Kingpin of St. Louis
Involved in local politics as a young adult, by the 1950s Wortman reportedly had extensive political connections on both sides of the Missouri-Illinois border, including Illinois politician and state auditor
Orville Enoch Hodge, who was convicted of embezzling more than $1 million in taxes in 1956. That same year, Wortman assaulted an IRS agent at The Paddock tavern, which led to his being audited. On February 26, 1962, he was charged with two associates of conspiracy to evade taxes, but all three were eventually acquitted. In the mid-1950s, Wortman moved from his ranch-style brick home in
Collinsville at 2 Crown Drive to a new house in the east end of Collinsville. This new "fortress" was surrounded by a water-filled moat with the only access being a narrow bridge. During the 1960s, a Black street gang known as The Warlords began moving in on Wortman's territory, and in one incident threw a hand grenade into McCoy's Tavern. With the threat of retaliation, members of Wortman's organization were able to intimidate the street gang into backing off. ==Later years==