Anthony Provenzano
American mobster

Anthony Provenzano

The basics
Quick facts
Intro
American mobster
A.K.A.
Tony Pro
Gender:
Male
Work field:
Birth:
17 May 1917(Lower East Side, USA)
Death:
12 December 1988(Lompoc, USA)
Star sign:
Biography menu
Menu

Jump to

Introduction Early life Career Death In popular culture
The details
Biography

Introduction

Anthony Provenzano (May 7, 1917 – December 12, 1988), also known as Tony Pro, was a caporegime of the Genovese crime family New Jersey faction.Provenzano was known for his associations with Teamsters Union director Jimmy Hoffa due to Provenzano's job as an International Brotherhood of Teamsters president for Local 560 in Union City, New Jersey.

Early life

Provenzano was born on May 7, 1917, in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, the fourth of six children to Sicilian immigrants Rosario and Josephine Provenzano. At age 15, he quit Public School 114 and went to work as a ten-dollar-a-week helper at the H.P. Welch Trucking Company. Three years later he became a driver. Provenzano became employed by Teamsters Local 560 in Union City, New Jersey, as a business agent between 1948 and 1958, as the president between 1958 and May 1966, and as secretary treasurer between November 24, 1975 and June 1978.

Provenzano was a resident of Clifton, New Jersey and Hallandale, Florida.

Career

In June 1961, Local 560 Secretary-Treasurer Anthony Castellito traveled to Upstate New York to meet with Salvatore Briguglio, a mob-associated loan shark. According to federal government reports, Briguglio and Harold Konigsberg had murdered Castellito. Subsequently, in August 1961, Provenzano's brother Salvatore was appointed to the position of Trustee formerly occupied by Castellitto; Briguglio was appointed to the position of Business Agent in September 1961; Provenzano's other brother Nunzio was appointed to the position of Business Agent in February 1963.

On November 15, 1960, Provenzano was indicted in the District of New Jersey for extortion for the demand and receipt of "labor peace" payoffs from the Dorn Transportation Company between 1952 and 1959. On July 12, 1963, Provenzano was convicted of extortion and sentenced to seven years imprisonment; he served 4 and a half years, incarcerated between May 1966 and 1970. Although Provenzano had once been a friend of Teamsters Union director Jimmy Hoffa, they had become enemies after a reported feud when both were in federal prison at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.

On July 30, 1975, Hoffa disappeared after he had gone out to a restaurant to meet Provenzano and Anthony Giacalone. Provenzano told investigators that he was playing cards with Stephen Andretta in Union City, New Jersey the day Hoffa disappeared. Ten weeks after Hoffa's disappearance, President Richard Nixon made his first public appearance since his resignation, during which he golfed with Frank Fitzsimmons, president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, and Provenzano.

On December 9, 1975, Provenzano was indicted in the Southern District of New York, along with Anthony Bentro and Lawrence Paladino, for conspiracy to violate the anti-kickback statute for a proposed $2.3 million pension-fund loan from the Utica Teamsters Benefit Fund for the renovation of the Woodstock Hotel; in July 1978, he was convicted of these charges and sentenced to four years in prison. On June 23, 1976, Provenzano was indicted in Ulster County, New York, along with Briguglio and Konigsberg, on charges of conspiracy and murder in connection to the 1961 death of Anthony Castellitto. On June 14, 1978, Provenzano was convicted of murder, while the conspiracy to commit murder count was dismissed, and was sentenced to life imprisonment in Kingston, New York exactly one week later. On February 22, 1979, Provenzano was indicted in the District of New Jersey, along with Gabriel Briguglio, Stephen and Thomas Andretta and Ralph Pellecchia on RICO charges in the Seatrain Labor Peace Payoffs case. On May 25, 1979, he was convicted of these charges, and, on July 10, 1979, he was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment.

Death

On December 12, 1988, Provenzano died of a heart attack at Lompoc Federal Penitentiary in Lompoc, California, aged 71. A month before his death, he was treated for congestive heart failure. He was buried at St. Joseph's Cemetery in Hackensack, New Jersey. He left his estate to his French-Canadian second wife, Marie-Paule Migneron Provenzano.

In popular culture

He was played by Stephen Graham in Martin Scorsese's 2019 film The Irishman.