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Colacurcio Family, Seattle #557106
10/12/09 02:12 AM
10/12/09 02:12 AM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
Mickey Meatballs
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On the North West Coast of the United States, there is a tiny but fascinating alleged
"crime" family. I say alleged because, despite the Italian heritage, there seems to be
no real connections between the family and any of the traditional LCN crime families.
(although, being a father-son team, perhaps "crime family" is an apt term)

Okay, sure the guy has convictions for racketeering, money laundering and facilitation
of prostitution, and, of course, he's of Southern Italian stock AND, of course, is
listed amongst other regional crime family leaders. Most authorative statements on
them however, see them construed as a completely home-grown phenomenom with no connection
whatsoever with any of the nations crime familes. (Despite some sources citing a
meeting with Salvatore "Bill" Bonanno in '71)

A fairly obvious indicator of their "independance" is the size and supposed structure of
the group. The "heirarchy" is made up by Frank Colacurcio Sr and his son, Frank Jr,
with all other alleged participants and partners in their criminal conspiracies cited
as associates. A list of these associates shows few fellow Italians being involved in
the criminal exploits (as their convictions testify); beside's "longtime" associate,
one John Gilbert Conte, names likes Ebert and Fueston are predominant: Colacurcio Sr's
own nephew (indicted with his uncle) is named a distinctly non-mediterranean
Leroy Richard Christiansen. No capo's, soldiers, made-guys, nothin'.

Frank Sr, patriarch, is the 2nd son (of 9) born of Southern Italian migrant parents,
growing up on his parents farm in Seattle. The guy apparantly drops out of school at
15 and starts his own trucking business, works a spit-load of jobs 's after that, starts
a few more companies and by the late 60's was well established in the restaurant and
night-club businesses, going on to go-go bars and strip clubs. Chased vigourously by
local law enforcement over the years, he has served time for typical mobster crimes
such as bribery and tax evasion. Later charges alleged contracted murders, but there
are no convictions pertaining to these allegations.

He nonetheless built up his empire of night-spots through the 70's 80's and 90's,
enlisting his son in later years to assist in the management. Serving a rap for tax
fraud, he last emerged from prison in 2000 but has recently been indicted again on
racketeering, amongst other charges.

Some sources claim that the Colacurcio's operate with the blessing of such groups as
the Chicago Outfit and'or the New York families. Others claim that the Colacurcio's
themselves are responsible for keeping the "mafia" out of Seattle. The best theory i
have read is an assertion that the truth is more in the middle: not only do the nation's
crime families know of the Colacurcio, they simply dont see the bother in attempting
to muscle in.

Here's some pretty cool links on the guy and his "crime family":

http://www.geocities.com/OrganizedCrimeSyndicates/seattle.html - the small admin.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Colacurcio,_Sr.
The Wikipedia page.

http://mafiatoday.com/?p=2056 - The details of his most recent indictment.

http://seattle-criminaldefense.blogspot.com/2009/07/colacurcio-associates-plead-not-guilty.html - And another source

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003695542_colacurcio06m.html And an older article.


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #557145
10/12/09 05:22 PM
10/12/09 05:22 PM
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DiMaggio68 Offline
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Many people I've talked to say they're just a gang of Italian criminals and not a LCN crime family. My friend in Seatle said the group is known as the Colacurcio Klan.

Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: DiMaggio68] #557324
10/13/09 07:41 PM
10/13/09 07:41 PM
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Okay, okay. so they're not connected? Not sanctioned or recognized or any sorta thing? Not that its hard to believe they are independant operators, a bloke and his son managing the family built empire (but a little crooked, like)

The Italian thing must be a half blessing for them though; being Southern Italian and in their line of business, they'd be in a position to trade off on the American mob's currency (that being violence or the implied threat of) and credibility. That ethnic linkage comes with a pretty high profile though, true or not. With the ethnic profiling that so many fall victim too, its the first place many would go: he's an elderly Italian organized criminal; how could he not be a mobster?


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #568375
03/03/10 07:52 PM
03/03/10 07:52 PM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
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I meant to post this a while back, but got sidetracked & never got around to it.
For those who are interested in the Colacurcio family & their associates, ive linked to an article on the February sentancing of Gil Conte for racketeering charges.

http://www.seattlepi.com/local/415313_CONTE11.html

Kinda old news, but.


