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Chicago Tribune
CAR BOMB INJURES
TEAMSTERS OFFICIAL
By Robert Blau and John O`Brien.
Tribune reporter Ray Gibson
contributed to this article.
September 7, 1990
Lucien Senese, carrying a briefcase at his side,
left a girl friend`s home in Chicago`s Little Italy on Thursday morning
and walked to a white Buick parked in the driveway. He inserted a key
into the car`s ignition and turned it, instantly setting off an
explosion that nearly ripped off the back of the car, shattered windows
up and down the 1000 block of South May Street and sent shrapnel flying
across the street.
Senese, a large, bearded man, staggered from the
car, his skin, clothing and hat on fire.
On Thursday night, Lucien Senese, 33,
secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 703, was in critical condition in
Cook County Hospital`s burn unit. A spokeswoman for County Hospital said
he was later transferred to another hospital, but family members
requested that the name of the hospital not be disclosed.
The explosion occurred one week after Senese`s
father, Dominic Senese, 73, a victim of a 1988 shotgun attack near his
west suburban Oak Brook home, was ordered to give up the presidency of
the union local because of the father`s longstanding ties with
organized-crime bosses.
The attempted assassination of Lucien Senese,
who lived with his family in Elk Grove Village, is seen by investigators
as part of an ongoing violent power struggle for control of the union
local which, according to federal authorities, is controlled by
organized crime. The attack was not believed to have stemmed from a
personal vendetta, authorities said.
Dominic Senese was banished from the union by a
federal judge, but his enemies within the local, some of whom federal
authorities regarded as up-and- coming mob figures, saw business as
usual with Lucien Senese. The younger Senese, who has been the local`s
secretary-treasurer since 1983, was poised to take control and still
take orders from his father, the enemies feared.
Local union records on file with the U.S.
Department of Labor show that Lucien Senese, who was previously employed
as a truck driver, was paid $100,515 a year in salary and expenses. He
also was given the use of a 1989 Buick, in which the bomb was planted.
Within the union, he is known as a loudmouth
bully who occasionally upset his father and a brother, Joseph, a
$47,300-a-year organizer for the local. Indeed, police who investigated
the shooting of Dominic Senese said they were told Lucien might have
been involved in that attack and stood to benefit from it.
Shortly after Thursday`s explosion, the elder
Senese rushed to County Hospital, where he instructed doctors not to
allow his son to be interviewed, sources at the hospital said. The
location of the assassination attempt was unusual, according to
investigators, who said that the old Italian neighborhood on Chicago`s
West Side has long been considered off limits for mob violence.
Investigators, including personnel from the FBI,
Chicago police and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms,
acknowledged that they face a long and tedious job in trying to identify
who planted the bomb and why. Detectives who canvassed the area said
some neighborhood residents were reluctant to cooperate with police.
An examination of the demolished car indicated
that the bomb was probably fashioned with a large amount of dynamite or
a similar explosive substance. The bomb was placed in the rear of the
driver`s side. It was apparently detonated when Senese, who had just
left his girlfriend`s house, started the engine, according to Chicago
Police Deputy Supt. Edward Wodnicki. The car`s gas tank did not explode.
Nevertheless, the blast ignited a fire, which spread from a garage
behind the car to the rear porch of a house. It also shot hundreds of
metal fragments in all directions, some of which punctured doors and
windows of cars parked on the street. One woman was grazed by flying
debris, police said.
Investigators said they want to question
Senese`s girlfriend, identified only as "Mimi," whom police were not
able to locate, according to Chief of Detectives John Townsend.
Fortunately, police said, the street that is near the heart of Chicago`s
Little Italy was not bustling with people at the time of the explosion.
Several residents heard the blast and rushed to
the scene in time to see Senese running from his car, his clothes singed
off and his body badly burned. "I didn`t know what happened," said Frank
DeSanti, who lives on the block. "I looked and I saw a car on fire and
smoke coming out. The man was staggering down the street. He was on
fire. I tried to help him. A pastor gave him a chair. A woman got him a
blanket. "He was so shocked, he couldn`t say a word," DeSanti added.
Responding police found Senese being cared for
by paramedics. "I asked him what his name was," said Sgt. Joseph Gawlik,
of the Monroe police district. "He told me, `Lucien Senese.` I asked him
what had happened. That question he would not respond to. He was moaning
from the pain."
On Aug. 30, a federal judge in New York upheld
an order ousting Dominic Senese from the presidency of Local 703 because
of his association with Chicago mob figures.
Local 703 represents workers in Chicago`s
wholesale produce market, which receives most of the meat, fruit and
vegetable deliveries that enter the city. Non-Teamster drivers making
pickups at the market have long complained of shakedowns by people
working in the market. Dominic Senese, known in mob circles as the "big
banana," according to FBI documents, narrowly survived a shotgun attack
that tore away parts of his face and neck as he drove toward his home in
an exclusive subdivision in Du Page County.
According to a federal court document written by
FBI agent Peter J. Wacks, an organized-crime specialist, the FBI warned
Dominic Senese in 1987 that his life was in danger. Wacks said Senese,
whom he identified as a member of the Chicago mob, declined FBI
protection. No one was charged with the attempted hit on the elder
Senese. He underwent plastic surgery and returned to work at the local
office, 300 S. Ashland Ave. Whatever the motive of the shooting, it did
not stop Senese from gaining re-election as union president over
challenger William Romondi, who was later stripped of all union power by
Senese.
But in 1989, the national Teamsters union
entered into a consent decree with federal authorities, a move that led
to the appointment of three administrators who took control over many
union affairs.
As a result, Dominic Senese and two other
Chicago Teamster officials were permanently ousted from the union on
July 13 by one of the appointed administrators.
The Lucien Senese car bombing came almost one
year after Joseph Bova, secretary-treasurer of a Laborers union local in
northwest Indiana, was killed when he started his pickup truck,
detonating a bomb outside his home in Merrillville, Ind. That bombing is
unsolved.
Copyright 1998, The Tribune Company.
http://www.thelaborers.net/newspapers/Tribune_9-7-90.html

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