As a youngster, "we were beaten up daily by the
Irish boys," Lansky recalled in his later years. "And we had a choice. We could
run away, or we could fight back and fighting back meant everything connected with
that."
Standing up to the Irish and Italian gangs required Lansky and his
friends to organize their own protective society. Between 1914 and 1920, Meyer and his
younger brother Jake -- who was everything Meyer was not: large of stature and slow of
mind were joined by Meyer "Mike" Wassell, Red Levine, Tabbo Sandler, and
Doc Stacher, who would remain a lifelong friend of Meyers. Sometime in that six year
period, Meyer Lansky would meet and become close friends with another man who would
accompany him on his rise to the top of the Syndicate.
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Mug shot of a young Bugsy Siegel |
Lansky and Benny Siegel met, according to Meyer, on a
street corner on the poverty-stricken Lower East Side of Manhattan when they were both
young teens. The two were involved in a fight that arose from a street corner craps game
when a gun was drawn and subsequently dropped. Lansky saw Benny reach for the gun and
point it at one of the combatants. Just as police whistles began to blow and the law drew
near, Lansky hit Siegels arm and forced him to drop the piece.
"Are you crazy," he shouted at Siegel. "Lets get
out of here."
The two youngsters ran away although Benny could barely contain
his rage at the older boy.
"I needed that gun," he said.
Despite the rocky beginning, Lansky and Siegel became fast friends and
soon were the terrors of their neighborhood. Meyer was without a doubt the brains of the
outfit while Benny, a.k.a. Bugsy, was the brawn. Benny, the youngest member of the gang,
was known on the streets as chaye, the Yiddish word for "untamed." He was
a hothead: crazy as a bedbug, which gave him the nickname he came to loathe.
Siegel was a loose cannon and it seemed like only Meyer could handle
him. It is said that opposites attract, and there are probably few friends who are as
dissimilar as Lansky and Siegel. Benny was a flashy dresser who was quick to fight and
despite his high intelligence was ruled by his passions. Meyer was the thinker, the one
who never let his emotions overrule his head. Despite their differences, the two teens
were closer than brothers.
The Bugs and Meyer mobsters were equal opportunity thugs. They liked to
shakedown Jewish moneylenders and store keepers as well as Irish and Italian shop owners
and gamblers. No one was safe from the gang.
Thanks in no small part to Lanskys experience with automobiles
and mechanics, the Bugs and Meyer Mob was active in car theft and hijacking. The gang
quickly became known as experts in "transportation" with no job to big or
dangerous. They fronted the operation thanks to a car and truck rental garage that served
as a nice warehouse for swag.
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