Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Upon Guardalabene's death from natural causes on February 6, 1921, his son Giovanni Battista "Peter" Guardalabene became boss of the Milwaukee crime family until 1924, when he turned over control of the family to a distant relative, Giuseppe "Big Joe" D'Amato. [5] D'Amato died from pneumonia at the age of 41, on March 28, 1927. [5]
Milwaukee: October 16, 2007: 2: R&B singer and record producer fatally shot at recording studio [8] Wisconsin Sikh temple shooting: Oak Creek: August 5, 2012: 8: Mass shooting at Sikh temple [9] Azana Spa shooting: Brookfield: October 21, 2012: 4: Estranged husband of worker entered spa in suburban Milwaukee, four killed including the wife and ...
Frank Peter Balistrieri (May 27, 1918 – February 7, 1993) was the crime boss of the Milwaukee crime family from 1961 to 1993. He was a central figure in the skimming of Las Vegas casinos during the 1970s and 1980s, and served several prison sentences.
Opinion: D'Vontaye Mitchell's death, captured on a by-stander's video, replays a familiar American script of a Black family crying out for justice.
The Milwaukee County Courthouse, Sept. 13, 2023 A jury deliberated for only 10 minutes Wednesday and found a 46-year-old Milwaukee man guilty of first-degree intentional homicide for the brutal ...
Police handcuffed and beat Sayon, who later died. His death was ruled a homicide due to "asphyxia by compression of the chest and neck while rear-handcuffed and prone on the ground". [71] August 27, 1994 Edward Mallet: 25 Phoenix, Arizona: Edward, who had both legs amputated, died after Phoenix Police officers pepper sprayed, and placed in a ...
The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner's Office determined on Aug. 2 that Mitchell's death was a homicide that was caused by "restraint asphyxia and toxic effects of cocaine and methamphetamine."
With a crew of former gang members he conducted a multi-year re-study of Milwaukee gangs, which led to a second edition of People & Folks. In the first edition, Hagedorn predicted that if jobs were not created Milwaukee’s gangs would entrench in the illegal economy. This prediction, unfortunately, was supported by his subsequent research.