Jewish Criminals and 
their Activities
        
        
       These excerpts are compiled from the
         following books:
        
         •   The American Jews
       •   An Empire of Their Own
       •  
         Esau’s Tears
       •   Heil Kahane
       •   Jews and Money
      
         •   The Rest of Us
       •   The Rise and Fall of the Jewish Gangster in America
       •   Jewish Criminals and Their Activities
        
       The American
         Jews: portrait of a split personality
       Author: James
         Yaffe ©1968 Publisher: Random House Library of Congress No. 68-28553 ISBN No. N/A
       61, 62 -- Jews Fear Headlines Exposing Jewish Criminal Activity
  
          
       A great
         many Jews live in terror of the banner  headline that screams out the guilt of someone with an obviously Jewish  name. If
         a Jew must commit a murder or an embezzlement, let him be named  Smith or Robinson. ...
        
       The sensitivity
         of some people to this kind of  thing can hardly be exaggerated. Every time they read that bookies have  been arrested, draft
         dodgers have been exposed, building inspectors have  been accused of taking bribes, they automatically check the list for
         Jewish names. Jews felt as grieved at President Kennedy’s death as all  other Americans; but I wonder how many of them,
         in the first hour after  the assassination, didn’t say a little prayer to themselves, “Please  God, make it not
         be a Jew!”
        
         Not only must Jews keep their own sins out of  the gentile gaze, they must be careful
         not to expose the sins of their  fellow Jews. this is the source of the friction which has existed since  time immemorial
         between the official Jewish community and the Jewish  writers. The writer feels that his first obligation is to deal honestly
         with the world he knows best. The official community feels that his  first obligation is to make that world look attractive
         to the gentiles.
        
         Book Title: An Empire of Their Own
       Author: Neal Gabler ©1988 Publisher: Crown Publishers Inc. ISBN No. 0-517-56808-X
         304 -- Put Ficticious Jewish Hero Into Movie: Stone
    
          
       In
         effect, though, Stone’s [John Stone, formerly  John Strumwasser] work mainly came down to picking nits: influencing
         the producer of The Sands of Iwo Jima to incorporate a fictitious Jewish  soldier; advising the producer of I Can get It for
         You Wholesale, a  film about the garment industry, that he must proceed cautiously since  the general public associated Jews
         with the garment trades; trying to  beef up the role of Justice Brandeis in a film biography of Oliver  Wendell Holmes; leaning
         on the writer of Murder Inc., about the Jewish  gangster Louis Lepke, to include a crusading Jewish prosecutor as well;  and
         most ludicrously, suggesting that Sammy Glick, the conniving Jewish  protagonist of Budd Schulberg’s novel What Makes
         Sammy Run?, be changed  to someone of indeterminate ancestry.
        
       Book Title: Esau’s Tears
       Author: Albert S. Lindemann ©1997 Publisher: Cambridge University
         Press ISBN No. 0-521-59369-7
       66 -- Eastern European
         Jews and Criminal Activity
        
       Eastern European Jews were also infamous in the  nineteenth century
         for involvement in activities associated with the  saloon, as pimps, or in the language of the time, in “white slavery,”
         but also in other illegal activities. A substantial Jewish subculture of  criminality thrived in cities like Odessa and Bucharest.
        
       Anti-Semitic conclusions were frequently drawn  from the prominent participation of Jews in the liquor trade, saloons,
         usury, prostitution, smuggling, and racketeering. Such conclusions were  drawn in the West as well as in eastern Europe and
         were part of the  reason that western Jews often tended to consider Jews from eastern  Europe to be social deviants, parasites,
         and criminals. Jewish reformers  did not deny the existence or extent of Jewish criminality but rather  emphasized how much
         the environment in eastern Europe encouraged  criminality. They expressed concern about what they termed the  “unnatural
         situation of Jews in eastern Europe and the unhealthy Jewish  character that resulted from it. Western Jewish leaders campaigned
         with  special vigor to root out the large participation of Jews in  prostitution.
        
       The Rise and
         fall of the Jewish Gangster in America
       Author: Albert
         Fried ©1980 Publisher: Holt Rinehart Winston ISBN 0-03-021371-1
       Dust Jacket Introduction
        
       Once there was a Jewish ghetto in every major  American city, each
         with its own distinctive underworld culture, its own  amalgam of prostitutes and pimps, gamblers and gangsters. From the 
         largest and most famous of these ghettoes, New York City’s Lower East  Side, there emerged in the years from 1880 to
         1914 some of the best  known criminals of their time, the likes of Monk Eastman, Kid Twist, Gyp  the Blood, Big Jack Zelig,
         Dopey Benny, Yoski Nigger, Kid Dropper,  Little Augie, Arnold Rothstein...
        
       ... The prominent Jewish gangsters
         of a later  day came from the same ghetto environment. One group specialized in  industrial and labor racketeering, from garments
         to baking and movies.  Of these racketeers none were more powerful, none more feared and  despised after World War I than
         Lepke Buchalter and his sidekick Gurrah  Shapiro; they and their Murder Incorporated allies cut a swath of terror  that is
         without precedence in the annals of American crime...
        
