Tony Spilotro

Actor

Popular As Anthony John Spilotro (Tough Tony, The Ant)

Birthday May 19, 1938

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1986-6-14, Bensenville, Illinois, U.S. (48 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 5' 2" (1.57 m)

#8627 Most Popular

1914

His father had emigrated from Triggiano, Province of Bari, Italy, and had arrived at Ellis Island in 1914.

He and his mother ran Patsy's Restaurant, which was frequented by mobsters such as Sam Giancana, Jackie "The Lackey" Cerone, Gus Alex, and Francesco "Frank the Enforcer" Nitti.

1938

Anthony John Spilotro (May 19, 1938 – June 14, 1986), nicknamed "Tony the Ant", was an American mobster and high ranking member for the Chicago Outfit in Las Vegas during the 1970s and '80s.

Spilotro managed the Outfit's illegal casino profits (the "skim") when four of the casinos, The Stardust, The Fremont, The Hacienda, and The Marina, were managed by Frank Rosenthal, replacing Outfit member John Roselli in Las Vegas.

1953

He attended Burbank Elementary School, and entered Steinmetz High School in 1953.

1962

He also testified that Spilotro, his boss in Las Vegas, ordered him to make a telephone call that lured one of the 1962 murder victims, William McCarthy, to a fast food restaurant.

McCarthy and James Miraglia were found dead in the trunk of a car on May 14, 1962.

McCarthy's head had been placed in a vise and his throat slashed, while Miraglia was strangled.

Spilotro was acquitted later that year.

Spilotro's defense attorney was future Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman.

1971

He was the leader of the "Hole in the Wall Gang", which he formed in Las Vegas when he moved there in 1971.

In 1971, Spilotro moved to Las Vegas to manage the affairs of the Chicago Outfit there.

He formed the "Hole in the Wall" Gang, a group of experienced thieves, safecrackers and killers.

The crew became known in the media as the "Hole in the Wall Gang" because of its penchant for gaining entry to homes and buildings by drilling through the exterior walls and ceilings of the locations they burglarized.

1979

In early 1979, Frank Cullotta moved to Las Vegas to join Spilotro.

1981

On July 4, 1981, the Hole in the Wall Gang robbed Bertha's Gifts & Home Furnishings on East Sahara Avenue in Las Vegas.

The robbery was a bust as much of the gang was arrested, including Cullotta, Joe Blasko, Leo Guardino, Ernest Davino, Lawrence Neumann and Wayne Matecki—each charged with burglary, conspiracy to commit burglary, attempted grand larceny and possession of burglary tools.

Around this time, Spilotro had an affair with Frank Rosenthal's wife, Geri McGee.

1982

In 1982, Cullotta was imprisoned and approached by the FBI with a wiretap of Spilotro talking with someone about "having to clean our dirty laundry", which Cullotta took as an insinuated contract on his life.

Due to this, in July 1982, Cullotta finalized an agreement with the prosecutors.

1983

In September 1983, Spilotro was indicted for conspiracy and obstruction of justice in the Sherwin "Jerry" Lisner murder and released on $100,000 bail.

At a trial in October 1983, Cullotta admitted that he was involved in over 300 crimes, including four murders, perjury, robberies and burglaries.

1986

Spilotro eventually ran afoul of his organized crime overseers who disapproved of his handling of their Las Vegas affairs, and who then arranged his murder on June 14, 1986.

Spilotro and his brother Michael disappeared on June 14, 1986, after they drove away together from Michael's Oak Park home.

Michael's wife, Anne, reported both brothers missing on June 16.

Michael's car, a 1986 Lincoln, was recovered several days later in a motel parking lot near O'Hare International Airport.

On June 22, their bodies were found, one on top of the other and stripped down to their undershorts, buried in a cornfield in the Willow Slough preserve near Enos, Indiana.

The freshly turned earth had been noticed by a farmer who thought that the remains of a deer killed out of season had been buried there by a poacher and notified authorities.

An autopsy completed on June 24 identified their cause of death as blunt force trauma, and ascertained that they had been dead since June 14.

They were identified by dental charts supplied by their dentist brother, Patrick Spilotro.

The two were buried in a family plot at Queen of Heaven Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois, on June 27.

In January 1986, in the wake of the imprisonment of Joseph Aiuppa and John Cerone for skimming Las Vegas casino profits, a meeting was held at the Czech Lodge in North Riverside, Illinois.

Most of the 'upper echelon' were there, including Outfit boss Tony "Joe Batters" Accardo.

1987

Tony and four of his brothers, (John, Vincent, Victor, and Michael) became involved in criminal activity starting at an early age; after Tony and Michael's death, his brother Victor would be inducted into the Outfit a year later in 1987.

The remaining brother, "Patrick" Pasquale Jr., became a dentist.

Spilotro was a boyhood friend of Frank Cullotta, and started a criminal career together as teenagers, engaging in theft, burglary, and murder.

He was nicknamed "Tony the Ant" by the media after FBI Special Agent William Roemer referred to Spilotro as "that little pissant."

Since the media couldn't use "pissant", they shortened it to the "Ant".

1995

Spilotro served as the basis for the character Nicky Santoro in Martin Scorsese's 1995 film Casino.

Spilotro was born in Chicago, Illinois, the fourth of six children to Pasquale "Patsy" Spilotro Sr. and Antoinette Spilotro.