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Rosenthal suggested a gangster-era connection

Frank “Letty” Rosenthal, a bookmaker and former casino owner, died in Florida on Monday at the age of 79, according to his family and a source at his high-rise condominium complex in Miami Beach. Rosenthal was a minor celebrity confined to gambling, organized crime and Las Vegas society until 1995 when the film “Casino,” based on his life story, led him to an even higher level of fame. Rosenthal’s death marks the end of another chapter in Las Vegas’ transformation from a disreputable gambling destination to a global destination celebrated by everyday tourists, politicians and business leaders who invest billions of dollars in resorts.

“He was an innovator and creator of what we know today as a Las Vegas race and sports book with a modern sense,” said Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman, a former lawyer and who represented Rosenthal in high-profile clippings with Nevada regulators, including now-Senator Harry Reid. “He was an amazing bet and he gained so much more than he lost.” Goodman painted Rosenthal as the type of boss representing Las Vegas’ best when it came to how to run a good casino. 안전한 파워볼사이트

“He was the kind of guy who was working in the casino industry, looking at cigarette butts on the floor and picking them up and discarding them on his own,” Goodman said. “And then he fired an employee who was initially working on picking up cigarette butts.” Rosenthal was also a controversial figure whose life story was intertwined with the advent of Las Vegas as a destination for rioters trying to launder money through legal casinos. His childhood was spent learning the gambling trade through an illegal book-making business run by organized crime figures from the Midwest. He created a link that fueled his rise and fall and later fueled his fall in Las Vegas.

Rosenthal was born in Chicago on June 12, 1929, and spent the 1930s in the city. When he arrived in Nevada in 1968, he found that gambling was not only a benefit, but a ticket to advance where his job was the object of reverence, not contempt. “When I was growing up in Chicago as a kid, if you walk around with a … card in your hand, at least you can be arrested or bullied,” Rosenthal said in a 1997 interview with the PBS program “Frontline.” “On the other hand, if you want to go to Las Vegas, Nevada, you can do the same thing and be quite respectful.”

The word “respectful” was much of a phrase when it came to Rosenthal. When he moved to Las Vegas, he had already gained some notoriety in 1961 before appearing before a Senate hearing on gambling and organized crime, during which he invoked his Fifth Amendment protection 38 times. But the lack of a license wouldn’t stop Stardust, Hacienda, Fremont, and Marina casinos from being owned or controlled by an Argentine company, and financier Allen Glick from taking control of these casinos. Glick was known to be the head of the Midwestern mob that controlled these casinos through Argentina, financed in part by a Teamsters union loan.

In a 1975 interview with a magazine reporter, unlicensed Rosenthal fell into hot water with regulators, saying, “Glick is for financial purposes, but policy comes from my office.” Rosenthal’s problems have been exacerbated by his personal and business connections with reputable mobster Tony Spoiltro. Spilotro, along with about 14 others, was accused of skimming schemes, which also sealed the fate of the game regulator and Rosenthal, eventually putting both of them in a black book of characters excluded from casinos. Spillot also had an affair with Rosenthal’s estranged wife, Gary, which he later claimed was evidence that Spillot tried to kill Rosenthal. “There are definitely things that are happening,” Rosenthal told the Fort Lauderdale (Fla) SunSentinel in 1995. “There are more tricks in the deal than I can explain. But I think some of that (federal investigation) is exaggerated.” Later, in a Sun-Sentinel story, Rosenthal admitted there was little chance of escaping the shadow of the infamous Spillatro.

“When I look back on his reputation and the fact that we were boyhood friends, there was no way for me to overcome it,” Rosenthal told the newspaper. Others suggested Rosenthal was more than just a boyhood friend with a rough personality. The Sun-Sentinel article includes Glick’s claim that Rosenthal made a deadly threat when he didn’t get his way. Glick likened Rosenthal’s approach to “if you’re trying to disrupt casino operations or disrupt what I want to do here … you can never leave this company alive.” But in the end, it was Rosenthal who got the wrong end of the deadly threat. Rosenthal left Las Vegas after the bombing but was in the headlines throughout the 1980s as the government dealt with dirty laundry from the Las Vegas gambling industry in numerous court proceedings.

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