       ... The other group specialized in bootlegging.  Soon after Prohibition
         went into effect Jewish gangs sprang up in  Chicago, Cleveland, Boston, Detroit, Newark, Minneapolis, and of course  New York,
         calling forth such celebrated men of the age as Waxey Gordon,  Dutch Schulz, Bugs and Meyer (Benjamin Siegel and Meyer Lansky),
         King  Solomon, Longy Zwillman, Moe Dalitz and the Cleveland Four, the Purple  Gang and Kidd Cann. These mobs evolved into
         giant syndicates as they  joined or merged with their (mostly) Italian counterparts in each city  and formed cooperative arrangements,
         regional and national in scale, to  control the illicit alcohol market. And it was these very  gang/syndicates, with their
         concentrations of wealth and muscle, that  expanded into new commercial realms, especially gambling, after  Prohibition ended
         in 1933. Organized crime had by then become an  established institution.
        
       18 -- Pimps
          
       Some
         were large-scale indeed. Motche Goldberg  (“King of the Vice Trust”) had started out in the 1890s with one girl;
         by 1912 he had a controlling interest in eight whorehouses and 114 women  and was earning $4,000 a month, an incalculable
         amount by today’s  standards. Capitalists like Goldberg, furthermore, possessed resources  that enables them to go far
         afield in pursuit of business, to ship their  women wherever the traffic was most profitable — out west, even to the
          remotest mining towns, and abroad as well.
        
       25, 26 Fagins and Fences
        
       Like his counterparts
         in every other poor  neighborhood the Jewish criminal exploited the opportunities that lay  close at hand. He shook down peddlers
         and pushcart vendors and  storeowners, anyone with property vulnerable to assault, anyone whose  livelihood could be easily
         impeded. He was occasionally a burglar or  thief or “fagin.” One such fagin, Harry Joblinsky, had fifteen nimble
          pickpockets under his wing, another, Abe Greenthal, commanded the  notorious Sheeny Gang. More often, the criminal was a
         fence, a receiver  and mover of stolen goods. For years the untitled queen of the fences  was “Mother Fredrika Mandelbaum,
         squat and corpulent, citywide, indeed  nationwide if the accounts about her are true, complete with a battery  of defense
         lawyers and a whole communications network. Common too, and  especially loathsome for obvious reasons, was the arsonist who
         would gut  a store or house for the insurance it brought him or his employer. In  the early 1890s, after an epidemic of neighborhood
         fires, the  authorities sent eighteen of the worst arsonists to jail, some for life.  The most fiendish of them, Isaac Zucker,
         had a ring of “mechanics,”  each of whom he paid $25 for burning down a building or store which he,  Zucker, had
         insured.
        
       95, 96 “Black Sox” Scandal
        
       [Arnold] Rothstein had vaulted far
         beyond the  stuss parlors and pool halls and political clubhouses of his Lower East  Side youth and was now America’s
         premier gambler, certainly its  cleverest, best known, and most daring gambler. It was no surprise that  Rothstein’s
         name had recently surfaced as the evil genius behind the  1919 “Black Sox” scandal, the worst, or the only serious,
         scandal in  baseball history. And though Rothstein denied having anything to do with  the fix, and was never brought up on
         charges, he bore the inescapable  presumption of guilt: only he could have inspired such a heinous deed,  the corruption of
         the great American pastime (and the World Series at  that!). Nor was gambling his only claim to notoriety. The press also
          referred to him as a “sportsman and man about town” who consorted with  the rich (even as he fleeced them) in
         Saratoga and Long Island and  elsewhere, who had his own stable of fine race horses and belonged to  the exclusive New York
         Jockey Club.
        
   
            103 Dutch Schulz
        
       Arthur Flegenheimer is an improbable
         name for  an aspiring gangster. So this child of Austrian-Jewish parents, brought  up in the sinkholes of the South Bronx,
         chose as his nom de guerre Dutch  Schulz. “the Dutchman” demonstrated his exemplary gifts at an early  age; he
         was smart and quick and demonically cruel, and he had no trouble  becoming the leader of his local street gang. After serving
         as a  freelance gunman with several bootlegging and highjacking outfits the  Dutchman struck out on his own. His South Bronx
         gang, a grab bag of  Jewish, Italian, and Irish hoods, a ruthless assemblage if there ever  was one, beat down, muscled in
         on, or co-opted one neighborhood rival  after another, supplying beer and liquor to speakeasies, restaurants and  clubs as
         far away as Manhattan’s Upper West Side and Harlem. It was a  foolhardy adventurer who dared challenge the Dutchman’s
         expanding  fiefdom.
        
               234-238 Meyer Lansky in the 30s
        
       No one in America, it seems, was
         busier in the  1930s than Meyer Lansky, ambassador extraordinaire of organized crime.  Here is a checklist of some of his
         endeavors at that time. ...
        
       With a number of his colleagues, among them  Bugsy Siegel, Frank
         Costello and Joey Adonis, he owned shares in Capitol  Wines and Spirits, a giant New York distributor. ...
        
       Lansky joined the Cleveland outfit — Dalitz,  Tucker, Kleinman (who happened then to be in jail), Rothkopf,
         and the  Polizzis — in building a series of distilleries strung across the  northern tier of the country from Ohio to
         New Jersey, the largest  illicit operation of its kind uncovered by revenue agents. ...
        
       Lansky was
         instrumental in converting Hot  Springs, Arkansas, from a venerable watering hole into an up-to-date  casino gambling town
         — though it never lost its quaintness — and an  ideal refuge for syndicate gangsters on the lam. ...
       Lansky was a partner in the enormously lucrative slot machine business
         that Frank Costello opened in New Orleans. ...
        
