-hours taverns. He warned them when the FBI was planning a raid and collected ``street tax'' from them for himself and the mob.

As organized crime leaders grew to trust him, Corbitt began delivering huge sums of money for them. The money came from skimming at Las Vegas casinos, prostitution, extortion and theft.

``From the day I came on the job, I was involved in organized crime activity until I left the job,'' Corbitt said.

Corbitt, 53, might have continued his criminal career into old age, but attorney Thomas Scorza, then a federal prosecutor, took an interest in the lawman, eventually convicting him three times.

Corbitt almost certainly is telling some of the truth, Scorza said. Corbitt certainly oversaw vice in Willow Springs and participated in the scheme to kill Masters, Scorza said. Scorza repeatedly heard rumors that Corbitt was a mob bagman.

But as for some of the details of mob life offered by Corbitt, Scorza offers a warning: ``Michael Corbitt usually tells part of the truth.''


`Get a job as a policeman'

Michael Corbitt's first job as a teenager was making deliveries for a company in Summit that, Corbitt recalls, ``supplied slot machines, gambling paraphernalia.'' The young Corbitt would pick up broken slot machines from taverns and bring them in for repair.

Corbitt was an entrepreneur. While still in his teens, he operated a gas station. When not pumping gas, he rented parking spots to mob figures who needed a place to park hijacked trucks for a day or so.

It was then that he met Giancana, the ultimate boss of organized crime in Chicago at that time. In 1965, Giancana had a proposition for Corbitt: Become a cop.

``He said, you know, it would be a good thing for you to ... get a job as a policeman and maybe you could help us out once in a while,'' Corbitt said.

Corbitt said he met with a Willow Springs city official at a tavern and was sworn in as an officer.

``Just remember your friends,'' Giancana told Corbitt a few weeks later.

Corbitt described Willow Springs and its surrounding forest preserves as ``rustic, scenic'' and ``a very nice community aesthetically.''

He also said organized crime dominated the community.

``The town of 3,500 had almost 40 liquor licenses,'' he said. ``I would say at least eight houses of prostitution.

``We had at least six bookmaking operations. We had two full-blown casinos.''


The mob's lookout man

Corbitt remembered his friends.

Until he went to prison in 1987, Corbitt said, he worked for organized crime in Willow Springs and surrounding communities, first as a patrolman, then police chief, then a Cook County sheriff's investigator.

For example, he said, he checked license plates for mob figures to see whether they were assigned to the FBI.

Even the street lights in Willow Springs served the mob.

``We had a switch in the police station that would shut off the street lights in the community,'' Corbitt said. ``When the State Police would come in, we would hit the switch for the street lights and all the establishments would shut down their operations.''

During raids, one bar could hide 150 slot machines by lowering a fake wall.

Corbitt collected payoffs from the businesses for himself and mob figures.

``Joey Aiuppa was one,'' he said. Aiuppa, now dead, was a top crime boss for 40 years.

Another, he said, was Al Pilotto, a former Laborers Union district council vice president who served time in prison for racketeering.

``At the time I came to Willow Springs, [Pilotto] was running our community's involvement in organized crime with several other people,'' Corbitt said. ``But he was the boss.''

In his testimony, Corbitt alleged that 13 Laborers Union officials in the Chicago area were members of the mob or associates of mob figures.

Through the 1970s and 1980s, Corbitt was, literally, a bagman.

He said he delivered ``garbage bags full of money'' to people like the late Vince Solano, a Laborers Union official and reputed crime figure.

``I would say 30-gallon garbage bags ... that's how they collected the money,'' Corbitt said. ``I mean, there was hundreds of thousands of dollars in the bags.''


Friends and enemies

Delivering money over the years, Corbitt said, he came to know many big names in organized crime--and the Laborers Union.

``No. 1 is Tony Accardo,'' he said. Corbitt said he captained Accardo's boat on a fishing trip in Florida and stayed at his home in Palm Desert, Calif.

Another acquaintance, he said, was James DiForti, a former Laborers Union official awaiting trial for the 1988 murder of a businessman. DiForti allegedly killed the businessman after he refused to repay a loan.

