-Caveat Lector-

excerpts from:
On The Take - From Petty Crooks to Presidents
William J. Chambliss©1978
Indiana University Press
ISBN 0-253-34244-9
269 pps. – First Edition – In-print
-----
CHAPTER FIVE

Maintaining Control

SHARED INTERESTS are the root of the forces of social control that maintain
silence and ensure mutual cooperation among the members of the network and
those who work for it. The device by which all these people come to share an
interest in maintaining corruption and widespread criminality is the payoff.
Principally payoffs are in cash, the oil of capitalism's machinery. This
money provides cash to meet monthly bills, to pay gambling debts, to finance
political campaigns, to send children to private schools, to bribe officials
for special favors, or simply to pay wages somewhat above those earned by
comparable workers in "legitimate" employment.

There are gifts that supplement payoffs: a color television given to the
newscaster, an antique automobile for a bank vice-president, a loan to a
local businessman. And there is the use of public office to gather
information that gives someone a special advantage in making a handsome
profit from a small investment.

Those who cooperate and join the network are well rewarded. A routine and
moderately paid government job can be turned into a source of wealth or at
least considerable luxury. Seattle police captains received monthly stipends
of five to eleven hundred dollars from the network. These, however, were the
more blatant and in many respects less important techniques by which the
network maintained control. More important by far were the people who moved
from one position of power and influence in the government-business
structures to another, all the time maintaining links with or control over
important segments of crime enterprises. A few cases illustrate the
interpenetration of different political and economic structures of network
members.

1.  A police officer and police inspector who worked directly under officers
who coordinated payoffs within the police department was handpicked by a
leading local politician to run for the office of sheriff when there was an
opening. He was successful in his campaign. Afterward he received his salary
as sheriff and large monthly sums as his share of network profits from the
county.

2.  A U.S. Coast Guard commander who was friendly with network members, upon
retirement from the Coast Guard, was appointed to the state liquor board.

3.  A fireman from the city cooperated with the crime interests by inspecting
and harassing businesses or businessmen who refused to cooperate with the
network. He also assisted in the destruction of some property network members
wanted to burn in order to collect insurance. After five years as a fireman
he joined the police force and was appointed to the vice squad, where he
continued to work as a network member for seventeen years. With the support
of leading people in the political power structure of the city, he was
elected to the city council, where, along with the president of the council,
he worked diligently to protect the interests of network members. While on
the city council he was appointed head of the licensing committee, from where
he was able to control the licensing of both legitimate and illegal
businesses.

4.  Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation who either worked closely
with network members or were suspiciously unconcerned about corruption were
able to remain in the Seattle office for unusual lengths of time. On
retirement they were offered attractive jobs in government and business.
Contacts with network members were then used to bring in substantial business
to their companies or law firms. The companies were of course pleased with
the business and with the political contacts a former federal law officer
brought to the business. For his part, the agent might be increasingly
important in network policies and could direct several businesses central to
network interests.

5.  A former sheriff who worked closely (but not too wisely) with the network
was appointed to the state parole board. In this position he was able to
manipulate prison terms for network members as well as to punish persons who
did not cooperate with them. He was also in a position to shorten prison
sentences for people able to make payoffs to leading members, including, of
course, himself. Most important, he could see that network members were able
to "do a favor" for a politician or businessman who wanted to "help out a
friend" by getting someone out of prison. Such mutual aid was a crucial
ingredient in maintaining control.

This list of people who moved from position to position as the network
solidified its control over local and state politics and law enforcement
could be expanded to include judges, state legislators, and political
officeholders at all levels. The examples selected are neither extreme nor
unusual. They are, in fact, quite typical of how a crime network maintains
control. They are typical of how American politics works. The fact that the
profits that underlay the establishment of the network of crime were from
business ventures that were illegal does not alter the fundamental fact that
the process by which these interrelationships developed and persisted was no
different from the process by which the same networks and interdependencies
emerge and persist between enterprises that are legal and the political
law-enforcement system.

For the system to work effectively there must be enough income to warrant
mutually shared interests protecting and perpetuating illegal activities.
Such a network would not arise to protect the interest of people devoted to
the rehabilitation of derelict alcoholics.

The Business Community

People engaged in the manufacture, sale, or distribution of goods or services
that are legal get involved with crime networks by pursuing profits in
precisely the same way they pursue profits in legitimate business. The
"decision" to join a network is often more an accident than a design:

I met Jay(P) at the Rainier Club. We liked each other. We both had played
sports in college and had a lot in common. We also like to drink and horse
around. Then one day he called and told me he knew of a possibility for
turning a nice profit if I had some unused cash lying around. It was a
perfectly natural thing. Businessmen are always doing things like that. So I
invested a good deal of money on Jay's recommendation. I guess I should have
looked into it more carefully, but I had no reason not to trust him. After
all, he was a well known politician at the time. He told me it was to be used
to import some things from Taiwan. I never saw a bill of lading though I see
now I should have asked. Only later did I discover that I had purchased ten
percent of a heroin shipment. I doubled my money in two months. Naturally, I
didn't want to ask too many questions with that kind of profit. The next time
Jay called I was ready to sell my wife to make the investment. We bought land
together and some phony business connected with an amusement company, and Jay
passed on tips to me about land deals. I liked the guy, and we agreed
politically on most Issues though he was a little too conservative for my
blood. Still, in view of our friendship and everything I contributed heavily
to his political campaigns and even supported him publicly....

