In 1960, the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly chaired by Senator
Estes Kefauver held hearings into
organized crime and professional boxing. It was revealed that the IBC had ties to
Mafioso Frankie Carbo, a soldier in New York's
Lucchese Family who had been a gunman with
Murder, Inc. At the time of the hearings, Carbo was imprisoned on
Riker's Island, having been convicted of the undercover management of prizefighters and unlicensed matchmaking. The hearings revealed that Carbo's wife was employed by the IBC at a salary of $45,000 a year. Former world welterweight and middleweight champion
Carmen Basilio testified before the Subcommittee, giving evidence on Carbo, Carbo's partner
Frank "Blinky" Palermo (a member of the
St. Louis crime family) and Carbo's aide, Gabriel Genovese, a cousin of Mafia Don
Vito Genovese who was convicted in 1959 of being an unlicensed boxing manager. Calling for a house cleaning of professional boxing, Basilio's testimony revealed that his former managers had to pay off organized crime for his title shots and that he essentially had a behind the scenes manager in Genovese. He also told of meeting with Carbo, who he had first met in the mid-1950s. Evidence submitted to the subcommittee showed that Basilio's on-the-record managers, John DeJohn and Joseph Netro, paid Gabriel Genovese $39,334.41 and approximately $25,000, respectively, during the time Basilio fought for and defended his welterweight and middleweight titles. The following year, Gibson Jr. and Carbo, Carbo's partner "Blinky" Palermo, and
Los Angeles mobsters Joe Di Sica and
Louis Dragna, were charged with conspiracy and extortion against
National Boxing Association Welterweight Champion
Don Jordan. After a three-month trial, in which
U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy served as prosecutor, the defendants were convicted and sent to federal prison. ==See also==