logo
'Operation Family Secrets': Inside the FBI takedown that shattered the Chicago Outfit

'Operation Family Secrets': Inside the FBI takedown that shattered the Chicago Outfit

Yahoo30-04-2025

The Brief
"Operation Family Secrets," launched 20 years ago, is considered the most significant mob prosecution in U.S. history.
It began when Frank Calabrese Jr. secretly cooperated with the FBI against his father, a notorious Chicago mobster.
The case led to charges in nearly two dozen murders and helped dismantle the Chicago Outfit's leadership.
CHICAGO - It has been called the most important mob prosecution in U.S. history.
Twenty years ago this month, the federal government filed charges against more than a dozen top leaders of the Chicago Outfit, involving nearly two dozen murders that had gone unsolved for decades. They called the case "Operation Family Secrets."
What we know
The Chicago Outfit had a hold on the city for decades, with influence in the courts, the police department, and at City Hall. But that all changed when the son of a powerful mob boss grew frustrated that his father would never change his ways.
Frank Calabrese Jr. went to the library in the federal prison where he was doing time with his father and typed out a cry for help to the FBI.
"I feel like it was a different life," said Calabrese Jr. during a recent interview for the 20th anniversary of the Family Secrets indictment. "Sometimes I feel it was like a nightmare that it really didn't happen, that I'm just talking about some story."
Calabrese Jr. was raised to be a mobster. His father, Frank Calabrese Sr., ran the Chicago Outfit's notorious Chinatown crew. Frank Sr.'s brother, Nick Calabrese, was a trusted mob soldier responsible for at least fourteen hits.
"The difference between me and my uncle is as soon as he got in this life, he was ordered to kill," said Calabrese Jr. "And once he was in, he could not get out."
The backstory
In 1998, Calabrese Jr. was serving time with his father at the federal prison in Milan, Michigan, for illegal juice loans and racketeering.
"I'll never sit up there and tell you I'm a victim. I did a lot of bad things in my life at one time that I'm embarrassed of today."
The younger Calabrese said he wanted to turn his life around. But he said it became clear his father had other ideas.
"It came to the point where I realized he is never going to let me out of this and he's never going to lose control of me, and I have to do something. And the choices that I had were to wait till he gets on the street, finish this with him. He's good at killing. I'd probably be dead or he's dead and I might be in jail. The other one was getting the government to help."
After considering his options, Calabrese Jr. went to the prison library and typed out a letter for help to the FBI, writing, "I feel I have to help you keep this sick man locked up forever."
Calabrese Jr. said it was a gut-wrenching decision.
"I knew the day that I did that letter that my life was going to change forever. It wasn't about prison. It was about me and my dad. And the hardest thing I ever did to this day is go against my own father."
When the letter arrived at the Organized Crime Division of the FBI, agents weren't sure it was real.
"That letter was extremely important to the organized crime squad," said Michael Maseth, a former Chicago FBI agent who was assigned to the Organized Crime Unit in the late '90s. "There was a lot of excitement, but there was a lot of secrecy associated with it."
Maseth was among the agents who set up top secret meetings with Calabrese Jr. at the Michigan prison, eventually giving him a recording device hidden inside a pair of headphones and setting up an undercover surveillance system in the prison's visiting area.
"There were gang members there, all in the area of the yard. And so had they seen that he was wearing a wire, it would not have gone very well for him."
Calabrese Jr. knew his life was on the line.
"If (my father) catches me, I'm dead. And if anybody else catches me there, I am dead."
In long conversations recorded in the prison yard, Calabrese Sr. opened up to his son about unsolved mob murders going back decades, including the assassination of mob hit man William Dauber and his wife in 1980, and the car bombing of businessman Michael Cagnoni in 1981.
"The amount of information on those recordings was phenomenal," said Maseth. "We were astounded at how Frank Calabrese would talk about the homicides that he was involved in. Just the amount of information he was providing, the detail."
Dig deeper
Around the same time, FBI agents approached Nick Calabrese, who was serving time inside another federal prison. The agents told Nick they had newly obtained DNA evidence from a bloody glove left at the scene of a mob hit on the Northwest Side years earlier. Nick Calabrese had killed Outfit enforcer John Fecarotta but hurt himself during a struggle for the gun.
After initially clamming up, "Nick had had enough and realized that I'm not going to stand up for my brother," said Maseth. "He's a horrible person and I'm going to, I'm doing it."
Calabrese Jr. said he had no idea his uncle was also turning on Calabrese Sr.
"That's when my uncle started cooperating. And he was the one who really took down the whole mob."
Maseth said Nick Calabrese broke the case wide open.
"Telling us about one murder after the next, and the members of organized crime who were involved in it. And that's when we realized that we had to expand our investigation ten to twenty-fold."
That also includes the infamous execution of mob brothers Anthony and Michael Spilotro, whose bodies were found buried in an Indiana cornfield in 1986. The murders were portrayed in the 1995 mob movie Casino. Nick Calabrese revealed for the first time that the Spilotros had been killed in a home in the northwest suburbs, then buried in a shallow grave in Indiana.
"Nick Calabrese had quite a bit of insight about that because he said he was there," said Chicago mobologist John Binder.
After a seven-year investigation, the Family Secrets case exploded into the public with sweeping charges against not just Calabrese Sr. but the longtime leaders of several other Outfit street crews.
What's next
In part two of our look back at the historic case, we'll revisit that dramatic trial, examine what happened to the key players, and ask whether the Chicago Outfit still has a pulse.
The Source
For this story, FOX 32 Chicago interviewed several key players from this historic trial. Those included a witness who is the son of one of the defendants, an FBI special agent who was originally assigned to the case and one of the federal prosecutors who tried the case. FOX 32 Chicago also interviewed a local professor and author regarding the historical impact this trial had on the mob and Chicago.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A notorious hacker group is now targeting the aviation industry, the FBI says
A notorious hacker group is now targeting the aviation industry, the FBI says