Similar patterns prevailed throughout the community. A realtor became
involved by learning of an opportunity to invest in a hotel. The realtor was
approached by a lawyer who did not identify his clients. The lawyer's
clients, the realtor was told, were interested in purchasing an old hotel
suitable for renovation. The location was not important, but the hotel did
have to be in poor condition. The realtor found a suitable hotel, which the
lawyer then authorized the realtor to buy for his clients. The realtor agreed
to accept a share of the hotel as his commission.

The lawyer and his clients formed a corporation. They became a public
corporation and sold stock. The proposed purpose of the stock was to raise
capital to renovate the hotel. Few of those who invested over a million
dollars ever saw the hotel. Nor were they ever aware of the caper in which
they took part.

The corporation borrowed several million dollars (from the bank of which a
member was vice-president) on the strength of the capital raised by selling
stock. Contracts were granted for reconstruction. The principal contractor
was a man who had moved to Seattle from Detroit, where he had been a member
of a crime network that controlled much of the building industry in that
city. The contractor agreed beforehand to kick back to the lawyer and his
clients 50 percent of the value of the contract. When reconstruction of the
hotel supposedly began, the insurance was increased commensurate with the
construction that was allegedly taking place.

The insurance was prorated according to reports given to the insurance
company by the contractor as to how far along construction had progressed.
When the construction was supposedly nearly completed and insurance was close
to its peak, the hotel burned down. In actuality, of course, the hotel had
barely been touched. The money that was to have gone for reconstruction had
mostly been skimmed off by those who formed the corporation and by the
contractor. The insurance company paid the full amount. The stockholders were
paid off, the company was liquidated, the state purchased the vacant lot on
which the hotel had stood, and the stockholders profited a little. The
criminal network profited a lot. Not only had they increased their capital by
making a "shrewd investment," but they had along the way gained the
friendship and allegiance of an important local realtor, who was most pleased
that his commission had turned into such a handsome profit. The insurance
company raised the price of next year's insurance by a fraction of a penny to
cover the loss.

Property and the State

State, county, and municipal governments manage an enormous amount of
property. They manage buildings that house government offices, municipal
parking lots, jails, courts, roads, highways, and public buildings. They also
manage and control licenses, franchises, and other forms of property that are
the source of incredible profit to those who can acquire them.

Property, whether in the form of land, buildings, or franchises and licenses,
is the cornerstone of capitalism. The property managed by the government for
the most part (but not entirely) is "soft" property in the form of licenses,
franchises, and information. The governor of the state, the county board of
supervisors, the municipal governing board or mayor, the heads of licensing
committees in the legislature or in the government control much of the soft
property. It is used for a variety of purposes, of which the cementing of
power and the conversion of power into wealth are the most important.

In 1964 a Republican replaced the incumbent Democrat who had been governor
for two terms. One of the new governor's first official acts was to transfer
over one million dollars in state insurance to the insurance company for
which the governor had worked before his election.[5] The outgoing governor
amassed a personal fortune while in office. In one instance he purchased a
piece of land for $8,327 and sold it for $250,000.

There are good reasons in the legitimate business community for a crime
network. Many of the city's legal businesses thrive or decline to the extent
that goods and services provided by a crime network are available. One such
industry is tourism. Hotels, restaurants, and taverns profit and thrive on
vice.

An important ingredient in Seattle's economy is tourism. An important fact of
tourism, in turn, is the attraction of conventions. Men who come to
conventions are attracted to cities where gambling, prostitution,
pornography, and various other "pleasures" are readily available. No one has
to articulate this fact of life in order to have people in politics,
business, and law enforcement adopt policies that conform to it:

... everybody knew that a decent city that is growing has to have whores, has
to have accessible liquor, prohibition or not, has to have a place where a
guy can go and shoot craps, either for penny ante or high stakes, has to have
a place where a guy can go and play cards. There's no reason putting somebody
in jail for it, because it is what all good, righteous Christians do.


Law-Enforcement Agencies

Shared interests stretch farther than mere economic ties. Shared interests
occur on a very broad level and should be understood as stemming basically
from contradictions which inhere in the political and economic structure of
American cities. To understand this, it will help to view the role of laws in
the shaping of crime networks. Laws prohibiting gambling, prostitution,
pornography, drug use, and high-interest rates on personal loans are laws
about which there is a conspicuous lack of consensus. Even persons who agree
that such behavior is improper and should be controlled by law disagree on
the proper legal response. Should persons found guilty of taking drugs,
gambling, or visiting a prostitute be imprisoned or counselled? Reflecting
this dissension, large groups of people, some with considerable political
power, insist on their right to enjoy the pleasures of vice without
interference from the law.

Those involved in providing gambling and other vices enjoy pointing out that t
heir services are profitable because of the demand for them by members of the
respectable square-John community. Prostitutes work in apartments located on
the fringes of the lower-class area of the city, rather than in the heart of
the slums, precisely because they must maintain an appearance of
respectability so that their clients will not feel contaminated by poverty.
Professional pride may stimulate exaggeration on the part of the prostitutes,
but their verbal reports are always to the effect that "all" of their clients
are "very important people." My observations of the comings and goings in
several apartment houses where prostitutes work generally verified the
women's claims. Of some fifty persons seen going to prostitutes' rooms in
apartment houses, only one was dressed in anything less casual than a
business suit.

