Your daily dose of old world gangsters who were rubbed out doing what they loved most. Plus some other fun stuff.
Sunday, March 17, 2019
Rocky Mountain Die (Colorado)
On this St. Patrick's Day back in 1932, four of Denver, Colorado's providers of intoxicating spirits were driving about town. At the wheel was Vincent Mortellaro, unknown to police, but assumed to be a bootlegger. In the back were Joe Barry and Roxy Stone, both known gangsters. Riding shotgun was Mortellaro's brother in-law, Frank Mortelli. Speaking of shotguns, as the quartet motored along, a black sedan pulled up along side them and a shotgun barked. The blast instantly killed Mortellaro and, as his car careened into the curb, the black auto pulled up along side and opened fire again. Barry and Stone were slightly wounded as they jumped out and ran. Mortelli was injured by the volley that killed his brother in-law, but not seriously.
Stone was still recovering from a wound he received a week previous and Barry lost two other associates, Sam and Pete Carlino, to gangster bullets a year or so earlier.
Labels:
1932,
bootlegger,
Carlino Brothers,
Colorado,
Denver,
Denver Colorado,
Fank Mortelli,
gangster,
Joe Barry,
mob hit,
Pete Carlino,
Roxy Stone,
rubbed out,
Sam Carlino,
shotgun,
Vincent Mortellaro
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