Frank Abbandando
Frank Abbandando (July 11, 1910 – February 19, 1942), nicknamed "The Dasher", was a New York City contract killer who committed many murders as part of the infamous Murder, Inc. gang. His preferred killing method was to stab his victims through the heart with an ice pick. After a trial and conviction for murdering a Brooklyn loan shark, he was executed in the electric chair at Sing Sing on February 19, 1942.
Frank Abbandando | |
---|---|
Born | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. | July 11, 1910
Died | February 19, 1942 31) Sing Sing, Ossining, New York, U.S. | (aged
Resting place | St. John Cemetery (Queens)[1] |
Other names | The Dasher |
Occupation | Hitman |
Criminal status | Deceased |
Spouse(s) | Jennie DeLuca |
Children | Lawrence Abbandando Frank Abbandando Jr. |
Parent(s) | Lorenzo Abbondandolo Rosaria Famighetti |
Conviction(s) | First degree murder |
Criminal penalty | Death by electrocution |
Early years
Abbandando's parents, Lorenzo Abbondandolo and Rosaria Famighetti, emigrated from Avellino, Italy to New York City. He was born in New York on July 11, 1910. Abbandando was one of twelve children (of which seven did not survive childhood). His brothers and sisters were: Filomena (December 10, 1907 – December 6, 1970); Rocco (December 22, 1910 – October 19, 1912); Anna (June 25, 1912 – October 13, 1984); Carolina (1914 – September 16, 1915); Theresa (October 1, 1915 – April 11, 1997); Carmela (1917 – April 30, 1924); Rocco (the second, a mob associate; September 7, 1918 – March 31, 1976); Antonio (March 15, 1920 – April 6, 1981); Twins: Angelina and Arcangelo (August 1921 – October 18, 1921); Angelina (the second) (1923 – May 2, 1925).
Criminal career
Abbandando began as a teenager extorting money from shop owners by threatening to torch their shops. By his twenties, he had joined a street gang in the Ocean Hill section of Brooklyn where he quickly became a lieutenant of Harry "Happy" Maione. Abbandando organized gambling, loan sharking, and extortion rackets for the gang, as well as committing murders. In 1928, Abbandando was convicted of beating a New York police officer and was sent to reform school in Elmira, New York, where he demonstrated skill at baseball and received the nickname "The Dasher".[2][3]
While Abbandando was said to be a connoisseur of fine clothes and fancy cars, he was also a habitual sexual predator who would drive around his neighborhoods of Brownsville and Ocean Hill looking for young women to rape. The prosecutor at his murder trial said that Abbandando had all but admitted one rape, to which Abbandando replied, "Well, that one doesn't count really—I married the girl later."[3]
Contract killer
In the early 1930s, New York's Five Families began using gangs to commit their murders. This was because they had reformed their operating structures following the vicious, high-profile Castellammarese War which had made front page news for its brutality. With the new peace, the mobs now wanted to keep a low public profile. By using contract killers, the Five Families were better protected from public and law enforcement scrutiny. These killers were led by Louis "Lepke" Buchalter, the young leader of the Jewish gang known as the "Gorilla Boys". With the growth in racketeering, Buchalter's small informal network of killers grew into a group of 250 criminals who were also involved in narcotics, labor unions, and other rackets such as gambling and prostitution. Buchalter called his group "The Combination" but the New York Press labeled it "Murder, Inc." Unlike the Five Families, which required members to be of Sicilian or Southern Italian ancestry, Murder Inc. was a diverse ethnic gang that included Jews, Italians, and Irish killers.
Abbandando had become associated with Murder Inc. in the 1920s. By the early 30s, he was reputed to have killed at least 30 people, mostly in Brooklyn, for a payment of about $500 per murder. In September 1931, Abbandando helped Buchalter and gang member Abe Reles eliminate the Shapiro Brothers, a rival outfit from the Lower East Side of Manhattan who controlled the garment industry in Brooklyn.
In 1937, Abbandando assisted in the murder of George Rudnick, a loan shark in Brooklyn. Reles had ordered Rudnick's murder because he had received information that Rudnick was a police informant. Using an ice pick and a meat cleaver, Abbandando and several other gang members strangled Rudnick, stabbed him 63 times, and crushed his head inside a garage. No one was arrested for the crime. In February 1939, Abbandando and others killed mobster Felice Esposito. The contract was issued because he had been a prosecution witness in a mob murder trial 17 years earlier.
