Joey ‘The Clown’ Lombardo, Who Oversaw Mob Casino Interests in Las Vegas, Dies in Prison At Age 90
Posted on: October 21, 2019, 08:52h.
Last updated on: October 21, 2019, 11:42h.
Chicago Mobster and gambling kingpin Joey Lombardo died Saturday in the federal maximum security prison where he was serving a 2007 life sentence for racketeering, extortion, loan sharking, illegal gambling, and murder.
Lombardo was alleged to have been the Chicago Outfit’s Consiglieri at a time when it controlled — and skimmed the profits from — some of Las Vegas’ most popular casinos, notably the Stardust, Fremont, the Hacienda, and the Marina.
In 1986, he was convicted of maintaining hidden interests in several casinos, including the Stardust, and of skimming more than $2 million from them between 1974 and 1978. He was released in 1992 to resume his position in the Outfit’s highest echelon.
Killer Clown
Lombardo, born Giuseppe Lombardi, was nicknamed “the Clown” largely by the media because of his quick wit in the courtroom and his tendency to pull faces in police mugshots.
He once left a courtroom with a copy of The Chicago Sun Times covering his face with eye holes cut out.
But he was also a ruthless killer. His official Mob nickname was “Lumpy,” reportedly for his propensity to knock lumps out of people. This was a sobriquet earned as a young loansharking hoodlum in a tough Italian neighbourhood known as “the Patch” on Chicago’s Near West Side.
But Lombardo’s violence was coupled with a fierce intelligence, which by the early seventies had helped him rise to the top.
Lefty and The Ant
The Outfit’s Las Vegas operations were dramatized in Martin Scorsese’s 1995 movie Casino, which details the exploits of Tony “The Ant” Spilotro and Frank “Lefty” Rosenthal. Spilotro and Rosenthal had been sent out West to look after the Outfit’s casinos — Rosenthal as a manager, Spilotro as a vicious enforcer who would later fall out of favor with the Mob and pay with his life.
Lombardo did not appear as a character in Casino, but his responsibilities in Las Vegas — which he conducted from Chicago — were major.
According to The Beachwood Reporter, big boss Tony Accardo assigned Lombardo the roles of overseeing the Teamsters Union’s Central States Pension Fund and supervising Rosenthal and Spilotro.
The Outfit used the Teamsters pension fund as its own personal bank, which it dipped into to finance many of its ventures, including the purchase and construction of casinos, because it couldn’t apply for a loan at a regular bank.
Family Secrets
In 2005, Lombardo was indicted with 13 others as part of the FBI’s “Family Secrets” investigation, so-called because the resulting convictions were based on the testimonies of the son and brother of Outfit hitman Frank Calabrese Sr.
The 74-year-old Lombardo went on the lam, but was captured by the FBI nine months later.
He kept Omerta, the Mafia’s code of silence, to the bitter end.
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Last Comment ( 1 )
1. ...joey aiuppa was the boss of the chicago outfit along with accardo in the 70s, and 80s ...thats precisely why aiuppa went to jail in the casino skim case...lombardo and lapietra were captains who recieved a cut of the skim 2. Since the family secrets trial ..fbi has released that lefty rosenthal was a fbi informant.. 3. There is official documented serveillance of tony spilotro meeting multiple times while out west with tony accardo and joey aiuppa on separate occasions...sources are the Teamsters by steven brill, supermob by gus russo,and a 1979...chicago tribune article by bob wiedrich ...also when johny roselli , marshall caifano were in vegas before spilotro ...they only reported to front boss like giancana...they never reported to captains ...neither did new york mobster bugsy siegel report to captains only top bosses like lansky and luciano