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #572968
04/29/10 08:40 AM
04/29/10 08:40 AM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
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News on Colacurcio associates, three men who were indicted alongside father & son late last year have reached plea deals:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2011728120_colacurcio29m.html


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #576239
06/27/10 11:13 PM
06/27/10 11:13 PM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
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Frank Jr's plead out to his indictment (did i say that right?)
Now its just the old guy to go. http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2012206675_colacurcio26m.html

On the investigation:


The Raids:


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #576304
06/28/10 09:15 PM
06/28/10 09:15 PM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
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I stand for response.


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #576386
06/30/10 09:49 AM
06/30/10 09:49 AM
Joined: Dec 2009
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Spark Offline
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Some think if a gang of Italians are into criminal activity they are a mafia organization. The Colacurcio Klan, or CK as they are localy called are a crew of mostly Italian Americans that are into prostitution and drug dealing. However, none of these hoodlums are connected to La Cosa Nostra. You sound like a fanboy, which is not a big deal, but just as long as you know.

Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Spark] #576531
07/01/10 07:10 PM
07/01/10 07:10 PM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
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Fanboy? These murderous douch-bags? YOU sound like... well whatever.

You know back in the day there was something kinda cool & dark about the mob. Then i grew up.

Read the post. I contend that you haven't.
Fanboy. Blech. You cant be interested in something without recognizing it as reprehensible & wrong? I do alot of drugs, & drugs are fucked. I do it but its not like im delusional, braggin about how cool they are. Same thing with these mobsters. Sure i follow em. Doesnt mean they aint homicidal ass-holes.

In conclusion...shaddap-a-ju-face.

No really. grin


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #576532
07/01/10 07:11 PM
07/01/10 07:11 PM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
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Too defensive. I mean, OK.


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #576614
07/03/10 02:09 AM
07/03/10 02:09 AM
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IvyLeague Offline
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Frank Colacurcio Sr. Dies at 93
By Steve Miletich
Seattle Times staff reporter
July 2, 2010



Frank Colacurcio Sr., the strip-club magnate whose organized-crime exploits covered more than half a century and coincided with Seattle's history of police corruption and reform, died Friday. He was 93.

Mr. Colacurcio had been in declining health for some time, suffering from congestive heart failure. His death was confirmed by his attorney, Irwin Schwartz. Mr. Colacurcio died at University of Washington Medical Center, said spokeswoman Leila Gray. In keeping with his life story, Mr. Colacurcio was under indictment at the time of his death, facing allegations of racketeering and promoting prostitution.

Mr. Colacurcio died only a week after the final dismantlement of his strip-club operations by federal prosecutors, 67 years after he was first sent to prison for what was then called carnal knowledge with a teenage girl.

As Seattle's longest running crime figure, Mr. Colacurcio often was portrayed by law-enforcement officials and the news media as one of Seattle's most notorious racketeering figures, if not its own small version of an organized-crime "Godfather."

The reputation stemmed from convictions for tax evasion and racketeering that repeatedly sent him to prison. Adding to the lore were murky stories — involving an ex-governor, corrupt cops and his cat-and-mouse dealings with law-enforcement officials — that no one could answer, except perhaps Mr. Colacurcio.

Despite his notoriety, Mr. Colacurcio wasn't flashy. He wore golf shirts, played cards and lived in a modest home in the Sheridan Beach neighborhood of Lake Forest Park at the north end of Lake Washington. His one indulgence was a 38-foot boat used for fishing in Alaska.

At first, he benefitted in the 1950s and 1960s from Seattle's so-called tolerance policy, flourishing at a time when Seattle had rougher edges and police turned their eyes from vice and criminal activity in exchange for payoffs.

Eventually, he became a top target of federal and local law-enforcement officials.

For years, the feds and other investigators picked through his trash, eavesdropped on his conversations and recruited snitches. They finally nailed him beginning in the 1970s, for racketeering and failing to pay taxes on money skimmed from his businesses.

But the long-held suspicion that Mr. Colacurcio was behind the execution-style slayings of several people who had crossed him never resulted in charges.

