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Final_Judgment

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136 Israel’s Godfather [75]<br />

Chapter 12 we shall examine Lansky's international narcotics trafficking,<br />

and his consequent connections with the CIA, in detail.)<br />

Although Batista was in and out of office several times during the next<br />

two decades, the Cuban strongman remained the de facto leader of the island<br />

through successive puppet regimes until the advent of Fidel Castro on New<br />

Years Day, 1960.<br />

However, Lansky also had extensive contacts much farther away from<br />

American shores. Lansky—as we shall see here—was a key force in<br />

establishing the State of Israel.<br />

ALLIANCE & RIVALRY<br />

To understand Lansky's preeminent leadership position in organized<br />

crime, however, we must first look at the strange and complex alliance—and<br />

rivalry—between the Italian and Jewish elements in the organized crime<br />

world.<br />

The Wall Street Journal's account of Lansky's rise to power hints at<br />

these contradictions, but doesn't explore them in the fashion needed. Two<br />

interesting things left out of the Journal summary of Lansky's career should<br />

be mentioned.<br />

It is generally known that Lansky launched his criminal career working<br />

in conjunction with the famed Mafia figure Charles "Lucky" Luciano. Their<br />

alliance is noted in the Journal account and a recent Hollywood extravaganza<br />

entitled Mobsters highlighted the youthful exploits of Lansky, Luciano,<br />

Benjamin Siegel and Frank Costello.<br />

LUCIANO GETS FRAMED<br />

However, it may have been Lansky, through his political contacts, who<br />

arranged the criminal indictment and subsequent imprisonment of Luciano.<br />

It was Luciano's imprisonment—and ultimate deportation—that smoothed<br />

Lansky's further advancement in organized crime.<br />

In his own memoirs Luciano provides a detailed account of how he was,<br />

in fact, framed on the white slavery and prostitution charges that resulted in<br />

his imprisonment. Luciano does not blame Lansky, by any means,<br />

although, as we shall see, he may have had his suspicions.<br />

Luciano doesn't ask the reader to believe that he (Luciano) wasn't<br />

engaged in extensive criminal activity. He does present a very cogent case,<br />

however, that he was not guilty of the crimes for which he was convicted.<br />

Indeed, Luciano was never brought to trial for any of the crimes in which he<br />

was engaged with Lansky.<br />

In any case, it is quite possible that Lansky, in fact, did have some role<br />

in framing Luciano on the prostitution charges. Tom Dewey's war against<br />

Lucky Luciano, the Mafia chieftain's imprisonment, and his subsequent<br />

deportation smoothed the way for Lansky's rise to the top.

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