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Gangland Wire

Lucky Luciano and the Dannemora Priest

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6623 Ratings

🗓️ 27 January 2020

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this first of 2 episodes about Lucky Luciano, Gary tells a story about Lucky Luciano and the Dannemora priest. In 1936, the politically ambitious mob busting special prosecutor Thomas Dewey obtained a guilty verdict against Charles, “Lucky” Luciano for compulsory prostitution or for being a pimp. The state sent him to the Dannemora prison or Little Siberia which is as far away from New York City as possible. He arrived at Dannemora prison as just one more downstate inmate, a long fall from being the boss of bosses in New York City. Around this time the Catholic church assigned a young priest named Father Ambrose Hyland to minister to the inmates. Father Hyland asked himself, why is there no church building on the grounds. He proceeded to raise private money and obtained the warden’s permission to build a church on the actual prison grounds. By 1939 the inmates finished building the church and Father Ambrose would be able to say, “As far as I know, it is the first church in the United States to be dedicated to Saint Dismas.” He named the church after St. Dismas because he was known as the ‘good thief’ and is recognized as a Saint of the condemned. As the story goes, Dismas was one of the two thieves crucified with Christ. Many convicts volunteered their time and talents like a safe-cracking nitroglycerin expert, a forger, and a stickup man. Charles “Lucky” Luciano called “the most dangerous gangster” by his prosecutor made an unusual offer to Father Hyland. Luciano learned that Father Hyland had $5,000.00 in seed money from the Cardinal, but the cost of construction would exceed that amount. Luciano told Father Hyland that he was an expert at picking the winners of horse races and the results were posted in the New York papers every day. He had a paper and pointed out three horses on the race card for the following day. Luciano pointed at those names and said, “Bet it on these three horses tomorrow.” Father Hyland declined but he had to look at the race results for the following day. Sure enough, all three were long shots and all three came in as winners. 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

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0:00.0

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

0:19.0

Well, hello, all you wiretappers out there.

0:21.3

I'm here in the studio of Gangland Wire.

0:24.1

All by myself today, you know, I've been doing shows with Cam and with other guests.

0:29.9

But today I'm going to do a show.

0:31.5

I'm going to do actually a series of two shows on Lucky Luciano.

0:36.8

Now, if you're not new, you know who Lucky Luciano was. If you're new to organized crime, Lucky Luciano. Now, if you're not new, you know who Lucky Luciano was.

0:39.3

If you're new to organized crime,

0:41.2

Lucky Luciano was one of the most famous mobsters, I'd say,

0:45.8

and probably because he had a cool name,

0:48.6

but he was one of the more famous early mobsters in the early 1920s know, 1920s, 1930s.

0:55.8

It was actually born Saboteur, Luciana in Sicily, and came over with his father,

1:00.9

the usual immigrant story around, came over, they came over around the turn of the century.

1:05.8

His father had been some kind of a minor over there, and they moved into, I think what you would call the lower

1:11.9

east side of Manhattan, the Five Points area where the Irish had started there before, the Five Points

1:18.9

area is generally defined as being bound by Center Street to the west and the Bowery to the east,

1:25.3

Canal Street on the north and Park Row on the south.

1:28.0

And today it's primarily occupied by something called the Civic Center.

1:33.8

But at this point in time, it was where all the immigrants first landed and lived in densely populated,

1:42.9

disease-ridden, and crime-infested slums,

1:45.3

and was like that for a long time until more modern times.

1:49.4

So lucky came up the hard way and came up with these own street gangs

...

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