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About Rick Porrello | 
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     Rick Porrello wears many hats. He is a retired Cleveland-area police chief and author of The Rise and Fall of the Cleveland Mafia. 
Porrello began writing his first book during research into the murders of his grandfather and three uncles, who were mob leaders killed in Prohibition-era violence. Read the Preface. 
The book, published in 
1995 by Barricade Books of  New York City, quickly became a regional favorite, went through several hardcover printings, then was republished in paperback. 
   
       Porrello is an accomplished jazz musician and soloist.  
     Despite the excitement and promise of such early success, a second career interest 
eventually pulled Rick from the Davis gig and he returned to Cleveland to begin college 
studies.  In 1986, despite opposition from family and friends, Rick traded his sticks for a 
badge and .38 special when he joined the police force. Since childhood, Rick had an 
increasing interest in police work  
     Rick Porrello continues to perform in the N.E. Ohio area. 
 
     In 1998 Rick's second book was published. Titled To Kill The Irishman: The War that 
Crippled the Mafia,  To Kill The Irishman was under motion picture option for several years and is now a movie (2010) Kill the Irishman starring Ray Stevenson, 
Vincent D'Onofrio, Christopher Walken and Val Kilmer, and directed by Jonathan Hensleigh. 
 
Rick's title Superthief - A Master Burglar, the Mafia and the Biggest Bank Heist in U.S. History won second place in ForeWord Magazine's 2005 Book of the Year Awards true crime category, and is in development for a motion picture with filmmaker Tommy Reid, producer of Kill the Irishman.
 
Rick's latest title, Bombs, Bullets and Bribes - The True Story of Notorious Jewish Racketeer Alex Shondor Birns, is in development for a limited streaming series.
 Email Rick at Rick@RickPorrello.com 
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AmericanMafia.com Please note that Rick Porrello is an author and not an organized crime or Mafia expert. He does not maintain 
contacts with mobsters, is unable to assist with family history research and is 
unable to provide assitance with locating photographs. If you believe you are 
the victim of organized crime, you may seek help from your local law enforcement agency, state attorney general's office, the F.B.I. or 
U.S. Attorney's office.  
Sorry, we are unable to personally accept research inquiries. 
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