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Wiseguys and the White House

Gangsters, Presidents, and the Deals They Made

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

"Wiseguys and the White House is an eye-opening, authoritative, remarkably detailed exposé of the interplay between organized crime and our presidents, shockingly revealing how close we have come to Mob rule."Ronald Kessler, New York Times bestselling author of The Secrets of the FBI and The First Family Detail

"Mobsters and presidents? The ties aren't just in pulp fiction. Eric Dezenhall tracks down the startling deals and deceptions that both sides might prefer to keep secret—from FDR to JFK to Trump."—Susan Page, New York Times bestselling author of Madam Speaker

A "connected" account of how the Mob has worked with America's Commander in Chiefs and have influenced the presidency for nearly a century.

Gangsters and presidents have long captured the American imagination, but how much does the underworld actually affect presidential power? How deep are their "connections"? As Eric Dezenhall reveals in this eye-opening history, in some instances, one couldn't have functioned without the other. From Franklin Delano Roosevelt to Richard Nixon to Joseph R. Biden, the mob has done presidential dirty work, including attempts to assassinate foreign leaders, harass America's enemies, and put our chief executives in office.

Wiseguys and the White House documents when mobsters and presidents have traded favors—and double-crossed each other, including:

  • The deal cut with Lucky Luciano to protect the waterfront during World War II.
  • How the Chicago Outfit (and Frank Sinatra) got one Kennedy elected, only to be pursued by another.
  • How LBJ and the FBI used a mob hitman to hunt down the killers of Civil Rights activists in Mississippi
  • Reagan's association with Lew Wasserman, the powerful and influential Hollywood mogul
  • Trump's blatant ties to construction and gambling cartels
  • Biden's early links to "the Irishman" Frank Sheeran, the labor union official and enforcer for Jimmy Hoffa and Russell Bufalino.
  • And more
  • Combining exhaustive research, including newly released government records and the private recollections of leading gangsters, Wiseguys and the White House offers insight into the myths about the power in America and the drive for recognition and respectability that unites consiglieri and commanders-in-chief alike.

    Wiseguys and the White House includes 65 black-and-white photographs throughout.

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      • Kirkus

        Starred review from December 1, 2024
        Juicy accounts of mobsters and presidents. Journalist Dezenhall, author ofBest of Enemies: The Last Great Spy Story of the Cold War, opens by warning that America's fascination with mobsters owes much to pop-culture fantasy. It exists, but the reality lacks the "cool and sexually dangerous" efficiency of the movies. With this disclaimer, he proceeds with an often stunning account of gangsters and presidential politics. After summarizing pre-20th-century skullduggery (much corruption, little organized crime), he introduces Franklin D. Roosevelt, probably the first to make use of mobsters. As patriotic as most Americans, they were happy during World War II to order dock union workers and Italian fishing fleets to keep their eyes out for U-boats and spies, but few turned up. Harry Truman owed more to organized crime than other presidents. Loyal to Tom Pendergast's corrupt Kansas City machine, Truman hit the jackpot when the preferred candidates decided not to run for the U.S. Senate in 1934. Dezenhall maintains that Truman probably never accepted a bribe and considered dealing with mobsters a necessary evil in politics. Eisenhower gets off scot-free, but that the Kennedys pestered surprisingly reluctant mafiosi to assassinate Fidel Castro is beyond doubt. Nixon gets off lightly, except for his cultivation of the notorious Jimmy Hoffa, a rare union leader who favored Republicans. Dezenhall's expansive definition of "organized crime" is on display in his description of President Reagan, beginning with the young actor riding the coattails of cutthroat Hollywood entrepreneurs and shady lawyers, whose influence he never entirely escaped. As for Donald Trump, the author writes of how the 45th president inherited a real estate empire and loved being rich and ruthless and associating with other rich and ruthless people. Alone among presidents, he boasted that he could deal with gangsters because he was as smart as they were. Entertaining history in which mobsters often come off better than presidents.

        COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      • Library Journal

        December 20, 2024

        Crisis management consultant Dezenhall (False Light) worked at the White House during the Reagan administration. His book explores connections between organized crime and presidential politics. The presidents he examines are Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden. After a deep dive into potential connections with crime affiliates for each named president, the book grades each on a scale of one to five with the lowest number being only a tangential connection to the mob; the highest grade indicates the author's assertion that they wouldn't have become president without help from the mob. Organized crime has endured, he argues, because it's localized in nature; in its early years, the government chose to focus more on combating communism than on crime, and politics and crime can be transactional. The book includes an extensive bibliography and notes. VERDICT Dezenhall's perceptive analyses of each president are laced with a wry sense of humor, which makes this work accessible to a wide audience.--Caren Nichter

        Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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