Bugsy Siegel




























Bugsy Siegel
Mugshot Benjamin Siegel.jpg
Born
Benjamin Siegel[1]


(1906-02-28)February 28, 1906

Brooklyn, New York

DiedJune 20, 1947(1947-06-20) (aged 41)

Beverly Hills, California, U.S.

Cause of deathHomicide
Resting placeHollywood Forever Cemetery
Residence
Los Angeles, California
NationalityAmerican
Other namesBenny, Ben, Bugs, Bugsy
Occupation
Racketeer, gangster, casino owner
Height5 ft 10 in (178 cm)
Spouse(s)
Esta Krakower
(m. 1929; div. 1946)
Partner(s)
Virginia Hill (1945–1947)
Children
  • Millicent Rosen (daughter)

  • Barbara Saperstein (daughter)

Parents
  • Max Siegel (father)

  • Jennie Riechenthal (mother)

Signature
Bugsy Siegel signature.svg

Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel (February 28, 1906  – June 20, 1947) was an American mobster. Siegel was known as one of the most "infamous and feared gangsters of his day".[2] Described as handsome and charismatic, he became one of the first front-page celebrity gangsters.[3] He was also a driving force behind the development of the Las Vegas Strip.[4] Siegel was not only influential within the Jewish mob but, like his friend and fellow gangster Meyer Lansky, he also held significant influence within the American Mafia and the largely Italian-Jewish National Crime Syndicate.


Siegel was one of the founders and leaders of Murder, Inc.[5] and became a bootlegger during the Prohibition. After the Twenty-first Amendment was passed repealing Prohibition in 1933, he turned to gambling. In 1936, he left New York and moved to California.[6] His time as a mobster (although he eventually ran his own operations) was mainly as a hitman and muscle, as he was noted for his prowess with guns and violence. In 1939, Siegel was tried for the murder of fellow mobster Harry Greenberg. He was acquitted in 1942.


Siegel traveled to Las Vegas, Nevada, where he handled and financed some of the original casinos.[7] He assisted developer William R. Wilkerson's Flamingo Hotel after Wilkerson ran out of funds.[8] Siegel took over the project and managed the final stages of construction. The Flamingo opened on December 26, 1946, to poor reception and soon closed. It reopened in March 1947 with a finished hotel. Three months later, on June 20, 1947, Siegel was shot dead at the home of his girlfriend, Virginia Hill, in Beverly Hills, California.




Contents





  • 1 Early life

    • 1.1 The Bugs and Meyer mob


    • 1.2 Marriage and family



  • 2 Murder, Incorporated


  • 3 California

    • 3.1 Hollywood


    • 3.2 Greenberg murder and trial



  • 4 Las Vegas

    • 4.1 Las Vegas' beginning


    • 4.2 Defiance and devastation



  • 5 Death

    • 5.1 Memorial



  • 6 Media portrayals


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References

    • 8.1 Notes


    • 8.2 Works cited



  • 9 Further reading


  • 10 External links




Early life


Benjamin Siegel[9][1] was born on February 28, 1906 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, the second of five children of a poor Jewish family that emigrated to the United States from the Galicia region of what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[10][11][1] His parents, Jennie (Riechenthal) and Max Siegel, constantly worked for meager wages.[12] As a boy, Siegel left school and joined a gang on Lafayette Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. He committed mainly thefts until he met Moe Sedway. With Sedway, Siegel developed a protection racket in which he threatened to incinerate pushcart owners' merchandise unless they paid him a dollar.[13][14] Siegel had a criminal record, dating from his teenage years, that included armed robbery, rape and murder.[15]



The Bugs and Meyer mob



During adolescence, Siegel befriended Meyer Lansky, who formed a small mob whose activities expanded to gambling and car theft. Lansky, who had already had a run-in with Charles "Lucky" Luciano, saw a need for the Jewish boys of his Brooklyn neighborhood to organize in the same manner as the Italians and Irish. The first person he recruited for his gang was Siegel.[16]


