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



Saturday, October 4, 2014

Wisconsin Shootout with the Dillinger Gang

Little Bohemia Lodge as it looked at the time of
Dillinger's escape  
Wikipedia
Each September my wife and I go back to Wisconsin for vacation. While there, we attend a motorcycle rally in Tomahawk, Wisconsin and have a great time. About 60 miles north of Tomahawk is Manitowish Waters, where the Little Bohemia Lodge is located. 

We took a ride up there a couple weeks ago. The lodge is most famous as scene of a gunfight between John Dillinger and his gang, and Melvin Purvis and the FBI in 1934Little Bohemia remains operational today as a restaurant and gathering place. The Lodge is open year round, seven days a week for breakfast, lunch and dinner. 

A historic display of artifacts and memorabilia from the Dillinger gun battle is available for public viewing along with recent memorabilia and autographs from the filming of Public Enemies. For $5 per person you can take a self guided tour of the upstairs bedrooms where the Dillinger gang were at the start of the gun battle. Numerous bullet holes are still in the walls and ceilings from the FBI firing what must have been machine guns from the outside. Bullets actually fractured part of the bathroom sink which fell off onto the floor. It was pretty neat. In the summer of 2008, some scenes from the Michael Mann film Public Enemies were filmed on location at Little Bohemia. The movie starred Johnny Depp and Christian Bale and is still widely available. They also have a great menu with good food, as a few people we were with decided to try out the restaurant.
Bullet holes through walls in bedroom.

The following account is from Wikipedia, links provided:
Little Bohemia Lodge is a small lodge located in Manitowish Waters, Wisconsin. The Lodge was built in 1927, suffered a fire in 1928, and was rebuilt in 1930. The historic Lodge remains as it was at the time of the FBI siege in 1934 and has a collection of memorabilia and damage from the gun fight, including the original bullet holes in the walls and windows. The Lodge is located on US Highway 51 in Manitowish Waters, Wisconsin on Little Star Lake, on the Manitowish Chain O Lakes.
Bathroom sink fractured from bullets.

On April 20, 1934, John Dillinger's gang, consisting of Dillinger, Baby Face NelsonHomer Van MeterTommy Carroll, and John "Red" Hamilton, settled at Little Bohemia Lodge, then owned by Emil Wanatka. The gang assured the owners that they would give no trouble, but the gang monitored the owners whenever they left or spoke on the phone. Emil's wife Nan and her brother managed to evade Baby Face Nelson, who was tailing them, and mailed a letter of warning to the U.S. Attorney's office in Chicago, which later contacted the FBI. Days later, a score of FBI agents led by Hugh Clegg and Melvin Purvis approached the lodge in the early morning hours of April 23. Two barking watchdogs announced their arrival, but the gang was so used to Nan Wanatka's dogs that they did not bother to inspect the disturbance. It was only when the FBI mistakenly shot a local resident, John Hoffman, and two innocent Civilian Conservation Corps workers, John Morris and Eugene Boisneau, as they drove away that the gang was alerted. (Hoffman was wounded, and Boisneau was killed.) The gangsters inside grabbed their weapons and prepared to jump from a second floor window in the back. A group of agents led by Inspector William Rorer rounded that side and opened fire, but were forced to take cover when Dillinger fired on them.
Bullet holes still in balcony.
As the agents ducked to avoid return fire, Dillinger, Van Meter, Carroll and Hamilton each jumped one at a time from the second floor onto a frozen mound of snow behind the lodge. They then ran down some wooden steps to the beach and ran west along Little Star Lake, unnoticed by Inspector Rorer, who could not see them because of an eight foot incline that obstructed his view. In the woods, Carroll became separated from the rest of the group. He made his way to Manitowish Waters and stole a car, and made it to St. Paul uneventfully. Van Meter attempted to flag down a car driven by Nan Wanatka's brother George LaPorte, who was following an ambulance from the work camp to Little Bohemia, but did not stop. They spotted another lodge a short distance away, Mitchell's Rest Lake Resort. The owner, Edward Mitchell, was tending to his sick wife when Dillinger, Van Meter and Hamilton walked in. Hamilton yanked the phone off the hook after asking for a glass of water, while Dillinger put a blanket over Mitchell's wife and asked for a car. The three ended up taking a car driven by Mitchell's carpenter.
Meanwhile, Nelson, who had been packing in the cottage, had fired at Purvis and fled southeast along Little Star Lodge. He took a couple, the Langes, hostage and made them drive him. He then took local switchboard operator Alvin Koerner hostage. Emil Wanatka, who had stopped by, was also taken hostage. At that point, three federal agents, W. Carter Baum, Jay Newman, and Constable Carl Christiansen, arrived from Little Bohemia, acting on a tip about the car that Carroll had stolen in town. Nelson surprised the agents and shot them. First to be shot was Baum, who was shot three times in the neck and killed instantly. Newman was hit once in the head, but was only dazed. Christiansen was critically wounded, shot five times in the midsection. After shooting at Wanatka, Nelson stole the FBI car and escaped as Newman fired at him.
http://www.littlebohemialodge.com/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Bohemia_Lodge


Sunday, September 21, 2014

Mafia Don Eaten Alive By Pigs In Revenge Murder

shutterstock
The mob is still going strong in Italy! Gabrielle Bluestone at gawker.com Links provided:
11/30/2013  In a plot stolen straight out of "Hannibal", Italian police are saying that Calabrian mobsters recently murdered a mafia don by beating the man with a spade and then throwing him into a sty, where he was eaten alive by pigs.
Francesco Raccosta, the don of the ‘Ndrangheta crime family in Calabria, disappeared last year amidst whispers that he had been responsible for the murder of a rival mob boss, Domenico Bonarrigo, of the Mazzagatti family.
Bonarrigo was shot and killed while driving his car. Eleven days later, Raccosta disappeared without a trace.
Italian police sent in an undercover officer to investigate and made the gory results public this month.
According to their investigation — codenamed “Operazione Erinni," after the Greek goddess of vengeance — 24-year-old boss Simone Pepe took responsibility for Raccosta's murder in wire-tapped phone calls.
"It was so satisfying hearing him scream ... mamma mia, he could scream!” he said, adding that there wasn't "a thing left" after the feeding frenzy.
"People say sometimes they [the pigs] leave something," he added.
"In the end there was nothing left...those pigs could certainly eat."