Business Insider

time40 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

A notorious hacker group is now targeting the aviation industry, the FBI says

Even IT pros are susceptible to hackers these days. According to an FBI warning, a notorious cybercriminal group known as Scattered Spider is deceiving IT help desks into targeting the US airline industry. Scattered Spider gained attention in 2023 for hacking both MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment within a week of each other. "These actors rely on social engineering techniques, often impersonating employees or contractors to deceive IT help desks into granting access," the FBI said on X. "These techniques frequently involve methods to bypass multi-factor authentication (MFA), such as convincing help desk services to add unauthorized MFA devices to compromised accounts." The FBI said the group is focused on large corporations and their third-party IT providers, so "anyone in the airline ecosystem, including trusted vendors and contractors, could be at risk." "Once inside, Scattered Spider actors steal sensitive data for extortion and often deploy ransomware," the agency said. The FBI did not indicate that the actions affect airline safety. Charles Carmakal, the chief technology officer at Google's Mandiant, a cybersecurity firm and subsidiary of Google Cloud, said on LinkedIn that the firm was "aware of multiple incidents in the airline and transportation sector which resemble the operations of UNC3944 or Scattered Spider." "We recommend that the industry immediately take steps to tighten up their help desk identity verification processes prior to adding new phone numbers to employee/contractor accounts (which can be used by the threat actor to perform self-service password resets), reset passwords, add devices to MFA solutions, or provide employee information (e.g. employee IDs) that could be used for a subsequent social engineering attacks," he said. Unit 42, a cybersecurity threat research team that is part of the larger Palo Alto Networks cybersecurity corporation, said it also observed Scattered Spider targeting the aviation industry. "Organizations should be on high alert for sophisticated and targeted social engineering attacks and suspicious MFA reset requests," Sam Rubin, senior vice president of consulting and threat intelligence for Unit 42, said on LinkedIn on Friday. Canada's WestJet announced earlier this month that it had uncovered a "cybersecurity incident involving internal systems and the WestJet app, which has restricted access for several users." A spokesperson told Business Insider the company has made "significant progress" regarding the matter, and investigations were ongoing. Hawaiian Airlines also said on Thursday that it experienced a "cybersecurity event" that affected some of its IT systems. "We continue to safely operate our full flight schedule, and guest travel is not impacted," the company said in a press release. Neither airline provided details about who or what caused the cybersecurity incidents. A Southwest Airlines spokesperson said that its systems had not been compromised.