Siegel became involved in bootlegging within several major East Coast cities. He also worked as the mob's hitman, whom Lansky would hire out to other crime families.[17] The two formed the Bugs and Meyer Mob, which handled hits for the various bootleg gangs operating in New York and New Jersey, doing so almost a decade before Murder, Inc. was formed. The gang kept themselves busy hijacking the liquor cargoes of rival outfits.[18] The Bugs and Meyer mob was known to be responsible for the killing and removal of several rival gangland figures.[19] Siegel's gang mates included Abner "Longie" Zwillman, Louis "Lepke" Buchalter, and Lansky's brother, Jake; Joseph "Doc" Stacher, another member of the Bugs and Meyer Mob, recalled to Lansky biographers that Siegel was fearless and saved his friends' lives as the mob moved into bootlegging:
"Bugsy never hesitated when danger threatened," Stacher told Uri Dan. "While we tried to figure out what the best move was, Bugsy was already shooting. When it came to action there was no one better. I've never known a man who had more guts.[20]


Siegel was also a boyhood friend to Al Capone; when there was a warrant for Capone's arrest on a murder charge, Siegel allowed him to hide out with an aunt.[21] Siegel first smoked opium during his youth and was involved in the drug trade.[22] By age 21, Siegel was making money and flaunted it. He was regarded as handsome with blue eyes[23] and was known to be charismatic and likable.[24] He bought an apartment at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel and a Tudor home in Scarsdale, New York. He wore flashy clothes and participated in New York City night life.[11][25]


From May 13 to May 16, 1929, Lansky and Siegel attended the Atlantic City Conference, representing the Bugs and Meyer Mob.[26] Luciano and former Chicago South Side Gang leader Johnny Torrio held the conference at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Atlantic City, New Jersey. At the conference, the two men discussed the future of organized crime and the future structure of the Mafia crime families: Siegel stated, "The yids and the dagos will no longer fight each other."



Marriage and family


On January 28, 1929, Siegel married Esta Krakower, his childhood sweetheart. They had two daughters, Millicent Siegel (later Millicent Rosen) and Barbara Siegel (later Barbara Saperstein).[4] Siegel had a reputation as a womanizer and the marriage ended in 1946.[27] His wife moved with their teenage daughters to New York.



Murder, Incorporated


By the late 1920s, Lansky and Siegel had ties to Luciano and Frank Costello, future bosses of the Genovese crime family. Siegel, Albert Anastasia, Vito Genovese, and Joe Adonis, allegedly were the four gunmen who shot New York mob boss Joe Masseria to death on Luciano's orders on April 15, 1931, ending the Castellammarese War.[28][29] On September 10 of that year, Luciano hired four gunmen from the Lansky-Siegel gang (some sources identify Siegel being one of the gunmen[30][31]), to murder Salvatore Maranzano in his New York office, establishing Luciano's rise to the top of the Mafia and marking the beginning of modern American organized crime.[32]



Bugsy Siegel

Siegel's April 1928 mugshot


In 1931, following Maranzano's death, Luciano and Lansky formed the National Crime Syndicate, an organization of crime families that brought power to the underworld.[5][33]The Commission was established for dividing Mafia territories and preventing future gang wars.[5] With his associates, Siegel formed Murder, Inc. After Siegel and Lansky moved on, control over Murder, Inc. was ceded to Buchalter and Anastasia.[34] Siegel continued working as a hitman.[35] Siegel's only conviction was in Miami. On February 28, 1932, he was arrested for gambling and vagrancy, and, from a roll of bills, paid a $100 fine.[4]




Bugsy Siegel's house in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, alongside the New River.