According to Italian police, the feud between the families has been going since the 1950s.
A spokesperson said that Pepe's methodology was designed as a message: “By feeding his victim to pigs he thought he would earn the respect of rivals as well as his own clan.”
In recent years, the warring Calabrian families have economically surpassed the Sicilian Cosa Nostra, thanks in large part to their prolific distribution of cocaine through Italy and other parts of Europe.
[image via Shutterstock]
http://gawker.com/mafia-don-eaten-alive-by-pigs-in-revenge-murder-1474000709


Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Wisconsin Supreme Court rejects crime boss' son John Balistrieri bid to practice law

Frank P. Balistrieri (center) walks with his sons, John (left) and Joseph,
in the Milwaukee County Courthouse in 1975. (Sentinel Files)
Article thanks to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Links provided:

8/12/2014 The bid by
John J. Balistrieri, a felon and the son of Milwaukee's onetime organized crime boss, to get his law license back was shot down by the Wisconsin Supreme Court Tuesday morning.

The rejection comes two years after Balistrieri applied to practice law for the second time since his 1989 release from federal prison. The court has had the matter before it since 2012 after Richard Ninneman, the attorney appointed to review the case, recommended that Balistrieri be allowed to practice law again. The court’s Office of Lawyer Regulation, however, opposed his reinstatement.

Balistrieri, 65, his older brother, Joseph, and their father, Frank, were convicted of attempted extortion in 1984 after an FBI sting and federal trial that focused on the role of organized crime in the Milwaukee vending machine business. Frank Balistrieri died in 1993 and
Joseph died in 2010.

The Balistrieri brothers were each sentenced to eight years in prison, a term that was slashed to five years after they blamed their father for their wrongdoing.

In its
unsigned opinion, the court wrote that it was “not averse to providing a second chance” to disbarred lawyers if they show they have changed their ways.

But, the court added: “The record in this instance, however, does not demonstrate that Attorney Balistrieri has clearly and convincingly proven that he has the required moral character to practice law, that he has a proper attitude toward society's laws and the standards imposed on members of bar, and that he is fit to represent clients and to aid in the administration of justice as a member of this state's bar.”

In fact, the court wrote that “the record reveals a pattern of a lack of acceptance of responsibility over the years that have passed since Attorney Balistrieri's conviction.”

The court noted that when Balistrieri first tried to get his license back, the court’s policing arm in 1995 recommended against allowing him to practice. Balistrieri responded by lashing out at the agency saying it “was biased against him because of his Italian heritage," the court noted Tuesday. “He attacked the integrity of the reinstatement process with a completely unsupported charge of ethnic bias.”

Justice Patience Roggensack did not participate in the decision and Justice Ann Walsh Bradley wrote a dissent arguing that Balistrieri should be allowed to practice law.

http://www.jsonline.com/blogs/news/270903591.html

Other of my related Mob posts:
"Mr. Fancy Pants" Balistrieri - Tracking Milwaulee's most dangerous mobster
Benjamin "Lefty Guns" Ruggerio-The real story of the "wise guy"
The Beef That Didn't Moo - Wisconsin Ties to the Mob
Tales of the Milwaukee Mob and Two Cigarette Men!
Married to the Daughter of a Milwaukee Mob Boss-Our Pediatrician!
The Milwaukee Queen Bee of Organized Crime
Tale of a Failed Milwaukee Mob Hit!
Lieutenant Uhura (of the Starship "Enterprise") - close encounters with the Chicago and Milwaukee Mob!
Part Two: The Milwaukee Mob and Lieutenant Uhura (Star Trek)
Milwaukee Mob Attorney - Tale of a Double Life
The New York Mob and Iowa Beef - Part 1
The New York Mob and Iowa Beef Processors - Part II
Sally Papia - A life lived on the edge
The Milwakee Mob Hit on Anthony Biernat
The Milwaukee Mob Hit on August Palimisano
New York's "Joe Bananas" meets Milwaukee's Frank "Mad Bomber" Balistrieri
The Life and Times of a Chicago Mafia Hit Man
From Balistrieri's Bag Man to Investigative Reporter
Louis Fazio - Milwaukee Mob Hit or Robbery?

Friday, August 8, 2014

Loius Fazio - Milwaukee Mob Hit or Robbery?

ancestry.com
As published in the following archive of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, most of the local police officials immediately dismissed the idea that the motive for murder may have been a mob hit, and were certain that it was a “simple” robbery-murder.


But, as mentioned in several accounts, Frank Balistrieri, Milwaukee’s mob boss, and Louis Fazio were enemies.


On Feb 2, 1973, Milwaukee Journal reporters Alex Dobish and Thomas Lubenow reported in the Journal that back in 1968 there were rumors that Fazio was going to be offered the post of Mafia don in Milwaukee. That would not have set well with "The Mad Bomber" Balistrieri, who had been in command since 1961. (The Chicago Outfit had the ultimate control of Milwaukee and it was well within their power to depose and appoint a Milwaukee don.)

Joseph Pistone, an undercover FBI agent, and “Lefty Guns” Ruggerio (New York mobster) were guests in Frank Balistrieri’s Milwaukee home for dinner one Saturday evening in 1978. Joe wrote in his book, “Donnie Brasco”, that Frank wanted to go to an ethnic Italian civic dinner event the next evening that Fazio had been a previous chairman of. He had not attended the event for several years. Frank made the statement that evening about Fazio, “He’s dead, Five times thirty-eight.” Of course, thirty-eight referred to 38 caliber. The next evening, Frank and his entourage walked in unannounced, to “have some fun”, disrupting everyone as the staff scrambled to accommodate them and Balistrieri played the “godfather” to the hilt! The event took place in none other than the Grand Ballroom of the Marc Plaza hotel!


Ned Day, a former bagman and bartender for Balistrieri turned investigative reporter in Las Vegas, wrote years later:
“I remember Louie Fazio got blasted. Frankie Bal didn't like him. I remember when Augie Maniaci took two bullets in the skull. Frankie Bal didn't like him, either.”

As I remember, back in those years, Milwaukee County District Attorney Hugh O’Connell and long time Police Chief Harold Breier were persistent in their public statements that there was no evidence of organized crime in Milwaukee or Wisconsin! Did the power from the top command the bottom to “look the other way”? Other federal and state agencies didn't see it the same way.

In an article in the Milwaukee Sentinel on N0v 3, 1975, Milwaukee Dist. Atty. E. Michael McCann was quoted as saying the deaths of Louis Fazio and August Maniaci were "reflective of an interior struggle" within the organized crime element in Milwaukee.

