Oh Kenji, Kenji... The way you portray this stuff reminds me of how I used think. That was prior to the day when a young law school graduate, looking for a slot at a big firm, took on a job that was too hot for the company to ingratiate himself with one of the partners. The client was Ronald Jarrett, Allah rest his soul because Christ knows that guy is being ripped to pieces and put back together again in hell right now. Nice guy as long as you kept him away from your wife/daughter/grandmother/disabled nieces, and as long as you and no one you knew owed him and anyone he knew money.
Now, I have a pretty good idea about this one. Your sources are your own ears, you say, but I tend to think they're your own eyes as well, and the little bits of newspapers, books and film that have passed before them. Because in a sordid career of defending rats, thugs and scoundrels, I've figured out a probability scenario for sifting through Federal bullshit. In particular, indictments tend to make people worse than they are. So when the most
reputable federal prosecutor in the entire country corrects what has become a part of mythology,
it's not to make his adversaries' lives any easier. As a matter of professional curiosity, and to see if what I was hearing was bullshit or not, I've gone through the trouble of obtaining the coronor's report. I can still dig it up if you like, though you won't like what you see because it's inconclusive. The reason that it was originally believed that the Spilotros may have been buried alive is because there were no knife or bullet wounds in their bodies. That's it. The grave, in fact, was too shallow: they could have literally climbed out of it. When Tocco and his friends crossed the line to Indiana, the Spilotros were already dead, and it's highly unlikely they were alive when they left that basement in Bensenville.
I have what I've heard and now what prosecutors are arguing. You have what they argued, what's been portrayed and what even Roemer would only place an "allegedly" on.
As for the rest of it, I see the appeal of HollywoodMafia.com rather than GuysDrivingVansShakingDownStripClubs.com. You don't need to be a marketing guru to plant your flag on that one. But this is you and me talking and we can be serious with one another. Frank Schweihs--he's a living symbol of what they've become, as are, in a sense, you. Frank was a little guy? Well, he wound up that way, the same as you did, leaning on dodgy pornographers after the glory days had passed. That's how they all are these days.