Corbitt had an unsettling relationship with Joseph Lombardo, a convicted racketeer who was released from prison about five years ago. Lombardo didn't care for him because he was, at least technically, a policeman, Corbitt said.

``He didn't really like me, and that was not a good position to be in,'' Corbitt said. ``He was an enforcer.''

Lombardo's son, Joseph Lombardo Jr., is secretary-treasurer of the Laborers Chicago district council.

Corbitt saw firsthand what happened to people who crossed the mob.

His best friend, he said, was a man named Joe Testa, who owned a savings and loan used by the mob to launder money.

Although Testa was wealthy, he declined to pay a disputed loan to a mobster, Corbitt said. This caused Testa problems.

``Everything he had started blowing up,'' Corbitt said.

``They blew up his restaurant, they blew up his home, they blew up his office, they planted a bomb on his car, and he was unable to get rid of this problem,'' Corbitt said.

In 1981 Testa invited Corbitt to visit him at his palatial seaside home in Florida. Corbitt declined.

``That next afternoon ... I received a call from his secretary that Joe had been blown up in his car at a golf course in Fort Lauderdale,'' Corbitt said.

Testa's affection for Corbitt was reflected in his will. Testa left him $800,000.


The Masters case

For the first time, Corbitt officially admits he was a conspirator in the death of Dianne Masters.

He said he disposed of the body in exchange for $8,000, but does not say who paid him.

Alan Masters, Diane's husband, was convicted with Corbitt on federal charges related to her death. At trial, both maintained their innocence.

Diane Masters, who was 35, was having an affair with an English teacher, the latest of several liaisons. Alan Masters found out and was enraged.

It was no coincidence that Alan Masters knew Corbitt, at that time an investigator for the Cook County Sheriff's Department. A wealthy Palos Park attorney, Alan Masters was close to officials in the department.

During his 1989 trial, prosecutors portrayed Masters as a ``master fixer'' who paid off judges and police officers such as Corbitt to protect gambling and prostitution in the southwest suburbs.

One former Cook County officer testified that for 12 years Masters had paid him $100 to $150 a month to protect bookmaking in Cicero. He and Masters also shared part interest in a Dixmoor brothel called the Astrology Club.

Another witness testified that Masters was someone who ``can get anybody off of anything. He has all the connections. He paid the cops who made the case and paid the judges who made the case and everybody in between.''

During the hearing this summer, an attorney for the Laborers International union asked Corbitt, ``Did you ... dump Dianne Masters' body and car in the canal?''

``Yes, I did,'' Corbitt replied.


Jailed Suburban Chief Reveals How He Became a Mobster



Michael Corbitt’s induction into Chicago’s organized crime operations came about innocently.
As a teenager, Corbitt was hired by Pete and Bill Altiere, who owned A & W Electric in Summit, Illinois. Publicly, A&W reworked electrical appliances, but Corbitt says that as an employee, he knew the real business was building and supplying gambling devices and slot machines to the Chicago Mob, through another associate, Bill White.

Corbitt’s first job was to serve as the “route man,” driving with another man delivering slot machines and picking machines that needed repair.

It didn’t take Corbitt long to decide that he wanted to run a business of his own, and leaning on the new mob friends he made, Corbitt borrowed money from them and opened a gas station when he was 18 years old at 56th and Harlem Avenue, in Summit. His friends at A&W would bring items to him for resale or trade.

And, eventually, the same men would come to him and ask him to store large trucks on his gas station’s back lot, which was fenced in. The trucks, as it turns out had been hijacked, but Corbitt would be paid well by the hijackers.

“These trucks turned out to be hijacked material, stolen material, and they would leave them there,” Corbitt testified.

“When they would pick them up, they would give me an envelope with some money in it and thank you very much.”

One day, in the mid-60s, one of the men that came to see him was Sam Giancana, who was accompanied by Dominic Blasi and Marshall and John Caifano and Jackie Cerone. In fact, Corbitt recalled, Cerone would come by the gas station often with his girlfriends.

Not only would they drop off hi-jacked trucks at the station, they also unloaded stolen material that was placed in the back of their cars.