Here’s the original story, thanks to the Journal Sentinel Archives. No reporter was credited by the Sentinel. Links provided:



Louis Fazio Shot Dead in Parking Lot of Home

Sept. 27, 1972 Louis Fazio, a member of a prominent Milwaukee restaurant family who served nearly a dozen years in prison for his part in a 1948 gangland slaying, was found shot to death outside his home Wednesday morning.

Fazio, 58 of 2805 N. Humbolt Ave., was found in a parking area behind his home at about 6:45 a.m. by a neighbor.

County medical examiner’s investigators X-rayed the body first, without removing Fazio’s clothing. By noon they had located two slugs still in the body, one in the head, with what appeared to be an entrance wound at the right rear side of the head and another in the neck, apparently fired as Fazio was falling or lying on his side.. That slug tore through the shoulder of his coat, leading detectives to believe he had a shoulder wound, officials said.

There was a third bullet wound in Fazio’s abdomen, but that slug had not been located by X-ray. An autopsy was to be held.

A copy of The Milwaukee Sentinel was found on the ground beside the body. Two more copies of the paper were found inside the car.

Joseph La Monte, deputy county medical examiner and a friend of the Fazio family since childhood, said it had been Fazio’s practice to bring a newspaper home with him after closing the Iron Horse restaurant, 100 W. Wells St., one of the family enterprises, which he managed. La Monte said said it was a practice of one of the regular late night customers to buy the papers and hand them out just before it’s 2 a.m. closing.

Detective Inspector Leo Woelfel said that as far as police could determine the motive was robbery.

He said Fazio was known to carry two or three wallets and that “he was a guy known to carry a bundle of cash.” After closing the restaurant, said Woelfel, Fazio was probably carrying much of the day’s receipts.

However, when the body was searched at the county medical examiner's office, a total of $448 was found in his pockets, more than $400 of it in a money clip.

The other wallets to which Woelfel referred were not found.

“Apparently, he put up a fight”, said Woelfel, “his knuckles were bruised.”

Woelfel discounted the possibility that Fazio was a victim of a Milwaukee gangland struggle. He said there was no evidence to point to anything but robbery as a motive.

Found in Parking Lot
However, federal authorities and agents of state Atty. Gen. Robert W. Warren’s organized crime strike force were known to be interested in the slaying investigation.
The body was found on a three stall concrete parking area behind the four-family apartment house in which he and his wife, Josephine, lived.
Fazio had parked his car in the middle space, as was his custom. The body was found at the rear of the car.
Fazio’s keys were found behind the left rear wheel of the auto, a 1972 Chevrolet.
Mrs. Fazio said that when she awoke: “I heard voices outside. I pulled up the shade and there they all were.” She was referring to police.
Mrs. Fazio said it was her husband’s practice to arrive home between 2 and 3 a.m. and take their dog out for a walk. She said she looked out a rear window about 2:30 a.m., saw the car and expected Fazio inside at any minute. The Fazios had been married 37 years.
Ray Suminski, Fazio’s nephew and a bartender at the Iron Horse, said that Fazio left the restaurant at 10 p.m. Tuesday.
According to the county medical examiner’s report, neighbors heard arguing about 2:45 a.m. Wednesday and then heard two or three shots.
Although police were officially listing robbery as the motive, detectives and other Safety Building and Courthouse officials were speculating that there might be other motives - possibly revenge.
Fazio had a police record dating back to 1933, when he was arrested on a charge of carrying concealed weapons.

First Prison Term
He received his first prison term - 10 years - in 1942, when he was sent to the State Prison at Waupun for pandering and carnal knowledge and abuse.
At the trial Fazio was accused of being a leader of a white slave ring, in which, among other things, he allegedly bought for $150 another man’s interest in a 15 year old girl whom the other man had placed in a house of prostitution in Sheboygan county.
That sentence was commuted by Gov. Julius Heil and Fazio was released from prison May 18, 1945. Heil’s action brought protest from then Dist. Atty. Herbert J. Steffes, now a Circuit Judge, who had prosecuted Fazio, and from Milwaukee women’s groups.
Slightly more than a year later - June 24th, 1948 - Fazio was returned to the state prison for his part in the slaying of Mike Farina and the attempted murder of Farina’s brother, Joseph, on Hwy 43 in Kenosha county that year.
Also convicted in that killing were John Mandella, his brother Jerome, and Dominic Lampone, all associates of Fazio.

Revenge Considered
Authorities believed the slaying was in revenge for the burglary of John Mandella’s home. Loot from the burglary was taken to Kenosha and it was on the way back that the Farina’s truck was stopped on the highway by a car following them. Inside were the four defendants.
Joseph Farina lived to testify in court and pointed to Fazio as the trigger man.
“The four punched us around,” Farina testified, “and then Fazio made me get in the back of the truck. He sat on a box and I sat on the floor. Lampone was in the driver’s seat. Then Fazio got out and went away, but he came back. I saw sparks coming toward me and felt my head twisting around. I knew I was shot when I felt blood. I was shot twice in the head and three times in the left hand. “Then I heard fighting outside the truck and Mike started in the back end. Mike said ‘Are you hurt Joe? What’s the matter?’  

More Shots
“Then there were more shots behind Mike. He grunted, and fell on me. I saw Fazio at the door of the truck. More shots were fired, so I fell down and played dead.”
Fazio was sentenced to life for the murder and to 30 years to run concurrently, for the assault on Joseph Farina.
Former Waupun Warden John C. Burke said Wednesday that he recalled Fazio as a good prisoner, one whose conduct enabled him to have some of the more privileged jobs in the prison.
While it may have been his good conduct that brought him special treatment in the state prison, it was his political influence that brought him special favors in the State Legislature. It also brought the end of the political career of Mark Catlin, then one of the state’s most powerful politicians.
Catlin, an attorney and speaker of the Assembly, was named in a complaint by Board of State Bar Commissioners with unethical conduct in trying to obtain clemency for state prisoners - among them, Fazio.
Frank Fazio, Louis’ brother and now operator of a Fort Lauderdale restaurant, testified that he paid Catlin  $5,000 in an effort to get Louis released from prison.
The attempt failed, but Catlin lost his bar license for six months - it has long since been reinstated - along with his political influence.
At the time Catlin had been considered as the choice of the state Republican organization to replace Alexander Wiley on the ballot for US senator.

