Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Cleveland crime family, also known as the Scalish crime family or the Cleveland Mafia, is an Italian-American Mafia crime family based in Cleveland, Ohio, and throughout the Greater Cleveland area. The organization formed during the 1900s, and early leadership turned over frequently due to a series of power grabs and assassinations.
Frank Joseph Battisti (October 4, 1922 – October 19, 1994) was a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. Battisti's career featured groundbreaking—and sometimes controversial—rulings, notably his finding in 1976 that the Cleveland public school system was guilty of racial ...
John Bryant and Garfield Heights, Ohio police Sgt. Dennis Glivar 53 Dennis B. McGuire: White 53 M January 16, 2014 Preble: Joy Stewart 54 Ronald Ray Phillips: White 43 M July 26, 2017 Summit: Sheila Marie Evans 55 Gary Wayne Otte: White 45 M September 13, 2017 Cuyahoga: Robert Wasikowski and Sharon Kostura 56 Robert J. Van Hook: White 58 M July ...
John Nardi (January 21, 1916 − May 17, 1977) was an influential associate of the Cleveland crime family who was involved in labor racketeering in Cleveland, Ohio. At the end of his criminal career, Nardi turned against his crime family in a bloody gang war.
Cleveland. [1] On April 1, 1840 the Israelitic Society petitioned Cleveland's City Council for a half-acre Jewish section of the city's Erie Street Cemetery. That request denied, on July 7, 1840 it purchased 1 acre (4,000 m 2) of land on Willett Street (now Fulton Street) in the Ohio City neighborhood of Cleveland, west of the Cuyahoga River ...
Cleveland Heights is a city in Cuyahoga County, Ohio, United States. The population was 45,312 at the 2020 census . One of Cleveland 's historic streetcar suburbs , it was founded as a village in 1903 and a city in 1921.
Pages in category "People from Cleveland Heights, Ohio" The following 49 pages are in this category, out of 49 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The Beverly Brothers (Mike Enos and Wayne Bloom), wrestlers billed as hailing from Shaker Heights [11] Leon Bibb, television anchor [12] Keith Black, neurosurgeon [13] John Blackburn, songwriter [14] Sara J. Bloomfield, executive director of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum [15] [16] Roberts Blossom, actor and poet [17]