       In Cuba, Lansky dealt with another kind of  boss, ex-army sergeant
         Fulgencio Batista, who late in 1933, and with the  help of the United States, made the law himself, giving the stamp of  legitimacy
         to whatever he authorized. He and Lansky were the closest of  friends. Catching the vision Lansky outlined, Batista would
         rent Havana  to the American underworld, not at once but bit by bit and for as long  as he could. In return Lansky and his
         associates would build up the  tourist industry as only they knew how, and the whole island, from  Batista to the humblest
         campesino (though in unequal measure), would  enjoy the blessings of their largesse.
        
       241 Meyer Lansky
         in the 40s
        
     
          Now it was universally assumed that the Mafia  controlled the International Longshoreman’s
         Association of the Port of  New York, and so the commanding officer of the Third Naval District  concluded that the best way
         to improve security was to win the  cooperation of the ILA. (It never occurred to the Navy to appeal  directly to the patriotism
         of the longshoremen. There is an implied  racism here: Italians equal Mafia.)
        
       In the spring of 1942, the head of
         Naval  intelligence operations for the Third District called on the New York  District Attorney for help. The D.A. got in
         touch with Joseph “Socks”  Lanza, boss of the Fulton Fish Market on the east River. Lanza, a  tertiary figure
         in the gang/syndicate order, could not do very much and  referred the government officials to Luciano. This they did through
         one  of Luciano’s lawyers in the 1936 trial, Moses Polakoff, who happened  also to be Meyer Lansky’s lawyer. It
         was Lansky who conveyed the  government’s message to Luciano, secured Luciano’s agreement to do  whatever he could
         in behalf of the war effort, and as Luciano’s emissary  worked closely with the ILA leaders. Luciano granted the government
         one  more favor: he saw to it — again through Lansky — that his Sicilian  Mafia paisanos lent the American and
         Allied expeditionary forces every  assistance (quite valuable as it turned out) when they landed there in  1943. ...
        
       Messick quotes from a secret Narcotics Bureau  memo sent by one of its agents to Italy on December 4, 1951. “Lucky
          Luciano,” the memo goes, “came to an understanding with Mafia elements  in the U.S.A.,” the burden of which
         was this: “If anyone in the U.S.A.  interfered or muscled in on Lansky’s activities Lucky Luciano would take 
         appropriate strong actions from Italy.
        
       261, 262 Going Straight?
        
       That the Mafia
         was hardly the point at issue —  in the form the Committee imagined at any rate — was blatantly obvious  from
         the number of Jewish gangsters who appeared before it, gangsters as  rich and powerful as the most notorious of the Italian
         witnesses. With  the exception of King Solomon’s men — Joe Linsey, Hyman Abrams, and  Louis Fox (Kefauver having
         inexplicably omitted Boston from his  itinerary) — and Kidd Cann, just about every important Jewish gangster  testified.
         And on the whole they comported themselves very well. They  pictured themselves as men who after a few youthful peccadilloes
         and  false starts were trying earnestly to make a go of it in business. There  was of course some truth in this misrepresentation.
         Detroit’s Bernstein  Brothers, retired Purples, were raising horses and selling real estate  in California; Moe Dalitz,
         besides running a huge Las Vegas hotel with  his partners, had many legitimate concerns in Cleveland and Detroit,  from scrap
         iron and laundries to steel mills; Nig Rosen had dress  factories in the Bronx and Pennsylvania; Longy Zwillman rented cigarette
          vending and washing machines and sold cars, among other things; Lansky  lamented his failure in selling jukebox television
         to bars and  restaurants (“We should have gone into the home set end, and maybe I  would have been a rich man today”);
         and so on and on went the parade of  gangster-entrepreneurs.
        
       When pressed hard and forced to admit
         that they  were still friendly with “known underworld figures,” were indeed still  engaged in illegal activities,
         they shifted ground, pleading for  sympathy, claiming they were trapped, overwhelmed by circumstances.  Addressing Moe Sedway,
         Bugsy Siegel’s ex-sidekick and now one of the  Flamingo’s bosses (he also had risen to considerable respectability:
         he  was in 1950 the chief fund-raiser for the Nevada United Jewish Appeal),  Senator Tobey said with unflagging righteousness:
         “You are in cahoots  with a lot of people like Bugsy Siegel, and you wonder whether it all  pays or not or what it amounts
         to, and why men do these things. I look  upon these people in my state of New Hampshire that till the soil and  make $2,000
         a year as a lot richer than these people down here. They  have peace of mind and can look everybody in the eye.”
        
       286 The Present
        
               It is a fading memory enveloped in twilight  now: the Lower East Side of Maier
         Luchowljansky’s childhood, where Big  Jack Zelig and his men (Lefty Louie, Whitey Louis, and Gyp the Blood)  still commanded
         the streets, taking up where Monk Eastman and Kid Twist  had left off, where the whores and gun molls and cadets and gamblers
         and  guerrillas and life-takers met at Segal’s Cafe and in scores of  hangouts like it, where youth gangs abounded on
         every block, where  aspiring criminals learned the technique of survival and with luck and  audacity and brains achieved success
         as well. But the Lower East Side  and every other urban ghetto — Chicago’s and Philadelphia’s and  Cleveland’s
         and Boston’s and Detroit’s and Newark’s — once tenanted by  Eastern European Jews are gone, and so
         are all the children of the  underworld, those who fell in battle and those who died peacefully in  the bosom of respectability,
         the anonymous mass and the privileged few.  That past is vanquished. Meyer Lansky is the last of its heroes.
        