“They would give me an envelope. They’d give me a hundred dollar bill. They’d give me a fifty dollar bill. They were always good to me,” Corbitt recalls of his youthful induction into the activities of the Chicago Outfit.

Corbitt said he got out of the gas station business and storing hijacked trucks and stolen merchandise when the Altiere brothers approached him and told him they wanted his property to use as a parking lot for a supper club they had purchased and located next door called the Forum.

“Several weeks after that occurred, Sam Giancana and Dominic Blasi came in, and they were aware of what was going on and we had a conversation and Sam Giancana said, what do you want to do?” Corbitt recalls.

“I said I want to get a job. I want to make some money. He says, do you want to be a policeman? I said, no, I don’t really want to be a policeman. He said, well, it would be a good thing for you to, you know, get a job as a policeman and maybe you could help us out once in awhile.”

Corbitt, at that point, had married and had a young son and he needed the job, now that his gas station enterprises with the Chicago Mob had come to a crashing halt. The station was closed, the property was transferred to the Forum and Corbitt became a policeman.

Corbitt was told by Giancana to see his “friend,” Willow Springs Mayor John Rust.

“I went out and had a meeting with him and was sworn in his tavern that day as a police officer, that day. I think I was 21 or 22 years old,” Corbitt recalls.

Two days later, Corbitt was returning to the Willow Springs Police Station when he saw Giancana and another mobster sitting in a car idling in the Willow Springs Police Station parking lot.

“I drove up and he got into the car with me and he asked, he said, well, what do you think?” Corbitt recalled. “I said I think it’s kind of boring, but I think it’s okay.”

Corbitt said from that moment on he was a “protected guy. My Chinaman was Giancana.”

That was a turning point not only for Corbitt but for the Mob and the Southwest Suburbs. Willow Springs for years has lived under the cloud of being a mob controlled town. People knew better than to drive through it on Willow Springs Road. You avoided it.

And Corbitt confirms that Willow Springs, much like the Town of Cicero, was completely under the grip of Organized Crime, from the politics, to the issuance of business licenses and liquor licenses, fees, fines and penalties, all tied to kickbacks and payments to members of the mob.

How much money could Corbitt collect. In one passage, he describes how he would bring cash to Chicago First Ward’s Pat Marcy at Counselor’s Row, which used to be located across from City Hall.

“Garbage bags. Hefty, maybe a — I would say a 30-gallon garbage bags and I mean they would be heaped to the top, but that’s how they collected money, in garbage bags. There was hundreds of thousands of dollars in the bags.”

The money was taken to a “counting area” where it was counted, sorted and separated and marked for who would receive how much.

It wasn’t long before Corbitt came under the scrutiny of the FBI, and he noticed vehicles following him, even as a police chief. He had friends in the Cook County Sheriff’s Department check out license plates for him, that were traced to the FBI.

Eventually, Corbitt said he and other Willow Springs police officers confronted the mayor and the police chief then, demanding to get their share.

“Our mayor and our chief of police at that time had a system which was a trickle-down system, but didn’t trickle down very far. It trickled down to them and then that was the end of the system, and we were doing — the patrolmen and the guys on the street were doing all the work,” Corbitt said of bribes that were paid for protection.

One spot protected by the police and controlled by the mob was the old American Legion Center on Archer Road, which was not really an American Legion Post but was in fact a gambling front where fake walls were removed to reveal slot machines and gambling tables, Corbitt said in his testimony.
Corbitt said that after they complained, the system of pay-offs changed. Instead of giving the money directly to Mayor John “Doc” Rust or to the chief, the money went to the police officers, who brought it to Mayor Rust or the chief.

Mayor John “Doc” Rust managed a local bar which also served as the town’s chief House of Prostitution.

“When we objected, the envelope started coming to us, and then we would deliver it to him just so we could be there at the same time the envelope was opened,” Corbitt said.

Corbitt’s enterprises increased swiftly as he rose in the ranks of the Willow Springs Police Department. He left Willow Springs to work in the Summit Police Department in 1967, on Giancana’s orders, and then returned to Willow Springs in 1969. In 1973, Corbitt was named Chief of Police and held the post through 1982, the same year Dianne Masters was reported missing.
At that time, Corbitt said, federal convictions and investigations had forced the mob to tighten’s its belt and be more careful of their dealings. As Willow Springs Police Chief, Corbitt made himself the local “Boss” and he personally handled all of the bribes and kickbacks himself.

