Herbie Blitzstein

Herbie Blitzstein, who helped Anthony Spilotro oversee Chicago mob interests for more than a decade in Las Vegas, met a violent end, much like his crony.

  1. Back in the old days, Fat Herbie Blitzstein was a somebody, a man to step aside from, under Tony Spilotro, back in the 1980's when Spilotro and his crew ruled Vegas. Nicky the Ant Spilotro was Chicago representative in Vegas and since Fat Herbie was Tony the Hat's top loan shark, Fat Herbie could do what he wanted to do, say what he wanted to.
  2. The Herbie Blitzstein Murder Trial By Allan May When Chicago mobster Anthony “Tony the Ant” Spilotro was sent to Las Vegas to oversee the Chicago Outfit’s interests, he brought along some people from Chicago to provide muscle for him. One of them was Herbert Blitzstein. A mountain of a man at six foot, 300 pounds, he was known as “Fat.

A brief moment with Chicago outfit and Tony 'The Ant' Spilotro associate Frank Cullotta. Frank and Tony worked for the Chicago Outfit in Las Vegas, guarding. That notoriety dated back to the days when Herbert 'Fat Herbie' Blitzstein was best known as an associate of mob enforcer Anthony 'Tony the Ant' Spilotro. One of them was Herbert Blitzstein. A mountain of a man at six foot, 300 pounds, he was known as “Fat Herbie,” or the “Fat Hebe.” In William Roemer’s “The Enforcer,” he states Blitzstein was one of the mobsters the FBI tested during the early days of the FBI’s Top Hoodlum Program.

A business associate who went to Blitzstein's townhouse Tuesday morning found him shot to death inside. Blitzstein had been shot once by an unknown assailant, police said.

The 61-year-old Blitzstein, known as 'Fat Herbie,' recently had worked at a used car lot. He died much the same as did Spilotro, who was found beaten to death along with his brother, Michael, in an Illinois cornfield in 1986.

'They were always together,' said lawyer Oscar Goodman, who occasionally represented Spilotro and Blitzstein. 'They were good friends and good fellas together. It's a terrible shame they both had to meet such tragic endings.'

Blitzstein had lived quietly since his release from prison in 1991 until a few months ago, when state gaming officials began an effort to ban him from casinos. Blitzstein had served five years in prison on fraud charges

Herbie Blitzstein

Blitzstein was Spilotro's closest associate during the 1970s and early 1980s, when Spilotro ran operations for the Chicago mob in Las Vegas.

He was indicted on racketeering charges along with Spilotro in 1985, but they were dropped when a witness declined to testify against him.

After Spilotro was killed in 1986 while awaiting retrial on the racketeering charges, organized crime influence waned in Las Vegas.

Metro homicide Lt. Wayne Petersen said Blitzstein was shot in the upper body, but he declined to say where. He said the body was found in the living room of the townhouse, which Blitzstein rented. Petersen said Blitzstein was last heard from about 7 p.m. the night before.

'I can't understand why anyone would want to take the time to kill Herbie,' Goodman said.


Herbert Fat Herbie Blitzstein

By Mike Hudson

Gone: Sonny Nicoletti, former
reputed head of the mob in Niagara Falls.
Legit? The late, Joe Todaro, Sr. (Right) former reputed head of the mob in Buffalo with son, Joe Todaro, Jr. (Left). Both became fabulously successful pizza and chicken wing purveyors.
Bobby Panaro, who denies he has any involvement with the Mafia, has been widely rumored to be the new boss of the Buffalo mob.
Mafia man? Did Steve “The Whale” Cino order a hit on the late Herbert “Fat Herbie” Blitzstein?