Watching those who frequented panorama gave me the same impression that the
principal users of vice are middle and upper class. During several weeks of
observations (leaning against the wall), I observed that more than 70 percent
of the consumers of these pornographic vignettes were well-dressed,
single-minded visitors to the slums who came for fifteen or twenty minutes of
viewing and left as inconspicuously as possible. The remaining 30 percent
were poorly dressed, older men who lived in the area.

Information on gambling and bookmaking in the permanently established or
floating games is less readily available. Bookmakers report that the bulk of
their "real business" comes from doctors, lawyers, and dentists in the city:

A:  It's the big boys-your professionals—who do the betting down here. Of
course, they don't come down themselves; they either send someone or they
call up. Most of them call up, 'cause I know them or they know Mr. ____ [one
of the key figures in the gambling operation].

Q:  How 'bout the guys who walk off the street and bet?

A: Yeah, well, they're important. They do place bets and they sit around here
and wait for the results. But that's mostly small stuff. I'd be out of
business if I had to depend on them guys.

The poker and card games held throughout the city are of two types: 1) the
small, daily game that caters almost exclusively to local residents of the
area or working-class men who drop in for a hand or two while they are
driving their delivery route or on their lunch hour, and 2) the action games
that take place twenty-four hours a day and are located in more obscure
places, such as a suite in a downtown hotel. Like prostitution, these games
are on the edges of the lower-class areas. In Seattle the action games were
the playground of men who were by manner, finances, and dress clearly
well-to-do professionals and businessmen.

Not all business and professional men partake of the vices. Indeed, some of
the leading citizens sincerely oppose the presence of vice in their city.
Even larger numbers of the middle and working classes are adamant in their
opposition to vice of all kinds. On occasion, they make their views
forcefully known to the politicians and lawenforcement officers, thus
requiring public officials to express their own opposition and appear to be
snuffing out vice by enforcing the law.

The law-enforcement system is thus placed squarely in the middle of two
essentially conflicting demands. On the one hand, the job obligates police to
enforce the law, albeit with discretion; at the same time, considerable
disagreement rages over whether or not some acts should be subject to legal
sanction. This conflict is heightened by the fact that some influential
persons in the community insist that all laws be rigorously enforced, while
others demand that some laws not be enforced, at least not against themselves.

Faced with such a dilemma and such an ambivalent situation, the law enforcers
do what any well-managed bureaucracy would do under similar circumstances.
They follow the line of least resistance. Using the discretion inherent in
their positions, they resolve the problem by establishing procedures that
minimize organizational strains and that provide the greatest promise of
rewards for the organization and the individuals involved. Typically, this
means that law enforcers adopt a tolerance policy toward the vices,
selectively enforcing the laws when it is to their advantage to do so. Since
the persons demanding enforcement are generally middle-class and rarely
venture into the less prosperous sections of the city, the enforcers can
control visibility and minimize complaints merely by regulating the location
of the vices. Limiting the visibility of such activity as sexual deviance,
gambling, and prostitution appeases those who demand the enforcement of
applicable laws. At the same time, since controlling visibility does not
eliminate access for persons sufficiently interested to ferret out the
tolerated vice areas, those demanding such services are also satisfied.

Cooperation and Control

The policy of cooperating in order to control the vices is also advantageous
because it renders the legal system capable of exercising considerable
control over potential sources of real trouble. For example, since gambling
and prostitution are profitable, competition among persons desiring to
provide these services is likely. Since legal remedies are lacking, the
competition tends to become violent. If the legal system cannot control those
running the vices, competing groups may well go to war to dominate the
rackets. If, however, law-enforcement agents unofficially cooperate with
some, there will be enough concentration of power to minimize conflicts.
Prostitution can be kept clean if the law enforcers cooperate with the
prostitutes; the law can thus lessen the chance, for instance, that a
prostitute will steal money from a customer. In this and many other ways the
law-enforcement system maximizes its visible effectiveness by creating and
supporting a shadow government that manages the rackets.

Initially, people may have to be brought in from other cities to help set up
the necessary organizational structure. Or the system may have to recruit and
train local talent or simply co-opt, coerce, or purchase the knowledge and
skills of entrepreneurs engaged in vice operations. This move often involves
considerable strain, since some of those brought in may be uncooperative.
Whatever the particulars, the ultimate result is the same: a crime network
emerges—composed of politicians, law enforcers, and citizens—capable of
supplying and controlling the vices in the city. The most efficient network
is invariably one that contains representatives of all the leading centers of
power. Businessmen and bankers must be involved because of their political
influence, their ability to control the mass media, and their capital. The
importance of cooperating businesses was demonstrated in Seattle by the case
of a fledgling magazine that published an article intimating that several
leading politicians, in particular the county prosecutor, were corrupt.
Immediately major advertisers canceled their advertisements in the magazine.
One large chain store refused to sell that issue of the magazine in any of
its stores. When one of the leading members of the network was accused of
accepting bribes, a number of the community's most prominent businessmen
sponsored a large advertisement declaring their unfailing support for and
confidence in the integrity of this "outstanding public servant."

The network must also have the cooperation of lawyers and businessmen in
procuring the loans which enable them individually and collectively to
purchase legitimate businesses, as well as to expand the vice enterprises.
One member not only served along with others in the network on the board of
directors of a loan agency, but he also helped wash money and advise
associates on how to keep their earnings a secret. He served as a go-between,
passing investment tips from associates to other businessmen in the
community. In this way a crime network serves the economic interests of
businessmen indirectly as well as directly.