Gets Parole
Fazio was paroled Dec, 2, 1957, after serving about the minimum sentence.
Within two years he was returned to prison for violating his parole. Police found 80,000 ballpoint pens and jewelry taken in a burglary of a downtown Milwaukee jewelry store in his car.
Fazio was returned to prison for a year and was paroled on Oct. 10, 1960.
He went back to work in the family restaurant on N. 5th St. and on Dec. 12, 1966, his prison sentence was commuted by former Gov. Warren P. Knowles.
Because he was serving a life sentence Fazio would have been on parole for the rest of his life and as a parolee Fazio could not have held a City of Milwaukee bartender’s license.
However, the commutation changed that and he was granted a bartender’s license on 1968.

http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1499&dat=19720927&id=zsYdAAAAIBAJ&sjid=qSgEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6702,4135604




Thursday, July 24, 2014

Ned Day, From Balistrieri's Bag Man to Investigative Reporter

article.wn.com
Very interesting, in depth article thanks to Tom Matthews and milwaukeemagazine.com Links provided:

Me and the Mob

He was a Milwaukee Mafia henchman who became a famed Las Vegas reporter. Did that fame catch up with him?

 
Ned Day lay on a beach in Hawaii, 4,000 miles and a lifetime away from his birth in West Allis 42 years earlier.

He had been born a prince of sorts, the son of Milwaukee bowling legend Ned Day Sr., who had mingled with presidents and movie stars. As an adult, the younger Day also had consorted with an icon: Frank BalistrieriFrankie Bal – Milwaukee’s most notorious mobster. In the late ’60s and early ’70s, Day worked in Frankie’s strip clubs, made collections for the boss’ gambling racket, and lived and played among the city’s seediest characters. But then a gruesome double murder forced him to take a soul-stricken look at the company he’d been keeping. Day came to realize there was a better purpose for his roguish nature.

The winds blew Day west to Las Vegas, where – remarkably – Frankie Bal’s legman became his nemesis. Working as a caricature of a hard-living, skirt-chasing, truth-telling muckraker, Day remade himself as a crusading journalist. He came to focus on the gangsters who had run Las Vegas for decades, helping to expose not just Balistrieri’s Vegas operation, but the whole Mafia infrastructure there. Eventually, Ned Day Jr. from West Allis, Wis., would be honored by Nevada’s governor and the state’s powerful U.S. senator as a model of journalistic integrity and courage.

By the time Day was done chronicling the wiseguys’ dirty deeds, the mob’s mythic hold on America’s gambling mecca was crumbling. But there may have been a price to pay for his hell-bent ways.

Ned Day lay on a beach in Hawaii.

He was dead.

It had been a life bracketed by kingpins.

He was born in 1945 to Ned and Frances Day at the height of his father’s fame. Beginning in the mid-1930s, Ned Day Sr. had forged a career that, by the end of that decade, would see him ranked as the best bowler in the world. The West Allis pro bowled with Harry Truman at the White House. He went to Hollywood to make movie shorts. Jack Benny name-checked him on the radio. He even made a Wheaties box. In an era when the nation’s 15,000 bowling alleys were a $250 million a year industry and perhaps no city was more bowling-mad than Milwaukee, it’s not a stretch to say that Ned Day was the Brett Favre of his sport.

The competitions themselves didn’t pay jack – the biggest pot he ever took was $14,000 in a nationally televised last hurrah in 1959 – but his high profile and good looks turned him into one of the sports world’s early marketing titans. He appeared in ads for bowling gear, motor oil, underwear and cigarettes (“Experience is the best teacher… in bowling and in choosing a cigarette!” he shilled for Camel). He wrote a series of books on the sport. And he owned three Milwaukee pro shops in addition to controlling the rich Brunswick franchise throughout bowling-besotted Wisconsin. When Ned Day Jr. arrived on April 5, 1945, it looked like he had been born into a perfect game.

He grew up in a modest home on South 92nd Street, hardly the mansion life of a celebrity’s son but lacking nothing in terms of toys and creature comforts. He was a quiet kid who attended Woodrow Wilson Elementary School and the private St. Aloysius, before a decision that would mark him forever.

His mother decreed that Ned would be shipped off to St. John’s Northwestern Military Academy in Delafield. For the rest of his life, he would bitterly believe he was sent away because he was in the way of his father’s career and his mother’s social life.

“Ned was abandoned by his family,” says Mark Fierro, a colleague and close friend in Las Vegas. “They left him in the impossible position of winning back their love: ‘Tell me what I have to do to be good enough that you’ll love me and bring me home. Tell me what that is.’

“They set a bar that I think Ned felt was unreachable his entire life. It always hung over him and made him a much bigger person than he would have been.”

Enrolling at the strict and imposing St. John’s in 1959, Day initially hated the place. In a letter sent home to his mother, he reveals not only his anguish but also an early glimmer of a journalistic voice that would expose the misdeeds of powerful people.

“Today was another drag,” he wrote with all the righteous fury of an angry 14-year-old. “This place is the worst. … [Right now] the dean is showing some boy and his parents the campus and feeding them a pack of lies on how good this school is…

“I sure hope things get better because they can’t get any worse.”

But remarkably, Ned came to flourish at St. John’s. By the time he graduated in 1963, he had been voted most popular cadet and “Best All Around Fellow.” He served as captain of his company, earned numerous medals and awards, and prospered in football, hockey and golf. Images of Ned in the St. John’s yearbook show a ramrod-straight, remarkably handsome 18-year-old, ready to take on the world.

Just as noteworthy, given the charismatic persona Day soon would develop, was his nickname noted in the yearbook: Neddy Poo.

Day left the academy with a seemingly glowing future as heir to his father’s bowling empire.

But that empire, it turned out, was in decline. Ned Sr., considered by most of his peers to be a kind and generous man, spent his money freely and often recklessly. Worse, he had a drinking problem, a serious addiction to betting the horses and an overinflated belief in his stock market savvy. As his star as a bowler dimmed, the Brunswick contract expired, and one by one, the pro shops were shuttered. By 1965 – just two years after Ned Jr. left St. John’s – his father was down to one store. And then things went really bad.

Dennis Juechter came to work for Ned Sr. as a teenager in the late ’50s, drilling bowling balls and setting up the Brunswick pool tables Day was selling for top dollar. He was still working in Day’s remaining shop in 1965 when a pack of federal agents descended.

