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Re: Meyer Lansky.
#195600
09/28/02 06:46 PM
09/28/02 06:46 PM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,720 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,720
AZ
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Lansky was a pal of Batista's from the '30's. When Batista returned to power in '52, he found that gringo gamblers were staying away in droves because the games were crooked. He asked his pal Lansky to organize gaming in Havana as a consultant, because Lansky had a solid-gold reputation for giving players an even break--he believed profits from gambling were sufficiently big so that there was no need for the house to cheat. To keep peace with his Mob pals, Lansky divided up the Havana action evenly. The scene in GFII in which Roth says he's leaving his empire to the Corleones "but all of you will share equally" is a fair approximation of how he operated in Cuba. (BTW: in that scene, "Eddie Levine of Newport" was in real life Eddie Levinson of Covington, KY, a big-time gaming operator; "Johnny Ola" in real life was Lansky's pal Jimmy "Blue Eyes" Alo.) Lansky and Trafficante partnered with Batista in building the Riviera, Havana's biggest casino hotel. It started making big money when it opened in 3/58, but Castro closed it and the other casinos after he took over in 1/59. Lansky and his investors lost everything. Trafficante spent a month in a Cuban jail before Lansky persuaded Castro to let him go.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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Re: Meyer Lansky.
#195607
01/03/06 06:49 PM
01/03/06 06:49 PM
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Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 103
Don Chater
Made Member
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Made Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 103
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Originally posted by Turnbull: Lansky was a pal of Batista's from the '30's. When Batista returned to power in '52, he found that gringo gamblers were staying away in droves because the games were crooked. He asked his pal Lansky to organize gaming in Havana as a consultant, because Lansky had a solid-gold reputation for giving players an even break--he believed profits from gambling were sufficiently big so that there was no need for the house to cheat. To keep peace with his Mob pals, Lansky divided up the Havana action evenly. The scene in GFII in which Roth says he's leaving his empire to the Corleones "but all of you will share equally" is a fair approximation of how he operated in Cuba. (BTW: in that scene, "Eddie Levine of Newport" was in real life Eddie Levinson of Covington, KY, a big-time gaming operator; "Johnny Ola" in real life was Lansky's pal Jimmy "Blue Eyes" Alo.) Lansky and Trafficante partnered with Batista in building the Riviera, Havana's biggest casino hotel. It started making big money when it opened in 3/58, but Castro closed it and the other casinos after he took over in 1/59. Lansky and his investors lost everything. Trafficante spent a month in a Cuban jail before Lansky persuaded Castro to let him go. This information can be found in Uri Dan's book on Meyer Lansky?
"If anything in this life is certain; If history has taught us anything, it's that you can kill anyone."
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Re: Meyer Lansky.
#195608
01/05/06 05:34 AM
01/05/06 05:34 AM
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Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 513
juventus
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 513
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Lansky DID spend a few (i thought 3) months in jail in the 50's..
'This was just another Bronx tale.'
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Re: Meyer Lansky.
#195609
01/05/06 01:27 PM
01/05/06 01:27 PM
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,720 AZ
Turnbull
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Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,720
AZ
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Don Chater, most of my info on Lansky comes from Robert Lacey's outstanding biography, "Little Man - Meyer Lansky and the Gangster Life," one of the very few gangster bios that's well researched and accurate. Juventus: Yes, Lansky spent three months in a jail in Saratoga Springs, NY in the early Fifties on a minor gambling charge. Although he'd been arrested several times as a young man, and was arrested several times later, this was the only time he actually served a prison sentence.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
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