LOW-KEY SENDOFF FOR ACCARDO
By John O`Brien
May 30, 1992
In another time, there assuredly would have been flower cars and
many more mourners. Maybe even a wiseguy like Sam DeStefano, who
delighted in making faces at the detectives riding right on his tail to
the cemetery.
Pallbearers from among the deceased`s friends could be expected to
smile, even wave to the photographers, not turn away or slink off. And those from public
life, the glamor people of show business, politics and even organized labor and the sport
of boxing, they would be there, some of them signing autographs for the curious gathered
behind the sweeping driveway of Chicago`s Montclair-Lucania Funeral Home to see "a
real somebody" get a grand sendoff.
The funerals of Paul Ricca, Felix Alderisio and
Sam Giancana-three successors of Al Capone in the 1950s, `60s and
`70s-had resembled those mob funerals of yesteryear, drawing mourners and federal agents
searching for license plate numbers to copy down.
Times change.
On Friday, when the late and barely lamented Anthony J. Accardo
was carried to his final reward, the only flowers for the reputed boss of Chicago`s
underworld were two sprays of yellow and pink roses inside the slate gray
hearse. The visible mourners, aside from immediate family members trailing behind in five
Cadillac limousines, consisted of two old pals from Accardo`s old Grand Avenue
neighborhood on the West Side. Police identified them as Joseph Amato,
84, of Lake Zurich, a reputed crime boss in Lake and McHenry Counties, and Rocco DeGrazio,
89, of Wood Dale, a retired Chicago florist.
Years ago, when Accardo and his wife, Clarice, traveled abroad,
DeGrazio`s brother, former Chicago police Lt. Anthony DeGrazio, had accompanied the couple
as a sort of bodyguard. There was no sign of any notables, except perhaps two of the
pallbearers, Ernest Kumerow, Accardo`s son-in-law and president of Local
1001 of the International Laborers Union, and his son, Eric, a Chicago Bears football
player.
The no-shows, who stayed away more to avoid
photographers than out of respect for the family`s wish for privacy, included John
DiFronzo and Sam Carlisi, reputed to share power as the mob`s street bosses.
Amato and DeGrazio did not linger to pay respects, and they did
not attend a brief prayer service presided over by a Catholic priest. The priest came and
went through a back door of the funeral home, 6901 W. Belmont Ave. "He would have
wanted it that way. Quiet, no hoopla," an FBI agent said of Accardo,
who died Wednesday at 86 and whose reputed crime career began under Al Capone in the
1920s. "I`m really surprised," said Bob Cody, a mob expert during his days as a
Chicago police detective. "Sure, the family wants privacy. So what
else is new. But here`s a guy who must have had a thousand friends here and around the
country, and now nothing," he said.
If Cody was disappointed, the crowd of about 80 onlookers didn`t
seem to mind. "It is not every day that a Tony Accardo dies," remarked Josephine
Kohler, a neighborhood woman who stood for two hours, waiting outside the funeral home.
"This is exciting."
Cody and his police companions tailed the cortege to Queen of
Heaven Cemetery, Hillside, and watched as Accardo`s casket of polished wood was carried
inside a mausoleum. Then, when no one was looking, some spectators moved
to the hearse and picked up a handful of yellow and pink roses that had fallen from the
casket. "A keepsake," said one, slipping the rose into his pocket.
Copyright 1998, The Tribune Company.