       Heil Kahane
        
               Author: Yair Kotler © 1986 Publisher: Adama Books ISBN No. 0-915361-35-3
       46, 47 -- Kahane & the Mafia
      
          
       Kahane
         received substantial aid from the New  York Mafia. The first real link between Meir Kahane and Joseph (Joe)  Colombo, a Mafia
         figure in New York, was formed in May 1971, when Kahane  was in jail on a charge of illegal possession of weapons and  explosives.
         He wanted to be freed on bail, but the JDL treasury was  empty, as usual. Imprisonment drove Kahane mad. He had always feared
         it  and done everything (even informing on his comrades to the authorities)  in order to avoid going to jail. Kahane knows
         that he can attract  publicity only when he is free.
        
       Nine other JDL activists were imprisoned along  with Kahane. In 1972
         Kahane stated that a total of $155,000 out of a  budget of $250,000 was spent on bail. In order to leave jail as quickly 
         as possible, Kahane was willing to make a pact with the devil himself.
        
       Kahane’s criminal lawyer was
         Barry Slotnick,  one of the leading criminal lawyers in New York, who was also Joe  Colombo’s lawyer. Kahane asked Slotnick
         to make the connection with the  Mafia leader. Kahane’s arrest attracted the attention of the media. He  found the attention
         flattering, but the imprisonment unbearable. Colombo  listened attentively to Slotnick, who told him that Kahane wanted  Colombo’s
         help in raising bail. Colombo jumped at the opportunity. He  replied that Kahane was a man after his own heart, a man “fighting
         for  his people.” As a veteran Mafioso, Colombo could appreciate Kahane’s  violent methods. He realized he could
         use Kahane to improve his own  image: public disclosure of the link between the two would benefit  Colombo. He immediately
         agreed to provide bail for all the prisoners.
        
       50 -- Firearms
        
       Colombo’s group treated Kahane
         as a hero after  he was charged with possession of firearms without a license — a serious  offense which further distanced
         Kahane from the Jewish leadership. Both  Kahane and Colombo were regarded as pariahs by their respective  communities.
       51 -- Mafia Connections
        
       Kahane’s
         critics in the United States maintain  that the JDL also had ties with Meyer Lansky, the Cosa Nostra’s  financial wizard,
         and that JDL activists were used to smuggle hard drugs  into the United States. When the Italian police arrested a drug  smuggling
         ring led by Salvatore Zizzo in September 1974, Kahane’s  opponents charged that the Zizzo family had close ties to a
         JDL branch —  ties that were forged by Colombo in the late sixties. The Zizzo ring  was involved in smuggling drugs
         from the Far East to the U.S. and  Canada. Many are aware that some JDL members have been addicted to drugs  in both the United
         States and Israel. Several were charged with the use  and distribution of drugs in the United States. The charges were  inexplicably
         dropped, suggesting that they may have served as informers.
        
       63 -- Time Bomb
                
       [Elderly
         Jewish impresario, Sol] Hurok refused  to bow to JDL pressure. In retaliation, they determined to destroy his  offices. On
         January 26, two young well-dressed men entered Hurok’s  twelfth-floor office suite and politely asked for the date of
         a future  performance. They were asked to wait for the information, but they  quickly left the offices, leaving behind a vinyl-covered
         briefcase. A  time bomb quietly ticked away inside the case. At the same time, two  other young men were similarly engaged
         at a Manhattan location nearby:  the offices of Columbia artists, a film company that also organized  visits to the U.S. by
         Soviet performers.
        
               Before anything could be done, the two bombs  exploded. Flames burst forth.
         The offices were filled with dense,  choking smoke. The fire caused great heat. Panic-stricken employees  jumped from the
         windows of the Columbia Artists office, fought their way  through the smoke filling the lobby, and escaped to the street.
         Hurok’s  office, on a high floor of a skyscraper, encased in hermetically sealed  glass, became a deathtrap, filled
         with lethal smoke. the windows could  not be opened. The central air conditioning system spewed forth smoke.  Hurok almost
         choked and was rescued by firefighters; he had to be rushed  to the hospital, more dead than alive.
                
       But
         Iris Kones, a 27-year-old Jewish woman who  worked in the accounting department, and two other women with whom she  worked
         tried to escape the smoke. They kept their faces close to the  floor, which was covered with wall-to-wall carpeting. The firefighters
          found them like that when they entered the room, with their faces buried  in the carpet and their hair burned. All three
         were unconscious. Two  were successfully resuscitated with the use of oxygen, but Iris inhaled  too much smoke. She died of
         suffocation. (Twelve other employees were  injured; two suffered serious burns.
        
       65 -- Kahane
         Chutzpah
        
       The police arrested seven people, including  three minors, all JDL members. (One of them, Michael
         Brown, was a  planted agent arrested by mistake; he was soon released) The League  responded by picketing police headquarters
         and charging the chief of  police with harassment and anti-Semitism. Those directly responsible for  Iris’s death, either
         hid or fled to Israel. The fugitives included  Jerome Zeller and several others subpoenaed by the grand jury  investigating
         the crime.
        