With the ground covering Joe Todaro and Sonny Nicoletti still fresh, both law enforcement and the legion of mafia buffs who make their home in Western New York have busied themselves trying to figure out who might next head up the tattered remains of the once formidable Magaddino crime family.
I’ve been covering organized crime in Buffalo for the better part of 15 years. There are some great stories, lots of colorful characters and some genuinely decent people who have been negatively affected by this kind of speculation.
Personally, I don’t get it. Because what nobody has been asking is “why anyone would want to be the head of the Buffalo mob?”
Even the most optimistic observers say the old Magaddino outfit has but 20 made guys left at most, and the majority of them have long since qualified for Social Security.
The formerly subservient Utica and Hamilton, Ont., crews have their own problems, with alleged Utica crime lord Russ Carcone still reeling from a 2000 shoplifting bust and the Canadian crew as dead as charity since the assassination of John “Johnny Pops” Papaglia in 1997.
Given all the agita that goes along with being a mob boss in a third-rate American city, is it really worth becoming a target both for law enforcement and any two-bit wannabe punk looking to make a name for himself?
Just ask the highly respected Papaglia, whose storied career ended when he got shot in the back of the head by a bumbling Irish alcoholic named Ken Murdoch who took the contract for just $2,000 and 40 grams of cocaine.
Even Todaro, who the FBI claims was the last official don of the Buffalo family, reportedly gave up his position in 2006 in order to spend more time with his family and enjoy the fruits of the lucrative La Nova pizza business he founded decades earlier.
The leading contender for the top spot, Frank “Butchie Bifocals” BiFulco, was alleged to have been a feared enforcer and a capo in the Magaddino organization going back to the 1960s. But he’s currently indisposed, serving a 10-year, 10-month stretch in Club Fed for the 2001 torching of a leased Nissan in the parking lot of Walden Galleria.
According to the FBI, Leonard “The Calzone” Falzone took over as acting boss of the family when Todaro stepped down in 2006, after years of serving as an enforcer, hit man and finally a capo in the organization. Falzone has of course denied this.
Still, the feds say Falzone was ultimately named consigliere to the Buffalo family in 1987.
Aside from a misdemeanor conviction for possession of stolen property in 1971, Falzone had never been in trouble with the law until the mid-1990s, when a federal investigation of Laborers Local 210 in Buffalo put him in the spotlight. Falzone was then an administrator of the local’s $80 million pension fund, and he became a huge target for the investigators.
At the time, Buffalo crime circles were lousy with paid informants, stool pigeons and squealers of every stripe. And it didn’t take the feds long to put together a case based on the allegations of these disreputable individuals.
The RICO and RICO conspiracy charges set forth in Falzone’s indictment covered a period of time from approximately September, 1985 through August, 1989, during which Falzone was alleged to have engaged in the business of loansharking - charging extremely high interest rates on loaned money.
In 1995, Salvatore 'Sammy' Spano told a federal jury he needed Falzone's protection and approval to establish a loansharking operation in Las Vegas. His testimony was the latest piece in the case federal prosecutors were trying to build against Falzone, who stood accused of being a renowned mob enforcer who escaped numerous investigations without a conviction.
'I asked him (Falzone) if I could move to Vegas and if I could use his name while out in Vegas,' Spano said on the witness stand. Also testifying against Falzone were the contemptible Ron Fino and Ronald 'Ronnie' Raccuia, a degenerate gambler and onetime Buffalo Common Council Chief of Staff.
Falzone was tried in the local media as well. Following his conviction, the Buffalo News editorialists felt vindicated. 'Over the years, Falzone had developed a reputation among some as untouchable,” an unsigned editorial read. “No more. This felony conviction cracks his slick reputation for invincibility.'
The other name currently being batted about as a possible successor to Todaro is that of successful businessman Bobby Panaro, a Las Vegas area resident for the past four decades who spends some time in Buffalo.
Like Falzone, Panaro was also ousted from Laborers Local 210 for allegedly associating with organized crime figures. At age 57, he was sentenced in 1999 by U.S. District Judge Philip Pro to 7-1/2 years in prison for conspiring to extort longtime mob associate Herbert 'Fat Herbie' Blitzstein, who was slain in January 1997.
At the time, Panaro was running an auto dealership known as Good Fellows. 'They're giving me 7 1/2 years,' he told reporters following his conviction. 'For what? What did I do?'
A jury acquitted Panaro of all charges related to the Blitzstein slaying, but the four-week trial left him branded a 'mafia soldier.' 'I'm no mob soldier,' he said. 'I never have been. I never would be.'
Federal prosecutors had accused Panaro and Steve “The Whale” Cino of authorizing the Blitzstein killing as part of a plot to take over the victim's business activities in Las Vegas.
At the trial, prosecutors described Panaro as a member of the Buffalo family and Cino as a member of the Los Angeles mob. 'Because I'm Italian?' Panaro asked. 'Get out of here.'
There are people in law enforcement, perhaps, whose jobs depend on whether or not there is a mafia, a “Cosa Nostra,” organized crime, or whatever you want to call it, in the city of Buffalo, New York.
And there are other people, lots of them, who study mob politics and machinations in the same way that Civil War buffs examine Sherman’s March to the Sea.
But if you ask me, I think Leonard Falzone and Bobby Panaro need to be head of the Buffalo crew like they need another hole in the head.

Herbie Blitzstein Las Vegas

Niagara Falls Reporterwww.niagarafallsreporter.com

Jan 08 , 2013