The political influence of the network is more directly obtained. Huge
tax-free profits make it possible to generously support political candidates.
Often the network members assist both candidates in an election, thus
assuring influence regardless of who wins. While usually there is a favorite,
ultra-cooperative candidate who receives the greater portion of the
contributions, everyone is likely to receive something.

Like all activities of the criminal network, political influence is obtained
in a variety of ways. An ambitious and talented young lawyer decides to run
for senator. He is running behind his opponent. He knows that his main
problem is inadequate campaign financing. One night he receives a telephone
call from a lawyer acquaintance asking to talk with him. They go for a drive,
and in an isolated parking lot outside the city the young candidate is given
an envelope containing thirty-five thousand dollars in onehundred-dollar
bills. The acquaintance tells him, "This is from some of the businessmen downt
own who want to support you in your campaign."

pps. 81-93
=====

CHAPTER SEVEN

The Higher Circles

DURING ONE OF Seattle's seemingly endless winters, I began to feel
permanently enveloped in the greyness of sunshineless days. Basking in the
gloom cast by the drizzle, I sat with a prominent local attorney in one of
the better restaurants in the city. The attorney had on occasion invested in
illegal ventures. We had become friends during the course of my research, and
he had helped me penetrate the upper echelons of the criminal network that
managed Seattle's illegal businesses. On this occasion he had called and
asked me to lunch. After an appropriately unfocused conversation of fifteen
minutes he paused and said, "Did you know that Meyer Lansky was in town the
other day? You know his son lives in Olympia?" This attorney and I had talked
about Meyer Lansky before. We both knew him to be one of the major financiers
of illegal businesses in the United States. He continued, "Meyer contacted
___ [a lawyer known to be a principal go-between for network members]. He
told him to pass the word to Rosellini that Meyer would pay everything
necessary for Rosellini to run for governor."

That was as gloomy as the weather. It nonetheless brightened the
conversation. We talked at length about why Lansky would be willing to invest
such a large sum of money in the state's governorship. We did not unravel the
mystery that afternoon, but this information started me in the direction I
needed to understand not only Lansky's unusual offer but the connection
between what was happening in Seattle and what was happening elsewhere in the
United States at that time.

Outside Connections

When the crime network was in full swing, on the fifteenth of every month a
member of the state House of Representatives flew from Seattle to a city a
thousand miles away carrying a satchel full of one-hundred-dollar bills. This
was "washed money," which had been filtered from gambling profits through a
bank. The amount in the satchel varied depending on how much of the
bookmaking profits had to be "laid off' during the preceding month, how much
the investors from other cities had coming as their share of profits from
various illegal transactions in the city, and how much (if any) local
profiteers wished to invest in businesses run by network operators in other
cities.

Despite the mythical character of the idea of a Mafia, there is nonetheless a
national crime network, the structure and organization of which parallels
rather closely the structure and organization of the network in Seattle. That
is to say, it is a loose affiliation of businessmen, politicians, union
leaders, and law-enforcement officials who cooperate to coordinate the
production and distribution of illegal goods and services, for which there is
a substantial consumer demand.

The satchel the state congressman carried out of Seattle every month flew
with him to an expensive bar, to a lawyer who represented illegal interests
in that city. The lawyer took the satchel with him to his office, where he
added its contents to an even larger amount gathered from his own city's
illegal businesses. The entire amount was then flown to Las Vegas, where a
representative took the money. A few days later the currency was converted to
larger bills, added to the "skim" from Las Vegas casinos, and flown to
Florida. Meyer Lansky took his share of the profits and sent the remainder
off to investors and associates in other citiesNew Orleans, Cleveland,
Detroit, and New York-whose investments entitled them to a certain share of
the profits from Seattle, San Francisco, Las Vegas, and Miami.

Crime networks flourished in the cities of America during prohibition. Many
of the leading personalities in these associations had begun their upwardly
mobile ascent out of poverty earlier, when they were employed by businesses
as strikebreakers. Some were later employed by or actively engaged as members
of labor unions to combat the violence of businesses that tried to break
union inroads.

But prohibition was the impetus for the emergence of organized efforts to
provide the illegal commodities that people wanted, namely alcoholic
beverages, and the services they were willing to pay for: gambling,
prostitution, high-interest loans, and so forth.

Following World War II the growth in wealth and power of crime networks was
unmatched by the growth rate of any other industry. The nation's economy,
which was thriving on the discovery of credit buying, on the wealth to be had
from the expropriation of resources of less-developed nations, and on the
markets won by dividing the world up with the Soviet Union, created an
affluence that seemed boundless. Commodities and services that were illegal
were in heavy demand. Profits were incredible. Restrictions were minimal..

The associations shared similar problems of existence. They had incredibly
high profits from gambling, drugs, and usury which they wanted to invest. But
where? How? The economy and criminal operations were expanding everywhere,
and the investment of excess capital was critical. Furthermore, with their
expanded operations, they were also in need of federal influence. The growth
of the bureaucracy in Washington posed an ever-increasing threat to criminal
operations. Payoffs and cooperation of local and state governments were
sufficient to ensure relatively trouble-free operations locally, but federal
agencies, controlling drugs and federal crimes as well as federal legislation
that could either facilitate or impede operations, became increasingly
important. Crime networks benefited from the same economic and political
climate that benefited other businesses from 1945 on.

The situation was replete with opportunities for someone who could provide
investment opportunities and federal political clout. As is always the case
in situations such as this, someone came along for the job. That person was a
man long associated with criminal operations in New York and a close
associate of most of the leading crime figures of the thirties, Meyer Lansky.

