Chicago Tribune
SUSPECTED PORN BOSS DIES IN HIS APARTMENT
By John O`Brien.
October 7, 1988
Michael Glitta, 68, known to law enforcement
officials as local overseer of crime syndicate pornography rackets, has
died in his apartment at 1221 N. Dearborn St., his attorney, Adam Bourgeois, said
Thursday. Glitta, who had a history of heart ailments, suffered a fatal heart attack
Wednesday night, according to Bourgeois.
Glitta, who operated a magazine sales firm at 1112 N. Milwaukee
Ave., had syndicate ties going back nearly 30 years, according to Chicago and federal law
enforcement officials. In 1982, the Chicago Crime Commission said he supervised
pornography operations for the mob in an area that ranged from the Near North Side to the
Wisconsin state line.
Crime Commission records say he got his start in
vice rackets by running B-girl strip joints in Chicago and later branched out to embrace
X-rated films and cassette tapes. Mob watchers said Glitta reported directly to Vincent
Solano, a labor union leader and reputed rackets boss for the North Side and the northern
suburbs.
Police and federal officials speculated Thursday that the list of
likely successors to Glitta`s porn interests includes Johnny Matassa, a Solano protege, as
well as Orlando Catanese and Leo Weintraub, two men described as manufacturers and sellers
of books, magazines, films and sexual paraphernalia, and business associates of mob figures.
Matassa, 37, recently has been observed regularly
accompanying Glitta to meetings with Solano, according to federal investigators. Solano
oversees Local 1 of the Laborers Union, and Matassa is a $75,000-a-year executive with
Laborers Union Local 2, whose members include sewer and tunnel workers.
Although Glitta was regarded by authorities as the mob`s top man
in the distribution of pornography, there have been recent indications his power was
waning. A recently disclosed FBI investigation, described in a court affidavit, contended
that reputed mob terrorist Frankie Schweihs had moved in on one North
Wells Street pornography shop and was planning to take over another. Both would normally
have been in Glitta`s territory, police said.
With federal court approval, the FBI secretly taped conversations
between Schweihs and a former porn dealer from whom he was collecting protection money on
behalf of the mob, the affidavit said. On one tape, the dealer, concerned about being
caught in a mob territorial dispute, asked Schweihs to talk to Glitta. Schweihs told him
that he didn`t talk to Glitta, but to Glitta`s boss, who was not named in the
conversation.
As a result of the tapes, Schweihs was charged
with extortion. At the time of his death, Glitta was awaiting trial in Chicago on federal
charges of illegally possessing two .38 caliber revolvers.
Glitta`s family said a funeral was planned for Monday.
Copyright 1998, The Tribune Company.