“It was really scary,” recalls Juechter, “probably eight FBI agents in the store with their suits open so we could see their guns. They raided the place, went downstairs, and there were ticker-tape machines down there. Ned was getting all the results from the tracks.”

It turned out that a nationwide gambling service was being run out of Day’s store. He would ultimately be named as an unindicted co-conspirator. Details of the case are scarce, but given the era and the nationwide scope of the investigation, it’s likely Day was working with the local mob.

The final years for Ned Day Sr. were brutal. His second wife divorced him in 1968, and a year later, he filed for bankruptcy. By 1971, his sole source of income was a used bookstore on South 16th Street. He died alone of a stroke in his apartment behind the store. It was Thanksgiving, and he was 60. His obituary in Newsweek was the first ever granted to a professional bowler.

Just as with St. John’s, his father’s squandering of the family fortune embittered the son while also driving him toward his destiny. “What happened was my father went broke and I had to find a way to go on with my life,” Day told a writer in 1981. “Instead of inheriting half a million dollars at age 20, I had to start all over again.”

It was the mid-1960s. The age of free love and ready drugs was dawning, but the decorated military school graduate went old-school and found his way into the bars, strip clubs and gambling dens of Milwaukee’s still-reigning mobster, Frank Balistrieri. Known by such nicknames as “Mr. Slick” and “Mad Bomber,” Frankie Bal was a dapper and dangerous man who had run the Milwaukee Family since 1961. He conducted his business at a table at Snug’s restaurant in the Shorecrest Hotel but owned clubs and other operations all over town.

Day’s descent into this world makes sense, considering his father’s places of business had for years been bowling alleys, pool halls and taverns. Maybe it was in one of these smoky halls where he met the guys who would end up being partners in his basement gambling operation. The bowling legend, meanwhile, tried to groom his son as his heir, sending him to tournaments all over the state. Ned’s chaperone was Dennis Juechter, the kid from the pro shop who was only a few years older. Young men, flush with Daddy’s cash and legendary name, set loose to compete – and hang out – in the drinking and gambling spots where the wiseguys conducted business. Somehow, Ned connected to the primo wiseguy, an experience he wrote about years later:

“I used to work for Frankie Bal back in the 1960s. ... I remember when the old man would come in the joints, with his cronies in tow. … They’d stay in the corner mostly, drinking shooters of Crown Royal, leering at the dancing girls. …

“I remember Louie Fazio got blasted. Frankie Bal didn’t like him. I remember when Augie Maniaci took two bullets in the skull. Frankie Bal didn’t like him, either.”

It was the kind of raw – and perhaps over-embellished – mob reporting that would become Ned Day’s stock in trade. But this was no Hollywood movie. By his own account, from ages 19 to 28, Day was “involved in some unhealthy activities” while prowling around the scuzzier climes of Milwaukee. He wrote a successful tout sheet, selling tips for betting on the horses running down in Chicago. He was arrested for passing bad checks in an attempt to settle up with an angry bookie.

And in 1972, at age 27, Ned Day married a onetime Miss Nude International who danced in one of the clubs. The marriage would last until 1974. He got custody of the crumpled Volkswagen Beetle that would become one of his many signatures.

That same year, Ned Day began to chart a new, healthier course for his life. Always drawn to politics and a good argument, he sold off a pinkie ring to help raise tuition and enrolled as a political science major at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. He delivered pies at the aptly named Ned’s Pizza to support himself.

Somehow, he came to the attention of UWM professor Jay Sykes, who read some of Ned’s writing and encouraged him to switch to journalism. Day took the bait, and before long, he was writing for Crossroads, a campus newspaper. With a lifelong suspicion of institutions and a deep resentment toward higher-ups who abuse their power, in November 1974, he wrote an exposé with the attention-grabbing headline: “Check of prof’s credentials uncovers bizarre disputes.” The professor with the suspect credentials ended up getting fired.

Day also wrote humorous and gritty essays drawn from his colorful past. One such piece, recounting his life as a pizza deliveryman, broke him into the big time. It was published in the weekly insert of the Milwaukee Journal, a paper he revered. Written in the wry, everyman voice of legendary Chicago columnist Mike Royko, Day regaled his readers with the time he almost died for his trade.

“That’ll be $5.45,” I said.
“I don’t have the money,” the man replied with a strange grin. “But I do have this.” In his hand, and pointed right at my chest, was what seemed like the biggest handgun I’d ever seen. … There was a resounding crash, and I thought, “What a stupid way to die, delivering pizza to some maniac.” And then I remember thinking, “It doesn’t hurt, so I must be dead already. It just hasn’t reached my brain yet.” When I peered down to get a look at the hole in my chest, the man began to laugh, almost hysterically.
“Thought you’d had it, huh?” he said. “Don’t worry, pal, it’s only a blank.”

Most likely through the intervention of Jay Sykes, Day won a job writing for the weekly West Allis Star. Carol Vogel, who hired him, knew what she was getting.

“Ned wrote and lived on the edge,” she was quoted as saying after his death. “He was willing to take the time to work sources. He went to bars and parties and wherever sources were. Ninety percent of journalists don’t do that anymore.”

As one of many young writers with the chain of Post papers, he was soon paired with none other than Charlie Sykes, son of Jay and eventual conservative talk show host on WTMJ radio. Sykes, almost 10 years younger than Day and by his own admission very wet behind the ears, was agog at Day’s stories of his mob days.

“He described himself as a gambler and a pimp,” Sykes told Milwaukee Magazine for this story.

Sykes was also interviewed in 1987 by George Knapp, a Las Vegas newsman who worked with Day at KLAS-TV. It was for a KLAS retrospective on Ned after his death. In the interview, Sykes remembered that Day “would talk about riding around in expensive cars, wearing fur coats and jewelry.”

“Ned was an exaggerator about that period of his life,” cautions Knapp, a Peabody Award-winning journalist who was Day’s protege and best friend. “It was a performance kind of thing. He was creating a caricature of himself.”

The mid-’70s were heady times for budding young journalists like Day and Sykes. The two went together to see All the President’s Men, Sykes recalled in the KLAS story: “We thought we were going to be Woodward and Bernstein. We were raw reporters and took on what we thought were major corruption stories. We went out at night, we visited people’s houses, we went through public records.

“We were making $160 a week while knowing almost nothing about journalism. We were making it up as we went along, and Ned was really the inspiration for the rest of us.”

