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    New Vegas museum highlights mob bosses, tommy guns

    New Las Vegas museum highlights mob bosses, tommy guns in homage to city's gangster roots

    Fantasy Finance

    LAS VEGAS (AP) -- In one room, a ghastly photo wall of bloody, uncensored images showcases the mob's greatest hits.

    In another, visitors are taught to load a revolver. And for when a gun just won't do, an oddball collection of household items — a shovel, a hammer, a baseball bat and an icepick — show the creative side of some of America's most notorious killers.

    On the 83rd anniversary of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre, Sin City is honoring one of its earliest relationships with the grand opening of a museum dedicated to the mobsters that made this desert town. There are tommy guns, money stacks and a bullet-riddled brick wall from the 1929 massacre that saw Al Capone seize control of the Chicago mob.

    Las Vegas has long been enamored with its gangster roots. Its longtime former mayor played himself in the mob flick "Casino" and hotels here often promote their nefarious origins. But the publicly funded, $42 million Mob Museum represents a new height in Sin City's lawlessness devotion. Even the local FBI agents are in on it.

    "We wanted to make sure the truth came out," said Ellen Knowlton, a former special agent in Las Vegas brought on to legitimize the downtown attraction.

    It's the second mob-themed attraction to open in Las Vegas in the past year. The Mob Experience at the Tropicana casino on the Las Vegas Strip quickly shut down because of slow ticket sales and other problems. It's slated to reopen later this year under the name Mob Attraction Las Vegas.

    City officials said their version will perform better because it's an authentic examination of the decisions and circumstances that made Las Vegas an international symbol of debauchery and excess. The museum is housed in a former Depression-era federal courthouse where the seventh of 14 U.S. Senate hearings on organized crime was held in the early 1950s. The proceedings watched by 30 million people introduced the mob to most Americans.

    But critics argue the government-backed attraction is a waste of tax dollars at a time when Nevada tops the nation in foreclosures and unemployment.

    "It's a risky bet," said Andy Matthews, president of the conservative Nevada Policy Research Institute, which protested the museum during its grand opening ceremony Tuesday.

    Nevadans and mobsters have a long, storied history.

    Casino workers and longtime visitors alike are known to wax nostalgic about the days when mob bosses kept drink prices low and streets violence free. Their casinos became celebrity playgrounds and architectural icons. The Stardust, El Cortez, Tropicana, Dunes Hotel, Desert Inn, Flamingo and Fremont hotel were all backed by the mob at one point. Elvis and Priscilla Presley tied the knot at the mob-controlled Aladdin resort and Wayne Newton later purchased it.

    More recently, Las Vegans thrice made former mob attorney Oscar Goodman their mayor. And when he was term-limited from running again last year, they gave the job to his wife.

    The mob, the story goes, helped build out the remote highway that would eventually become the Las Vegas Strip. Gangsters took over resorts built by front men, skimmed the profits and built nightclubs, country clubs, housing tracts and shopping centers.

    Increased law enforcement scrutiny and competition from business titans like Howard Hughes saw Las Vegas turn corporate in the late 1960s. Then the celebrity chefs and Cirque du Soleil dancers moved in. These days, Las Vegas feels more like a raunchy version of Disney World than a mob hangout.

    "We felt nostalgic the moment the old days ended," said Michael Green, a history professor at the College of Southern Nevada in Las Vegas working with the museum. "To Americans, Las Vegas will always have that image and they don't come here for Mickey Mouse."

    Museum officials deny that they are sensationalizing the mob experience to sell tickets, which cost up to $18 each. One exhibit shows the modern reach of organized crime through the drug cartels of Mexico, money laundering schemes in the Bahamas, counterfeit rings in China and human trafficking in Brazil.

    The museum also attempts to show the personal motivations behind the mug shots. There are pictures of a baby-faced Anthony Spilotro marking his First Communion, Frank Costello relaxing in a hammock at home and gambling titan Meyer Lansky with his daughter at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, his arm tenderly hooked around her waist. All three were among the mob's most powerful men.

    But the museum's extensive photography collection depicting cratered heads, imploded cars and full body bags likely will be its biggest draw among fans expecting a hefty dose of mob violence. There's Jack "Machine Gun" McGurn, his lifeless body splayed out in a Chicago bowling alley in 1936. Another photo depicts the death of Giuseppe "Joe the Boss" Masseria, assassinated at his favorite Italian restaurant in New York in 1931.