Meyer Lansky had a shrewd businessman's eye for discovering new territories
and creating impressively high profits for his associates, namely people who
ran or profited from network operations in cities like Cleveland, New York,
Cincinnati, and Kansas City.

Lansky's empire began with a fairly modest investment in Broward County,
Florida. The Colonial Inn was south Florida's first major gambling and
entertainment establishment outside of Miami Beach. Investors in the club
included the major figure in Detroit's crime network, Mert Wertheimer, who
owned one-third of the Colonial Inn, and Joe Adonis, leading racketeer in one
of New York's networks, who owned 15 percent. Lansky kept 16 percent for
himself and distributed the remainder among his close friends and relatives.
The profits were staggering, even by syndicate standards where profits less
than 20 percent are considered losses. From Florida, Lansky moved into Cuba,
where profits were even more impressive and where he also purchased the
goodwill, friendship, and protection of Fulgencio Batista, the Cuban
president before the socialist revolution. To top off these investments,
Lansky invested heavily in the heroin traffic from Turkey and France and
opened a hotel gambling casino in Las Vegas. By so doing, Lansky assured
himself of the undying loyalty and admiration of even the most anti,-Semitic
members of crime networks across the nation. Mark it, however, that he was no
1, godfather." He was simply a well-respected, trustworthy investor with
excellent political connections-connections which were able to get even Lucky
Luciano out of prison on a pardon.

Lansky also had an almost unerring eye for the political payoff system. He
chose his candidates well, but he also covered himself (and those who
depended on him for help) by financing candidates who competed with each
other. Thus, he paid handsomely into the campaigns of both Thomas E. Dewey
and Franklin Roosevelt. He contributed to the political campaigns of Lyndon
Johnson, as well as Hubert Humphrey, George Smathers, Russell Long (and Huey
Long before him), John Connolly, Richard Daley' Albert Rosellini, and Edmund
Brown, to mention only a few.[10] But he paid more here than there, a fact
that was ultimately to be his undoing. Those who play the political payoff
game take the chance of financing the loser. When that happens, their
fortunes fall as surely as they rose when they financed the winner.

Like his brothers and sisters in private industry, a syndicate leader is
measured by the profits he produces. The stockholders are the profiteers from
crime operations in New York, Trenton, New Orleans, Las Vegas, Seattle,
Portland, and cities across the country. Also, like his brothers and sisters
in private industry, a successful syndicate operator must manage political
payoffs to ensure the protection of crime network interests. Meyer Lansky
probably has done both jobs better than anyone in the history of organized
crime.

The years from 1932 until 1964 were Democratic years almost everywhere.
Naturally Lansky placed his money, at least a disproportionate amount of it,
in the hands of Democrats. In Seattle as elsewhere he worked diligently for
Democrats. It paid off. judges were appointed, legislation passed, and
protection provided. Lansky's investments in the Democratic Party were often
coordinated with, or given through, trade unions, especially the
Teamsters.[11] Whether given directly or indirectly, the money funneled to
politicians in the form of "campaign contributions" or bribes was designed to
purchase influence. As newscaster David Brinkley observed:

George Meany of the AFL-CIO is fawned over in Washington but not entirely for
his intellectual brilliance. And not because he can deliver labor's votes. He
can't. What he can deliver and does deliver is political money.

The present U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain was not appointed for his
contributions to creative foreign policy and diplomacy but for his
contribution of political money. This is not new. Back in the fifties, the
President appointed one of his big contributors ambassador to a country, then
it was found he didn't even know where the country was.

So, jobs like that, and Washington influence, are in effect for sale. All it
takes is money, political contributions in election years. If you give
enough, Washington's favors can be yours—influence, flattery, social success,
invitations to swell affairs, and even ambassadorships to countries with nice
climates and cheap servants. Perhaps more important, influence on domestic
policy, such as taxes, affecting your own business and income.

Running for office has become incredibly expensive, and candidates have to
get money somewhere. The Democrats get a lot of it from the unions, and the
Republicans get a lot of it from rich individuals and corporations.

No doubt, there are some rich unions and people charitable soul, who will
give money expecting nothing return, but they are scarce. A big political
contribution usually is seen as an investment. It's a scandal everyone
admits. But it's worse now, because running for office costs more. Public
cynicism about politics and politicians already runs high. If this is not
cleaned up, the political system will come apart-with influence, dominance,
and even control put up for sale to the highest bidder.[12]


It has been commonly accepted by those who play the political game seriously
that a major source of Democratic Party revenue for the past fifty years has
been a laborunion-crime network coalition.

The most important source of political money for the Democrats and
Republicans alike is, of course, the contributions that flow from
"legitimate" business, that is, from those businesses whose principal product
is a legal one, although the means by which the business is conducted may be
highly illegal. The means of conducting the business and the business itself
may, in fact, be far more harmful to more people than the business of
organized crime. Nonetheless, it makes sense to differentiate businesess
whose main product or service is illegal, since this difference in legality
does create important differences in the way the businesses are managed and
how they function.

Despite the fact that both Democratic and Republican parties receive their
major share of financing from legal businesses, the sad fact (from the
Democratic Party's point of view) is that the Republicans receive the greater
share of that political money. However, the labor-union-crime network funds
that oil the Democratic Party's machinery help to equalize the
disproportionate share of political money that legitimate business and
industry give to the Republican Party.

