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Final_Judgment

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230 The Errand Boy [169]<br />

a share in a gambling house in Hallandale, Florida along with Meyer and<br />

Jake Lansky, among others, in the early 1950s. 449<br />

There is no doubt that Ruby and Lansky's world of intrigue intersected<br />

in several arenas, as we shall see—whether the two actually ever were<br />

personally acquainted or not.<br />

RUBY AND THE LANSKY DRUG RACKET<br />

Peter Dale Scott has scored G. Robert Blakey and his House<br />

Assassinations Committee for its dismal failure to explore and to expose<br />

Ruby's Lansky connections which are very strong indeed. Scott, who has<br />

studied Jack Ruby's criminal antecedents, has outlined Ruby's critical<br />

positioning in the Lansky syndicate.<br />

According to Scott: "It is certain that Ruby was investigated [in the<br />

mid-1940's] for his role in [an] international drug-trafficking syndicate,<br />

involving corruption of government officials in Mexico City." 450 The top<br />

syndicate representative in Mexico City was one Harold "Happy" Meltzer,<br />

but, in fact, it was Meyer Lansky who was "the key figure in the Meltzer<br />

syndicate.” 451 According to Scott, "Right after World War II this was<br />

probably the biggest drug-smuggling channel into the United States." 452<br />

The House Assassinations Committee, in Scott's judgment, failed to<br />

note that "Ruby was in some way an important figure" 453 in the linkage<br />

between organized crime and the political arena in Dallas and "on a federal<br />

level." 454 Ruby, in short, was no mere mob hanger-on as some have tried<br />

to suggest and he was not, by any stretch of the imagination, part of "the<br />

Mafia" as G. Robert Blakey and some others have suggested.<br />

RUBY WAS NOT 'MAFIA'<br />

According to Scott, the House Committee investigation of Ruby and<br />

his underworld associates chose to focus on what Scott describes as an<br />

"ethnic model of organized crime as 'La Cosa Nostra'" 455 —that is, focusing<br />

on the so-called "Mafia," the popularized media sobriquet for Italian<br />

elements in the organized crime underworld, rather than upon the more<br />

substantially predominant Jewish elements personified by Meyer Lansky and<br />

those in his sphere of influence.<br />

According to Scott, these descriptions of organized crime "are<br />

bureaucratically distorted to the point of falsehood . . . [and that] this<br />

distortion involved systematic distortion of the facts, not just about Ruby,<br />

but about other aspects of the Kennedy assassination." 456<br />

In Scott's assessment, the House Assassinations Committee<br />

investigation of Jack Ruby omitted any reference to what he delicately<br />

d escribes as "the o ngo ing, drug-fueled, intelligence-mo b<br />

connection" 457 —what we, in the pages of <strong>Final</strong> <strong>Judgment</strong>, more correctly<br />

and precisely call the Lansky Organized Crime Syndicate.

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