In an interview a few years ago, Mr. Colacurcio dismissed the notion that he was involved in old killings or illegal activities. "They have been investigating me since the time I was born," he said.

Once considered Seattle's own connection to the Mafia, he more likely headed a homegrown organized-crime outfit, law enforcement officials concluded.

"Mafia malarkey," he once complained, saying local investigators needed someone to label their own mob figure.

Yet he and his associates also seemed to enjoy the image. Five years ago, while he awaited a court hearing, a cellphone belonging to an investigator on his defense team rang. The ring tone: the theme song for the movie "The Godfather."

For some detectives, investigating Mr. Colacurcio was an obsession. They built dossiers with flow charts and pictures of his known associates. Once, they even rented a room next to his old SeaTac office to eavesdrop through an electrical outlet.

Mr. Colacurcio outlasted some investigators, who moved to other jobs or retired. One federal prosecutor who brought charges against him later became his defense attorney.

"I'll never be 'retired' retired," he said in 1995. "Not until I'm in the grave."

He ran his operations from Talents West, a hiring agency and business office located in a small building on Lake City Way. Its walls displayed photographs of scantily dressed women and a giant framed photo of Mr. Colacurcio leaving a courthouse.

Mr. Colacurcio was born in Seattle to immigrant parents on June 18, 1917. He quit school at age 15 to begin farming and started a produce-hauling business.

Beginning in the 1950s, he used thugs and threats to control Seattle's jukebox, pinball and cigarette vending machine business, competitors alleged. Those businesses historically had attracted organized crime because of their easily skimmed cash.

He also sought to expand into Portland, drawing the attention of a U.S. Senate committee investigating organized crime.

Under questioning by Robert F. Kennedy, chief counsel for the committee, James "Big Jim" Elkins, a Portland crime figure, told the committee that Mr. Colacurcio asked for Elkins' help in opening prostitution houses there.

"He wanted me to arrange so that he could take over 3 or 4 houses," Elkins testified. "I told him if he wanted the houses to go buy them."

Elkins described Mr. Colacurcio as a fellow racketeer and a "boy that had various things operating in Seattle."

In the 1960s, Mr. Colacurcio held an interest in several bars, restaurants and nightclubs in Seattle. He ran a beer garden at the Seattle World's Fair in 1962 and introduced go-go dancing to Seattle at the Firelite Room in 1965.

For years, the well-entrenched tolerance policy in Seattle and King County kept the police from bothering him until the payoff system crumbled, brought down by investigative reporters, a reform-minded King County prosecutor and a hard-charging U.S. attorney in Seattle.

In a 1971 trial, Mr. Colacurcio was convicted of racketeering for bringing illegal bingo cards into the state. Federal prosecutors exposed a bribery scheme in which police were paid to ignore illegal gambling activities at area taverns. A nightclub owner testified he paid Colacurcio $3,000 a month for police protection.

Around the same time, State Patrol investigators reported that Mr. Colacurcio had met in Yakima with Salvatore "Bill" Bonanno, the son of legendary New York Mafia boss Joseph "Joe Bananas" Bonanno, to discuss a business relationship. Mr. Colacurcio famously responded to a reporter that he and his family had gone to Yakima to pick hot peppers, "but I didn't pick no bananas."

Although he served prison stints for the 1971 conviction and a 1981 tax-fraud conviction, Mr. Colacurcio opened topless taverns and strip clubs — another cash business that allowed profit-skimming — throughout the Seattle area and beyond, eventually operating in at least 10 Western states.

Law-enforcement officials banded together in 1984, driving him out of many states.

For a period, Mr. Colacurcio almost faded into local lore. After a 1991 guilty plea to tax fraud and the end of his 36-year-year marriage to Jackie Colacurcio about the same time, he and his son, Frank Colacurcio Jr., concentrated on running a smaller number of nude-dancing clubs.

The clubs, which years earlier had stopped selling alcohol to avoid state liquor inspectors, made their money from cover charges, high-priced soft drinks and charging a hefty per diem to the dancers.

But Mr. Colacurcio and his son landed on the front page of newspapers in 2003 when the "Strippergate" scandal jolted Seattle City Hall.

