Vito Rizzuto

Birthday February 21, 1946

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Cattolica Eraclea, Sicily, Italy

DEATH DATE 2013-12-23, Montreal, Quebec, Canada (67 years old)

Nationality Italy

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1933

Vito was named after his grandfather, who was murdered on 12 August 1933 in Patterson, New York.

1946

Vito Rizzuto (21 February 1946 – 23 December 2013), also known as "Montreal's Teflon Don", was an Italian-Canadian crime boss alleged to be the leader of the Sicilian Mafia in Canada.

He headed the notorious Rizzuto crime family based in Montreal, Quebec.

Rizzuto was born in Cattolica Eraclea, Sicily, Italy in 1946 and immigrated to Montreal with his parents in 1954.

Vito Rizzuto was born in Cattolica Eraclea, in the province of Agrigento, Sicily on 21 February 1946.

1954

In 1954, on Vito's eighth birthday, he immigrated with his family to Canada, docking at Pier 21 in Halifax, Nova Scotia before moving on to Montreal, Quebec.

Vito was the first child of Nicolo Rizzuto and his wife, Libertina Manno.

His mother was the daughter of Antonio Manno, a local Mafia leader in their hometown.

1966

Vito married Giovanna Cammalleri, daughter of compatriot mobster Leonardo Cammalleri, on November 26, 1966, and had three children.

1967

His eldest son, Nicolo Rizzuto (Nick Jr.) – named after his grandfather – was born on 4 December 1967.

1970

His father Nicolo married into the mob, and later started his own crime syndicate in Montreal after overtaking the Cotroni crime family in the late 1970s.

In the 1970s, his father Nicolo was an underling in the Sicilian faction, led by Luigi Greco until his death in 1972, of the Calabrian Cotroni crime family.

This led to a violent Mafia war in Montreal which resulted in the deaths of Violi and his brothers, along with others, spanning the mid-1970s to the early 1980s until the war ceased.

1972

In 1972, Rizzuto was sentenced to two years for conspiring to commit arson of Renda's hair salon in Boucherville in 1968 with the intention of defrauding insurers; he served 18 months of the sentence.

1973

As tension then grew into a power struggle between the Calabrian and Sicilian factions of the family, a mob war began in 1973.

1980

By the mid 1980s, the Rizzuto crime family emerged as Montreal's pre-eminent crime family after the turf war.

According to law enforcement officials, Rizzuto oversaw a criminal empire that imported and distributed tons of heroin, cocaine and hashish in Canada, laundered hundreds of millions of dollars, lent out millions more through loansharking operations and profited handsomely from illegal gambling, fraud and contract killings.

1981

In 1981, Rizzuto participated in the killing of three rival capos in New York City ordered by Joe Massino of the Bonanno crime family, and he was indicted by a Brooklyn federal grand jury in connection with these killings in 2004.

1987

In October 1987, a ship off the coast of northeast Newfoundland and Labrador was seized by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).

1988

The RCMP found 16 tonnes of hashish in the surrounding area, and Rizzuto, Raynald Desjardins and four associates were arrested; Rizzuto was freed on bail in March 1988.

1989

With the witness unfit to testify, Rizzuto was acquitted in 1989.

1990

Rizzuto's trial began in October 1990 in a St. John's courthouse, but when the RCMP overstepped the bounds of Rizzuto's warrant by wiretapping restaurant conversations between Rizzuto and his lawyer, the Newfoundland Supreme Court dropped the case.

Later that year, Rizzuto was arrested again for conspiring to import hashish into Canada.

Drug dealer Normand Dupuis was ready to testify against him for a reduced prison sentence, monetary compensation and a new identity.

Before the trial, however, Dupuis contacted Rizzuto's lawyer Jean Salois with an offer not to testify in exchange for $1 million.

Salois recorded this conversation and got Dupuis charged with obstruction of justice.

In the early 1990s, the RCMP secretly ran a phony currency exchange in Montreal as part of an elaborate sting operation, called Project Compote, ending with 46 arrests and a Rizzuto lawyer, Joseph Lagana, convicted for laundering $47 million.

Rizzuto was named as a co-conspirator, but there was not enough evidence to charge him.

Though only considered a soldier of the New York Bonanno crime family by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Rizzuto was considered by Canadian officials to be the most powerful mob boss in the country.

2004

He had several run-ins with the law but was able to avoid conviction for any major offenses until 2004.

2006

He was extradited to the United States in 2006, and pled guilty to conspiracy to commit murder and racketeering charges in 2007.

2009

The Rizzuto crime family had been in the midst of a power struggle while Rizzuto was incarcerated; his son Nicolo Jr. was killed in 2009, and his father killed in 2010.

He was shot six times and killed near his car in the Montreal borough of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce on December 28, 2009.

His other son is Leonardo Rizzuto, and the third child is his daughter, Libertina "Bettina" – named after her grandmother.

2010

Nicolo would later be murdered as well, killed by a single sniper's bullet at his residence in the Cartierville borough of Montreal on 10 November 2010.

His sister Maria was married to Paolo Renda, reputed consigliere of the Rizzuto crime family, who went missing on 20 May 2010.

2012

He was given a 10-year prison sentence, but was released in late 2012.

2013

Rizzuto died shortly after on December 23, 2013, due to complications from pneumonia, which may have been induced by lung cancer.

2015

Vito's son, Leonardo, and Rocco Sollecito's son, Stefano, are believed to be the heads of the Mafia in Montreal, both of whom were arrested and charged with drug trafficking and gangsterism in November 2015.

2018

On 19 February 2018, they were released from prison, acquitted of charges of gangsterism and conspiracy to traffic cocaine.