Day and Sykes shared bylines on some genuine muckraking, including exposing campaign violations by then-County Board Chairman William O’Donnell as he ran for what would become a 12-year reign as county executive. But much of Day’s reporting for the West Allis Star was stultifyingly dull, covering beauty pageants, endless city council meetings or accompanying some West Allis leaders on a fact-finding mission to Battle Creek, Mich., to study the feasibility of a shopping mall proposed for Greenfield Avenue.

It was hardly Mike Royko or Jimmy Breslin, but Day was learning his craft and building his portfolio. It would take a personal brush with horrific violence to drive him to bigger and better things out west.

Lucita Restis was found dead in a home on East Newton Avenue in Shorewood on April 28, 1976. Draped across her body was that of her 10-year-old daughter, Tzu-Li. Both had been strangled, the mother with a lamp cord and the daughter with a bicycle-lock chain. A liquor bottle had been twisted into the chain, apparently to turn it tighter on the little girl’s neck.

Restis had blown into town in 1968, on the run from her third husband, a carnival worker in Lake Charles, La. Beautiful and innately gifted at getting men to provide for her, she was, by any measure, a very naughty girl.

“It’s not my fault,” she was quoted as saying. “I just never learned how to go along with The Program.”

At 21, Restis had abandoned a first husband and daughter in Honolulu and landed in San Francisco, where she married a club owner and embarked on a career as a stripper. She soon was earning top dollar while developing a reputation as a hellcat who once cracked a bar patron over the head with a liquor bottle for badmouthing Hawaiians.

She was 32 when she and her 3-year-old daughter arrived in Milwaukee, taking up residence on the ninth floor of the Wisconsin Hotel. Although old for her profession, she quickly was earning $600 a week as a featured stripper in clubs in Appleton, Green Bay and Milwaukee.

If you were a stripper in Milwaukee, odds are you worked in one of Frankie Bal’s clubs. Which included the Ad Lib. Which is where Ned Day tended bar. Which resulted in the fact that sometime during the late ’60s or early ’70s, Ned Day was her lover.

Of course he was.

But there was something else, something that undercuts the tawdriness with a wisp of poignancy: Day had claimed the little girl as his goddaughter. And now, mother and child had been brutally murdered, just at the point when the reporter was trying to put his dodgy past behind him and go legit.

The local press breathlessly covered the lurid details of the crime. With his exclusive access to key facts, this could have been the story that made Day’s career, but he was thrown into a tricky journalistic position once his connection to the victims was revealed. The reporter – who was called in to identify the bodies and, for a time, seems to have been considered a suspect – had become part of the story. Day’s editors tried to keep him off the case. So he set out to find the killer himself.

Day knew that, for years, Restis had been taking money for sex from a “farmer from Sheboygan.” She had described him as “weird, odd, crazy and a psycho.” She had even provided a name: William Heinen.

On the day the murders broke in the Milwaukee papers, Day was already in Sheboygan. He found Heinen’s home and got a photo of him in his driveway, but for some reason never confronted the suspected murderer. It was nearly a week before Heinen was arrested, and it’s not clear if the police were acting on a tip from Day. But Sykes is certain Day got to the killer first.

Days after Heinen’s arrest, Day published a firsthand account of his relationship with the slain mother and daughter. It is a painfully honest piece, opening with Day standing over their bodies in the morgue. “Their faces were not peaceful,” he wrote. “The death masks reflected a moment of ultimate terror, seemingly frozen in time.”

Day then proceeds to relay Lucita Restis’ turbulent life, never once passing judgment on a woman who would strike many as contemptible (“She was beautiful to her friends,” he noted). As he would for the rest of his life, Ned Day found redeeming qualities in the shabbiest of souls – particularly when their flaws were laid in contrast to corrupt and powerful players who exploited those beneath them. “[Lucita] was less than saintly,” he wrote. “But she remained a fascinating, beguiling and adamantly unrepentant sinner. … Most people would judge her to be a poor mother, but she dearly loved Tzu-Li. She fretted about her daughter’s education, finally enrolling her in a strict parochial school in Shorewood.

“I remember Tzu-Li to be at once charming, stubborn, wonderfully wise beyond her years and, like her mother, very adept at getting her way,” he said in tribute to his goddaughter. (It would come out in the trial that 10-year-old Tzu-Li had been killed trying to protect her mother.)

On July 14, three months after the murders, William Heinen was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder and sentenced to 50 years in state prison. The killer had been a wretchedly pathetic figure on the stand, and his public defender convinced the jury that his crimes were committed while he was not in his right mind. According to journalist William Janz, who covered the story, the lesser verdict outraged the entire city. And Ned Day.

Janz recalls that the incident became a life-changer for the reporter. “Ned told me in the courthouse that, after the case was over, he was going to hop in his old Volkswagen and head for Las Vegas, where he could find some adventure.” Just five months after Lucita and Tzu-Li Restis were killed, Ned Day left Milwaukee for Las Vegas. He was 31. “Half of Ned would have liked to have made it here, to be a respectable reporter for theMilwaukee Journal,” Charlie Sykes would recall. “But I think there were a lot of ghosts here for Ned, and that was one of the reasons he felt he had to leave.”

Michael “Max” Maxakuli was a Milwaukee club owner and entertainment promoter whom Ned Day had gotten to know in his days working for the mob. In 1970, Maxakuli migrated to Las Vegas, arriving in time to find a budding backgammon craze. He quickly capitalized on it, becoming not only a top backgammon professional but one of its chief proponents. By the time he lured Day to join him in 1976 with his tales of dames, money and endless sources of misadventure, Maxakuli had become an influential man.

One place where he had pull was the Valley Times, run by an iconoclastic and not entirely scrupulous editor named Bob Brown. The Valley Times set itself apart by covering the grittier stories that were ignored by the city’s leading daily papers, the Las Vegas Review-Journaland the Las Vegas Sun. In lieu of a decent salary, writers were given enormous freedom by Brown to chase whatever story attracted their interest, the gaudier or more provocative, the better.

Maxakuli gave Brown some of Day’s clips; according to legend, it was the pizza delivery guy story that sold Brown. Word came back to Day that, when he was ready to give up on Milwaukee, there was a newspaper job waiting for him in Las Vegas. Shortly after arriving in his new town, Day wrote a letter to his mother and grandmother back in Wisconsin that recognized this shot at redemption.

“I know that some things I have done in the past have served to dishonor you both, but those days are behind me,” he vowed. “I may never be rich, but I do plan to be the best damned newsman possible.”