For years, the Colacurcios had tried to expand parking at Rick's, a Lake City Way strip club, but were repeatedly rejected. When the parking plan came before the council again in 2003, Colacurcio associates contributed thousands of dollars to three City Council members, who helped form a majority that approved the plan.

Strippergate also cast a spotlight on the long friendship between the Mr. Colacurcio and former Washington Gov. Albert Rosellini. Rosellini, who served as governor from 1957 to 1965 and is now 100 years old, played a role in pushing for the parking-lot rezone.

Their ties had gone back for years, dogging Rosellini during his political career, although there was never proof of illegal dealings.

Prosecutors charged Mr. Colacurcio, his son and two others with skirting donation limits by secretly reimbursing contributors. In 2008, Mr. Colacurcio, his son and an associate pleaded guilty to criminal charges and paid fines. The fourth defendant was dismissed from the case.

But even before that case was resolved, the Strippergate case prompted FBI and local law-enforcement officials to launch a broader investigation, looking for evidence of prostitution at Colacurcio clubs.

Investigators also reopened old homicide cases, trying to link Mr. Colacurcio or his associates to the slayings of five people in the 1970s and 1980s: a rival strip-club operator and his fiancée, a bar owner in Central Washington, a mechanic in a murder-for-hire scheme, and a police informant.

Although some people were identified in the killings, neither Mr. Colacurcio nor his associates were tied to those cases, and involvement in the Central Washington case has been ruled out.

The four-year investigation culminated with racketeering charges brought against Mr. Colacurcio, his son and others last year, alleging they allowed rampant prostitution at Rick's and three other clubs in King, Pierce and Snohomish counties that generated million of dollars in business.

Last week, Frank Colacurcio Jr., 48, pleaded guilty to a racketeering conspiracy charge that will cost him $1.3 million and likely land him in prison for a year and a day. Four close associates of his father earlier pleaded guilty to prostitution-and racketeering-related charges.

As part of plea deals, the Colacurcios' four strip clubs have been shuttered, and the government seized the buildings and other property valued at $4.5 million. The final piece of property, Talents West, was forfeited by Colacurcio Jr. under his plea.

In a final interview a year ago, while sitting in a leather chair, a blanket draped over his lap, Mr. Colacurcio was asked what he wanted his legacy to be. He paused, mulled the question and replied, "I think my background speaks for itself."

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2012264324_colacurcioobit03m.html


Mods should mind their own business and leave poster's profile signatures alone.
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: IvyLeague] #576651
07/04/10 05:20 PM
07/04/10 05:20 PM
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Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica Offline OP
Mickey Meatballs
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Awesome.


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Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #576675
07/06/10 12:22 AM
07/06/10 12:22 AM
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The article that is, not that he's dead.


(cough.)
Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: Mickey_MeatBalls_DeMonica] #592489
01/27/11 09:24 PM
01/27/11 09:24 PM
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I can give a fairly authoritative answer on this one. My late father was a journalist for decades in Seattle. Started out as a police beat reporter for the Daily Olympian and finished his on-air career as the investigative reporter for KIRO-AM. Covered the '69 Seattle PD payoff scandals for KING-TV (I practically grew up in the KING newsroom).

Anyway, dad knew everyone in Seattle law enforcement and politics. He always said of the Colacurcios that they were small-time pimps with no real connections to organized crime. He was quite dismissive of them. After all, they only had a couple of strip joints. Gangsters they were not.

According to dad the only presence the mob may have had in Seattle was through the Rosellini family back in the 30's. He used to tease my mom's mom about being a "mob moll" because she worked as a cook at a Rosellini roadhouse during the Depression. It's doubtful the Rosellinis ever had more than the usual bootlegging connections to the mob during Prohibition. However connected they were it ended when the sons went legit, Al the Rose even serving as governor.

People don't realize how small Seattle was until the Boeing boom and then the first urban renaissance during the late 70's. Too small to support real rackets. And the Italian community was miniscule. Chinese tongs we had, but no LCN.

Re: Colacurcio Family, Seattle [Re: BillyBatts] #592490
01/27/11 09:40 PM
01/27/11 09:40 PM
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I should divulge that Jim Compton, one of the city councilmen that Frank tried to bribe, was a family friend. But I knew Jim to be an absolute straight-arrow and I believe 100% that he had no knowledge of the laundered campaign donations.


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