>From the 1930s and into the 1960s, there emerged an unspoken detente between
Republican and Democratic leaders with respect to some of the major sources
of campaign contributions. The Democratic and Republican parties came to
control different sources of the available political money. Obviously, if
either party could undermine a major source of the other party's political
money, the balance of power so crucial to any workable detente would be
severely threatened as the money shifted into the coffers of one party.

Shortly after his election to the Presidency in 1968, Richard Nixon began a
campaign which, had it been successful, would have shifted much of the
labor-union-crime-network political money from the Democratic to the
Republican Party. Whether this was a knowledgeable plan on the part of Nixon
and his political advisers is something we do not know. judging from the now
available insights into how this group of men planned numerous political
forays to increase their position of power, one suspects that the attempt to
corner funds for their political interests may have been quite rationally
made. In any case, whether by design or simply as a by-product of other
decisions, the consequence for the balance of power between the Republican
and Democratic parties would have been the same.

Nixon had long-standing and very close ties to a number of people whose
business profits derived at least in part from illegal businesses. Regardless
of how heavily involved in crime enterprises these associates and partners of
Nixon were, it is tempting to speculate that they were involved enough in
such places as Dade County, Florida; the Bahamas; Costa Rica; and Las Vegas,
and in such enterprises as drug trafficking, stock frauds, bank swindles, and
gambling casinos to have the wherewithal to run illegal businesses profitably.

The Nixon administration's campaign against "organized crime" was in fact a
campaign against those crime networks that were most closely connected with
Nixon's political foes, Republicans and Democrats. This campaign had the
effect of eliminating the entrenched owners and managers of crime cartels,
thus affording Nixon's associates and partners an opportunity to increase
their share of criminal enterprises. To bring this about, the Nixon
administration systematically exposed networks in Democratic Party
strongholds, while ignoring networks who supported Nixon's wing of the
Republican Party.[13] At the same time, the campaign against organized crime
attempted to purge Meyer Lansky from his position as a major link between
different organized crime interests and the Democratic Party.

Lansky's empire was vast. The Republicans' first attack was on his Las Vegas
holdings. For this attack Howard Hughes was available to invest in the
casinos and hotels, which Lansky was being forced to sell by state political
pressure that threatened to end the skimming of profits which made the
casinos so profitable, by subpoenas and indictments brought by
Republican-appointed U.S. attorneys where Democrats had reigned heretofore,
by Internal Revenue agents under Republican control, and by FBI agents under
Republican control. So he sold out of Las Vegas, and Howard Hughes came in.
Immediately the profits that were for political payoffs began moving into the
Nixon campaign fund and out of the Democrats'.

In south Florida Lansky was indicted by a Republicancontrolled grand jury for
perjury. In Las Vegas he was indicted for tax evasion.

Control of a Miami-based bank shifted from Lansky to Nixon associate Bebe
Rebozo. Union funds that had gone to Lansky for investment and into Lansky's
banks were transferred. Law firms that had had lucrative union contracts lost
them to Republican firms; the Teamsters hired Nixon's own law firm. For all
of this, the Republicans paid off. Nixon granted Jimmy Hoffa executive
clemency, and Hoffa was released from prison. Frank Fitzsimmons, who was the
replacement for Hoffa as head of the Teamsters, was publicly acknowledged by
Nixon as being "welcome in my office any time; the door is always open to
Frank Fitzsimmons."

It was not only the door to his office that was open; so too was the door to
his airplane. In January 1973 the Los Angeles office of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation learned that a syndicate leader from the Midwest was coming to
Los Angeles to work with Teamsters officials to arrange a billion-dollar
health insurance contract for Teamsters' members. Frank Fitzsimmons came to
attend the final meeting. The FBI bugged the offices for seventytwo hours
preceding the major meeting, but when they requested permission to continue
the bug (which by federal law they had to do), the attorney general's office
turned down the request. The meeting between Fitzsimmons, a Midwest
associate, and insurance company officials took place, and the contract was
signed. Fitzsimmons left immediately to meet Richard Nixon in Palm Springs,
and they flew back to Washington, D.C., together. The International Herald-Tri
bune reported these events in the April 30, 1973, edition as follows:

Two ranking officials to the Department of justice eight weeks ago turned
down a request by the Federal Bureau of Investigation to continue electronic
surveillance that had begun to penetrate Teamsters's union connections with
the Mafia, according to reliable governmental sources. Attorney General
Richard G. Kleindienst and Assistant Attorney General Henry E. Petersen were
said to have made the decision after 40 days of FBI wiretapping had begun to
help strip the cover from the Mafia plan to reap millions of dollars in
payoffs from the welfare funds of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.
The officials acted on the grounds that investigation had failed to show
"probable cause" to continue eavesdropping, the sources said.

They reportedly acted after having received a memorandum, prepared at the
direction of L. Patrick Gray III, who was then the bureau's acting director.
The memorandum, which made no recommendations, indicated the sensitivity of
the investigation, which was reportedly producing disclosures potentially
damaging and certainly embarrassing to the Teamsters' president, Frank E.
Fitzsimmons, the Nixon administration's staunchest ally within the labor
movement.

Endorsement

The administration's cultivation of the two-million-member union culminated
last year in a Teamster endorsement of the President's reelection, and Mr.
Nixon has made it clear that the door to his office is always open to Mr.
Fitzsimmons.

The Kleindienst- Petersen decision came less than a month before Charles W.
Colson, special counsel to the President, left the White House to join a
Washington law firm to which Mr. Fitzsimmons had transferred the union's
legal business.

