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Sinatra 'Almost Got Caught Carrying $3.5m Mafia Cash'
The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 5-5-2005 | Catherine Elsworth

Posted on 05/04/2005 5:36:35 PM PDT by blam

Sinatra 'almost got caught carrying $3.5m Mafia cash'

By Catherine Elsworth
(Filed: 05/05/2005)

Frank Sinatra once served as a Mafia courier and narrowly escaped arrest with a briefcase containing $3.5 million in cash, according to a new biography of the legendary singer.

The entertainer Jerry Lewis is quoted as saying that Sinatra "volunteered to be a messenger for them... And he almost got caught once... in New York."

Frank Sinatra: mob links

Extracts of Sinatra: The Life, an unauthorised biography by Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan, were published yesterday by Vanity Fair magazine.

Lewis said that Sinatra was going through customs with a briefcase containing "three and a half million in fifties" and that customs officials opened the case.

But due to crowds jostling for a glimpse of the star, officials aborted their search. Otherwise, Lewis said, "We would never have heard of him again."

According to Vanity Fair, the authors do not claim that Lewis witnessed the customs incident but related the account "as a fact of which he had knowledge".

Lewis, one of the singer's Rat Pack compatriots from the 1960s, claims that Sinatra's mob links "had to do with the morality that a handshake goes before God". The anecdote is one of many fleshing out Sinatra's reputed close ties to the Mafia.

The singer carried mob money several times, Lewis is quoted as saying. He knew the Mafia was expanding beyond its East Coast base and volunteered to be a "messenger".

"Frank, at a cocktail party, told Meyer [Lansky, a known mobster] in no uncertain terms, 'If there is going to be East Coast, West Coast, intercontinental and foreign - if all that's going to happen, I go all the time," Lewis says.

Sinatra, who died aged 82 in 1998, always denied any links to the mob, although FBI files released seven months after his death portrayed him as a close friend of Sam Giancana, the reputed Chicago mobster.

The federal documents also suggested that he had contact with Mafia boss Lucky Luciano during a 1947 trip to Cuba and alleged that his early singing career was backed by a New Jersey-based racketeer named Willie Moretti.

The book quotes Lewis as saying that the cash smuggling incident occurred shortly after Luciano was deported from the US to Italy in 1946.

According to Vanity Fair, the authors of the book describe Sinatra's "long-time, intimate relationship with Luciano", who in 1936 was declared New York's "public enemy Number One", progressing from "beatings to no fewer than 20 murders to pioneering drug trafficking".

Sinatra said he did not meet Luciano until a chance encounter in 1947, but the book suggests that he had contact with "top New York area mobsters as early as 1938 or 1939". It also describes how Sinatra's mob links helped his career.

It quotes Sonny King, a friend of the singer, as saying: "The Boys got on to Frank. In part because he was a saloon singer and they loved saloon songs, and they liked his cockiness... They liked to think of him as their kid, or son."

Sinatra was also allegedly helped by his "godfathers", who, at a gathering in Cuba, essentially "sentenced to death" the mobster Bugsy Siegel, who was blocking the singer's attempts to set himself up in Las Vegas. It was Luciano, the book says, who approved the killing of Siegel.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 35m; almost; carrying; cash; caught; mafia; sinatra
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To: Reaganwuzthebest

The Big Sleep
The Maltese Falcon
Sabrina
The Caine Mutiny
The Petrified Forest


101 posted on 05/04/2005 8:24:09 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: Doctor Stochastic
Very little and what I drank came from a bottle.

Muleteam1

102 posted on 05/04/2005 8:25:30 PM PDT by Muleteam1 (Roswell aliens are real. They speak Spanish.)
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To: Dont_Tread_On_Me_888
Also Angie Dickinson was Ladies Auxiliary Member.
103 posted on 05/04/2005 8:27:38 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: bigsigh
If you doubt that Sinatra was mobbed up

You misread, I wrote that "I don't doubt that Frank was mobbed up"

104 posted on 05/04/2005 8:28:54 PM PDT by RJL
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To: Lizavetta
Take the test...

What member of the Rat Pack are you?

Previous FR thread regarding test

105 posted on 05/04/2005 8:30:54 PM PDT by socal_parrot (Turn the beat around!)
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To: blam
Sinatra was also allegedly helped by his "godfathers", who, at a gathering in Cuba, essentially "sentenced to death" the mobster Bugsy Siegel, who was blocking the singer's attempts to set himself up in Las Vegas. It was Luciano, the book says, who approved the killing of Siegel.

Although Sinatra was definately tied into the mob, I really doubt that Meyer Lansky killed his boyhood friend because of him. Bugsy was skimming the mob's money and they couldn't stand for that.