     
          The police nets soon drew in Stuart Cohen,  Sheldon Davis, and Sheldon Seigel, three
         members of the top echelon of  the JDL. They were arrested and charged with causing the death of Iris  Kones. Kahane hurried
         back to the United States, and held a press  conference at the Belmont Plaza. Kahane charged Nixon with attacking the  League.
         He repeated his denial of JDL complicity in the bombing, and  said that the “beautiful Jewish children” taken
         into custody had been  arrested solely because they were JDL leaders.
        
       68 -- Serious Incidents
        
       The grand jury met in closed session and heard  Seigel’s testimony. Indictments were returned against Seigel
         and six  others for the bombs in Amtorg and Glen Cove. In the meantime another  serious incident occurred. A JDL sniper fired
         into the seventh-floor  bedroom of the residence of the Soviet delegate to the UN. Fortunately  none of the diplomat’s
         four children asleep in the room were harmed. The  sniper fired from the roof of Hunter College, using a Remington 243.
        
       Seigel named the real sniper: Gary Shlian, a  seventeen-year-old. Shlian was arrested while on his way to the airplane
          which was to take him to Israel.
        
       Seigel told about fantastic plans against  Soviet diplomats envisioned
         by the JDL with the grandiose notion of  damaging an emerging détente between the U.S. and the USSR. The first  plan
         had reached the operational stage. JDL members built a  radio-controlled model airplane, with a wingspan of 6 feet, which
         could  carry 66 sticks of dynamite. The plane could be transported on the top  of an automobile and controlled from a distance.
         JDL members planned to  land the plane on top of the Soviet mission to the UN on Park Avenue and  explode it.
        
       The second plan concerned dynamiting a Soviet  diplomat’s car while it was parked in the underground garage
         of the  Soviet Mission. League members conducting surveillance on the diplomat  discovered that he parked his car in an accessible
         location during  weekly visits to his mistress. The dynamite would be attached to the  bottom of his car at that time, to
         be detonated by remote control, when  the car was later parked in the Soviet Mission’s underground garage.  Other plans
         included shelling the Soviet residence in Glen Cove, Long  Island and murdering the Soviet ambassador to Washington, Anatoly
          Dobrynin, as he entered the Soviet embassy.
       Acting
         on Seigel’s information, police located  the miniature plane in the basement of a house in Borough Park. They  also
         scotched notions of shelling the residence in Glen Cove and  assassinating the Soviet ambassador.
                
       Jews
         and Money: the myths and the reality
       Author: Gerald
         Krefetz ©1982 Publisher: Ticknor and Field ISBN No. 0-89919-129-0
       112 -- La Kosher Nostra
        
       Of all the areas of Jewish enterprise, none has  been so overlooked
         as the field of crime. And it isn’t because of a  lack of Jewish criminality. For an introspective people, this oversight
          is significant. It is as if Jewish crime did not exist, an unsavory  skeleton best left in the family closet. Naturally,
         it goes against the  grain to think that among all the other Jewish-American prototypes —  doctor, lawyer, businessman,
         financier, artist, musician, scientist, and  academician — there is also a Jewish gangster. Recent circumstances  have
         forced this unpleasant recognition, for Jewish criminals are again  in the limelight.
        
       114, 115 --
         Unzer Shtik (Our Thing)
        
               While contemporary Jews believe that crime is  someone else’s problem,
         Jewish criminality is well-established. Perhaps  the refusal of the Jewish establishment to examine dispassionately the  record
         of Jewish-American crime “reveals a fundamental lack of security  and self-respect.” Jewish criminals, however,
         cut out a niche for  themselves quite a while ago, whether or not other Jews wish to  recognize their achievements. The list
         of prominent villains is long and  the aliases are intriguing: Louis “Lepke” Buchalter, Mickey Cohen,  “Tootsie”
         Feinstein, Solly Gross, Jake Guzik, Phil “The Stick” Kovolick,  Abe “Kid Twist” Relis, Arnold “The
         Brain” Rothstein, Benjamin “Bugsy”  Siegel, and Maier Suchowljansky, a.k.a. Meyer Lansky.
       For the most part, Jewish crime has followed  the tradition of the
         Jewish people: it is verbal, intellectual,  quasilegal, and non-violent. From the beginning, Jewish criminal  activity has
         mirrored the activities of legitimate business. While some  Jews were involved in the seamy, violent forms of crime, especially
         the  gang warfare of the Prohibition era, more Jews drifted to white-collar  crime and to the economic organization of crime.
         They left the more  vigorous bully work to the Italians, with whom they allied in their  joint effort to make a name for themselves.
         In the 1920s, rum-running  and manufacturing illegal liquor were the major underworld activities.  However, smuggling drugs
         and diamonds, loansharking, betting, numbers,  stock swindles, and securities fraud were also rackets.
                
       Perhaps
         the most notorious Jewish criminal of  that period was Arnold Rothstein. After fixing the 1919 World Series,  Rothstein turned
         to smuggling whiskey across the Atlantic, but not  before bribing the Long Island police and the Coast Guard commanders in
          the area. Rothstein retired before he was caught, and provided the  financial backing and the political protection for his
         one-time  bodyguard, Legs Diamond. Rothstein was murdered, but his two spiritual  heirs, Dutch Schulz (nee Arthur Flegenheimer)
         and Waxey Gordon (nee  Irving Wexler), took over. Also around that time, Meyer Lansky and  “Bugsy” Siegel were
         busy making their reputations as killers and  hijackers.
        