Before leaving the White House, Mr. Colson had been instrumental in
formulating administration political strategy regarding organized labor.

The electronic surveillance began on January 26, under an order of the
Federal District Court in Los Angeles authorizing the FBI to tap 11 telephone
numbers in the offices of People's Industrial Consultant, 9777 Wilshire
Blvd., Los Angeles, justice Department sources said.

The consulting firm is a Mafia front set up to channel Teamster welfare money
to underworld figures, the sources said.

On February 14, the court authorized an extension of the tap until March 6.
The taps were requested and installed under the omnibus Crime Control and
Safe Streets Act of 1968.

FBI Affidavit

What was learned from the taps was described in an FBI affidavit submitted to
justice Department lawyers. The affidavit asked for continuance of the
existing surveillance for 20 days and installation of new taps on a public
telephone and the office telephone of an alleged mobster implicated in the
plot to siphon money from the Teamsters.

The affidavit said that investigation up to then, including the use of
electronic listening devices, had indicated "a pattern of racketeering
activity-that is, a series of payments of commissions or kickbacks" flowing
from corporations controlled by a doctor in league with the mob through
People's Industrial Consultants "to the officers and agents of the
employee-welfare benefit plan," in violation of federal statutes.

Mr. Petersen and Mr. Kleindienst, however, would not allow an application for
renewal of the court order.

A request Friday to the justice Department for comment from the two
government officials went unanswered.

The FBI affidavit cited information reportedly given to the bureau by an
informant in contact with an associate of Allen Dorfman, consultant to the
Teamsters' billion-dollar Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas
Pension Fund, who began a federal prison term a month ago for conspiring to
receive a kickback in connection with a loan application made to the pension
fund.

"Source No. 3"

The informant, identified in the affidavit as "source No. 3," said that on
February 8, at the Mission Hills Country Club in Palm Springs, California,
Dorfman's associate introduced Mr. Fitzsimmons to Peter Milano, Sam Sciortino
and Joe Lamandri, identified, by the FBI as southern California members of
the Mafia. The Teamster leader was in Palm Springs participating in the Bob
Hope Desert Classic golf tournament.

justice Department sources reported that, according to the informant, the
three men presented to Mr. Fitzsimmons a proposal for a prepaid health plan,
under which members of the union covered by its welfare program would be
provided with medical care by Dr. Bruce Frome, a Los Angeles physician.
Monthly medical fees for each union member would be paid by the central
states fund from the millions of dollars contributed to it by employers under
Teamster contracts.

In a 15-minute conference with the three, the informant added, Mr.
Fitzsimmons gave his tentative approval and sent the group to a Palm Springs
residence for definitive discussions with Dorfman.

The FBI were said to have learned that the next day Mr. Fitzsimmons met with
Lou Rosanova, identified by justice Department sources as an envoy for a
Chicago crime syndicate, which sought a percentage of the Los Angeles mob's
take on the health plan.

Justice Department investigators say that they have evidence that the Chicago
branch of the Mafia is determined to retain the access it had to the pension
fund through Dorfman during James R. Hoffa's Teamster presidency. Hoffa was
imprisoned after being convicted of tampering with a federal jury and pension
fund fraud.

As a result, according to the federal agents, the Chicago Mafia members have
kept a sharp eye on Dorfman and Mr. Fitzsimmons since Mr. Fitzsimmons gained
clear control of the union.

In 1971, President Nixon commuted Hoffa's eight-year prison sentence, with a
provision that precludes his holding union office until 1980.

Nixon's Plane

Rosanova and Mr. Fitzsimmons had talks again on February 12 at La Costa, a
plush resort and health spa in San Diego County, according to the Orange
County and San Diego County authorities. The same authorities reported that a
few hours after that meeting Mr. Fitzsimmons boarded President Nixon's plane
and flew to Washington with the President. Both Rosanova-Fitzsimmons meetings
were reportedly observed by informants of the Orange County District
Attorney's Office. On February 27, at La Costa, the same informants say that
they heard Rosanova boast of a future payoff split between him and Mr.
Fitzsimmons.

In its affidavit seeking an extension and a broadening of electronic
surveillance, the FBI cited as a basis for its request Title 18, Section
1954, of the U.S. code, which prohibits commissions and kickbacks to union
and welfare plan officials in return for the placement of union business.

Corroboration

During the 40 days the devices were in operation, the sources said, recorded
conversations greatly supplemented and tended to corroborate information
gathered in other phases of the investigation being carried on by the bureau
and authorities in Los Angeles, Riverside, San Diego, and Orange Counties.

On February 9, the day after Milano, Sciortino and Lamandri allegedly met
with Mr. Fitzsimmons and Dorfman in Palm Springs, the taps at People's
Industrial Consultants were said to have picked up a conversation between Dr.
Frome and Raymond de Derosa, identified by the California authorities as a
muscle man for Milano, who operates out of the consulting company's offices.

The FBI affidavit said that de Derosa had told the doctor that "the deal with
the Teamsters is all set." De Derosa indicated to Dr. Frome, according to the
affidavit, that People's Industrial was in the line for a 7 percent
commission, and they talked about a possible $1 billion-a-year business.

In other tapped conversations, de Derosa reportedly said the PIC would get a
10 percent cut of the medical payments. He reportedly complained that the
concern had to "give away three points (3 percent) to get the deal."

