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The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob
 
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The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob [Paperback]

Dennis N. Griffin
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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Book Description

My name is Dennis N. Griffin. I am the author of The Battle for Las Vegas - The Law vs. the Mob, ISBN 0929712374, and CULLOTTA - The Life of a Chicago Criminal, Las Vegas Mobster, and Government Witness, ISBN 0929712374.

I was checking my rankings on your site today and noticed that my books are showing as out of stock or that only used copies are available. I suspect this is the result of the publisher's distributor - BookWorld of Florida - going out of business in October. The publisher, Huntington Press of Las Vegas, Nevada, is now handling the distribution for all of its titles. My books are available in ample supply in Huntington's warehouse.

Should you desire to place an order for your inventory, please contact Bethany Coffey, Director of Marketing at Huntington Press. Her email is marketing@huntingtonpress.com. Huntington's phone number is 702 252-0655.


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Computer Times Editor's Choice, Feb 21 2007
By 
Dennis N. Griffin "Denny Griffin, author" (Las Vegas, Nevada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob (Paperback)
Computer Times

October 2006

Editor's Choice Book

The Battle for Las Vegas

Reviewed by Terrance Kibiloski

The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law vs. The Mob, by Dennis N. Griffin (ISBN 0-929712-37-4), from Huntington Press Publishing, is a great read and a fascinating walk through the history of Las Vegas as you have never seen it before. Forget the glitzy lights and action on the casino floors; the real action was happening behind the scenes, in the penthouses, the offices, the police departments, the bars, and the homes, in Chicago, in Cleveland, in Kansas City, and Las Vegas. While you may be familiar with some of the players like Bugsy Siegel, Lucky Luciano, and Jimmy Hoffa, you will also meet Moe Dalitz, Tony Accardo, Joe Aiuppa, Lefty Rosenthal, Anthony Spilotro, and many others who fought the battles behind the glitz. This was during the time when the customer was king, long before the corporations came in to make it a family entertainment and convention center. This was the time when Vegas was truly Sin City.

If you gambled in Vegas in the 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s, you witnessed the growth of the city, from gambling and prostitution to gaming and hostesses. You may remember the free shrimp cocktails with shrimp bigger than your middle finger, and the free, or extremely cheap, flights, food, rooms, and money to get you started on the casino floor. While the mob ran Vegas, gamblers could count on being pampered and provided every luxury in the world as they were treated like Kings and Queens, knowing full well the mob always had the Ace in the hole. But, it was fun and it made you feel a little bit wicked and sinful, like you were getting away with something, even though you left most of your money in Vegas, well, most of the time. There was always that chance of hitting it big or bumping into the likes of Liberace, Sinatra, or Elvis, or any number of stars who played on the same casino floor as you. You were always treated like a part of the family, while the real "family" did the dirty work behind the scenes.

The Battle for Las Vegas is a history of this dirty work, like the work of the servants and staff behind the scenes of a wealthy estate, but slightly different. In this case, the servants and staff are busy stacking the deck to become richer than the guests they are serving. Griffin's well-researched book is so packed with incredible detail and quotes that you feel like you were there while the battle was taking place. While I have read many books on Las Vegas, this is the first one that made me feel like an eyewitness to the battle between the mobsters, who rolled out the red carpet for the guests, and the lawmen, who brought the mobsters down on the carpet.

Having gambled in Vegas since the 60s, I was extremely pleased to see the many photos in this book of people I felt I remembered seeing in the casinos. Now, with Griffin's excellent story-telling style of exposing the hits, the bluffs, the threats, and the real off-the-casino-floor gambling with money and lives, I have a much different view of the history of Vegas. Much like the person who went to a family reunion and finally heard the real stories of Uncle Tony, Uncle Moe, and Aunt Bertha. I feel more connected to the family who gave me so many pleasures while hiding the family secrets of the real price paid for all the luxury. This book is a great read and the closest to a sure thing that you will ever find in Las Vegas. It is sure to bring you many hours of reading pleasure and a better appreciation of the battle for Las Vegas.
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Amazon.com: 4.1 out of 5 stars (22 customer reviews)

13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Read, Nov 9 2006
By toni rich eisenstein - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob (Paperback)
Like most new things, Las Vegas had growing pains as aptly depicted in THE BATTLE FOR LAS VEGAS.

