Gus Greenbaum

Gus Greenbaum
Born 1894
Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.
Died December 3, 1958
Encanto, Phoenix, U.S.
Cause of death Murder
Occupation Businessman

Gus Greenbaum (1894 Phoenix, Arizona December 3, 1958, Encanto, Phoenix) was an American businessman in the casino industry.

Early life

Gus Greenbaum was born in 1894 in Phoenix, Arizona.

Career

An associate of Meyer Lansky, Greenbaum joined his organization on New York's Lower East Side in the mid or late 1910s. During Prohibition, Greenbaum began working with the Chicago Outfit managing the southwest division of the Trans-America Race wire service in 1928. Sent to Las Vegas shortly after World War II began, Greenbaum gained control over syndicate gambling operations with Morris Rosen and Moe Sedway. Sedway and Greenbaum ran the El Cortez Casino in 1945, until Greenbaum was asked by William R. Wilkerson to manage casino operations for the Flamingo Hotel. In 1946, Bugsy Siegel took over construction and creative control of the Flamingo, until it was shut down in January 1947 due to mounting losses as a result of Siegel's skimming. His friend William Bioff lived nearby in 1250 East Bethany Tempe, Arizona.

Murder and legacy

After Siegel's murder in June 1947, Greenbaum brought the struggling casino out of debt within several months, controlling several other syndicate casinos and bookmaking operations in Arizona within several years. Greenbaum planned to retire to Arizona and rejected offers to run the Riviera for Tony Accardo, though after Greenbaum's sister-in-law was murdered, he accepted the job. As a syndicate leader in Las Vegas, Greenbaum would order the deaths of Tony Brancato and Tony Trombino for robbing a syndicate hotel. Shortly after his close friend and Chicago-enemy Willie Bioff's murder, Greenbaum's now worsening gambling, womanizing, and drug habits eventually caused him to begin skimming from casino operations. His embezzlement was discovered by the Chicago syndicate. On December 3, 1958, Greenbaum and his wife Bess were found dead in their Phoenix home. Their throats had been cut with a butcher knife. Gus was found in bed with a heating pad and his television turned on. He had nearly been decapitated. Bess sustained blunt trauma to her head before her throat was cut. Her head was padded with newspaper and a towel, seemingly to avoid blood stains on the furniture.[1]

Present-day photo of Phoenix house where Greenbaum and his wife were murdered; location info from "The Naked Desert" by Dewey Webb

Greenbaum's name was merged with Moe Sedway's to inspire the name for the character "Moe Greene" in the crime drama film The Godfather.

References

  1. "Hotelman, Wife Murdered". The Arizona Republic. Phoenix. 4 December 1953. p. 1.

Further reading

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