Background
Sabini was born Ottavio Handley, the illegitimate child of Italian immigrant Ottavio Sabini and Englishwoman Eliza Handley.
Sabini was born Ottavio Handley, the illegitimate child of Italian immigrant Ottavio Sabini and Englishwoman Eliza Handley.
Gangs of London by historian Brian McDonald has a chapter devoted to the Sabini family and is considered to be the best source. As leader of the Sabinis and "king of the racecourse gangs", he dominated the London underworld and racecourses throughout the south of England for much of the early twentieth century. Sabini"s Clerkenwell-based organisation, although rivalled by the Birmingham Boys, the Cortesi family, the Yiddishers and the White family, dominated the local underworld for nearly 20 years during the inter-war period.
Sabini"s organisation, notorious for razor attacks, which had an estimated 300 members including imported Sicilian gunmen in addition to local criminals, was involved in criminal activities including extortion, theft and illegal gambling (specifically horse racing) as well as operating several nightclubs.
The core of his income came from racecourse protection rackets operated against bookmakers. In 1922 he was involved in a gunfight with the Cortesi brothers.
In 1926 he was declared bankrupt following an unsuccessful libel action against District of Columbia Thompson & Company That year he moved to Brighton and established a similar racket there using the name Fred Handley (his mother"s maidenname).
Although regularly charged with assault, his gang"s reputation made witnesses naturally reluctant to come forward.
At its peak, Sabini had extensive police and political connections including judges, politicians and police officials. Sabini"s power rested on an alliance of Italians and Jewish bookmakers. After the outbreak of war, Sabini was arrested at the Greyhound Stadium at Hove in April 1940 and interned as an enemy alien, despite his mixed parentage and inability to speak Italian.
He was released the following year, but in 1943 found guilty of receiving stolen goods and sentenced to 3 years in prison.
After the war, his empire was taken over by the White family led by Alf White and subsequently by the organizations of Jack Spot and Billy Hill. During the 1930s, Sabini was said to be permanently resident in a penthouse apartment in the Grand Hotel, Brighton.
After the war, he worked as a bookmaker and was resident in Hove. He was immortalised as the gangster Colleoni in Graham Greene"s Brighton Rock.
Foreign this reason, the coming of the Second World War and the rise of Fascism in Italy threatened his powerbase, with antisemitism infecting London"s Italian community.