The Valley Times was the perfect launching pad for Day. Given Brown’s loose leash and Maxakuli’s contacts, Day could plunge straight into the two realms that were the feisty newspaper’s area of focus: politics and the Mafia. Day familiarized himself with mob bosses just enough to start making their lives miserable, in a way that may have had even Frank Balistrieri feeling a twinge of unease back in Milwaukee.

Day’s timing in arriving in Las Vegas was exquisite. The mob kingpins – who had run the town since Bugsy Siegel helped it rise garishly from the desert in the ’40s – had worn out their welcome. Their violent and boorish behavior was perceived by the citizens and some increasingly powerful corporate interests as a barrier to Vegas becoming a world-class resort town. At the same time, years of work by federal agents to drive a stake through the heart of a crime operation, one with tentacles extending to every corner of the country (including Milwaukee), were about to pay off.

One of the mob’s remaining assets in Las Vegas was having a news media that historically had been either too afraid or too cozy with the crooks to stick their noses into their business. Ned Day, having nearly been shot dead for a $5 pizza, had no such fear. In fact, he went out of his way to use the most belittling language to describe the Mafia operatives.
Tony Spilotro (Wikipedia.org)

Case in point: Day persisted in referring to Tony Spilotro, the sociopath who was the real-life model for Joe Pesci’s character in Casino, as “a fireplug who walks like a man.” This was when he was not calling him Tony the Ant. Spilotro, suspected by the FBI to have been responsible for at least 22 murders, hated it.

In the first major profile on Day in Las Vegan magazine in 1981, Day – clearly reveling in being the subject of a story rather than its author – snarled out his defiance.

“I remember soon after I first got to town … my friend asked me to not talk about [Spilotro]. ‘Don’t even mention his name. He doesn’t like it when people talk about him,’ ” Day recalled. It was advice he rejected. “If what they say about Spilotro is true,” he told the magazine, “then he’s smart enough to know that if he gets angry with something I write, there’s no way he can rationally make a move against me because he stands to lose too much. If something happens to me, then ‘60 Minutes’ and Geraldo Rivera and all those jerks are going to be all over here like they were in Arizona.” Don Bolles, a Phoenix journalist, had been blown up in his car by the mob five years earlier.

The interviewer asked Day if he wasn’t giving Spilotro a little too much credit for his intelligence. “Maybe,” Day shrugged. “But that’s the risk. I didn’t say there weren’t any risks.”

Not content to just tweak the wiseguys, for good measure, Day also provoked the shadowiest and most powerful players in the U.S. government. In 1980, Day started writing stories about fantastic military experiments being conducted in a heavily protected zone of the Nevada desert known as Area 51. In one of the first stories ever written about the mysterious military base, he told of aircraft invisible to radar and even a type of ray gun being developed. In no time, the journalist found himself dragged into an interrogation room and placed under bright lights by FBI agents, angrily accusing him of endangering national security.

According to Knapp, Day was typically unimpressed. “Ned says, ‘Look, I’ve done you a favor. I’m working for a little paper in North Las Vegas. If a guy like me can find out these secrets, you can be damned sure the Russians already know about them. So get off my f**king back.’
“And they let him go. But that was his imperative: Get the story right and tell it, no matter what might happen.”

By the early 1980s, Day had become a media star in Las Vegas. In 1980, after moving on to the more prestigious Review-Journal, he took a second job as managing editor at KLAS, the top-rated CBS affiliate in Las Vegas. Bob Stoldal, who ran the TV newsroom, courted the apprehensive reporter over a series of nights at the infamous Crazy Horse topless saloon. They ended up writing his contract on a cocktail napkin.

Despite – or maybe because of – his distinctive Milwaukee twang, Day projected a colorful, everyman persona that was a natural for a market as wild and woolly as Las Vegas. Sykes got a firsthand look at Day’s new life in a visit to see his old comrade. “He had become king of that town. He went everywhere, knew everyone,” Sykes recalls. “We stayed up all night. I remember the sun coming up over the mountains outside the strip club he took me to.

“But he also admitted he was sometimes exhausted by the life, and he was relying on pharmaceutical aids to keep him going.”

It was a time when cocaine use was rampant. Day’s appetite for extracurricular decadence and for drinking prodigiously became part of his legend. Day – sometimes wearing suits he bought at Goodwill – brought strippers to formal events and partied openly with his nefarious sources, a dubious journalistic practice.

Friends describe a crazed weekend on nearby Lake Mead, everyone drunk and stoned and trying to water ski behind a houseboat, while Day was tended to – in various capacities – by a woman known only as Nurse Julie. It’s a gonzo romp straight out of Hunter S. Thompson, one of Day’s literary heroes. Others, however, suggest his reputation as a world-class carouser was somewhat overblown – usually by Ned Day.

“I don’t think Ned was ever as bad as he wanted people to think,” says Linda Faiss, who worked with Day at the Valley Times. “When he was out with the hookers and strippers, it wasn’t like he was going to disappear into some dark netherworld. He was an outrageous character, but he was a good person.” “His social life never affected his work,” says Mary Hausch, Day’s editor at the Review-Journal. “I know he was staying up all night, but I don’t recall him ever missing a deadline. I was amazed.”

George Knapp believes Day’s bluster masked a surprising sadness. “Ned was never alone, but he was profoundly lonely,” he says. “He could sink into pits of despair, particularly around the holidays. If he was between girlfriends, we’d end up drinking all night and solving the problems of the world.”

Day never quite left his hometown behind. In one column, he paid tribute to his grandmother, who had run a rough-and-tumble boarding house in Milwaukee. In another, he spoke of a Las Vegas visit from his mother and two of her 70-something gal pals from Florida. (Patricia Judice, described by friends as the love of Day’s life before her career took her to Los Angeles in 1980, observed mother and son together and says the specter of St. John’s still haunted their relationship.)

And a year before his death, Day devoted a column to a guy named Don Lutz, who had gone to St. Aloysius with Day. Lutz, whom Day recalled as a troublemaker as a kid, grew up to be a boxer with some promise before being sent to Vietnam. He came home with a Purple Heart and wounds he was told would keep him from fathering children. He married his high school sweetheart, became father to her kids, and then – lo and behold – a month after the wedding, his wife was pregnant with a little girl.

Lutz had worked six years in a Milwaukee halfway house for men returning from prison, and when the state shut that down, he moved to the county’s Children’s Detention Center.

