The Fix Was In On The Reinstatement Of Giacchino’s Medical License In The 1980s
Posted on 20. May, 2010 by Joseph Fosco in Organized Crime
Regardless of how much respect Chicago Tribune’s John Kass and his office may give the Giacchino’s during the current hearings on Giacchino’s medical license, Kass will never learn what I know without reading my articles.
In an unofficial sense, I had the opportunity to interview/examine the following people over the years:
1. Joseph L. Giacchino, Jr.
2. Willie Messino, Sr.
3. Jack P. Cerone, Esquire
4. Rudy Fratto, Jr.
5. Anthony Erbacci, Sr.
6. Rocky Lombardo (brother of Outfit Boss Joe Lombardo)
7. Cook County Judge Jill Cerone-Marisie
In the course of my interviews, I was friendly with the above-mentioned individuals, therefore eliminating any concern for caution on their part. I learned that the Chicago Outfit was the only reason the State of Illinois restored Giacchino’s medical license the first time he lost it.
Old man Jack Cerone (the real gangster) was away serving his final prison term when Johnny DiFronzo and Rudy Fratto okayed Willie Messino to visit Jackie Cerone in prison for the purposes of solidifying a fix through Jackie’s son’s law firm. Jack P. Cerone (Jackie’s son) had a partner at his firm by the name of Anthony Erbacci, Sr. who had an inappropriate amount of influence with exactly the right people to fix Giacchino’s problem. Mr. Erbacci’s son, Anthony Erbacci, Jr., was some sort of bigwig with the Illinois Department of Professional Regulations as well as an attorney. According to the people named above, this connection should have guaranteed a positive result in Giacchino’s hearing.
And it did. Giacchino beat his suspension by having his medical license returned in this dubious manner.
If the United States Attorney’s Office has not subpoenaed Anthony Erbacci, Jr. to a grand jury, I suggest they do so at once. While they may need to offer him immunity, such action will likely shed light on the sordid mess that is Giacchino’s dark past.
After Giacchino’s license was returned because of Cerone and Erbacci, Giacchino began offering special benefits and perks to various relatives of the high and mighty in the Chicago Outfit. In one case, Giacchino purchased an automobile on his credit card for the niece of a Chicago Outfit Boss.
The idea that Jill Cerone-Marisie, former Cerone family law firm corporate president, considering all the shenanigans the firm has been involved in over the years – achieved the official status of full Cook County Judge is, in my opinion, nearly as troubling as having a Cook County Machine politician living in the White House. Read a recent Chicago Tribune article about Judge Cerone here.
Surely, the United States Attorney’s Office in Chicago is brilliant enough to effectively draft a criminal RICO case against Giacchino, relating to his criminal enterprise called the Melrose Park Clinic and its partnership with the criminal enterprise called the Chicago Outfit. I happen to agree with over 90% of the cases brought by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Chicago and this case would surely be one of them.
I would be shocked if the IRS decided to give Giacchino a pass, considering the tax frauds that I have touched on in several previous articles on Giacchino.
Aside from Giacchino’s recent misconduct, I find one particular skeleton of his most haunting. For everyone who believes this former medical practitioner is a good, upstanding citizen, let me relate a story that will illustrate to you the true nature of Mr. Giacchino.
My memory of every detail pertaining to the story I am about to share with you is not perfect. Also, I did not witness this gruesome occurrence myself; the story was told to me by Giacchino. However, a junior investigator can easily crack the case based on my information (this is where Chicago Tribune and John Kass’ office can do something productive).
Back in California, when Giacchino was a young man, he was attending college. During what I am sure was an illustrious colligate career, one day Giacchino decided to hire a prostitute for him and a few friends as a surprise. I believe the boys chipped in and paid the working girl around $50.00. After the fun was over, reality began to set in for Giacchino. All he could think about was that he was out money – the money he paid the prostitute. This is when Giacchino quickly devised a plan.
He offered the prostitute a ride home with one of his friends. She accepted. Giacchino calculatedly designated one of his friends as the driver and he kindly offered to let the prostitute sit in the front passenger seat. Giacchino positioned himself in the back seat. Once they drove away from the campus, Giacchino used a blunt object to strike the prostitute in the back of the head with all of his might.
Giacchino told me that he was sure he killed her as he laughed telling the story. The driver was astounded and panicked. Giacchino calmed him down and pointed out that he could get their money back now that she was unconscious. Giacchino did exactly that. He ordered his friend to pull to the side of the road, where she was left for dead.
Short while later police officers tracked down Giacchino. Fortunately, the woman was not killed. However, because of her lack of credibility (as she was a call girl), the college’s eagerness to keep quiet that something this horrible had occurred and Giacchino’s father immediately paying restitution for his son’s crime, the matter was swept under the carpet.
Well, almost swept under the carpet.
Giacchino was expelled from the school and was told that he would be ineligible for medical school because of his ghastly immoral conduct. This is where John Kass can use his resources to get details from the school. Unfortunately, for now, KTF Media Group cannot compete with the Chicago Tribune as far as resources go.
Giacchino explained to me that he sat out the rest of the school year after his expulsion, depressed that he could not go on to medical school. The next year he enrolled in a different school out of state. He later discovered that interstate scholastic communication was not thorough enough in the 1960s to ensure that his expulsion would preclude him from going on to medical school in a different state. Unfortunately, we know the rest of the story. Goodbye California, Hello Chicago Outfit.
With a background like this, is it any wonder that a man like Giacchino could wantonly risk the health of his patients, those people who depend on him the most, strictly for profit? While civilized people might find it shocking that a substantially wealthy doctor would go to such lengths to make a few extra dollars, it is not difficult to see that Giacchino’s obsession with money has repeatedly driven him to terrible, terrible ends. Hopefully this time the Outfit will be unable to help him continue his destructive behavior.
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