During this period, Siegel had a disagreement with the Fabrizzo brothers, associates of Waxey Gordon. Gordon had hired the Fabrizzo brothers from prison after Lansky and Siegel gave the IRS information about Gordon's tax evasion. It led to Gordon's imprisonment in 1933.[19]


Siegel hunted down the Fabrizzos, killing them after they made an assassination attempt on him and Lansky.[36] After the deaths of his two brothers, Tony Fabrizzo had begun to write a memoir and gave it to an attorney. One of the longest chapters was to be a section on the nationwide kill-for-hire squad led by Siegel. The mob discovered Fabrizzo's plans before he could execute them.[37] In 1932, Siegel checked into a hospital and later that night sneaked out. Siegel and two accomplices approached Fabrizzo's house and, posing as detectives to lure him outside, gunned him down.[38] According to hospital records, Siegel's alibi for that night was that he had checked into a hospital.[37] In 1935, Siegel assisted in Luciano's alliance with Dutch Schultz and killed rival loan sharks Louis "Pretty" Amberg and Joseph C. Amberg.[39][40]



California


Siegel had learned from his associates that he was in danger: His hospital alibi had become questionable and his enemies wanted him dead.[41] In the late 1930s, the East Coast mob sent Siegel to California.[42] Since 1933, he had traveled to the West Coast several times,[43] and in California, his mission was to develop syndicate-sanctioned gambling rackets with Los Angeles family boss Jack Dragna.[44] Once in Los Angeles, Siegel recruited gang boss Mickey Cohen as his chief lieutenant.[45] Knowing Siegel's reputation for violence, and that he was backed by Lansky and Luciano — who, from prison, sent word to Dragna that it was "in [his] best interest to cooperate"[46] Dragna accepted a subordinate role.[47] — Siegel moved Esta and their daughters, Millicent and Barbara, to California. On tax returns, he claimed to earn his living through legal gambling at Santa Anita Park near Los Angeles.[48] In Los Angeles, he took over the numbers racket[49] and used money from the syndicate to help establish a drug trade route from the Mexico to the United States and organized circuits with the Chicago Outfit's Trans-America Wire service.[50][51]


By 1942, $500,000 a day was coming from the syndicate's bookmaking wire operations.[49] In 1946, because of problems with Siegel, the Chicago Outfit took over the Continental Press and gave the percentage of the racing wire to Dragna, infuriating Siegel.[51][52] Despite his complications with the wire services, Siegel controlled several offshore casinos[53] and a major prostitution ring.[17] He also maintained relationships with politicians, businessmen, attorneys, accountants, and lobbyists who fronted for him.[54]



Hollywood


In Hollywood, Siegel was welcomed in the highest circles and befriended movie stars.[3] He was known to associate with George Raft, Clark Gable, Gary Cooper and Cary Grant,[55] as well as studio executives Louis B. Mayer and Jack L. Warner.[56] Actress Jean Harlow was a friend of Siegel and godmother to his daughter Millicent. Siegel bought real estate and threw lavish parties at his Beverly Hills home.[50] He gained admiration from young celebrities, including Tony Curtis,[57]Phil Silvers, and Frank Sinatra.


Siegel had several relationships with actresses, including socialite Dorothy DiFrasso, the wife of an Italian count. The alliance with the countess took Siegel to Italy in 1938,[58] where he met Benito Mussolini, to whom Siegel tried to sell weapons. He also met Nazi leaders Hermann Göring and Joseph Goebbels, to whom he took an instant dislike and later offered to kill them.[59][60][61] He relented because of the countess' anxious pleas.[55]


In Hollywood, Siegel worked with the syndicate to form illegal rackets.[47] He devised a plan of extorting movie studios; he would take over local trade unions (the Screen Extras Guild and the Los Angeles Teamsters) and stage strikes to force studios to pay him off, so that unions would start working again.[51] He borrowed money from celebrities and didn't pay them back, knowing that they would never ask him for the money.[62][63] During his first year in Hollywood, he received more than $400,000 in loans from movie stars.



