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154 Israel’s Godfather [93]<br />

pressure was such that there was widespread clamor for his deportation. It<br />

didn't help matters that fearless crime reporter Hank Messick's biography of<br />

Lansky appeared during that same period and portions of it appeared in the<br />

Israeli press. Lansky himself made his own loyalties clear, however. In a<br />

friendly series of interviews with Ma'ariv, an Israeli daily, Lansky said, "I<br />

don't care what they wrote and write about me in America. I care what they<br />

think of me in Israel." 255<br />

Between the public outcry in Israel and pressure from American<br />

authorities, the Israel government buckled and agreed to expel Lansky.<br />

However, the "boss of all bosses" appealed his expulsion all the way to the<br />

Israeli Supreme Court. The emotional issue of a Jew who had made<br />

"aliyah" and settled in Israel under the Law of Return—and who was then<br />

being expelled to face possible punishment in a criminal court in another<br />

country—played heavily in Lansky's favor. However, despite Lansky's best<br />

efforts—including an offer of $10,000,000 if he was permitted to<br />

remain—he was forced to return to the United States.<br />

LANSKY IN DECLINE<br />

By this time, Lansky was in ill health and even underwent open-heart<br />

surgery. However, as the Wall Street Journal noted: "Whenever the heat<br />

[was] on—an investigation made public, a grand jury inquiry, a new task<br />

force of federal crime fighters on his trail—stories suddenly abound that<br />

Meyer Lansky is dying of cancer or some other terminal illness. In the files<br />

of the New York State Police, there exists a report made out in the 1920's<br />

that says Meyer Lansky is a bad guy, all right, but there's no need to worry<br />

because he's a sickly man who won't live out the year." 256<br />

But Lansky's traditional magical powers over the American criminal<br />

justice system were still with him. First of all, a jury in his home base of<br />

Miami acquitted him on the income tax evasion charges. Then, in mobcontrolled<br />

Nevada, the criminal charges against Lansky were thrown out of<br />

court on the basis that Lansky was in ill health. And in Washington, U.S.<br />

Solicitor General Robert Bork decided that going after Lansky—the ruling<br />

boss of international organized crime—was not in the nation's best<br />

interests. Bork decided that the Justice Department just didn't have a case<br />

against Lansky. The case was dropped. 257 Lansky had once again<br />

prevailed—to nobody's surprise.<br />

(Bork later suffered an ignominious rejection by the Senate when<br />

nominated for the Supreme Court. However, it was not Bork's pandering to<br />

Lansky that weighed against him—although it probably should have.)<br />

Lansky's remaining years were quiet ones spent with his wife and dog<br />

and an assortment of other aging racketeers. He still maintained some<br />

oversight over his business operations but increasing health problems<br />

continued to plague him. The mastermind behind the global crime syndicate<br />

finally died on January 15, 1983.

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