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Operation Family Secrets

Operation Family Secrets was an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) into mob-related crimes in Chicago. The FBI called it one of the most successful investigations of organized crime that it had ever conducted.

Murders
The following list is of the murders committed as objectives of the Chicago Outfit that were investigated in Operation Family Secrets: ==Investigation==
Investigation
Frank Jr.'s letter to FBI The investigation began on July 27, 1998 when Frank Calabrese Jr., wrote a letter to the FBI saying he wanted help to put his father in jail. The letter was sent without warning from the federal correctional facility in Milan, Michigan, where both Frank Jr. and Frank Sr. had been incarcerated since 1995, when four members of the Calabrese family had been sentenced for collecting "juice loans" and racketeering an auto repair business. In the letter, Frank Jr. requested a face-to-face meeting in which he planned to give the FBI information about his father's crimes, business activities of the Chicago Outfit street crews, and the murder of John Fecarotta: "This is no game. I feel I have to help keep this sick man locked up forever." Afterward, his father allegedly put a gun to his son's head and threatened to kill him. That and many other instances of Frank Sr.'s abuse and poor fathering contributed to Frank Jr.'s desire to help the FBI bring him down. He volunteered to record conversations that he had with his father while they were imprisoned. He wore a pair of headphones around his neck fit by the FBI with a hidden microphone to record conversations between the father and son. It was not difficult for Frank Jr. to direct his conversations in the prison courtyard and recreational facilities with his father toward information that would benefit the FBI's rapidly assembling investigation. Frank Sr. bragged to his son about past criminal activities. Nick's co-operation with federal agents Federal agents Michael Maseth, Tom Bourgeois, and Michael Hartnett were assigned to the investigation. They began to put together pieces of information on the Fecarotta murder. Newspapers reported that Calabrese had been confronted with DNA evidence implicating him in the 1986 mob hit of mob enforcer Fecarotta, prompting Nick Calabrese to cooperate with law enforcement in the probe. Frank Jr. agreed to wear a wire during conversations with his father as they talked about the family business. ==Trial==
Trial
The FBI, in April 2005, turned in a 43-page indictment that was created by the "Family Secrets" investigation. "Family Secrets" was unprecedented for naming the entire Chicago Outfit as a criminal enterprise. Assistant US Attorneys Mitchell Mars, John Scully, and T. Markus Funk would represent the United States in the case. After more than two years, the trial began in June 2007. Judge James Zagel heard the case. The evidence was presented between June and August 2007. The trial included testimony from more than 125 witnesses and over 200 pieces of evidence. On September 27, 2007, the same jury found Lombardo guilty of the 1974 Seifert murder. In 2009, Lombardo, seated in a wheelchair, was sentenced to life in prison for the convictions. On February 5, 2009, Marcello was sentenced to life imprisonment for the Spilotro murders. Judge Zagel agreed with federal prosecutor Markus Funk presentation that Marcello was also responsible for the D'Andrea murder as well, even though the jury had deadlocked on that count. On January 28, 2009, Judge Zagel sentenced Frank Calabrese, then 71, to life in prison for his crimes, calling the acts he had committed "unspeakable". On finding prosecutors had proven the murder allegations, the judge sentenced Calabrese for 13 slayings. Calabrese died at the age of 75, on December 25, 2012, at the Federal Medical Center, Butner, North Carolina. On March 26, 2009, Nick Calabrese was sentenced to 12 years and 4 months in prison. Zagel expressed doubts Calabrese will ever truly be a free man again, telling him, "The organization whose existence you testified to will not forgive or relent in their pursuit of you." ==References==
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