Vincent Solano
Vincent Solano (c. 1920 – November 16, 1992) was a Chicago labor union leader who presided over Laborers' International Union of North America Local 1 for nearly 30 years and was reputed to hold the rank of caporegime in the Chicago Outfit, exerting control over gambling, vice, and loan-sharking operations on the city's North Side.[1]As president of Local 1, Solano negotiated wage increases and benefit improvements for thousands of construction laborers, consolidating significant influence within Chicago's building trades amid persistent federal scrutiny of organized crime's penetration into unions.[1] He was publicly linked to Outfit leaders such as Anthony Accardo and Joseph Aiuppa, and in testimony before a U.S. Senate subcommittee, mob turncoat Ken Eto accused him of ordering Eto's 1983 assassination attempt after Eto's guilty plea in a gambling case exposed syndicate activities.[1] Solano invoked the Fifth Amendment during related hearings on labor racketeering but faced no successful federal prosecution for murder solicitation or direct mob leadership during his lifetime.[2][1] He died of natural causes at his home in Lisle, Illinois, while undergoing treatment for prostate cancer.[1]