Move to Montana and murder conviction By 1907, Vanella and Torrio had parted ways and Vanella relocated to the American Midwest. On October 13, 1907, Vanella was arrested in Laurel, Montana and charged with the shooting death two days earlier of his roommate and associate, Raffaele Orasio (sometimes spelled Raffael Orasse). Vanella's trial began on January 22, 1908, at which a witness testified to having seen Vanella run down an alley with a coat over his arm after shots had been fired by police. On January 25, 1908, Vanella was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 50 years in prison at the
Montana State Prison at Deer Lodge. However, a public campaign for Vanella's release was launched by his mother in New York and by socialite Ethel Eppstein of San Francisco, claiming that Vanella had been unfairly convicted entirely on circumstantial evidence. At the same time, the chief witness against Vanella, Louis Fava, was later found dead in Taft, Montana in September 1908. On December 24, 1913, Vanella received a Christmas Eve commutation of his sentence from
Governor Sam V. Stewart to twelve years. In April 1914 Vanella was released on parole by the state board of pardons, having served only six years of his original 50-year sentence.
Second brush with the law in Chicago Following his release from prison, Vanella moved to Chicago to reconnect with Torrio. A few months later, the two were implicated in the July 1914 death of Chicago Police Sergeant Stanley Birns, who was killed by friendly police fire during a vice raid. Newspapers at the time reported that Vanella was affiliated with the "
Black Hand"—a pre-Mafia form of extortion attributed to Italian men from
Calabria and
Sicily who would send anonymous notes to their victims emblazoned with a feared old country symbol. The State's Attorney alleged that Vanella, identified as "Rocco Venille," had been hired by local property owners in a botched attempt to assassinate a senior vice police inspector. Charges were filed against Vanella, Torrio and fellow Chicago crime figure
Jim Colosimo, but the cases were never brought to trial and Vanella returned to New York City.
Return to James Street Upon returning to New York, Vanella turned himself into a successful and politically connected businessman and became known as the "Mayor of James Street." Over the next few years he organized and ultimately became president of the Ragpicker's Union, as well as a Democratic district captain on the
Tammany Hall staff of Thomas F. "Big Tom" Foley. In 1918, Vanella and his younger brother, Vincenzo (Vincent) James Vanella, founded Vanella's Funeral Chapel at 27-29 Madison Street. While Vanella had no further legal entanglements he continued to publicly associate with crime figures such as Torrio and Brooklyn crime figure
Frankie Yale. In May 1921, Vanella met Rosario (Sadie) Faranda, the daughter of Antonio Faranda who owned Faranda & Sons in Laurel Hill, Long Island, while advising a client on a headstone. Two months later the two were married at an extravagant wedding ceremony at the
Roman Catholic Church of St. Joachim, at 22 Roosevelt Street, with over 150 vehicles and 1,000 guests. Torrio, who came in from Chicago to serve as Vanella's best man, reportedly travelled in a private train car with fifty of his own guests in tow. == Later years and death ==