       In 1934, the criminals got together in an  ecumenical congress, a
         clandestine gathering that became the National  Crime Syndicate. It was Rothstein’s vision to organize lawlessness on
         a  regular, paying basis, and reduce intergang homicides. Organized by men  of ethnic backgrounds, the syndicate was led by
         Luciano, Lepke, Lansky,  and Siegel. Lansky, the chairman of the board, set up an organization to  settle jurisdictional disputes.
        
       Under Lansky, crime was no longer a cottage  industry of small, warring groups disposed to petty rackets and grand
          violence, but an elaborate corporation with subsidiaries and affiliates  in gambling, prostitution, narcotics, industrial
         racketeering, bribery,  and political corruption. Muscle was still used, and Lansky, the “little  enforcer,” knew
         when to apply it. But the wholesale slaughter that  existed earlier was largely a thing of the past. Some observers mark the
          Lansky chairmanship as a maturation of American crime, a watershed. A  contemporary, Al Capone, was a product of the era
         of guts, while Lansky  was a forerunner of the era of brains. Capone didn’t have a bank  account; Lansky left a trail
         of paper. The former died from syphilis in  jail; the latter retired with an officially reported net worth of $300  million.
        
       129-139 -- The Bernard Bergman Saga
        
       Central casting could not have found a more  perfect image of orthodoxy
         and self-righteousness — that mixture of  piousness and studied indifference to modernity — than Bernard Bergman.
          He was born in Hungary but in 1929, immigrated to the United States,  where he was ordained in 1934 at Yeshiva University.
         After a brief visit  to Jerusalem, he returned to New York City. At about the same time, his  stepfather was arrested in Paris,
         passing himself off as the “grand  rabbi of Brooklyn,” trying to smuggle seventeen pounds of heroin among  his
         religious books. Bergman’s mother pleaded guilty as an accomplice.
        
       Bergman’s first association
         with a nursing home  was as a rabbi at a Lower East Side establishment. After the war, he  gave up the active rabbinate and
         moved into nursing homes and real  estate as businesses. His first partner was sued by the state for  bilking Jews out of
         $2.3 million in a cemetery swindle. Bergman  attracted characters of dubious ethics.
        
       While Bergman
         was busy wheeling and dealing, he  maintained an active role in Zionist activities and Jewish  philanthropic work. ...
        
       ... As his holdings grew, he had few qualms  about using his contacts to expedite permits, quash unfavorable reports,
          and promote rate increases. From an inheritance of $30,000, left to him  by the founders of the first nursing home he worked
         in, Bergman’s net  worth grew to exceed $10 million by 1960.
        
       By that time, his nursing homes earned
         big  money and had attracted the attention of city authorities. Some of the  practices of the nursing facilities were fraudulent.
         The Commissioner of  Investigation, Louis Kaplan, found that the private nursing homes were  overbilling the city for the
         care of welfare patients — giving them  minimal care but charging maximum rates. Kaplan found the records so  badly
         kept that his accountants had to extrapolate a formula for the  erroneous billing. He concluded that the city had been overcharged
         $3.7  million in a two-year period in the late fifties, much of it due to  simple fraud. One Bergman home was responsible
         for $213,000 in  overcharges, and the president of the trade association, Eugene  Hollander, had overbilled by $237,000. The
         case was forwarded to the  District Attorney for legal action while the corporation counsel  recovered $650,000 for “unjust
         enrichment,” an out-of-court settlement  in which the city collected seventeen cents on a dollar. If the recovery  was
         incomplete, due to the difficulties in proving the case in court,  the criminal acts of the defendants were mysteriously forgotten.
         Forty  out of 119 houses were closed after Kaplan’s report. However, the  nursing home operators filed for and received
         rate increases of thirty  percent. ...
       131 ... As
         a consequence of the Kaplan report,  Bergman was notified by the New Jersey authorities that he was “persona  non grata.”
         Undeterred, Bergman moved into that state through front  organizations nominally owned by members of his family. ...
       ... Bergman’s “success” in the nursing home  business
         can be attributed to a number of things: his presence in the  right field at the right time; the indulgence of government
         agencies,  which seemed more concerned with custodial space than care for the  elderly; but probably most of all, to chutzpah,
         plain gall.
        
    
           135 Bergman’s single-minded profiteering was  his undoing. He milked Medicaid,
         taking advantage of the latest  government-sponsored program to aid the aged and indigent. What was  heinous about Bergman’s
         activities was not the theft of government funds  — in those terms he was no different than the wanted men on post office
          bulletin boards — but that he was preying on people who were unable to  defend themselves. It can, of course, be argued
         that Bergman was no  different from any other fast-buck artist. He was just dealing in  volume. But perhaps he should have
         been different — as a man of the  cloth, he should be devoted and held to higher standards of morality.  ... 136, 137
         ...
        
       Dr. Fleck, the first Deputy Commissioner of the Department of Health summarized Bergman’s
         activities:
        
    
           A long history of repetitive arrangements ...  which follow a consistent pattern
         under which the parties fulfill, on an  alternating basis, roles as buyers and sellers, lessors and lessees of  real estate
         devoted to nursing home purposes. The only standardized and  consistent relationship in these arrangements is continued inflation
         of  paper real estate values. ... Dr. Bergman wishes to choose among the  various options available to him under our current
         laws and regulations  in order to maximize the profits he can obtain by an eventual sale of  real estate. Apparently, the
         quality of the nursing home operation and  the service to be provided to the public is not an important  consideration influencing
         Dr. Bergman’s choices. ... The Public Health  Council is concerned about the inflation of costs as a result of this
          type of decision-making which is characterized by them as “trafficking  in nursing home real estate values” with
         regard to its effect on patient  welfare.
        