We have all heard of Bugsy Siegel and on the other side, Eliot Ness...but how many are familiar with the likes of Tony...The Ant...Spilotro? There is speculation as to how Spilotro got his nickname...some think it was a shortened version of his given name...others thought it was due to his stature. However the name The Ant came about, he is introduced to us in this exciting portrayal of how Sin City was steeped in not only sin but greed as well.

From murder to skimming to prostitution, this account tells it all. We meet the city officials as well as the law enforcement personnel who were `in the pockets' of these crooks. The general Las Vegas public appeared to be more obsessed with prostitution than they were with the mobs. There is a theory that most mob crime is mob upon mob and the average citizen would not feel the tentacles of this corrupt octopus. The public was so concerned with the sex crimes that they voted out their Sheriff, McCarthy, who went after the mob with a vengeance.

I would like to see the movie Casino once again now that I can put names to the characters with a much better understanding of who they are...thanks to Dennis Griffin.

If you'd like a vivid portrayal of how Las Vegas was tamed, be sure to put this on your reading list.

12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Business end of the dog, July 1 2007
By Vinegar Jim - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob (Paperback)
Excellent, well-written and well-researched book. The book outlines the mobs' local crew under Tony Spilotro efforts to squeeze Las Vegas dry for their own purposes as well as the skim for their handlers in the midwest. The movie CASINO parallels this story. The movie presented law enforcement as country-bumpkins that, when unable to use effective law enforcement tactics, resorted to politics to interdict the mob. Griffin does a yeoman's job in showing that police/FBI were NOT ineffective and DID prevail. They prevailed, with hands tied in some cases, because they were intelligent and brave men that never gave up.

24 of 29 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars About the Book, Aug 7 2006
By Dennis N. Griffin "Denny Griffin, author" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law Vs. the Mob (Paperback)
"King of the Strip"

In the 1970s and thru the mid-1980s, the Chicago Outfit was the dominant organized crime family in Las Vegas, with business interests in several casinos. During those years the Outfit and its colleagues in Kansas City, Milwaukee, and Cleveland were using Sin City as a cash cow. Commonly referred to as the "skim," unreported revenue from Outfit-controlled casinos was making its way out of Vegas by the bag full and ending up in the coffers of the crime bosses in those four locations.

The skim involved large amounts of money. The operation had to be properly set up and well managed to ensure a smooth cash flow. To accomplish that goal, the gangsters brought in a front man with no criminal record to purchase several casinos. Allen R. Glick, doing business as the Argent Corporation (Allen R. Glick Enterprises) purchased the Stardust, Fremont, Hacienda, and Marina. They next installed Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal as their inside man, and the real boss of the casino operations. Rosenthal was a Chicago native and considered to be a genius when it came to oddsmaking and sports betting. Under Lefty's supervision the casino count rooms were accessible to mob couriers.

But even with the competent Rosenthal in charge, there remained room for problems. What if an outsider tried to muscle in on the operation? Or just as bad, suppose one of their own decided to skim the skim? To guard against such possibilities the Chicago bosses decided to send someone to Vegas to give Rosenthal a hand should trouble arise. The successful applicant had to be a person with the kind of reputation that would deter interlopers from horning in, and make internal theft too risky to try. But the mob's outside man had to be capable of action as well as threats. In other words, he had to be a man who would do whatever it took to protect the Outfit's interests. So, in 1971, 33-year-old Tony Spilotro, considered by many to be the "ultimate enforcer," was sent to the burgeoning gambling and entertainment oasis in the desert. Spilotro, sometimes called "tough Tony," or "the Ant," was a made man of the Outfit and a childhood friend of Rosenthal. He was known as a man who could be counted on to get the job done.

Being an ambitious sort, Tony quickly recognized that there were other criminal opportunities in his new hometown besides skimming from the casinos. Street crimes ranging from loan sharking to burglary, robbery, and fencing stolen property were all in play. It wasn't very long before Tony had his hands into every one of these areas. As the scope of his criminal endeavors grew, Tony brought in other heavies from Chicago to fill out his gang. The five-foot-six-inch gangster was soon being called the "King of the Strip."

Federal and local law enforcement recognized the need to rid the casinos of the hidden ownership and control of the mob, and shut down Spilotro's street rackets. They declared war on organized crime and the battle was on. It was a hard fight, with plenty of tough guys on both sides. But it was a confrontation the law knew it had to win.

The Battle for Las Vegas relates the story of that conflict, told in large part by the agents and detectives who lived it.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 22 reviews  4.1 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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