Saturday, October 11, 2014

The Mafia's Ties to Wisconsin Cheese

thecheesemafiafamily
In March of 1980, after a two year investigation, the Pennsylvania Crime Commission released a Report of the Study of Organized Crime’s Infiltration of the Pizza and Cheese Industry. Wisconsin’s Grande Cheese Co of Fond du Lac was referenced several times.


Grande Cheese Co., mentioned in the body of the report in reference to Joseph Bonanno, Roma Foods and the Falcone Brothers, was born out of a Chicago gang war in 1939. During the first few years of its operation, at least five men, including the owner, were killed. Chicago crime boss Ross Prio eventually gained control of the company. Over the years Grande has been owned by or associated with numerous organized crime figures.

In the 1950's the ownership of Grande Cheese passed from Ross Prio to the DiBella family, John and his sister, Rose. John DiBella became corporate President in 1959. John had ties
to Milwaukee crime boss John Alioto, who was Frank Balistrieri’s father-in-law. John Alioto was the Milwaukee mob boss from 1952 until 1961 when he handed over control to his son-in-law, Frank Balistrieri. DiBella’s sister Rose took over her brother's stock after his death in 1964, and later sold her interest to the Candela and Gaglio families. The Gaglio family owned Ontario Importing, founded by the family patriarch, Vito Gaglio, in the mid-1960's.

The actual control of the cheese and pizza business began with no less a figure than Joseph Bonanno, Sr. Bonanno, living at that time in Tucson, Arizona, was regarded as one of the most powerful leaders of Organized Crime in America. Bonanno initiated a conspiracy to control the specialty cheese business in the United States in the early 1940's and even in 1980, he and his associates controlled the activities of some of the largest and most prosperous specialty cheese companies. Bonanno had direct ties to Grande Cheese of Wisconsin; through it to Grande's exclusive distributor in the Pennsylvania area, Roma Foods of South Plainfield, New Jersey; and through the distributor to hundreds of retail pizza shops which were financed and controlled by the organization in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.

The Falcone brothers of Brooklyn, New York--formerly associated with Bonanno-tied Grande Cheese and partners with a Grande officer in other Wisconsin cheese companies--built and operated for a decade a network of fraudulent "paper companies" designed to produce millions of dollars for the Falcones only to collapse financially when challenged by claims of their legitimate business victims.

The Pennsylvania Crime Commission investigation had determined that the Falcones and Thomas Gambino drove another company into bankruptcy in 1976. In December of 1975, the
Falcones and Gambino bought 70% of the stock of the previously family-owned Badger State' Cheese Company in Luxemburg, Wisconsin. Eight months later, Badger State Cheese collapsed in disarray with $1.3-million in debts. The Falcones and Gambino had taken over Badger and arranged that Capitol Cheese of Brooklyn, New York be the major customer and distributor for Badger. Capitol Cheese of Brooklyn was operated by Joseph and Thomas Gambino. Joseph Gambino was a leader in the Carlo Gambino crime organization.
Capitol Cheese directed delivery of Badger State cheese to Capitol's customers, collected payment from the customers, and then the cash disappeared. When Capitol Cheese owed Badger State Cheese $560,000, Badger State closed down and the Wisconsin State Department of Agriculture placed the company in trusteeship. Capitol Cheese, the Gambino business in Brooklyn, afterward, went out of business.

Also involved in the Crime Commission Investigation:
F & A CHEESE of Grand Rapids, Michigan, owned by Francesco and Angelo Terranova. The Company was started with a loan from the uncle of the Terranovas, John DiBella of Grande Cheese. F & A Cheese had another office in Upland, California. Raffael Quasarano, a
member of the Joseph Zerilli criminal organization of Detroit, and Peter Vitale were indicted by a federal grand jury in Detroit in November, 1979 for allegedly extorting $270,000 from the Terranovas. They were also charged with mail fraud, tax fraud and racketeering. According to the indictment Quasarano and Vitale used "fear of economic loss" and threats of "force and violence" to gain control of an F & A subsidiary, Rogersville Cheese Factory, Inc. in Wisconsin.

