Italian Job Slot Machine
This video is unavailable. Watch Queue Queue. Watch Queue Queue. The Italian Job Slot Machine. Below you will find a list of online casinos providing Chartwell's The Italian Job slot machines. Hot Wheels Morris Mini The Italian Job Retro Entertainment #X8913 NRFP 2012 Red. PHP 1,384.00 +PHP 1,144.68 postage. May 10, 2018 The Italian Job slot game was developed by Amaya (Chartwell) studio for online gaming purposes. The major part of the game takes place in an urban district of Italy. It’s a classic story of guys who just want to get money, fortune and fame.
FBI surveillance photo from September 3, 1977 | |
Born | July 18, 1927 |
---|---|
Died | February 18, 1982 (aged 54) New York City, U.S. |
Relatives | Richard Cantarella (cousin) Joseph D'Amico (cousin) Alfred Embarrato (uncle) |
Allegiance | Bonanno crime family |
Anthony 'Tony' Mirra (July 18, 1927 - February 18, 1982) was an American mobster, soldier and later caporegime for the Bonanno crime family. He is well known for being the individual who introduced FBISpecial AgentJoseph 'Donnie Brasco' Pistone into the Bonanno family.
Early life[edit]
Mirra was born to Albert Mirra and Millie Embarrato in Manhattan. He was the nephew of Bonanno family caporegimeAlfred Embarrato, and cousins of street soldier Joseph D'Amico, capo Richard Cantarella, capo Frank Cantarella, and Bonanno family capo Paul Cantarella.
Mirra was born in the poverty-stricken Lower East Side at Knickerbocker Village where he lived in the same apartment building as Embarrato, Richard Cantarella and D'Amico. The Federal Bureau of Narcotics lists his address of residence at 115 Madison Street (Manhattan) in Lower East Side, New York. Mirra was once a good friend of Benjamin 'Lefty' Ruggiero; Mirra owned the Bus Stop Luncheonette[1] in Little Italy, Manhattan not far from Ruggiero's bar. His relatives D'Amico, Embarrato and Cantarella became involved in major racketeering schemes at The New York Post distribution center behind their housing complex, but Mirra moved on to more successful and prosperous racketeering endeavours.
Criminal career[edit]
Mirra worked for Bonanno capo Michael Zaffarano, and was involved in extortion, gambling and drug trafficking.[citation needed] During the 1970s, Mirra confessed to the 1959 assassination of Anthony Carfano and comedian Alan Drake's wife, Janice Hansen Drake. He stood at 6'3' and weighed 230 pounds. The New York Times correspondent Ralph Blumenthal described Mirra's appearance as 'Zorba-like'. Mirra never drank alcohol, only ginger ale.
Mirra remained a recluse from his fellow mobsters including his own relatives, which included Richard Cantarella, and eventually even became estranged from his uncle Alfred. Mirra was the first contact FBI agent Joseph Pistone made in his undercover operation, which led to his infiltration of the Bonanno family.[2] Pistone was working as an associate for the Colombo family at the time. Mirra introduced Pistone to 'Lefty' Ruggiero and offered him a job handling his slot-machine route. Pistone went under the name 'Donnie Brasco' and posed as a jewel thief.
In 1977,[1] Mirra fled New York after being indicted for drug trafficking. The FBI caught up with him three months later and he was sent to federal prison again for eight and a half years. When Mirra got out of jail, Brasco had since become close with Ruggiero and was working under him. Mirra argued that Brasco belonged to him, not Ruggiero. Mirra took the issue right to the top and had several meetings over the situation. In the end, Ruggiero won.
After the sudden death of his capo, Michael Zaffarano, Mirra took over the Bonanno family pornography empire and worked under the powerful Sicilian capo Cesare Bonventre. Mirra also muscled in on several Little Italy, Manhattan, restaurants and bars. He was involved in a vending machine operation that dealt in slot machines, peanut vending machines, video arcade machines and pinball machines that were distributed all over New York City. He had them installed in stores, luncheonettes, social clubs and after-hours establishments.
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The slot machines, since they were illegal, would be installed in the establishment's back room or basement. The coin collection route produced $2,000 a week, and he would open the machines with a key he carried and give the store owner his cut of the profits (at least $25). Mirra was involved in 'strong arm' schemes and extorted from several bars and restaurants. Each of the owners would pay him $5,000 a week in protection money and he would become angry if he did not receive the money.
Bonanno civil war[edit]
In 1979, following the takeover of Philip Rastelli as leader of the Bonanno family, the family divided into two rival factions. The 'Red' Team led by capos Alphonse 'Sonny Red' Indelicato, Dominick Trinchera and Philip Giaccone, and the 'Black' Team led by Dominick 'Sonny Black' Napolitano and Joseph Massino. The day before Giaccone, Trinchera and Indelicato were to be ambushed and executed, Mirra announced at the Toyland Social Club to Nicholas Marangello that he was joining the opposition.