“You had to be real careful about how you were doing things,” Corbitt said. “There would be one person who would meet with these people, and then whatever splitting up would be done, I would do it. As the boss, then, after 1973, I took care of that.”

During that time, Corbitt solicited bribes from chop shop owners and from members of organized crime who were managing bookmaking operations in his town. And he fronted for organized crime interests. He would have DWI cases fixed through his friend, attorney Alan Masters.

After leaving the Willow Springs Police Department, Corbitt had meetings in May 1982 with the brothers of Anthony “The Ant” Spilotro, Victor and Mike Spilotro, who were trying to set up an off-track betting parlor in Willow Springs. The Spilotros were the targets of an undercover FBI Sting headed by undercover agent Larry Damron, alias Larry Wright. Although Corbitt was a target in that sting, he managed to avoid FBI wiretaps.

The Spilotros told Corbitt about the success they had in running an illegal betting parlor in Palatine and how they had paid off officials there.

Corbitt said they eventually set up a messenger service that was supposed to take the bets and place them at the track, but the bets were “laid off,” and never placed. The mob kept the money, and paid off the winning bets, at their rate, themselves.

Corbitt said he paid a street tax on his receipts to the mob through Salvatore and Carmen Bastone.
Corbitt found himself vacationing in Hollywood , Florida at the condominium of Joey Aiuippa, a place where mobsters Wayne Bock and Ernest Rocco Infelise often held meetings.

His friendship with mobster Joey Testa, a wealthy banker who laundered mob cash, is well known, and when Testa died, it made headlines when the mobster left Corbitt a financial gift. The papers reported $100,000. The real amount was $800,000.

Corbitt had a lot of mob friends, but he had one enemy. Joey Lombardo.

“He really didn’t like me, and that was not a good position to be in, when he didn’t like you. He didn’t really like me and he voiced this to other people,” Corbitt testified.

“I was a cop. He didn’t want no cops around. He didn’t want no cops knowing anybody’s business. As a matter of fact, he even attempted to dissuade other people who were around me later on not to have anything to do with me. It didn’t work.”

Corbitt said that Lombardo owned a piece of several golf courses where Corbitt would often run into his son, Joey Lombardo Jr., and his brother, Rocco Lombardo.

“Lombardo was an enforcer. In my estimation, I believe that he filled up a cemetery or two,” Corbitt recalled. Although the Chicago Crime Commission this month named John DiFronzo as the head of the Chicago Outfit, Corbitt said he believes the show is being run by Lombardo.

After leaving the Willow Springs Police Department following a political upset tied to his suspected role in the Diane Master’s murder investigation, Corbitt went to the Cook County Sheriff’s Department so that he could continue carrying a badge and a gun and to front for the mob. He was assigned to the Clerk of the Circuit Court, at that time, Morgan Finley until he was indicted and convicted in 1987.

Corbitt was indicted in 1987, and was convicted in 1988 and was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, serving his time at a federal correctional institute in Florida. He faced three convictions, beginning in 1988, for racketeering, for conspiracy in 1989 and for obstructing justice in 1991.

After his indictment, the mob ordered Corbitt hit. The hit was rumored to have been ordered by Lombardo, and the hitman tabbed to carry it out was Gerry Scarpelli. It was one of the reasons why Corbitt agreed to testify against his former friends.


taken from: http://www.network54.com/Forum/402609/th...e+Italian+Mafia

Last edited by mickey2; 11/15/14 06:56 AM.
Re: book: Double Deal: M. Corbitt crooked Chicago cop [Re: billythekid] #813820
11/15/14 05:44 PM
11/15/14 05:44 PM
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,627
DiLorenzo Offline
Underboss
DiLorenzo  Offline
Underboss
Joined: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,627
This episode was pretty good for those interested !!

[video:youtube]http://youtu.be/l8NqEwvy6Vw[/video]


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