Career
Reginelli"s nickname came from his short stature. Born in Nepezzano in the Abruzzo region of Italy, Reginelli immigrated to the United States in 1914 at age 17. He first settled in an Italian-American community in Penns Grove, New Jersey, with many neighbors from Valle San Giovanni and Teramo.
Many of these immigrants worked at the nearby DuPont chemical factory.
Marco"s specialty was gambling and the numbers racket, although he was also convicted of larceny and receiving stolen goods. A congressional committee once described Reginelli as "the top hoodlum in the Philadelphia-New Jersey area".
In 1942, while Reginelli was visiting Miami, Florida, he called up his girlfriend Louise in Camden and invited her to join him in Florida. Using an airline ticket purchased by Reginelli, Louise flew to Florida and stayed with him in his hotel room in Miami Beach for ten days.
However, a United States Attorney in Trenton, New Jersey heard about her trip and indicted Reginelli under the federal Mann Acting.
Designed to combat the transportation of women across state lines for prostitution, the law could also cover adult women in a consenting relationship who were transported by their partner. Reginelli was convicted and, as a result, was denied naturalization as a United States citizen. Reginelli eventually extended his influence to the resort area of Atlantic City.
In the late 1940s, he built the 500 Club, a nightclub in Atlantic City.
The Federal Government unsuccessfully tried to deport Reginelli to Italy. They also failed to block his citizenship application.
Reginelli was finally naturalized as a United States. citizen in June 1955. Marco Reginelli died in 1956 at age 58 and is buried in the Calvary Cemetery in Cherry Hill, New Jersey.
Reginell"s successor as underboss was his protegee Angelo Bruno.