106 posted on 05/04/2005 8:33:09 PM PDT by sharkhawk (I really have to stop surfing at DU.)
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To: Reaganwuzthebest

Just finished Panic In The City


107 posted on 05/04/2005 8:33:37 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: socal_parrot
Oops. That was a different test. Here is the test in the FR thread...

Which Rat Pack Member Are You?

108 posted on 05/04/2005 8:34:15 PM PDT by socal_parrot (Turn the beat around!)
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To: Muleteam1; fat city

This is for you New Orleans freepers.

In 1988 I was in New Orleans for the Republican Convention and got lost. It wasn't my fault, though, the desk clerk told me to take the "Nawlins" exit! Honest. I even asked him to repeat it several times because it was such a strange-sounding name. Of course, he couldn't pronounce it "Noo Or-leens" like regular people so like an idiot I just kept driving and driving looking for the exit spelled "Nawlins," until I ended up across the river in the public housing section of town and had to ask directions from a guy who worked inside a fortress-like glass cage at a very scary gas station. Except for that, and the suffocating humidity, "Nawlins" is a fun town.


109 posted on 05/04/2005 8:36:11 PM PDT by Liberty Wins (Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of all who threaten it.)
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To: sinkspur

Dear sinkspur,

Never was much into vocal music. Except for Gregorian chants. ;-)

For modern stuff, I prefer Gershwin.


sitetest


110 posted on 05/04/2005 8:40:56 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: Doctor Stochastic

Great I'll look for those too. The Maltese Falcon was another one I heard was good.


111 posted on 05/04/2005 8:44:12 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Tribune7

I'm in the middle of the Three Stooges.


112 posted on 05/04/2005 8:45:02 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: sitetest
Gershwin and Cole Porter are great.

Sinatra and Tony Bennett have magical voices, IMO. True crooners.

113 posted on 05/04/2005 8:47:00 PM PDT by sinkspur (If you want unconditional love with skin, and hair and a warm nose, get a shelter dog.)
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To: sinkspur

Dear sinkspur,

Yes, Sinatra was a great singer. He was my mother's favorite. She'd go see him sing when he was a scrawny young guy starting to sing in NYC-area clubs. She was, I think, a "bobby-soxer." That's what she used to say.

She used to tell me that when he first started, he was so scrawny, they used to laugh at him.

Later, they swooned.

But I much prefer instrumental music. Of course, the "Ode to Joy" is a major exception, as well.


sitetest


114 posted on 05/04/2005 8:50:48 PM PDT by sitetest (If Roe is not overturned, no unborn child will ever be protected in law.)
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To: Liberty Wins; Muleteam1
"Nawlins" is a fun town.

Believe me, the novelty wears off real fast.

115 posted on 05/04/2005 8:53:38 PM PDT by fat city (Julius Rosenberg's soviet code name was "Liberal")
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To: Liberty Wins
LOL! Funny! I worked with a local fellow who, between my east Texas accent and his "Nawlins" accent, almost needed an interpreter to talk to me. A typical conversation usually began with a blank stare between us until we could get our internal translators working. Regarding Cajuns, I recall being shocked to learn that the typical Cajun can communicate quite well on French ships.

My best Nawlins story is, however, the fact that years after leaving Louisiana I learned that one of my great great great grandfathers in North Carolina built many, if not most, of the American muskets used at the Battle of New Orleans.

"Nawlins" is indeed a very interesting place. However, it is a tough place to have a young family which I did when I was there.

Muleteam1

116 posted on 05/04/2005 8:56:57 PM PDT by Muleteam1
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To: RJL
While I don't doubt that Frank was mobbed up, $3.5 million is 70,000 $50 bills. It must have been quite a "briefcase".

That jumped out at me also. When I hear people talk about folks carrying millions of dollars in a duffel bag or suitcase, I try to get them to understand how many bills that would have to be. When they're talking denominations of $20s, its easy to calculate out how it would have to be a truck and not a duffel bag.

117 posted on 05/04/2005 9:05:25 PM PDT by Ghengis (Alexander was a wuss!)
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To: Skooz

I heard that, too. 4F. I especially liked some of his early musicals. I'm lol at the thought of him with that suitcase of 70,000 $50's. He was so slight, so thin and fragile looking in his early life. But I'd always heard it the other way around. That he didn't volunteer for the mob, but that the mob 'volunteered' him. And that the kidnap of his son was 'encouragement' to continue in their help. Also, that early on in his career, mob guys tried to 'own' him and his career, but he fought against being owned. However much of my info came from many die-hard-fan friends from NY who looooved him like some people adore Elvis.


118 posted on 05/04/2005 9:44:47 PM PDT by fortunecookie
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To: RJL

I often suffer from old-timers disease.


119 posted on 05/05/2005 9:10:29 AM PDT by bigsigh
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