Word: bioff
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Said Blackmailer Bioff: yes, he knew the defendants well. Seven of them were "The Syndicate" that had helped him filch at least $1 million in union dues, and blackmail the czars of Hollywood on a Hollywood scale. Staring coldly back at Willie Bioff's fat, pointing finger was an all-star police lineup: Gunman Paul ("The Waiter") de Lucia; pistol-packing ex-Capone Muscleman Phil D'Andrea; Beer-war Veteran Charles ("Cherry-Nose Joy") Gioe; Machine-gun Expert Louis ("The Man to See") Compagna; Frank ("The Immune") Maritote, alias Frankie Diamond; 14-time indicted Ralph Pierce; John Rosselli...
...three days Willie Bioff prattled away about the troubles and triumphs of the shakedown industry. His recital not only damaged the defendants, but scorched U.S. workers who tolerate criminal union leadership and Hollywood bigwigs who take orders from the underworld...
Open Hands, Cold Feet. Said Willie Bioff to the Court: Back in 1934 he was just a smalltime operator in Chicago labor circles, working with his pal, George E. Browne, ex-president of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employes. (Both are now serving time for extortion.) "The Syndicate" took Bioff and Browne over. Thereafter, Chicago movie exhibitors-and finally even the big Hollywood studios-paid heavily and often for the usual "protection" from what was euphemistically called "labor trouble...
Under the bland, long-lashed stare of roly-poly Defendant Louis Compagna, wily Willie Bioff testified: "Compagna came to see me and said he heard what I said about resigning. 'Anybody resigns from us resigns feet first, understand?' he tells me. So I didn't resign...
...Bioff: "I told Miller the exhibitors . . . would have to have two operators in each booth. Miller said, 'My God! That will close up all my shows...