David "Dave" Yaras | |
|---|---|
| Born | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
| Died | 4 January 1974 Miami, Florida, U.S. |
| Occupation | Mobster |
| Allegiance | Chicago Outfit |
David "Dave" Yaras was a criminal involved with the Chicago Outfit. He was a partner of Leonard Patrick and one of the most active of the organized crime hitmen during the 1940s till the 1960s. He was arrested a total of 14 times, but never convicted. [1]
Yaras was involved with the Teamsters union, helping to organize the branch Local 320 in Miami. Santo Trafficante Jr. used Local 320 as a front for his activities. It was occasionally used as his headquarters and facilitated narcotics trafficking by providing trucks for transportation. Yaras and Trafficante dined and drank together. [2] He functioned as a go-between for Trafficante and Carlos Marcello in New Orleans. [3] He also served as a liaison between Chicago and organized crime in Miami and briefly was a mentor to Frank Rosenthal. [4]
The Kefauver Committee of the US Senate determined that Yaras was a hitman for Sam Giancana and was involved in the slot machine and pinball business of Al Capone. [5] He was also of interest to the McClellan Committee, with Senator Bobby Kennedy describing Yaras as "a notorious Chicago racketeer who has been involved with many of the leading racketeers in the Midwest". [6]
Yaras's partner in crime was his fellow Jewish Chicagoan, Leonard Patrick. They were particularly close, so much so that Yaras named one of his sons after Patrick. Lenny Yaras would go on to become one of Patrick's lieutenants. [7] On 14 January 1944 Benjamin "Zukie the Bookie" Zuckerman, the boss of an independent gang in Lawndale, Chicago was murdered, with Yaras and Patrick considered the likely culprits. [4] On 8 March 1947 Yaras, Leonard Patrick and William Block were indicted on the charge of murdering James Ragen. Although on 3 April 1947 the indictment was dropped after one of the three witnesses was murdered and the two others refused to testify. [8] While in Miami in January 1962, Yaras was recorded by the FBI in an electronic eavesdropping operation discussing the proposed killing of Frank Esposito with his fellow mobsters Jackie Cerone, Fiore Buccieri and Jimmy Torello. The Florida authorities were subsequently tipped off. [9] Yaras and Patrick were suspects in the murder of Alderman Benjamin F. Lewis in February 1963, after the FBI received a tip from an informant that the duo had killed Lewis. However neither were charged and the murder remains unsolved to this day. [10]
Following Jack Ruby's killing of Lee Harvey Oswald in police custody after he was charged with assassinating John F. Kennedy, Yaras was interviewed by the FBI on 6 December 1963. Yaras maintained that though he knew Ruby when he was young, he had not seen him since he left Chicago approximately 14 years prior and that Ruby was not connected to the Chicago Outfit. He added that his brother Sam Yaras knew Ruby and that he was connected with a machinery business in Dallas, but that he had fallen out with his brother in 1945 and consequently had not been to Dallas. [11] In 1978 the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), which was probing Ruby's links to organized crime figures, concluded that Yaras and Ruby were "acquainted during Ruby's years in Chicago, particularly in the 1930s and 1940s", but that "the committee found no evidence that Ruby was associated with Yaras or [Leonard] Patrick during the 1950's or 1960's". [12] In a deposition before the HSCA, Leonard Patrick testified that "[Yaras] talked to [Ruby], too, you know. He knew him as a friend, too, more than I did". [13]
On 4 January 1974 David Yaras died of a heart attack, aged 61, in Miami while playing golf. Weeks later his son Ronald was murdered. [14] [15] [16] Another son, Leonard, was slain in a gangland shooting in Chicago in January 1985. [15]