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Dennis Griffin - The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob (True Crime)

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Dennis Griffin The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob (True Crime)
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From the 1970s through the mid-1980s, the Chicago Outfit dominated organized crime in Las Vegas. Unreported revenue, known as the skim, from Outfit-controlled casinos made its way out of Vegas by the bagful, ending up in the coffers of the Windy City crime bosses and their confederates around the Midwest. To ensure the smooth flow of cash, the gangsters installed a front man with no criminal background, Allen R. Glick, as the casino owner of record, Frank Lefty Rosenthaal as the real boss of casino operations, and Tony Spilotro as the ultimate enforcer, whod do whatever it took to protect their interests. It wasnt long before Spilotoro, also in charge of Vegas street crime, was known as the King of the Strip. Federal and local law enforcement, recognizing the need to rid the casinos of the mob and shut down Spilotros rackets, declared war on organized crime. The Battle for Las Vegas relates the story of the fight between the tough buys on both sides, told in large part by the agents and detectives who knew they had to win.

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As a long-time Las Vegas resident and retired Senior Agent of the Nevada Gaming Control Board, I can state that Dennis Griffin has put together the real story of the Spilotro years in Vegas.


Jack Miller

Wow Dennis Griffin has really captured the Las Vegas I knew it s an - photo 1


Wow ... Dennis Griffin has really captured the Las Vegas I knew; it s an amazing book. If you want to know about Las Vegas in the mob days, this book says it all. It s a great read.


Tru HawkinsLong-time Las Vegan and host of the Tru Hawkins Show on KDWN Radio

There has been a lot written and filmed about the days when the mob reigned in - photo 2


There has been a lot written and filmed about the days when the mob reigned in Las Vegas, mostly from the point of view of the mobsters and their attorneys. In The Battle for Las Vegas, Dennis Griffin has added balance by including the law-enforcement side of things. If you want to know the true story of what it was really like back then, you need to read this book.


Lt. Gene Smith (retired)Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department

Finally a book about the mob in Las Vegas from the law-enforcement - photo 3


Finally, a book about the mob in Las Vegas from the law-enforcement perspective. Dennis Griffin has thoroughly researched and accurately written the story about how law enforcement fought and won the battle to rid Las Vegas of the influence and control of organized crime. It was a pleasure to live through those times again in the pages of this book.


Dennis Arnoldy (retired)FBI case agent for the Spilotro investigations in Las Vegas

The Battle for
Las Vegas


Other Books by Dennis N. Griffin


The Morgue

Red Gold

Blood Money

Killer In Pair-A-Dice

One-Armed Bandit

Pension

Policing Las Vegas

Cullotta


The Battle for
Las Vegas


The Law vs. The Mob


Dennis N. Griffin

Huntington Press

Las Vegas, Nevada


The Battle for Las Vegas

The Law vs. The Mob


Published by

Huntington Press

3665 Procyon Ave.

Las Vegas, NV 89103

Phone (702) 252-0655

e-mail:


Copyright 2006, Dennis N. Griffin


ISBN: 978-0-929712-82-X


Cover Design: Laurie Shaw

Interior Design & Production: Laurie Shaw


Photo credits: Dennis Arnoldy, Mike Bunker, Kent Clifford, Jim Erbeck, Lynn Ferrin, Dennis N. Griffin, Tru Hawkins, Gary Magnesen, John McCarthy, Gene Smith, Illinois Department of Corrections, Las Vegas Review-Journal, Las Vegas Metropolitian Police Department, Office of Mayor Goodman, UNLV Special Collections


All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be translated, reproduced, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the copyright owner.


Dedication


This book is dedicated to the men and women of law enforcement, sworn and civilian, whose diligence and professionalism make us all more safe and secure. The battles they fight on our behalfoften at great personal riskwarrant our sincerest gratitude.


Acknowledgments


I want to express my heartfelt gratitude to all those current and former law-enforcement personnel who shared their experiences, insights, photos, and time in helping me write this book. They include, but are not limited to, former Clark County Sheriff John McCarthy, Commander Kent Clifford, Detective David Groover and Lt. Gene Smith, former Deputy District Attorney Jim Erbeck, former Strike Force Special Attorney Stanley Hunterton, and former FBI agents Joe Yablonsky, Charlie Parsons, Emmett Michaels, Dennis Arnoldy, Lynn Ferrin, and Gary Magnesen.

The newspaper archives of the Las Vegas-Clark County Library District held stories from the Las Vegas Sun, The Valley Times, and Las Vegas Review-Journal that provided key information regarding events and incidents of the era I was researching. A series of 1983 articles by Michael Goodman of the Los Angeles Times proved to be equally beneficial.

The well-researched books The Green Felt Jungle (Reid and Demaris), Of Rats and Men ( John L. Smith), and The First 100 (A.D. Hopkins and K.J. Evans) provided crucial background information into the history of organized crimes influence in Las Vegas. I also watched the movie Casino in which actors Joe Pesci and Robert De Niro portrayed characters based on Tony Spilotro and Frank Lefty Rosenthalnumerous times.

Three former casino insiders, whom I call Sammy, Mario, and Mickey, gave me a feel for what it was like in the gaming establishments and on the Strip during the Spilotro years. A woman, Connie, who was employed by the Argent Corporation at that time and worked directly for Frank Rosenthal, shared her memories with me. Tru Hawkins of KDWN Radio and a life-long resident of Las Vegas offered his perceptions of those days, as well.

A bartender, Joe, who worked in several Las Vegas clubs and casinos during Spilotros reign, offered further insights into the atmosphere of Las Vegas during the days of mob control. Harry, a veteran Sin City bail bondsman, provided ideas of how information of law-enforcement activities made its way to the bad guys.

Veteran newsman Bob Stoldal of KLAS-TV, Gwen Castaldi, former KLAS reporter, Andrea Boggs, former KVBC-TV anchor and reporter, and Jane Ann Morrison of the Las Vegas Review-Journal provided a look at the Spilotro years from the media perspective.

I also extend my thanks to Nancy and Vincent Spilotro, Tonys widow and son, for helping out with personal insights about their husband and father.

There are many others who deserve mention, but for various legitimate reasons desire to be anonymous. Respecting their wishes, they will remain nameless, but not unappreciated.


Contents


















Introduction


Las Vegas and its ties to organized crime are well-known, the subject of many books, TV documentaries, and movies. In my previous book, Policing Las Vegas A History of Law Enforcement in Southern Nevada, I wrote a section called The Mobs Man, concerning the Las Vegas reign of Tony Spilotro, a made man of the Chicago crime family.

Tony and his wife Nancy, both 33 years old at the time, and their five-year-old son Vincent moved to Las Vegas in 1971. Known as a tough and ruthless gangland enforcer, Spilotro allegedly used intimidation, and sometimes murder, to protect Chicagos criminal interests in Vegas until his own death in 1986. When he wasnt acting directly on the Chicago familys behalf, law enforcement believed that Tony ran a gang that committed lucrative street crimes, including loan sharking, robbery, burglary, and fencing stolen goods. Eventually his status required that he be paid a street taxa kickbackfrom other criminal groups wanting to operate their own illegal enterprises. The word was that nothing happened in Vegasfrom loan sharking to contract killingswithout Tonys knowledge and blessing.

The deeper I dug, the more intrigued I became with Tony Spilotro and the battle the law waged against him and his gang. It was a fight with tough men on both sides. I gathered enough information to complete that section of the book, but knew Id only scratched the surface of the story.

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