Laser pointing at US Air Force fighter jets lands Arizona man in prison
Laser pointing at US Air Force fighter jets lands Arizona man in prison

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Laser pointing at US Air Force fighter jets lands Arizona man in prison

An Arizona man has been sentenced to prison after being accused of pointing a laser at two U.S. Air Force aircraft. Glenwood Arthur Bringle, 56, of Bagdad, Arizona, was sentenced June 25 to nine days in prison and three years of supervised release for the felony offense of aiming a laser pointer at an aircraft, according to the U.S. Department of Justice. The sentence, issued by U.S. District Judge Susan Brnovich, follows Bringle's guilty plea February 26, the department said. On Oct. 5, 2021, Bringle pointed a laser at two U.S. Air Force F-16 fighter jets as the pilots conducted training exercises in the desert near his home, according to the Department of Justice. The laser illuminated the cockpits, disrupting the pilots' vision, flight control and their ability to complete the exercise, the Department of Justice said. As part of his plea agreement, Bringle forfeited several firearms and laser devices that were seized during a warrant search Nov. 8, 2021, the department added. The case was investigated by the FBI's Phoenix Field Office, the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations and the Yavapai County Sheriff's Office, according to the Department of Justice. It was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Arizona, the department added. This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Arizona man sentenced after pointing laser at US Air Force jets

FBI confirms hacker group behind Hawaiian Airlines attack
FBI confirms hacker group behind Hawaiian Airlines attack

UPI

time5 hours ago

  • UPI

FBI confirms hacker group behind Hawaiian Airlines attack

1 of 2 | A notorious hacker group is likely responsible for a recent cyberattack on Hawaiian Airlines that affected some of its IT systems, the FBI confirmed to CNN. File Photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo June 28 (UPI) -- A notorious hacker group could reportedly be responsible for a recent cyberattack on Hawaiian Airlines that affected some of its IT systems. That incident and other cyberattacks "recently observed" by the FBI bear a resemblance to previous ones carried out by the Scattered Spider group, TechCrunch reported, citing a statement from the federal investigative agency. The airline confirmed the attack earlier this week but said neither its flights or passenger safety were affected. "As we navigate the ongoing event, we remain in contact with the appropriate experts and federal authorities," the airline said in its latest update. Scattered Spider is a group of English-speaking young adults and teens believed to be living in the United States and Britain. The group conducts large-scale phishing and ransomware operations in addition to other cyberattacks, usually against major corporations and their third-party IT contractors. The FBI confirmed the group's involvement in recent attacks, noting the airline industry remains vulnerable. "Anyone in the airline ecosystem, including trusted vendors and contractors, could be at risk," the FBI said in a statement to CNN. "Once inside (a victim's network), Scattered Spider actors steal sensitive data for extortion and often deploy ransomware." Earlier this month, a cyberattack targeting United Natural Foods Inc., caused a major disruption at Whole Foods. The Rhode-Island-based distributor is a major Whole Foods supplier, with the attack leading to empty grocery store shelves across the country. A week after the Whole Foods incident, international insurance company Aflac confirmed data and Social Security numbers of its clients were stolen by a hacking group. The company, based in Columbus, Ga., said the techniques used in the cyber intrusion closely resemble those used by Scattered Spider in previous hacks.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store