This is apparently a reference to that part of the deal surrendered by the
Los Angeles Mafia figures to pacify the Chicago representatives.

Meyer Lansky was left out of the Teamsters-Republican Party coalition.
Several years later it was reported that Nixon could get $1 million from the
Teamsters Union. He told John Dean that this fund could be used for hush
money. The Washington Star reported on Sept. 29, 1977:

. . . the $1 million may have been what Nixon referred to in the March 21,
1973, White House meeting with Dean concerning the Watergate burglars,
demands for huge sums [of] money in return for keeping quiet.

According to a transcript of a tape of that conversation, Nixon said to Dean:
"What I mean is you could get a million dollars ... And you could get it in
cash. I know where it could be gotten.... We could get the money. There is no
problem in that."

But Lansky's empire was much more than a link with the Teamsters. His
investments in Las Vegas were supplemented by major holdings of casinos and
hotels in the Bahamas, which he helped open up after Cuba was brutally thrust
outside the gambling circuit for American tourists. Businessmen who supported
the Republican Party attempted to wrest control from Lansky in the Bahamas by
manipulating political leadership. Bebe Rebozo made extensive investments in
hotels and casinos and tried to buy up and compete with Lansky's enterprises.
Someone attempted to murder a leading politician who was favoring Rebozo in
the struggle.

The final attack on Lansky was probably the most successful and the most
serious. The Republicans attempted to close off his sources of heroin. They
did this by pressuring the Turkish government to enforce the law prohibiting
the growing of opium, the plant from which all heroin is refined. At that
time (late 1960s) Turkey accounted for probably go percent of the opium
processed into heroin and shipped to the United States. By 1972 Turkey was
accounting for less than 40 percent, and Lansky had lost control over a major
source of his financial empire.[14] The Republican administration also
pressured the Latin American governments whose countries were layover points
in the heroin route to America, and Lansky's principal Latin American
coordinator of heroin traffic, Auguste Ricord, was forced out of Argentina,
where he had been managing the traffic for years. He was eventually arrested
in Paraguay.[15]

Meanwhile, the heroin traffic from southeast Asia, especially from the Golden
Triangle of northern Thailand, Burma, and Laos, expanded production and a new
source of heroin for the incredibly lucrative American market opened up. It
is unknown whether this new heroin source was linked to Republican
politicians, but the fact that the CIA and the South Vietnamese governments
under generals Ky and Thieu actively aided the development of this heroin
source suggests that such a link is not beyond the realm of possibility.[16]

Lansky must have known he was fighting for his life. Always a heavy
contributor to the Presidential election, in 1968 he outdid himself by a good
margin. Through his agent, Sam Levinson, Lansky contributed at least $240,000
to Hubert Humphrey's campaign against Nixon. Lansky also contributed heavily
in support of the Democratic governor of Washington. In fact, so heavily did
he contribute that according to political observers there the Democratic
candidate was able to ignore altogether the usually timeconsuming task of
raising campaign contributions.

The format of the attack against Democrat-controlled crime networks was much
the same everywhere. Newly appointed Republican U.S. attorneys called grand
juries to investigate corruption and racketeering. In Chicago one of
Illinois's leading Democratic politicians, Otto Kerner, who had formerly been
the governor of Illinois and was at the time of his exposure a U.S. judge,
was indicted, tried, found guilty, and sentenced to prison for accepting a
payoff while he was governor. As we have seen, in Seattle the bulk of the
political, law-enforcement network members and even a few of the racketeers
were indicted.

In the state the Democrats lost the governorship despite Lansky's heavy
financing. Moreover, the state attorney general's office was also won by a
Republican, and to make matters totally unliveable for the existing network,
a Nixon-affiliated Republican won the county prosecutor's office. These
shifts in state and local political fortunes would mean considerably less
money for Democrats in the state, because the new network would be formed
around a moderate Republican-oriented group. It would thus mean considerably
more money for the Republicans.

Thus it was that the network in Seattle came to its demise. Newspaper
reporters who reported the comings and goings of the network, and
law-enforcement officers who exposed the guilty culprits took well-deserved
pride in their role. The county prosecutor and the U.S. attorney, who worked
long hours to build cases against network members, were pleased with their
role. It was a marvelous experience in which the righteous thought they were
spearheading a campaign against evil. What they did not realize was that
they, in fact, were only pawns in a much larger game that was going on at the
highest levels of government.

This began to dawn on some when, after the indictments were brought and some
key players in the network had been removed from their positions of power and
sufficiently compromised so that new appointments could be made, the word
came from Washington, D.C., to stop further investigations. The governor
suddenly cooled on the idea of seeing the indictments through to prison
sentences. The FBI and other investigative units denied the rumor that
gambling, drug trafficking, and prostitution were coming in again under new
management. The Republican judge, whom the defendants had all agreed on as
presiding judge, dismissed the indictments on all but three of the key
defendants.

Or maybe those most involved in the network's demise simply turned their
heads and began looking to their careers and their political futures. Maybe
the reaction of a reporter who early on tried to expose the network was
typical: "It's all over. There is no more gambling." This same reporter, six
years before, had gone to see whether or not there was gambling. Now he was
willing to accept the myth that prevailed that the network had been broken,
that Seattle was "clean."

The network's demise did not usher in a new era of freedom from the rackets
or from the influence of crime. The evidence at hand suggests that the whole
process of exposing the crime network resulted from political and economic
struggles taking place outside of Seattle, King County, and the state.

pps. 150-169
--[cont]--
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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