Greenberg murder and trial


On November 22, 1939, Siegel, Whitey Krakower, Frankie Carbo and Albert Tannenbaum killed Harry "Big Greenie" Greenberg outside his apartment. Greenberg had threatened to become a police informant,[64] and Louis Buchalter, boss of Murder, Inc., ordered his killing.[65] Tannenbaum confessed to the murder[66] and agreed to testify against Siegel.[67] Siegel and Carbo were implicated in the killing of Greenberg, and in September 1941, Siegel was tried for the murder.[68] Krakower was killed before he could face trial.[69] Siegel's trial gained notoriety because of the preferential treatment he received in jail; he refused to eat prison food and was allowed female visitors. He was also granted leave for dental visits.[49][70] Siegel hired attorney Jerry Giesler to defend him. After the deaths of two state witnesses,[49][71] no additional witnesses came forward. Tannenbaum's testimony was dismissed.[72] In 1942, Siegel and Carbo were acquitted due to insufficient evidence[72] but Siegel's reputation was damaged. During the trial, newspapers revealed his past and referred to him as "Bugsy". He hated the nickname (said to be based on the slang term "bugs", meaning "crazy", used to describe his erratic behavior), preferring to be called "Ben" or "Mr. Siegel".[73] On May 25, 1944, Siegel was arrested for bookmaking. Raft and Mack Gray testified on Siegel's behalf, and in late 1944, Siegel was acquitted again.[74]



Las Vegas




Siegel's original Flamingo Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, 1947


In 1945, Siegel found an opportunity to reinvent his personal image and diverge into legitimate business with William R. Wilkerson's Flamingo Hotel.[75] In the 1930s, Siegel had traveled to southern Nevada with Lansky's lieutenant Moe Sedway to explore expanding operations there. He had found opportunities in providing illicit services to crews constructing the Boulder Dam. Lansky had handed over operations in Nevada to Siegel, who turned it over to Sedway and left for Hollywood.[76][77]


In the mid-1940s, Siegel was lining things up in Las Vegas while his lieutenants worked on a business policy to secure all gambling in Los Angeles.[78] In May 1946, he decided that the agreement with Wilkerson had to be altered to give him control of the Flamingo.[79] With the Flamingo, Siegel would supply the gambling, the best liquor and food, and the biggest entertainers at reasonable prices. He believed that these attractions would lure not only the high rollers but thousands of vacationers willing to gamble $50 or $100.[53] Wilkerson was eventually coerced into selling all stakes in the Flamingo under the threat of death and went into hiding in Paris for a time.[80] From this point the Flamingo became syndicate-run.[81]



Las Vegas' beginning


Siegel began a spending spree. He demanded the finest building that money could buy at a time of postwar shortages. As costs soared, his checks began bouncing. By October 1946, the costs were above $4 million.[82] By 1947, the Flamingo's cost was over $6 million (equivalent to $58 million in 2016).[83] By late November of that year, the work was nearly finished.[84]


According to later reports by local observers, Siegel's "maniacal chest-puffing" set the pattern for several generations of notable casino moguls.[17] His violent reputation didn't help his situation. After he boasted one day that he'd personally killed some men, he saw the panicked look on the face of head contractor Del Webb and reassured him: "Del, don't worry, we only kill each other."[85] Other associates portrayed Siegel in a different aspect; he was an intense character who was not without a charitable side, including his donations for the Damon Runyon Cancer Fund.[17] Lou Wiener Jr., Siegel's Las Vegas attorney, described him as "very well liked" and said that he was "good to people".[17]



Defiance and devastation


Problems with the Trans-America Wire service had cleared up in Nevada and Arizona, but in California, Siegel refused to report business.[78] He later announced to his colleagues that he was running the California syndicate by himself and that he would return the loans in his "own good time". Despite his defiance to the mob bosses, they were patient with Siegel because he had always proven to be a valuable man.[86]


The Flamingo opened on December 26, 1946, at which time only the casino, lounge, theater, and restaurant were finished.[87] Although locals attended the opening, few celebrities materialized. A handful drove in from Los Angeles, despite bad weather. Some celebrities present were Raft, June Haver, Vivian Blaine, Sonny Tufts, Brian Donlevy, and Charles Coburn. They were welcomed by construction noise and a lobby draped with drop cloths. The desert's first air conditioning collapsed regularly. While gambling tables were operating, the luxury rooms that would have served as the lure for people to stay and gamble were not ready. As word of the losses made their way to Siegel during the evening, he began to become irate and verbally abusive, throwing out at least one family.[88] After two weeks, the Flamingo's gaming tables were $275,000 in the red and the entire operation shut down in late January 1947.[89]