Trial and execution
By the 1940s, Murder, Inc. would be severely weakened after the arrests and convictions of its leaders, like Buchalter and Jacob Shapiro, and top hitmen such as Charles "The Bug" Workman and Emanuel "Mendy" Weiss. Its downfall began in 1940 when Abe Reles had turned state witness after being indicted for murder. His testimonies against fellow Murder, Inc. soon led to the arrest of Abbandando for the murder of George Rudnick in 1937.
In May 1940, Abbandando was put on trial for murder along with co-defendants Harry "Happy" Maione and Harry "Pittsburgh Phil" Strauss. Abbandando was so confident that his allies would succeed in fixing the verdict, he even whispered a threat into the judge's ear while he was on the witness stand. However, to his surprise, they were all convicted of Rudnick's murder, but the verdicts were overturned on appeal.
In April 1941 Abbandando, along with Maione (Strauss had been subsequently convicted in September 1940 of killing Jewish mobster Irving Feinstein in 1939), went on trial a second time. This time he was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to death. Abbandando spent the next nine months in Sing Sing Prison in Ossining, New York. On February 19, 1942, he was executed using "Old Sparky", the electric chair at Sing Sing. In the moments up to his execution, Abbandando continued to mock and curse his guards. It was reported he displayed no fear and seemed to find a morbid humor in the proceedings.[4]
A mass was said for him at Our Lady of Loretto Church in New York where his brother Rocco assaulted a news photographer. He was buried in the family plot in St John's Cemetery in Queens, New York City.[5]
Aftermath
After Abbandando's conviction, six other members of Murder, Inc., including Buchalter and Maione, were also convicted of murder and executed based on Reles' testimony. On November 12, 1941, while under police protection, Reles fell out a hotel window in Coney Island. The official ruling was that Reles died trying to climb down bedsheets to the street below; however, it was rumored that the Cosa Nostra raised $100,000 to bribe Reles's guards to shove him out the window.
With Buchalter's death, Albert "Lord High Executioner" Anastasia, a made man in the Cosa Nostra, took over Murder, Inc. As a reaction to government informants in Murder, Inc., the New York crime families started using their own members and associates, who were more easily controlled, to carry out murders. Murder, Inc. soon faded away.
Personal life
Abbandando married Jennie DeLuca, a hairdresser from Ocean Hill, at his parents' urging. He had two sons. Both became involved in organized crime.
Lawrence was born out of wedlock on December 20, 1927. He became a mob associate who died of cancer in North Miami Beach, Florida on March 25, 1995.
His younger brother, Frank Abbandando Jr., who was born on October 17, 1935, was a Gambino crime family associate who was murdered in Florida on December 22, 1995. The 60-year old mobster was run over as he crossed Biscayne Boulevard in North Miami Beach by Rocco Napolitano, the brother of Aniello Napolitano, a small time drug dealer who might have been executed on the orders of Abbandando Jr.. After running him down, Napolitano fired several shots into Abbandando as he lay on the ground. Napolitano told police that he had shot him out of revenge for his brother. He was sentenced to life in prison. Abbandando Jr. was buried in Ocean Hill, Brooklyn.[6]
References
- Sec. 12, range P, grave 75, St. John’s Cemetery, Middle Village, Queens, N.Y.C., Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Locations 253-254). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
- Turkus and Feder, p. 109
- Nash, p. 1
- Flowers and Flowers, p. 63
- Resting Places: The Burial Places of 14,000 Famous Persons, by Scott Wilson
- Iannuzzi, Joseph (1998). Joe Dogs: The Life and Crimes of a Mobster. Pocket Books. ISBN 9780671797539.
Cited works
- Flowers, R. Barri; Flowers, H. Loraine (2005). "Male Murderers". Murders in the United States: Crimes, Killers and Victims of the Twentieth Century. McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-2075-8.
- Nash, Jay Robert (1993). World Encyclopedia of Organized Crime. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-80535-9.
- Turkus, Burton B.; Feder, Sid (2003). Murder, Inc.: The Story of "The Syndicate". Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-81288-6.
Further reading
- Davis, John H. Mafia Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the Gambino Crime Family, New York: HarperCollins, 1993.ISBN 0-061-09184-7
- Iannuzzi, Joseph and James Morton. Joe "Dogs" Iannuzzi: The Life and Times of a Real Life Mobster. Simon & Schuster, 1993. ISBN 0-671-79752-2
- Raab, Selwyn. Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. New York: St. Martin Press, 2005. ISBN 0-312-30094-8