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Citizen Hughes - Michael Drosnin [62]

By Root 660 0

But there was no escape. Even as the Showboat threatened to befoul the Sands, another monstrosity was going up right next door to the Stardust—the Circus-Circus. It was something straight out of Hughes’s worst nightmare.

“The aspect of the Circus that has me disturbed is the popcorn, peanuts, and kids side of it,” he wrote, describing with horror a Norman Rockwell vision of Americana. “And also the Carnival Freaks, and Animal side of it. In other words, the poor, dirty, shoddy side of Circus life. The dirt floor, sawdust and elephants. The part of a Circus that is associated with the poor boys in town, the hobo clowns, and, I repeat, the animals. The part of a circus that is synonymous with the common poor man—with the freckled face kids—the roustabouts driving the stakes with three men and three sledge hammers, etc., etc.

“It is the above aspects of a circus that I feel are all out of place on the Las Vegas Strip,” he continued, returning to his own vision of a high-class resort. “After all, the Strip is supposed to by synonymous with a good looking female all dressed up in a very expensive diamond studded evening gown and driving up to a multimillion dollar hotel in a Rolls-Royce. Now, you tell me what, in that picture, is compatible with a circus in its normal raiment, exuding its normal atmosphere and its normal smell.”


For most people, the real stench of Las Vegas came from the Mob. Organized crime had tainted it from the beginning. Long before Hughes arrived with his vision, Bugsy Siegel had a vision, and where there had been only a desert he built the first giant gambling casino on a highway to Los Angeles that became the Las Vegas Strip. Bugsy was long dead, rubbed out by his partners, but he had created Las Vegas in his own image and mobsters still set the tone of the town.

To Hughes, however, the Mob was just another form of contamination. And now Bugsy’s creation, the Flamingo, was back in the news. One of Siegel’s original partners, the underworld’s financial wizard, Meyer Lansky, had been caught siphoning off millions. Hughes was outraged. He saw the scandal pulling his new purified, respectable, blue-chip Las Vegas back down into the gutter. It was time to clean out the Mob.

“Bob, the Flamingo has been accused of skimming,” wrote the angry billionaire. “It is one more set-back in the reputation of the Strip. Now, I feel this kind of thing has gone too far.

“First there was Parvin and all their miserable dishonesty, then came the Circus, the Stardust and their personnel, then the Bonanza, and I failed to mention Caesar’s and their junket of hoods.

“Bob, I moved heaven and earth to try and persuade you to do something about the mess. In spite of my pleas, however, each of these activities has been gradually swept under the carpet with absolutely no real effort by anyone to do anything about it.

“Now, finally, in the case of the Flamingo, I beg you from bended knee please to take some action, and urgently, immediately.

“The Flamingo, because of its position at the top or entrance of the Strip, has always represented and epitomized Nevada gambling. Many motion pictures have been made using the Flamingo as the example of the grandeur and the luxury of plush gambling on the Las Vegas Strip.

“I made one myself, called ‘The Las Vegas Story,’ using the Flamingo to represent all that is glamorous and exciting about Las Vegas.

“Anyway, the Flamingo has represented Las Vegas ever since its unfortunate beginning with Bugsy Siegel. And I assure you that, as a result of this incident, the Bugsy Siegel episode will get the full treatment again.

“Bob, you have got to take some action about it this time. I truly plead with you.

“Bob, I am sick and tired of being the Patsy of the entire Las Vegas area.”

Hughes was sure he was the only honest man in town. He was certain that explained why all the unscrupulous rival casinos were piling up big profits, while his, against all odds, were losing money. “It goes without saying that you cannot have principles and high profits both,” he wrote.

In fact, Hughes may have

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