On May 5, 1981, the day of the executions, Napolitano called Mirra's uncle, Albert Embarrato, and told him to come down to The Motion Lounge for a 'sit down'. At the sit down, Napolitano had two of his soldiers flank Embarrato on either side until Napolitano received confirmation that the executions were followed through. Napolitano would later tell Pistone, 'When he (Albert) heard that, he turned ash white. He thought we were going to hit him too. But I just reamed at him about Tony, told him Tony was no good; and that he (Albert) better recognize that and act right himself.' Embarrato agreed.
Operation Donnie Brasco and death[edit]
In mid-1981, when Pistone was revealed as an FBI agent, 'Sonny Black' Napolitano, 'Lefty' Ruggiero, and Mirra were all on the firing line for initially allowing the infiltration. Mirra went into hiding. Joseph Massino ordered Mirra's uncle Alfred Embarrato and Mirra's two cousins, Richard Cantarella and Joseph D'Amico, to find and kill him. On February 18, 1982, Joseph D'Amico, lured him to a parking garage in Lower Manhattan. Embarrato and Cantarella were waiting in a getaway car. The pair went to the parking garage, climbed into Mirra's car, and drove up to a locked security gate. D'Amico later described in a testimony, 'He took out his key, put it in the box, but he didn’t get a chance to turn the box... I shot him at close range several times on the side of his head.'[3][4]
References[edit]
- ^ abPistone, Joseph D (1988). Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia. Assisted by Richard Woodley. New York, N.Y.: Signet. ISBN0451192575. OCLC36631381.
- ^'Joe Pistone's Unfinished Mob Business'. Orchard Press Mysteries. 2007-12-30. ISBN9780786741199.
- ^'TIGHT-HIT FAMILY – CLOSE CUZ CHOSEN TO KILL 'BRASCO' WISEGUY'. nypost.com. June 17, 2004.
- ^'FAMILY TIES MADE IT EASY TO WHACK CUZ: MOB THUG'. nypost.com. June 17, 2004.
External links[edit]
- Carpenter, Teresa, Mob Girl: The biography of Arlyne Weiss
- Crittle, Simon, The Last Godfather: The Rise and Fall of Joey Massino Berkley (March 7, 2006) ISBN0-425-20939-3
- Dearborn, Mary V., Mailer: A Biography Mariner Books (December 10, 2001) ISBN0-618-15460-4
- May, Allan, Colletti & Drake: Women In the Wrong Place At the Wrong Time
- Pistone, Joseph D. and Woodley, Richard, Donnie Brasco: My Undercover Life in the Mafia Random House 1990 ISBN5-552-53129-9
- Pistone, Joseph D.; & Brandt, Charles (2007). Donnie Brasco: Unfinished Business, Running Press. ISBN0-7624-2707-8.
- DeStefano, Anthony. The Last Godfather: Joey Massino & the Fall of the Bonanno Crime Family. California: Citadel, 2006.
- Raab, Selwyn. Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires. New York: St. Martin Press, 2005. ISBN0-312-30094-8
How to Win on the Italian Job
Your biggest wins will come from lining up 5 of the red arrows which are the wild symbols. The full set of these is worth 2500 coins (keep in mind only 15 coins per spin). You’ll get 500 coins for 4 arrows, 100 for 3 20 for 2 and 2 coins for just a single wild in the left hand reel. This wild is slightly unusual in that it will only complete wins with the 2 biggest paying regular symbols. These are a detonator and hand, plus an old fashioned tape-to-tape machine. These are worth 1000 and 500 coins respectively for 5 and also pay all the way down to a single one in the left hand reel.
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Other regular symbols are a cross between scenes from the movie and playing card symbols. These have ace down to 10 in the bottom right corner. My guess is that the designers wanted to use unique symbols – though at the time this game was created playing cards were considered the normal thing to use.
The Italian Job Slot Bonus Game
You will find 3 bonus symbols on the reels in the form of the blue, red and white minis. These frequently hit the reels – though will only trigger a bonus game when you hit 3 of them consecutively on a win line. This does not need to be from the left hand side like with the regular wins.
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You then go to a second screen bonus game where you get to choose from blocks of gold. The gold bars are in the trunk of the mini and you click them one at a time to load them into the back of a van. Each block gives you a multiplier of your total bet, which accumulates in squares below the game. Eventually, you’ll hit a stack of gold bars which says ‘finish’ underneath. This ends the game, with your win calculated based on the multipliers earned so far.