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Gangland Wire

Abe Reles: A Brotherhood Betrayed

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6 • 623 Ratings

🗓️ 15 March 2021

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Abe Reles: A Brotherhood Betrayed Gary interviews Michael Cannell, the author of four non-fiction books and former sportswriter and editor for the New York Times. His most recent book, A Brotherhood betrayed: The man Behind the Rise and Fall of Murder Inc. tells the story of Murderer Incorporated’s most prolific killer, Abe Reles.  The feared Albert Anastasia had turned to a group of young ambitious Jewish gangsters to carry out murders for the Mafia. They were so feared by other gangsters and they committed so many murders that the press dubbed the group Murder Inc. The Making of a Killer Abe Reles grew up on Manhatten’s lower east side and like most of his peers, he gravitated to a life of crime. Like most young men, he followed the older gangsters. He even adopted the nickname of “Kid Twist” after hearing about an older Jewish gangster named Max “Kid Twist” Zweiback. The most prominent Jewish gangster of the day was Lepke Buchalter. During the 1930s, chaos among organized crime members ran rampant. the boss of bosses, Lucky Luciano, and the other bosses formed the Commission. In one of their early moves, they created a hit team to handle rebellious young gangsters and bring them in line with the established Mafia Commission. They noticed Abe “Kid Twist” Reles as a man they could trust and picked him to be the anchor of this new hit team that became known as Murder Inc. Abe Reles: The Canary Who Sang But Couldn’t Fly Law enforcement and the press noticed the rise in unexplained and unprosecuted murders of gangsters. Thomas Dewey was the crime-busting politically ambitious prosecutor. He chose an aggressive Irishman named William O’Dwyer as his assistant and gave him the job to eliminate this professional criminal culture that had dominated New York City since prohibition. O’Dwyer found a good informant named Harry Rudolph who ratted on Abe Reles. It was not long before Kid Twist realized this only chance to avoid the Electric Chair was to become a cooperating witness against Lepke Buchalter and other mafia bosses. The Mafia Commission put out the word that anyone who killed Abe Reles would be paid $100,000. By 1941 a momentous trial was underway that threatened New York’s most brutal mob bosses, specifically the Lord high Executioner, Albert Anastasia. O’Dwyer based his case on a star witness, Abe Reles. The police stashed Kid Twist in a hotel room at the Coney Island Half Moon hotel and maintained 24 hours a day guard on the door. But before he could testify, the guards found his shattered body on the rooftop of an adjoining building. The first question was whether or not it was a botched escape or murder. They did find several sheets tied together and hanging out the window. The Grand Jury ruled he had tied these sheets to a radiator and when he tried to slide down them, he lost his grip and fell to his death. Michael Cannell’s A Brotherhood Betrayed documents the rise and all of Murder, Inc. through Reles’ life span from punk gangsters, to a top hitman to stool pigeon, and ending with his death.  on a Coney Island rooftop. He colorfully depicts a time when crime became “organized” crime. The time of wise-cracking mobsters with names like Kid Twist, The Mad Hatter, The Prime Minister of the Underworld, and Tick Tock Tannenbaum. Show Notes by Gary Jenkins  Support the Podcast Hit me up on Venmo for a cup of coffee or a shot and a beer @ganglandwire To go to the store or make a donation Click Here.   To rent Brothers against Brothers, the documentary, click here.  To rent Gangland Wire, the documentary, click here To subscribe on iTunes click here, please give me a review and help others find the podcast Transcript   Hello, welcome while you are tappers out there back here in the studio gangland wire. I have a really interesting story today an interview a guest with 00:09 Arthur from New York, the writer writes a story about the canary who could fly but couldn’t sing now, if you’re any kind of a Mob aficionado,

Transcript

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0:00.0

You are listening to Gangland Wire, hosted by former Kansas City Police Intelligence Unit Detective Gary Jenkins.

0:19.3

Welcome, all you wiretoppers. It's good to be back here in the studio of Gangland Wire. I have on the Zoom call, Michael Connell. He wrote a book recently, A Brotherhood Betrayed, The Man Behind the Rise and Fall of Murder Incorporated. Now, we all know about Murder Incorporated. We know it has something to do with Albert Anastasia and Leipke-Bulkhalter and Abe Kid Twist,

0:42.2

who is the least known of these characters.

0:44.4

And we're going to learn a lot more about Abe Rellis and Kid, or Kid Twist.

0:49.6

I guess he was known by as we interview Mr. Cadell.

0:53.7

Welcome, Michael. It's great to have you here. Hey, it's great to. Connell. Welcome, Michael.

0:54.4

It's great to have you here.

0:55.6

Hey, it's great to be here.

0:57.0

Thank you, Gary.

0:58.5

Now, Michael, as I was researching your book here a little bit, I see you got paid a heck of a compliment by Judith Reveal.

1:06.2

She says, Connell's telling of this story is page turning.

1:09.5

His research is unquestionable. His

1:11.6

descriptions chilling and his character development is absolutely visual. So that's a heck of a

1:18.6

compliment, isn't it? Yeah, I really, I really appreciate that. Of course, that's what I was,

1:23.7

that's what I was going for. As I wrote this, you know, I really tried to write it the way a novelist would write a great novel or the way a movie director would make a movie. It's all true. It's history. It's journalism. Everything in this book is true, but I've tried to shape it

1:47.2

the way a novelist would shape a novel or the way somebody making a Netflix series would

1:55.1

shape that. So I'm gratified to hear that quote because that's that's exactly what I was going

2:02.4

for. Yeah, folks, let me give you just a little example here. Here he is describing Arnold

2:08.6

Rothstein. Most people are familiar with Arnold Rothstein. And I quote here from the book,

2:14.0

he was a tall figure, silky smooth with the cultivated pallor of a vampire.

2:19.3

He gampled all night and slept all day. I mean, you can just, you can visualize Arnold

2:24.2

Rothstein from that. There's no doubt about it. Well, this, this book mostly takes place in the 1930s,

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