The Unholy Murder of Ash Wednesday. The Stained Life and Rude Times of Mob Wannabe "bolo" Dovishaw
Dominick D. DiPaolo, Jeff PinskiErie, Pennsylvania; January 3, 1983: Are you ready for some football? Frank "Ash Wednesday" Dovishaw was more than ready that bitterly cold Monday night. He didn't really care who won or lost the last National Football League game of the regular season. But the man also called "Bolo" did indeed care about local sports betting on the nationally-televised pro game, and more specifically about his "take" on the action. Frank—or "Ash Wednesday" or "Bolo." He had many nicknames and aliases. He was a bookmaker. Not just a garden variety illegal numbers and sports-betting bookie. In partnership with an admitted mob hit man, he ran Northwestern Pennsylvania's most lucrative bookmaking operation, one that easily handled hundreds of thousands of dollars over a busy college bowl and professional football weekend. He was king of the local action. Unfortunately for Bolo, he would never see football that night; nor would he take another bet. Just hours before kickoff, begging for mercy...