Mobster Restaurants Around The Country


Mafia haunt in Brooklyn where he's been banned from offers a side of excitement for thrill-seeking diners.
Recently Mark Iacono, owner ofLucali, another Brooklyn eatery with speculated ties to the mob, made headlines recently when he got into aknife fight with a known wiseguy on the street near the pizzeria. Now charged with attempted murder, his new notoriety puts the reality of the Mafia into stark relief. But just like viewers can live vicariously through the reality programMob Wives without being married to the mob, visitors to these 13 restaurants can sop up the same spaghetti sauce without dodging bullets. We hope.(Photo courtesy of Eater NY)

Rao's and scene-of-the-crimeSparks Steak House are the usual suspects, while Chicago'sGreen Mill takes you back to Al Capone's heyday. Instead of a fedora and pin-stripe suit, these days goodfellas are more likely to be juiceheads that look something likeCafé Martorano's owner, nephew of former South Philly mobster "Long John" Martorano, although he chose the culinary life over La Cosa Nostra.(Photo, right: Arthur Bovino).
Many of the mobster restaurants are a real slice of Americana. History buffs gravitate towards places likeCampisi's in Dallas, where mob-affiliated Jack Ruby, Lee Harvey Oswald's hit man, was known to hang out, and hipsters can check out a real speakeasy in Providence, R.I. —Camille's, which has seen many a famous face, whether a made man or a Hollywood leading man.
Click here for the Mobster Restaurants Around the Country Slideshow.