"To reign is worth ambition though in hell;
Better to reign in hell, than serve in heavn."
-- John Milton
The year 1946 had been a good one for
Momo. He had shooed Eddie Jones, he had
become Underboss of the most powerful organization in the country; and he opened the
largest, most swanky and most productive round-the-clock bookie joint in the nation to
date -- directly across the street from Chicagos central post office. The local
politicians, including the mayor, looked the other way, except when themselves visiting it
to place bets and join Momo for a drink or two and maybe a couple of chuckles..
Accardo and Momo had been moving their gambling operations nationally, as well. One
sleight-of-hand at a time, they eventually took over the Continental Press, which up until
1946 was the only wire service that provided sporting results to bookies from state
to state. They reorganized it and renamed it the Trans-American. Some of the old guard
subscribers refused to buy into the new service and died, but most of the major
metropolitan syndicates recognized the advantages of keeping peace with Chicago. As thanks
for an easy merger, Momo provided his new allies -- Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel in
Las Vegas, Jack Dragna in Los Angeles and Carlos Marcello in New Orleans -- a generous
piece of the pie.
This accomplished, Momo saw no reason why they couldnt extend their gambling
activities internationally. Their first move was into Cuba, where Fulgencio
Batistas government partnered with the yanqui racketeers. Over the next
decade, concessions moved across South America, Egypt and Arabian domiciles where powers
"lined their pockets," to quote Momo, with the spoils. To make these initial
foreign inroads possible, the syndicate required the backing of American politicians and
ambassadors, all of whom received gratis. Momo told his brother many times that if
it wasnt for the support of money-hungry politicos the mobs dreams
couldnt be realized.
According to Momo, both presidents Roosevelt and Truman were "bought". FDR,
he claimed, owed his political career to Underworld dollars and Truman had had close ties
with the vicious Prendergast mob in Kansas City from its earliest days.
Momos boasts were easy to believe, considering the host of congressmen, judges,
statesmen and county sheriffs who flocked visibly to his side.
Through his friendships with the hoi-polloi, he acquainted many personalities, among
them sports greats such as "Joltin Joe" DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Jake
LaMotta and Rocky Graziano. West Coast connections brought him in contact with many a
young star whose career he bankrolled, "everybody from Ronald Reagan to Ed
Sullivan," declared brother Chuck. Singing careers were launched by
Momo, who
virtually told the jukebox industry whose records they would promote. Teenage daughter
Antoinette, in accompanying her father to California in 1949, was amazed when the
Giancanas were given a private tour of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios. In her book, Mafia
Princess, she recalls, "I was treated with as much respect as if I had been one
of the studios superstars."
The extent of the Giancana empire is best described by Seymour M. Hersh in The Dark
Side of Camelot: "(Giancanas) operation was skimming millions of dollars of
mob-dominated gambling casinos in Las Vegas and in Havana, Cuba and it had both political
and economic control of at least six heavily populated wards in Chicago (and) exercised
control over mobster and Teamster activities in Cleveland, St. Louis, Kansas City, Las
Vegas and Los Angeles."
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