Pictured on the right is Meyer Lansky and his Attorney Moses Polakoff on the left after posting $10,000.00 bail to get him out of jail. Photo and Article from Saratoga Living.
In the spring of 1953, as mob mogul Meyer Lansky began a three-month sentence in the Saratoga County Jail in Ballston Spa – his only jail term ever – he may have dreamed of the welcoming warmth of Havana. Just the year before, Lansky’s good friend, President Fulgencio Batista, had retaken the Cuban government in a military coup and was running the show.
Lansky may have had bad dreams, too. The unfortunate consensus at the mafia’s Havana Convention, held just before Christmas 1946 at the Hotel Nacional, was that Bugsy Siegel, his friend since childhood, must be “removed.” Mob leaders from around the nation had become convinced that Siegel was skimming money from the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas. Shortly after, Siegel was shot dead in his girlfriend’s home in Beverly Hills.
Still, Lansky could have had reasons to be optimistic that good times would return as soon as his jail time was up. Another decision of that historic Havana gathering: Charles “Lucky” Luciano, another young friend of Lansky’s, would be kingpin of the mob, calling the shots as he bided his time in Cuba, hoping to return to the U.S. after being deported.
Frank Sinatra came down to croon for the mobsters in high style. The syndicate knew that top-of-the-line entertainment, the best chefs, honest gaming, classy accommodations and beautiful women would draw the big gamblers and celebrities – a winning combination in Havana, Las Vegas… and Saratoga.
The story of how Saratoga Springs became a center for mob glitz dials back to the 1919 opening of The Brook, a casino and cabaret where tuxedos were required. By 1936 no one could open a casino in Saratoga Springs without the approval of the Combination and its head, Luciano, according to Colliers’ magazine. And it didn’t slow down one bit when Luciano, dubbed Public Enemy No. 1, was sent to prison later that year in upstate New York. Joe Adonis simply took his place.
Lansky, Luciano and Frank Costello were all protégés of famed ’20s gambling and narcotics czar Arnold Rothstein, the reputed fixer of the 1919 “Black Sox” World Series, who owned the classy Brook casino out on Church Street in Saratoga, where Lansky and Luciano learned their trade. Rothstein and Luciano were silent partners in the Chicago Club on Woodlawn Avenue in Saratoga.
By 1951, Costello, Adonis and Lansky had “formed the eastern axis of a combination of racketeers working through the nation,” according to a U.S. Senate committee report on organized crime. Sen. Estes Kefauver investigated organized crime in 14 cities across the country and heard testimony from more than 600 witnesses, and it was televised, riveting millions to their TVs to watch slot machine king Costello’s hands twitch as he testified. The TV cameras focused only on his wringing hands, giving a sinister impression as he spoke in a gravelly voice.
The rise of Saratoga casinos was documented and aired in the congressional hearings, including a 1943 letter Lansky had written to his accountant. Lansky had always told associates to keep all figures in their heads, but didn’t follow his own advice. The letter stated that Costello had a 30 percent interest in the Piping Rock casino in Saratoga Springs; other partners included Lansky’s brother, Jake, and Adonis, New Jersey’s gambling kingpin.
Before the ink was dry on the Kefauver congressional report, New York Gov. Thomas E. Dewey ordered grand jury investigations into the link between organized crime and local governments. And that led to a Saratoga County grand jury indictment for Lansky and three months of jail time. He also was fined $2,500 for his involvement in the Arrowhead Inn on Saratoga Lake.
The county grand jury handed down 24 indictments involving 49 people; 41 were convicted, including Louis J. “Doc” Farone, who was connected with Smith’s Interlaken, Riley’s and the Meadowbrook, and received a sentence of nine months.
Even before then, the press saw the good times coming to a halt.
“Saratoga Moans the Blues; Cops Put Lid on Gambling,” read the headline in the New York Daily News in August 1948 … “The moaning was terrific. Piping Rock, for instance, has booked a show that will cost the management $25,000 a week – with attractions like Joe E. Lewis and Kay Thompson and the Williams Brothers – and you can’t meet that on the income from food and liquor – even at Saratoga prices…”
But Jack Lait, a columnist for the New York Daily Mirror, proclaimed the end was near in August 1951: “It took a century to break the heart of Saratoga… Saratoga is terrorized and paralyzed. The little the Kefauver Committee missed last year by its threats to give the burg the business by taking away its principal business. Gov. Dewey’s State Crime Commission has mopped up.
“Almost everybody, including bartenders and waiters, is under subpoena… The spark of the Spa has gone out.”
But a new spark was born: Cuba. Lansky, who served jail time with Farone, made him an offer that Farone refused. An associate of Farone’s told this writer in a 2013 interview that “Meyer Lansky offered [Doc] a piece of Cuba-locals couldn’t gamble, only those from outside the country-and a piece of Nevada.” But Farone turned him down. “Someone would have shot him, too.”
As the heat had increased in Saratoga, Lansky, always looking ahead, established a relationship with Batista after they met at the Waldorf Astoria in New York in the late 1940s. Then, they agreed on kickbacks in exchange for mob control of racetracks and gambling in Cuba. After Batista retook power in a military coup in 1952, the golden era for mob-run casinos in the “Cuban Las Vegas” would soon begin, and Lansky had elaborate visions.
But all good things must come to an end. On New Year’s Eve 1958, more than a year after Lansky opened his opulent Hotel Habana Riviera, Batista fled the country. Eight days later, Fidel Castro set up his revolutionary government in the Hilton, but by then Lansky had slipped out of the country, too, escaping to the Bahamas. Then came the final blow: On Oct. 30, 1959, Castro nationalized the casinos and outlawed gambling.
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