       138, 139 ... When the courts caught him,  Bergman was sentenced in
         federal court to four months for Medicaid and  tax fraud and in state court to one year for bribery of a state  legislator.
         He signed over his assets to satisfy a government claim of  $2.5 million as the judge termed him “an unscrupulous and
         corrupt  individual” with “little or no remorse.” Bergman then left for a minimum  security prison with
         minimum fences “not designed to keep people in or  out, they’re just designed to let us know where our property
         ends,” said  the superintendent. Fences are probably a good idea; otherwise Bergman  might have tried to subdivide the
         property and build a nursing home  after he arranged a sale-and-leaseback dodge with the warden. Bergman  served ten weeks
         for his federal offenses.
        
        
       Book Title: “The Rest of Us”
       Author:
         Stephen Birmingham ©1984 Publisher: Little, Brown & Company ISBN 0-316-09647-4
        
       77 -- Beginnings
        
       And crime, of course, carried the highest risks  of all. It was a business so unbusinesslike that it could not properly
          be called a business at all, and yet the Lower East Side would also  produce some of the most successful and powerful gangsters
         in the world.  One of these arrived at Ellis Island in April, 1911, as a ten-year-old  boy named Meyer Suchowljansky.
       141 -- Among Jews, Jewish Criminal Viewed as Part of American Landscape
        
       That the East Side had produced a number of  criminals was well known, and the attitude toward these people among
         the  Russian-Jewish community was somewhat ambivalent. On the one hand,  Jewish parents did not point out these men to their
         children as examples  of American success. And yet, at the same time, there was a certain  grudging admiration for men who
         could buck the system and get away with  it. The Jewish criminal wore snappy clothes, drove an expensive car, was  good to
         his wife, and could afford to send his sons to Harvard instead  of the City College of New York. There was a certain glamour
         about him,  rather like a Hollywood movie star. Crime, after all, was another way  out of the ghetto, and nobody could be
         faulted for wanting to get out.  And, for some, it was proving a very rapid way out of the ghetto — as  whirlwind a
         way as Rose Pastor’s engagement and marriage. Also, for  otherwise perfectly legitimate Jewish businessmen, it was often
         useful  to have a friend with “connections” who could get things done  expeditiously, without going through a
         lot of legal red tape. Union  problems, for example, could often be handled with a little muscle from  certain quarters. And
         so the Jewish criminal was not regarded, among  Jews, as an enemy of society, but more as a part of the general American 
         landscape. By 1920, Meyer Lansky had become part of this panorama.
        
       142 -- The Lansky-Luciano Connection
        
       There are at least two versions of how Meyer  Lansky first became friendly with another tough young East Sider named
          Salvatore Luciana, later to become known as Charles “Lucky” Luciano.  Lansky liked to recall that they had first
         encountered each other at  what had threatened to become a Lower East Side street battle between  the Italians and the Jews,
         and how Luciano had been attracted by the  tiny — fully grown, he was only a few inches over five feet tall —
          Lansky’s spunk and nerve. Luciano had called off the fight, and later  taken Lansky under his protection, gratis. Luciano
         would recall the  initial meeting somewhat differently. Luciano had been earning extra pin  money collecting pennies from
         Jewish youths for protection, but when he  approached Lansky with the usual proposition, Lansky had replied, “Fuck 
         you!” Impressed, Luciano had offered to supply Lansky with free  protection, to which Lansky had replied, “Shove
         it up your ass!”  Realizing that they were kindred spirits, the two became lifelong  friends and business associates.
         This friendship, too, marked the  beginning of a Jewish-Italian alliance against a common East Side enemy,  the Irish.
        
       Soon, into the Lansky-Luciano group came another, somewhat older Jewish youth named Benjamin Siegel.
        
       143 -- Crime As A Business
        
       Lansky never liked to think of his chosen means  of livelihood as
         anything other than a business. It might not be a  legitimate business, but it was still a business, and Lansky tried to 
         keep it on as businesslike a level — no tampering with the books — as  possible. It was a business, as he saw
         it, that was designed to cater to  certain basic human needs — a service business. Human beings liked to  gamble, and
         would gamble whether gambling was legal or not, and so  Lansky and his associates would put themselves at the service of 
         gamblers. At the same time, Lansky had his own strict moral code. He  would not, for example, involve himself in prostitution.
         Prostitution  could also be rationalized as fulfilling a human need, but Lansky would  have none of it.
                
       144
         -- Prohibition
        
 
              On January 16, 1919, the Eighteenth Amendment  to the Constitution of the United
         States was ratified, to become law one  year later. The amendment banned the manufacture, sale, and  transportation of liquor,
         wine, beer, or other intoxicating substances.  Nine months later, over President Wilson’s veto, the Volstead Act was
          passed by Congress, toughening the Prohibition laws and setting up the  machinery for their enforcement.
        