After being granted a second chance, Siegel cracked down and did everything possible to turn the Flamingo into a success by making renovations and obtaining good press. He hired future newsman Hank Greenspun as a publicist. The hotel reopened on March 1, 1947,—with Lansky present[90]—and began turning a profit.[91][92] However, by the time profits began improving, the mob bosses above Siegel were tired of waiting. Although time was running out, at age 41, Siegel had carved out a name for himself in the annals of organized crime and in Las Vegas history.[17]



Death




Siegel's memorial plaque in the Bialystoker Synagogue.[93]


On the night of June 20, 1947, as Siegel sat with his associate Allen Smiley in Virginia Hill's Beverly Hills home reading the Los Angeles Times, an unknown assailant fired at him through the window with a .30 caliber military M1 carbine, hitting him many times, including twice in the head.[17] No one was charged with killing Siegel, and the crime remains officially unsolved.[4]


One theory posits that Siegel's death was the result of his excessive spending and possible theft of money from the mob.[94][95] In 1946, a meeting was held with the "board of directors" of the syndicate in Havana, Cuba, so that Luciano, exiled in Sicily, could attend and participate. A contract on Siegel's life was the conclusion.[96] According to Stacher, Lansky reluctantly agreed to the decision.[97] Another theory is that Siegel was shot to death preemptively by Mathew "Moose" Pandza, the lover of Sedway's wife Bee, who went to Pandza after learning that Siegel was threatening to kill her husband. Siegel apparently had grown increasingly resentful of the control Sedway, at mob behest, was exerting over Siegel's finances and planned to do away with him.[98] Former Philadelphia crime family boss Ralph Natale has claimed that Carbo was responsible for murdering Siegel, at the behest of Lansky.[99]


Although descriptions said that Siegel was shot in the eye, he was actually hit twice on the right side of his head. The death scene and postmortem photographs show that one shot penetrated his right cheek and exited through the left side of his neck; the other struck the right bridge of his nose where it met the right eye socket. The pressure created by the bullet passing through Siegel's skull blew his left eye out of its socket. A Los Angeles' Coroner's Report (#37448) states the cause of death as cerebral hemorrhage. His death certificate (Registrar's #816192) states the manner of death as a homicide and the cause as "Gunshot Wounds of the head."[100]


Though as noted, Siegel was not shot exactly through the eye (the eyeball would have been destroyed if this had been the case), the bullet-through-the-eye style of killing nevertheless became popular in Mafia lore and in movies, and was called the "Moe Greene special"[101] after the character Moe Greene — based on Siegel — was killed in this manner in The Godfather. Siegel was hit by several other bullets including shots through his lungs.[102] According to Florabel Muir, "Four of the nine shots fired that night destroyed a white marble statue of Bacchus on a grand piano, and then lodged in the far wall."


The day after Siegel's death, the Los Angeles Herald-Express carried a photograph on its front page from the morgue of Siegel's bare right foot with a toe tag.[103] Although Siegel's murder occurred in Beverly Hills, his death thrust Las Vegas into the national spotlight as photographs of his lifeless body were published in newspapers throughout the country.[50] The day after Siegel's murder, David Berman and his Las Vegas mob associates, Sedway and Gus Greenbaum, walked into the Flamingo and took over operation of the hotel and casino.[104]



Memorial




Siegel's memorial outside the wedding chapel at the Flamingo.


In the Bialystoker Synagogue on New York's Lower East Side, Siegel is memorialized by a Yahrtzeit (remembrance) plaque that marks his death date so mourners can say Kaddish for the anniversary. Siegel's plaque is below that of Max Siegel, his father, who died just two months before his son. On the property at the Flamingo Las Vegas, between the pool and a wedding chapel, is a memorial plaque to Siegel.[105] Siegel is interred in the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Hollywood, California.



Media portrayals


  • A character going by the same name appears in the sixth episode of the second series of the 1960s cult British spy-fi TV series The Avengers portrayed by Edwin Richfield.


