With carpet joints running from Saratoga to Key West,
Lansky attracted the attention of many different government officials. Some were on his
payroll, others were his sworn enemies. But the probably the most powerful government
official to be drawn to Lansky wasnt even American. He was Cuban dictator Fulgencio
Batista, the former army stenographer who had twice grabbed power in the Caribbean nation
90 miles south of Miami.
In 1952, when Batista seized power, Cuba was known as the Paris of the
New World. Europeans and Americans flocked to the sunny beaches and danced to the hot
rumba rhythms of the Cuban big bands, drinking daquiris and rums and smoking cigars.
Gambling was big in Cuba, too. But Batista had a problem. The games, it seemed, were seen
as crooked and no one was playing. Tourism started to falter as gamblers bypassed the
Cuban casinos in favor of the more honest Puerto Rican joints. Things began to look bad
for the dictator
Batista needed to inject some honesty into his games quickly and he
turned to Meyer Lansky. President Batista appointed Lansky his advisor on gambling reform
and gave him the authority to clean up the crooked gaming houses like the Sans Souci and
the Montmartre Club.
"Fulgencio Batista saw the enhancement of revenues from foreign
visitors, and from Americans in particular, as a major source of future income for Cuba
and for himself," Lacey wrote.
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Meyer and sons in Havana |
Lansky went to Havana and immediately began to roust
the crooked casino bosses. He kept Santo Trafficante Jr., the son of Tampas chief
racketeer, but leaned on Sans Souci operator Norman Rothman to start running a clean game.
He ordered dealers and croupiers most of them American who were crooked to
be deported and started the practice of dealing Blackjack from a six-deck shoe, which not
only helped the house in terms of percentage, but minimized cheating by the dealer and
player.
While Meyers reformed Montmartre Club was the in place in Havana,
he had long expressed an interest in putting a casino in the elegant Hotel Nacional, which
overlooked El Morro, the ancient fortress guarding Havana harbor. Meyer planned to take a
wing of the 10-storey hotel and create luxury suites for high stakes players. Batista
endorsed Lanskys idea over the objections of American expatriots like Ernest
Hemingway and the elegant hotel opened for business in 1955 with a show by Eartha Kitt.
The casino was an immediate success.
That spring, Lansky began working on his own casino, a 21-story,
440-skyscraper called the Riviera. When it opened it would be the largest casino-hotel in
the world outside Las Vegas. The Riviera was Lanskys second attempt at building a
hotel from scratch the first time was the ill-fated Flamingo Hotel in Vegas with
his friend and partner Benny Siegel
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