    A small gift store also plays up the mob's bloodthirsty reputation. The shelves lined with novelty items feature mobster paper dolls and gangster teddy bears dressed in striped suits and armed with plastic machine guns.

    A T-shirt reads: "In Godfather We Trust."

     

    14 comments

    • Shorty  •  3 months ago
      Heck, we do have (2) larger Mob Museums in the USA: 1) The White House; 2) The Capital Building when the Senate and House are in session!
    • Stupnagel  •  3 months ago
      Every competent law-abiding citizen should be trained in the use of firearms, and the revolver isn't a bad place to start. Incidentally, Auto Ordnance still manufactures the Thompson, in semi-automatic only, and it can be purchased by law-abiding adults in most states. It's a worthy device for home defense or your choice of other sports (anyone for pumpkins or watermelons?). Trivia: Until the early '30's, the fully automatic Thompson sub-machine gun could be mail-ordered and the USPS would deliver to your door. Ranchers bought them to control coyotes.
      • michaelc 3 months ago
        We have some 'coyotes' here in New York that need controlling. The cops call them gangs and they are always chasing after them.
      • Charles 3 months ago
        If Detroit built cars with front and rear mounted bazookas they would sell well, too.
    • Gamma Ray  •  Pleasanton, California  •  3 months ago
      We really should fund their like to go to Washington DC and make the loony toon leftists an offer they can't refuse.

      Naaaah .... on second thought, just wack all of 'em!!
      • Charles 3 months ago
        That's how Hitler and Stalin did it. (The capitalist global corporations don't actually have to kill people anymore to get what they want these days. Rendering somebody economically powerless is "as good as dead", for most practical & political purposes.)
    • Pam  •  3 months ago
      Lived in Las Vegas in the 80s when the bust came along. I actually felt safer when the mob was in charge than afterwards. Only difference in the mob and politics the mob was organized.
    • Ken  •  3 months ago
      I truly loved the old Vegas, You dressesd up when out on town.
      Oscars restruant is new but old class. great food and service
      mob gansters were our new politicans.
    • Old Geezer  •  3 months ago
      Go to the Golden Gate on Fremont. The first Hotel, originally The Las Vegas Hotel retains the old flavor. More importantly, check out the old pictures on the walls of all the guys with names ending in I's, O's and A's that owned the joint. Them were the days!
    • michaelc  •  3 months ago
      The Mob has always fascinated people. Look at all the Hollywood movies that have been made about the gangsters. Maybe it is because 'they did it their way' like Frank Sinatra sings.The Mob has not lost all the battles, just look at Prohibition (or the lack of it), We, the citizens got our right to drink alcohol back!
    • Rebel  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
      In New Orleans long time ago Carlos Marcello was the king pin on the Gulf Coast and don't commit any crime on his territory or else.It was against the law in New Orleans,but go next parish you could gamble.Now we have so much crime you have to carry a gun to be safe.
    • Regal  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 months ago
      Vegas is old news. The mob moved to the White House, doing far more damage than any Chicago Typewriter.
    • JeffreyB  •  Port Orange, Florida  •  3 months ago
      Your a funny guy!
    • allbusiness  •  Trenton, Michigan  •  3 months ago
      Very cool. I would have loved to grow up during that era.
      • Charles 3 months ago
        Yeah, you might have contracted polio just a couple of years before they developed the Salk vaccine.
    • Mr Rules  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 months ago
      Aweful expensive for a cheap publicity stunt.
    • donald  •  3 months ago
      publicly funded for what? people go to vegas to gamble not some museum.
    • Paul  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      Will they have a picture of Moe Greene getting it right in the eye?
      • whocares 3 months ago
        hahaha moe greene was a fictional character , not a real mafia guy,
      • Paul 2 months ago
        Who: OF COURSE he's a fictional character, from "The Godfather." EVERYONE knows that. My referencing him is what's known as A JOKE. (But fictional or not, given the picture's huge popularity and iconic status as one of the greatest movies of all time, ol' Moe is STILL probably the most famous Vegas gangster of all, outside of maybe the real-life Bugsey Siegal).

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