  • Bugsy (1991) is a semi-fictional biography of Siegel, featuring Warren Beatty as the mobster.[106]

  • The 1991 crime drama Mobsters, depicting the rise of The Commission, features Richard Grieco as Siegel.[107]


  • The Marrying Man (1991) has Armand Assante playing the role of Siegel.[108]


  • Tim Powers imagined Siegel as a modern-day Fisher King in his novel Last Call (1992).[109]

  • He is portrayed by Michael Zegen in the HBO series Boardwalk Empire.[110]

  • He is a central character in Frank Darabont's television series Mob City, portrayed by Edward Burns.[111]

  • He is portrayed by Jonathan Stewart in AMC's series The Making of the Mob: New York, a docudrama focusing on the history of the mob with the first season about Charlie "Lucky" Luciano's life story.[112]


  • Joe Mantegna portrayed Siegel in the 2015 film Kill Me, Deadly.[113]


See also



  • Jewish-American organized crime


References




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  4. ^ abcd "Siegel, Gangster, Is Slain On Coast. Co-chief of 'Bug and Meyer Mob' Here. Is Victim of Shots Fired Through Window". The New York Times. June 22, 1947. p. 7. Retrieved October 31, 2007. Benjamin Siegel, 42 years old, former New York gangster, was slain last midnight by a fusillade of bullets fired through the living room window of a Beverly Hills house where he was staying.
    (subscription required)



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  18. ^ Sifakis, The Mafia Encyclopedia. (2005). p. 68


  19. ^ ab "Bugsy Siegel Part 3". FBI Records: The Vault. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved September 21, 2012.


  20. ^ Eiseberg, Dan, Landau 1979, p. 57.


  21. ^ Tereba 2012, pp. 24–25.


  22. ^ Tereba 2012, pp. 172–173.


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  52. ^ Capeci, Jerry (2002). The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Mafia. New York: Alpha Books. p. 92. ISBN 0-02-864225-2.


  53. ^ ab Koziol, Ronald (September 27, 1987). "Bugsy Siegel Rolled Out The Greed Carpet For His Fellow Mobsters". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 26, 2012.


  54. ^ Tereba 2012, p. 63.


  55. ^ ab "Gangster/Las Vegas Visionary". The Internet Index of Tough Jews. J-Grit. Retrieved June 1, 2012.


  56. ^ Martinez, Bill (May 24, 2000). "Legendary mobster's safe reveals nothing but rust". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved June 6, 2012.


  57. ^ Knapp, George (July 23, 2010). "Who Killed Bugsy Siegel?". KLAS-TV 8 News NOW. Retrieved September 26, 2012.


  58. ^ Newark, Tim (2010). Lucky Luciano: The Real and the Fake Gangster. London: Macmillan. p. 229.


  59. ^ "Bugsy Siegel Biography". Biography Channel. Archived from the original on October 27, 2012. Retrieved November 28, 2012.


  60. ^ Sifakis, The Mafia Encyclopedia. (2005). pp. 417–418


  61. ^ Nash, Jay Robert (1995). Bloodletters and Badmen: A Narrative Encyclopedia of American Criminals from the Pilgrims to the Present. Lanham, Maryland: M. Evans & Company. p. 566. ISBN 978-0871317773.


  62. ^ Turkus & Feder 2003, p. 270.


  63. ^ Jennings 1991, pp. 43-46.


  64. ^ "Held On Lepke Charge". The New York Times. April 17, 1941. p. 20. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
    (subscription required)



  65. ^ Turkus & Feder 2003, p. 275.


  66. ^ Turkus & Feder 2003, p. 280.


  67. ^ "O'Dwyer Goes West In Murder Inquiry". The New York Times. December 8, 1940. p. 62. Retrieved December 6, 2012. "District Attorney William O'Dwyer of Brooklyn left Friday afternoon by train for Los Angeles to confer with the prosecutor's office there concerning developments in the case of Benjamin (Bug) Siegel, West Coast racketeer chieftain" (subscription required)


  68. ^ "Reindicted In Murder; Siegel and Carbo Are Accused in 1939 Death of Greenberg". The New York Times. September 23, 1941. p. 25. Retrieved December 8, 2012.
    (subscription required)



  69. ^ Jennings, We Only Kill Each Other. (1992). pp. 95–97


  70. ^ O'Neill, Ann W. (June 20, 1997). "50 Years Later, Still a Mystery". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 6, 2012.


