Chicago Sun-Times

MOBSTER’S DAD ADMITS EXTORTION SCHEME

- BY JON SEIDEL Staff Reporter

The father of a once- feared mob enforcer pleaded guilty to his own extortion plot Thursday and now faces 20 years in federal prison.

John J. Rainone, 83, admitted to U. S. District Judge Jorge Alonso that he helped shake down a businessma­n six years ago in Bartlett, once meeting the victim at a Dominick’s grocery store and warning that “nobody is going to give you a problem if you do the right thing.”

Rainone was quietly indicted in 2015 along with his 41- year- old grandson, who shares the same name. The younger Rainone pleaded guilty to the same scheme in October and agreed to cooperate with federal investigat­ors, records show. The judge has yet to set a sentencing date for either man.

While the attempted extortion charge they pleaded guilty to carries a maximum prison sentence of 20 years, the elder Rainone is more likely to face about three years in prison. His grandson is likely to face the same if he continues to cooperate.

The men are the father and son of Mario Rainone, the former Outfit muscle once described as an “urban terrorist” by a judge. Prosecutor­s have accused Mario Rainone of using violence and threats to squeeze Outfit debtors, even threatenin­g to chop off the heads of a restaurate­ur and his children if he wasn’t paid $ 200,000.

Fearing his associates in the Outfit were out to kill him, Mario Rainone once entered the federal witness- protection program only to change his mind when his mother’s porch was bombed. Mario Rainone is serving a 15- year prison sentence, but he is hoping for a reduction in prison time based on a change in the law, his defense attorney Joe “The Shark” Lopez said.

The younger John J. Rainone was sentenced in 2015 to 38 months in prison after he pleaded guilty to access device fraud and aggravated identity theft, records show.

Now grandfathe­r and grandson have been caught up in the same scheme. They’ve admitted that, in August 2010, they told a businessma­n that a reputed Outfit leader wanted to be “taken care of ” and demanded $ 10,000. The businessma­n refused to pay. The younger Rainone then told him in October 2010 that he had to pay $ 2,000 a month in “street tax” after the unnamed Outfit leader had gone to prison.

At a Bartlett Dunkin’ Donuts, the younger Rainone told the businessma­n, “You’re going to have to pay.”

The Rainones met the businessma­n at the Dominick’s later in back- to- back days. The businessma­n agreed to make a payment of $ 4,000 a month on Oct. 13, 2010, but the elder Rainone showed up at his business a day early and insisted on receiving the payment. The businessma­n refused.

The elder Rainone then said “they” were going to “send the rough guys to collect,” according to his grandson’s plea agreement.

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