The victim leads a restaurant group that operates over a dozen establishments, many of which feature video gambling machines that have collectively generated more than $30 million in net terminal income
Casey Szaflarski, 67, once labeled the Chicago Outfit’s video gambling “kingpin,” was indicted on May 28 on felony charges connected to a burglary of a wealthy restaurateur that occurred around March 18 at a home in unincorporated West Dundee, according to court records.
Szaflarski Arrested for Alleged Burglary
Szaflarski and his alleged accomplices, reputed mob-associated burglar Paul Koroluk, and Louis Capuzi Jr., the son of a former state legislator, are accused of taking possession of the homeowner’s property, including cash and/or jewelry valued between $10,000 and $100,000. They also face additional charges, including residential burglary.
The victim leads a restaurant group that operates over a dozen establishments, many of which feature video gambling machines that have collectively generated more than $30 million in net terminal income, according to records from the Illinois Gaming Board. Amy Johnson, a spokesperson for the Kane County Sheriff’s Office, the agency handling the investigation, declined to comment on whether the three men are suspected in other burglaries. She stated only that the case remains “a pending investigation and is being worked on.”
Here’s More About the Three Suspects
Way back in 2012, Szaflarski was sentenced to more than three years in federal prison after being prosecuted for allegedly running a profitable, mob-linked video gambling operation under the direction of Cicero mob boss Michael “The Large Guy” Sarno, who is now incarcerated. For years, paying out winnings from video gambling machines was illegal in Illinois, though it remained widespread. The mob supplied machines to bars and other venues, splitting the profits, and at times using violence to handle rivals.
That began to change in 2009 when the Illinois General Assembly passed legislation to legalize and regulate video gambling, although the first legal machines didn’t go live until 2012. Szaflarski, a resident of Chicago’s Bridgeport neighborhood, was released from federal custody in 2015…