  71. ^ Safire, William (December 1, 2002). "Defenestration". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved December 12, 2012.


  72. ^ ab Giesler, Jerry; Martin, Pete (December 26, 1959). "I Defend a Mobster". The Saturday Evening Post. p. 55


  73. ^ Sedley, David (November 22, 2017). "Bugsy Siegel's daughter gets Las Vegas Jewish burial". Times of Israel. Retrieved May 22, 2018.


  74. ^ Pegler, Westbrook (October 2, 1947). "As Pegler Sees It". Ludington Daily News. p. 4. Retrieved January 4, 2013.


  75. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). p. 62


  76. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). p. 74


  77. ^ Dennis N. Griffin. The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law vs. the Mob. (2006). pp. 6–7.


  78. ^ ab Turkus & Feder 2003, p. 288.


  79. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). p. 80


  80. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). p. 98


  81. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). p. 81


  82. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). pp. 83–84


  83. ^ Jennings 1991, p. 6.


  84. ^ Jennings 1991, pp. 169-171.


  85. ^ Jennings 1991, p. 17.


  86. ^ Turkus & Feder 2003, p. 289.


  87. ^ Griffin, The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law vs. the Mob. (2006). pp. 9–10


  88. ^ Griffin, The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law vs. the Mob. (2006). p. 10


  89. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). pp. 99–104


  90. ^ Wilkerson III, The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. (2000). p. 106


  91. ^ Burbank, Jeff (October 18, 2010). "Bugsy Siegel and the Flamingo Hotel". The Online Nevada Encyclopedia. Nevada Humanities. Retrieved December 16, 2012.


  92. ^ Koch, Ed; Manning, Mary (May 15, 2008). "Mob Ties". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved November 19, 2012.


  93. ^ On the plaques above see the name Max Siegel, Siegel's father, whose Hebrew name is "Mordechai Dov ben Reb Beirush HaLevi" (from the Hebraic tribe of the Levites) and the one for Siegel, whose Hebrew name is "Bairush HaLevi ben Reb Mordechai Dov HaLevi;" from this we see that Bugsy was named for his grandfather, Dov, meaning bear (Bairush is the Yiddish for Dov), which was Americanized to Benjamin. All fathers are called Reb as an honorific on memorial plaques; Reb means "teacher" as in Rabbi.


  94. ^ May, Allan. "Havana Conference – 1946 (Part Two)". AmericanMafia. PLR International. Retrieved December 8, 2012.


  95. ^ Turkus & Feder 2003, p. 290.


  96. ^ Turkus & Feder 2003, pp. 290–291.


  97. ^ Dennis Eisenberg; Uri Dan; Eli Landau. Meyer Lansky: mogul of the mob. (1979). pp. 238–241


  98. ^ Wallace, Amy (September 29, 2014). "Who Killed Bugsy Siegel?". Los Angeles Magazine. Retrieved October 11, 2014.


  99. ^ Serranti, Seth (March 15, 2017). "The Story of the First Mob Boss to Turn Rat". Vice. Retrieved March 21, 2017.


  100. ^ "Death certificate". Bugsysiegel.net. Archived from the original on 2009-04-01. Retrieved June 20, 2013.


  101. ^ Bruno, Anthony. "Fact and Fiction in The Godfather: The Little Man, the Dapper Don, and the Moe Greene Special". Crime Library. Archived from the original on April 17, 2008. Retrieved July 30, 2012.


  102. ^ "American Mafia Website". Americanmafia.com. Retrieved July 30, 2012.


  103. ^ Funerals of the Infamous Archived 2011-10-17 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved October 15, 2011


  104. ^ Eriksmoen, Curt (January 2, 2011). "Las Vegas mob boss had ties to N.D." The Bismarck Tribune. Retrieved December 21, 2012.


