Louis "Tiny" Benson Click in circle to chooseand then
"Tiny had been a cabdriver. Reles rescued him just in time. Otherwise it might have been necessary to build the cab around him." -- (Burton B. Turkus, Sid Feder in Murder, Inc .) Louis Benson was 5 ft., 8 inches tall and weighed 420 pounds.
Tony Accardo Click in circle to chooseand then
"Accardo's stock and trade was vengeance and he was particularly adept with a baseball bat." (Richard Lindberg in "The Death of the Don: The Legacy of Tony Accardo")
Tony Spilotro Click in circle to chooseand then
"Tony 'The Ant' Spilotro was sent to Las Vegas by the Chicago branch of La Cosa Nostra, known as the 'Outfit,' after proving his skills at conducting mob business. Often with the use of an ice pick or the placing of someone's head in a vise." -- (Anthony Spilotro FBI Files - paperlessarchives.com)
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Frankie Yale when young He looked better then Click in circle to chooseand then
"Yale's home base was the Harvard Inn, scene of at least two dozen murders between 1918 and 1928." -- (World encyclopedia of organized crime by Jay Robert Nash)
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Jacob Shapiro Click in circle to chooseand then "Born in 1899, Shapiro grew up in Manhattan's Lower East Side and began committing petty theft in his early teens, eventually first encountering his future partner Louis Buchalter as a teenager while [they were] inadvertently attempting to rob the same pushcart." (NationMaster.com Encyclopedia)
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Mark Swartz Click in circle to chooseand then "Kozlowski and Swartz were each found guilty in June 2005 of 22 counts of grand larceny, conspiracy, fraud and falsifying business records. Both are serving prison sentences of 8-1/3 to 25 years." (Reuters )
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Dennis Kozlowski Click in circle to chooseand then "Koslowski, Swartz, and Belnick stole $600 million dollars from Tyco International through their unapproved bonuses, loans, and extravagant "company" spending. Rumors of a $6,000 shower curtain, $2,000 trash can, and a $2 million dollar birthday party for Koslowski's wife in Italy are just a few examples of the misuse of company funds." (howstuffworks.com )