According to a report printed in the Milwaukee Sentinel on Aug. 7, 1980, the owner of a Wisconsin cheese factory (Rodgersville Cheese Factory) allegedly taken over by organized crime bosses from Detroit was told by either Quasarano or Vitale in 1974, “The big fish is swallowing the little fish, and you're lucky your legs aren't broken, according to Federal Court testimony that day. Both eventually pled guilty and were sentenced to prison terms of four years each in 1981.


http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1368&dat=19800807&id=lYBQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ChIEAAAAIBAJ&pg=2574,1039249



16 comments:

  1. Great blog!! I love to know about the pizza’s and cheese industry. You have explained it very briefly. I am proud to say that Chicago has really found itself to be The Foodie Capital of America.   Chicago restaurants

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  2. Very nicely done. Although you've left out many of the murders connected to Grande and the heroin smuggling, you summed up the Crime Commission report nicely.

    To clarify, Rose DiBella was John's niece, not sister. Filippo Candela, who took over from DiBella, was his brother-in-law. I know nothing at all about the Gaglio family, but it may be worth looking into.

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    1. Thanks so much for the clarification. Your comments are welcome anytime.

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  3. it is the best cheese around!

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  4. i am Joe Bonannos grand daughter and NOT a criminal. . . nor was my Grandfather. . . i just got done escaping a kidnapping and we did NOT pay 30M in Ransom, nor the 100M demanded from the first kidnapping of a younger member of my family by the same group this has gone on for yrs. we are wealthy and powerful people and NOT criminals sorry you feel that way. the real criminals are the people who screw w/US
    part of my family is the FBI and I AM central intelligence and hunt bad people down .

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  5. during this kidnapping I was drugged , raped, beaten and pousoned , and nobody in any mafia family was involved that is w/me or knows me, knowingly no Italians no sicilians and I AM royalty in this nation
    no new yorkers, no no midwesterners, nobody truly Mafia was involved. . .

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    1. sorry for misspelled and bad wording
      poisoned
      drugged, held against my will,
      beaten and f-d with relentlessly
      my families were NOT involved period
      I AM cheese that is it.
      I AM Prescotts' daughter. born in Sicilia he was Joes favorite son.
      not his wife as the kidnappers tried to portray
      this crap went on for 13 long yrs. due to oh so much bad press on the Families
      they said they could do what they wanted becuz nobody gives a sh-t about the Mafia and what happens to their families aw fongu to you too/ they even tried to give me terminal VD

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  6. Ross Prio was my grandfather. He was what he was, but was a terrific business minded person who used his bootlegging $$$ to get into many successful ventures, including Grande Cheese and Reddi Whip. He never used profanity ever, and was quiet but calculating...he was never in jail a day in his life, and made sure everybody was "taken care of" via payoffs to police and politicians. Sorry but that is the business way it was done in Chicago and elsewhere. With the advent of RICO in the late 60's he wound down his dealings and spent alot of time in Florida. He was married to my Grandmother for 60 years. Thanks to her, i was able to attend the 1967 and 68 World series in St Louis, and met Stan Musial....we had a Juke Box and slot machine in our house....they came and changed the records every week....very cool. Coolest Grand dad ever!

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  7. I work for Grande Cheese company and have met John Candela several times. He is a great guy.

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    1. In 75-76 we used to fly out Piper Cherokee 6 up to the Fon Du Lac airport....John Candela would show up in a van loaded with 10 lb bricks of mozzarella.
      My mom loved the cheese
      and we didn't realize how unique and expensive it would become...we stored it in a separate frig. Fun times.
      He was always nice to our family...my grandfather started
      Grande . But cheese didn't make much $$$ in the 1940s
      so he sold out to the Candelas
      who knew how to make it...

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  8. I was hauling truck loads of cheese for Grande in Fondulac in the 60s. An interesting story. I delivered a load a Mozzarella and provolone to a warehouse in Jersey.I had a number to call if I ever had any trouble. The warehouse manage told me he didn't order the 12 10 pound balls of provolone. Told me to take them back. I called the number and little man in a 64 impala pulled up and said, I take a care of it. He came came out with a signed bill of lading And said, "Keepa the cheese for your trouble*. I believe it was Frank Tierra.

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  9. Are you sure the spelling is correct. There was a Frank Tieri out of Brooklyn associated with the Genovese crime family. Thanks for the comment!

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  10. Hey Mom worked at Grande Cheese in Fond du Lac Wisconsin for many years through the hey Mom worked at Grande Cheese in Fond du Lac Wisconsin from the beginning of the '80s all the way through the 90s. I met John Candela a couple of times and he was a very nice man. He would also bring an older man that would just sit in a chair and watch. I always thought he was related to John Candela but I wasn't sure. My mom told me when she was alive but now I can't remember.

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    1. That could have been his father Filippo Candela, who started the company, which John took over. Thanks for the comment!

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