  105. ^ "Bugsy Siegel Memorial". Retrieved June 10, 2012.


  106. ^ Ebert, Roger (December 20, 1991). "Bugsy". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved November 5, 2015.


  107. ^ Bugsy Siegel at the TCM Movie Database


  108. ^ The Marrying Man at AllMovie


  109. ^ "LAST CALL by Tim Powers". Kirkus Reviews. April 20, 1992. Retrieved June 18, 2018.


  110. ^ Yeoman, Kevin (March 3, 2011). "'Boardwalk Empire' Casts Bugsy Siegel for Season 2". Screen Rant. Retrieved June 18, 2018.


  111. ^ Thorp, Charles (December 18, 2013). "Ed Burns Enjoys "Beating The Crap" Out Of People For Work On Mob City". Us Weekly. Retrieved June 18, 2018.


  112. ^ "Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel". Making of the Mob official website. AMC. Retrieved June 18, 2018.


  113. ^ Scheck, Frank (April 5, 2016). "'Kill Me, Deadly': Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 8, 2017.



Notes





Works cited


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  • Eisenberg, Dennis; Dan, Uri; Landau, Eli (1979). Meyer Lansky: Mogul of the Mob. Paddington Press. ISBN 978-0-448-22206-6.


  • Griffin, Dennis N. (2006). The Battle for Las Vegas: The Law vs. the Mob. Huntington Press. ISBN 978-0929712376.


  • Jennings, Dean Southern (1967). We Only Kill Each Other; the Life and Bad times of Bugsy Siegel. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall.


  • Sifakis, Carl (2005). The Mafia Encyclopedia. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8160-6989-7.


  • Tereba, Tere (2012), Mickey Cohen: The Life and Crimes of L.A.'s Notorious Mobster, Toronto: ECW Press, ISBN 978-1770410633


  • Turkus, Burton B.; Feder, Sid (2003), Murder, Inc.: The Story Of The Syndicate, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Da Capo Press, ISBN 978-0306812880


  • Wilkerson III, W.R. (2000). The Man Who Invented Las Vegas. Ciro's Books Publishing. ISBN 0-9676643-0-6.

Article



  • Smith, John (February 7, 1999). "Part II: Resort Rising. The First 100 Persons Who Shaped Southern Nevada". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved April 20, 2012.


Further reading





  • Almog, Oz et al. Kosher Nostra. Wien: Jüdisches Museum der Stadt Wien, 2003
    ISBN 3-901398-33-3


  • Buntin, John (2009). L.A. Noir: The Struggle for the Soul of America's Most Seductive City. New York: Harmony Books. ISBN 9780307352071. OCLC 431334523.


  • Cohen, Rich (1999). Tough Jews: Fathers, Sons, and Gangster Dreams. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0375705472.


  • Ferrari, Michelle; Ives, Stephen (2005). Las Vegas: An Unconventional History. New York: Bulfinch Press. ISBN 0821257145.


  • Lewis, Brad (2007). Hollywood's Celebrity Gangster. The Incredible Life and Times of Mickey Cohen. New York: Enigma Books. ISBN 978-1-929631-65-0.



External links





  • FBI files on Siegel (2,421 pages, heavily redacted) From the FBI Freedom of Information Act.


  • Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel Profile and NY Times Article at J-Grit: The Internet Index of Tough Jews

  • PBS American Experience

  • Bugsy Siegel memorial in Las Vegas


  • Bugsy Siegel at Find a Grave

  • Bugsy Siegel Biography


  • Bugsy Siegel at the Crime Library

  • Digitized photograph from the Lloyd Sealy Library Digital Collections: Identification photograph of Bugsy Siegel and others c.1932 (upper half removed)










Business positions
Preceded by


Murder, Inc.
Boss

1931
Succeeded by
Lepke Buchalter
Preceded by


Cohen crime family
Boss

1933–1947
Succeeded by
Mickey Cohen
Preceded by
William R. Wilkerson

Flamingo Hotel
Owner

1946–1947
Succeeded by
Moe Sedway










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