       145 -- Prohibition A Golden Door to Riches For Lansky
        
       It also allowed men like Meyer Lansky
         and his  friends the time to develop an elaborate game plan for buying and  marketing alcoholic beverages, so that when the
         Volstead Act finally  went into effect, they had a virtually foolproof strategy for working  around the law. On the very eve
         of Prohibition, nightclub comics joked  about the various ways of obtaining liquor that would become available  the following
         day. Had it not been for Prohibition, men like Lansky,  Luciano, and Siegel might have continued as operators of small-time
          gambling parlors, living in a series of cold-water tenement flats. But  Prohibition offered a golden door to riches —
         for Lansky, what would  become one of the larger personal fortunes in America — all for helping  Americans defy an unpopular
         law.
        
       149 -- A Canadian Jewish Connection
        
       Meanwhile, to the north of Lake Erie,
         another  gentleman was emerging who was becoming very important to Meyer Lansky  and his flourishing American bootleg business.
         His name was Samuel  Bronfman, and it was not long before Lansky and Bronfman had entered  into an arrangement that would
         be enormously profitable to both. ...
        
       153 What impressed Lansky the most was that  what Bronfman was doing
         was all perfectly legal — in Canada, that is.  Bronfman had no trouble with customs or police on the Canadian side of
          the border. In fact, the Ottawa government actually encouraged the  export of liquor to the United States by refunding the
          nine-dollar-a-gallon tax that is imposed on all liquor sold for  consumption within Canada.
   
             
       156
         -- The Jewish Lake
        
               Meanwhile Sam’s [Bronfman] profitable  connection with Meyer Lansky and
         his growing organization continued  apace. Sam Bronfman might not consider himself a bootlegger, but Lansky  and Company certainly
         did. As Lansky’s chief confederate, Lucky Luciano,  put it, Sam Bronfman “was bootleggin’ enough whiskey
         across the  Canadian border to double the size of Lake Erie.” It was no wonder that  wags in the liquor trade were beginning
         to refer to Lake Erie as “the  Jewish lake.”
       285
         -- Lansky and The Cause of Israel’s Independence
        
       During the war years, while Lansky, Mickey  Cohen, and their friends
         — now beginning to be known as the “syndicate” —  had been devoting much energy and money to the cause
         of Israel’s  independence, huge reserves of capital had been lying, untouched, in  Swiss bank accounts, quietly accruing
         interest. In Lansky’s personal  accounts reposed something in the neighborhood of thirty-six million  dollars, most
         of it from Prohibition profits. All this was fine, though  Lansky did not consider earning interest a very exciting way to
         make  money. The problem was that the syndicate was cash poor. It had an  excess of venture capital, but no new venture to
         invest it in. On the  drawing boards, in the meantime, lay Benny Siegel’s idea for Las Vegas.
               343, 344 -- Lansky Looks to Israel for Sanctuary
                
       By
         1970, meanwhile, Lansky had begun to weary  of the constant surveillance under which the government was keeping him.  He was
         sixty-eight years old, his heart had been giving him a bit of  trouble, and there was the recurring problem of his stomach
         ulcers. Over  the years, he had been very generous to Israel — not only with personal  contributions, but also by regularly
         turning over his Las Vegas hotels  and casinos for Bonds for Israel rallies. Israel continued to offer  itself as a land of
         refuge to Jews of any nationality. ...
       ... Lansky
         spent his two tourist years in  Israel pulling every string, using every contact and connection he could  muster to try to
         gain his citizenship. he even had a friend who was on  good terms with Golda Meir take his case directly to the prime minister.
          Mrs. Meir was sympathetic, and agreed that the one gambling charge for  which Lansky had been convicted was definitely minor.
         But she refused to  commit herself. The original blanket invitation to all Jews had been  given a bothersome amendment in
         1950 to bar any Jewish “undesirable.” It  was in this category that the FBI insisted that the Israelis place 
         Lansky in order that he could be returned to the United States to face  the various indictments it had waiting for him.
        
       345 -- Lansky Reluctantly Heads Homeward
        
       In November, 1972, a few days before his visa  would expire, Lansky
         realized that his cause was hopeless. If Israel did  not want him, he decided, he would leave the country voluntarily. Armed
          with a clutch of airplane tickets and entry visas to a number of South  American countries that he hoped might take him in,
         he headed to the Tel  Aviv airport. He had no sooner passed through Passport Control,  however, than he was joined by FBI
         agents, who followed him on a zigzag  journey halfway around the globe — to Geneva, Rio de Janeiro, Buenos  Aires, Paraguay
         — where, at each stop, he was denied entry despite his  valid documents. His last hope was Panama, for which he also
         had a visa.  Alas, he was denied entry to Panama. The FBI had done its advance work  well. The next stop was Miami.
        
       The irony was that, during the decade that  followed, in none of the cases that the government had arrayed against
          him was the government able to obtain a conviction. Millions of dollars  of American taxpayers’ money were spent, only
         to have case after case  dismissed for insufficient evidence. And so, in the end, officially  declared innocent of all his
         crimes, Lansky was allowed to live out his  life in retirement at Imperial House, forbidden to leave the country,  his passport
         revoked, forbidden to go to Israel — the man who may have  been the most successful criminal in American history sentenced
         to life  imprisonment in Miami Beach. At the time of his forced return, Lansky  was both bitter and philosophical. “That’s
         life,” he told reporters. “At  my age, it’s too late to worry. What will be will be. A Jew has a slim  chance
         in the world.” He died in Miami in January, 1983 at eighty-one.
 
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