Albert Marco

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Albert Marco
L.A. Herald, July 23, 1926
Born
Marco Albori

c. 1887
Italy
DiedUnknown
Unknown
Other namesAlberto Marco, Albert Black

Marco Albori, better known by his alias Albert Marco, was an Italian-born bootlegger and pimp who was active in Los Angeles during the Prohibition Era in the 1920s. He is said to be the first to transport Canadian whiskey to Los Angeles. Marco worked closely with Charles H. Crawford, who ran city politics along with Kent Kane Parrot.

Biography[edit]

Marco was born about 1887 in Italy.[1] Marco came to the United States through Ellis Island in 1908.[citation needed] He started off as a pimp and con man in Nevada and Washington. According to one account, Albori came from "the Tyrol mountains on the border of Austria and Italy," emigrating around 1910 and landing in Seattle, where he found work in "swindling" with "procuring and pimping as a sideline".[2] In 1919 he served a brief prison sentence for burglary in Sacramento. Crawford, an old friend from their days in Seattle convinced Marco to move to Los Angeles. Margo came down to Southern California with another pimp, Augustus Sasso, commonly known as Chito.[2] In contrast with his patron Crawford and his partner Chito,[2] "Marco bumbled his way into the newspapers and onto the public scene several times before his 1928 arrest, trial, and subsequent incarceration on two counts of assault, with a deadly weapon".[3]

In the early 1920s Marco drove to L.A. in a Cadillac transporting alcohol to a Long Beach warehouse. The political connections created by Crawford's political machine let Marco operate without much fear of prosecution for his crimes. In 1925 Marco pistol whipped an LAPD officer and was given a $50 fine and his gun back. He was also associated with Max "Boo Hoo" Hoff of Philadelphia.[4] Marco and Chito ultimately ran a couple dozen whorehouses "scattered through the downtown district and along the edges" staffed by "about 200 prostitutes".[5] According to the IRS, between 1922 and 1924 Marco earned $500,000 from bordello prostitution.[6] Another indication of Marco's income from running liquor and prostitutes is the claim that "Marco, minus any talent for it, loved to gamble. While he was the Caliph of the Los Angeles heterae, he lost $260,000 one night in 1927 playing low ball in an apartment at the top of Angels Flight" against Nick the Greek.[5]

UCLA Library holds this glass-plate negative from the Los Angeles Times photo collection of Marco, pictured following his arrest at the Ship Cafe the morning of June 28, 1928, still wearing Conterno's blood[7]
Mr. and Mrs. Dominick Conterno - "Principal Witnesses Against Marco" (The Los Angeles Times, July 18, 1928)

On the evening of June 27, 1928, Marco was welcomed to the Ship Cafe in Venice, California by restauranteur and retired boxer Tommy Jacobs. Marco was in the company of three friends. As the party continued, "Marco became embroiled in an argument with other customers that escalated into fist fighting. Outnumbered, the gangster reached for his gun and fired. Two men were wounded."[4] According to one history, "the testimony of witnesses at the cafe presents a sketch of Marco's less-than-sophisticated personality. According to one witness—a friend of one of the men who was shot, the trouble started after Marco approached him and made a derogatory comment about his dancing partner, implying she was a prostitute".[8] In the wee hours of June 28, Marco was arrested by officer John Brunty, and eventually put on trial for assault with a deadly weapon in the 1926 shooting of Dominick Conterno and Harry Judson.[9][10] He was found guilty on two counts and was sentenced to two seven-year terms by judge William C. Doran.

Marco Alberto (inmate 46930) in the San Quentin prisoner record book

On April 1, 1929, Marco was sent to San Quentin State Prison to serve his sentence.[11] Marco appealed the ruling, but was denied a second trial. He was paroled on April 7, 1933.[11] Marco was deported to Italy in November 1933.[12] He returned to Los Angeles in 1937 hoping to permanently stay in the United States, but he was denied and ordered to return to Italy again. In 1952 a Daily News staff writer named Jack Strange claimed that Marco was still alive and living in Venice, Italy, where he ran a restaurant.[13]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Entry for Marco Albori, 1930". United States Census, 1930. FamilySearch.
  2. ^ a b c Strange (1952b), p. 3.
  3. ^ Kooistra (2003), p. 110.
  4. ^ a b Moran & Sewell (1979), p. 72.
  5. ^ a b Strange (1952b), p. 26.
  6. ^ McDougal, Dennis (2009-08-05). Privileged Son: Otis Chandler and the Rise and Fall of the L.a. Times Dynasty. Hachette Books. ISBN 9780786751136.
  7. ^ Bash & Niotta (2021), p. 99.
  8. ^ Kooistra (2003), p. 116–117.
  9. ^ "Albert Marco Found Guilty in Shooting". Los Angeles Times. September 8, 1928. p. A5.
  10. ^ Ship Cafe, scene of the crime, 1928, retrieved 2024-05-07
  11. ^ a b "Marco Will Obtain His Parole Friday". Berkeley Daily Gazette. United Press. April 5, 1933. p. 5. Retrieved January 16, 2010.
  12. ^ "Berkeley Daily Gazette - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  13. ^ Strange, Jack (1952-03-25). "Gang Warfare of Bygone Era Linked to Politics". Daily News. p. 14. Retrieved 2024-06-05.

Sources[edit]