Day, writing shortly after his most spectacular brush with the mob had earned him headlines, hailed once again the virtue of the Little Guy.

Many people have told me what a brave fellow I am [for provoking the mob]. I’ve suspected they’re wrong. Now I know they are.
Real courage is the kind shown by Don Lutz, the quiet, uncelebrated kind. …
It’s the kind of stomach you need to fight your way up the ladder, only to get knocked down by circumstances outside your control; and then, when nobody is looking, when nobody cares, to get back up and keep slugging it out.
That takes guts.

It was a working-class tribute on par with Royko’s finest. And it’s hard to read it and not think about Day’s own unlikely reinventions, from rich kid to military school stud to street punk to acclaimed journalist riding high 2,000 miles from home.

By 1987, Ned Day was 42 and prospering in his second decade in Las Vegas. He had been awarded a prime co-anchor spot at KLAS. A slew of writing awards kept his column a must-read in the Review-Journal. Publications ranging from Reader’s Digest to the New Yorkerwere feeling him out for employment. Maybe it was time to find a new market for his talents.

As he had chronicled with glee, by 1987, the mob was becoming a shadow of itself, thanks largely to the feds breaking up a casino skimming operation that would help get Frank Balistrieri sent to prison. Tony the Ant, who ran the skim, had disappeared by then and was eventually found buried alive in a cornfield in Indiana.
findagrave.com

As it was all coming undone for the wiseguys, somebody firebombed Ned Day’s car. Naturally, the car wasn’t insured. He called it the greatest day of his life, mourning only the fact that his favorite golf clubs were in the backseat.

Day had fallen in love with Mary Ottman, a woman described by all as being of a caliber far removed from the frowsy company he had been keeping. No doubt with her influence, he began a humorous series of television reports about his efforts to get in shape. Decades of smoking, drinking, drugging and appalling eating habits had brought him to a point where his doctor told him – on camera – that he was killing himself.

A vacation would also do him some good, so he and Ottman left for Hawaii toward the end of August 1987. It was, by all accounts, a glorious trip, though Day persisted in writing his column when he was supposed to be relaxing, filing it via FedEx. On the morning of Sept. 3, 1987, Day and Ottman were snorkeling in the waters near Honolulu when Day was struck by what would be declared a fatal heart attack, perhaps precipitated by his unhealthy lifestyle. While there are those to this day who promote the possibility that the mob finally got him, there is not a trace of evidence to support it. Although it is a testament to the guy’s life that it feels possible.

Buttressing that feeling is that, when Day’s final column arrived at the Review-Journal on the day he died, he had whimsically implored the paper to hang onto it “as a potential historical record in the event that I … sleep with the fishes tonight.”

The reaction to Day’s death in Vegas was stunning. Nevada Sen. Harry Reid hailed Day as “an uneducated man who wrote like he had a Ph.D. …. He was tough and fair.” Then-Gov. Richard Bryan declared Day “not only an outstanding journalist but an outstanding citizen as well.” Former Gov. Grant Sawyer called Day “the most influential man in Nevada.” Among media types in town, the common consensus was that Day had influenced a generation of journalists.

Also among the mourners were the Little Guys – cab drivers and casino workers and ladies of the night – there to honor Day for having spoken up for them. And a phalanx of weeping young women in skimpy black dresses, each of them behaving as if they had been the love of Ned Day’s life. And alone at the back of the service stood Max Maxakuli, whose life started falling apart in 1982 and who would ultimately do time in prison for selling cocaine. When Ned Day’s star began rising just as Maxakuli’s started going bad, Day distanced himself from the friend who brought him in from Milwaukee and got him his first job. Maxakuli died in 2006.

Day’s small headstone was inscribed with the jaunty tagline he used at the end of his TV reports: “I thought you’d like to know, I’m Ned Day.” Every year on Day’s birthday, George Knapp visits his mentor and leaves behind a bottle of Jack Daniel’s and a Diet 7UP – the only things the journalist tended to have in his refrigerator.

A moving addendum would be woven into Day’s story within days of his death. It turned out a daughter had been conceived in Hawaii. She graduated from college in 2010 with a double major in history and Spanish, and is thinking about medical school and maybe a future helping women in Latin American countries. According to everyone who has met her, she has all of her father’s – and grandfather’s – charisma and drive.

Ned Day’s death received little notice in Milwaukee. The connection to his once-famous father had faded into obscurity, and the sort of folks Day lurked around with in his mob days may not have wanted to implicate themselves by saying they knew him. Or they were dead. But Charlie Sykes believes something of Day's spirit was left behind in this town as well. “I think for everyone who worked with Ned, it changed them in the way they went about their job,” says Sykes. “They went about it with a bit more determination and aggressiveness, but with a little more sense of fun, too.”

Those qualities stood out in everything Day did, but perhaps never more so than in the column he wrote after his car was firebombed. “Can’t you guys get it right?” he joyously needled the mob. “It’s not the car you want to annihilate. It’s the freakin’ typewriter, for cryin’ out loud. And, oh yes, kiss my rosy, red patootie.”

Tom Matthews is a Wauwatosa-based freelancer who has profiled Howie Epstein, Badfinger and the BoDeans for Milwaukee Magazine. Write to him atletters@milwaukeemag.com.

Other of my related mob posts:
"Mr. Fancy Pants" Balistrieri - Tracking Milwaulee's most dangerous mobster
Benjamin "Lefty Guns" Ruggerio-The real story of the "wise guy"
The Beef That Didn't Moo - Wisconsin Ties to the Mob
Tales of the Milwaukee Mob and Two Cigarette Men!
Married to the Daughter of a Milwaukee Mob Boss-Our Pediatrician!
The Milwaukee Queen Bee of Organized Crime
Tale of a Failed Milwaukee Mob Hit!
Lieutenant Uhura (of the Starship "Enterprise") - close encounters with the Chicago and Milwaukee Mob!
Part Two: The Milwaukee Mob and Lieutenant Uhura (Star Trek)
The New York Mob and Iowa Beef - Part 1
The New York Mob and Iowa Beef Processors - Part II
Sally Papia - A life lived on the edge
The Milwakee Mob Hit on Anthony Biernat
The Milwaukee Mob Hit on August Palimisano
New York's "Joe Bananas" meets Milwaukee's Frank "Mad Bomber" Balistrieri
The Life and Times of a Chicago Mafia Hit Man