Frankie Yale (born 1893, Calabria region, Italy—died July 1, 1928, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.) was an Italian-born American gangster and national president, during its heyday (1918–28), of the Unione Siciliane, a Sicilian fraternal organization that by World War I had become a crime cartel operating in several U.S. cities and active in robbery, prostitution, labour-union extortion, and other rackets.
Yale was born in Italy, and his family moved to the United States while he was still young. They settled in New York City, where he became involved in youth gangs. During Prohibition he graduated to bootlegging and rum-running. He opened a bar named the Harvard Inn, and Al Capone worked there for several years. Yale also took on murder contracts as a sideline; he was reputedly the imported gunman who held Dion O’Bannion’s hand while cohorts shot the Chicago mobster. Yale himself was finally killed driving his car on a Brooklyn street as another car drew alongside, machine guns firing. Capone allegedly ordered the execution, suspecting Yale of a liquor hijacking. Yale’s funeral was grandly enacted, with a $12,000 casket and 28 trucks of flowers.