Flamingo Gambling Club
Flamingo
3555 Las Vegas Blvd South
Las Vegas, NV 89109
- Flamingo Gambling Club Venice
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- Flamingo Gambling Club Atlantic City
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The Flamingo closed on Feb. 1, 1947, while construction was completed on the 200 hotel rooms. It reopened March 1, 1947, and was beginning to emerge from the red. But the recovery wasn't fast enough for Lansky and Luciano, who wanted an accounting of the money they'd sunk into the Nevada desert. Hit the casino with gaming tables and over 1,600 slot machines. Sensational dining awaits at the Flamingo, whether you’re looking for romantic ambiance or a lively bar and grill atmosphere. If you’re hosting an event, let the Flamingo’s experienced chefs customize a special menu. The Flamingo Casino offers a wide selection of slots and table games. Treat the family to a delicious meal at the Harvest Grill & Wine. Situated adjacent to the Kimberley Golf Club, you can tee-off on a challenging course.
Set on the famous four corners of Las Vegas Boulevard and Flamingo Road.
Dive into paradise at the Flamingo, where you’ll enjoy table games, slot machines and a whole lot more.
- All the new customers of Flamingo Club Casino, who have opened an account for the game for real money and installed the client software of the casino, get a welcome bonus of 200% up to 200 dollars / euro / pounds for the first deposit. The minimal amount of the deposit to receive the bonus should be 25 dollars at least.
- Tropicana Evansville offers comfortable hotel rooms on the Ohio river and the hottest table-games, slots and video-gaming in Indiana on their casino floor. Caesars Rewards Local Caesars Entertainment and Eldorado Resorts have come together to create new experiences for you.
Welcome to Payout Paradise – a Las Vegas gambling area with more than 1,600 casino slot games, including video poker and Megabucks. With so many choices, you’ll always experience a great time at this Las Vegas casino.
The Flamingo’s poker room features non-stop action, daily tournaments and a MegaBeat Jackpot starting at $200,000. You can also play Vegas casino games like craps, blackjack, baccarat and roulette. For a more relaxing experience, The Flamingo offers a keno lounge next to the race and sports book.
Extend your gaming experience at Jimmy Buffet’s Margaritaville, featuring a 15,000-square-foot casino. Enjoy the Vegas casino’s laid-back island vibe and choose from 22 gaming tables and 220 slot machines. You’ll also have easy access to and from the Las Vegas Strip.
Center Cut Steakhouse, Beach Club Bar & Grill, Tropical Breeze Café, Carlos ‘N Charles’s, Margaritaville, Paradise Garden Buffet, Club Cappuccino, Flamingo Food Court.
The Flamingo Las Vegas hotel is a self-contained casino and resort offering everything an adventurous vacationer could want: A tropical Wildlife Habitat, Go Pool – a 15-acre Caribbean-style water playground and select rooms with fabulous views of 550-foot-tall The High Roller. Set on the famous four corners of Las Vegas Boulevard and Flamingo Road, this Las Vegas hotel combines heart-pounding excitement with hospitality and service that’s second to none. Located adjacent to The Linq and The High Roller.
“Gambling, Gangsters and Girls”
'Newport Gangsters Tour' Tour Guides Dressed as gangsters from the era
Gambling in Newport came in many forms, from casinos to horse tracks and from country clubs offering slot machines and bingo to the infamous “bust out joints”. To understand just how many of these gambling places there were around the Sin City, the stories of the main players in the dangerous game of gambling must be recapitulated.
The Cleveland Syndicate
Turfway Park in Florence, KY. Founded by the Cleveland Four
Some of the first forms massive gambling that came to Newport were from gangsters from the Cleveland Syndicate that became known as the “Cleveland Four”. The members of the Cleveland Four were Moe Dalitz, Morris Kleinman, Louis Rothkopf and Sam Tucker (Sin City Revisited). They took over one of the already existing race track by assassinating the owner. Following that heinous they changed the track’s name to River Downs which continues to function to present day. After a while the syndicate expanded their business by acquiring a dog track in Florence, KY – a neighboring city of Newport – and turned it into a horse track and then again renaming it “Turfway Park” which is now owned by Keeneland.
The Cleveland Syndicate also started monopolizing the gambling houses, brothels and clubs all around the city, some of their more prominent clubs were the Yorkshire Club and the Flamingo Club which was located at 633 York Street.
The above is from a government document - An Investigation of Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce, in 1951. The hearings were also know as the Kefauver Hearings.
The Yorkshire Club, one of the main assets that the Cleveland Syndicate owned.
Peter Schmidt
Another key player in Newport’s history of sin was Peter Schmidt. Schmidt was one of George Remus’s chief henchmen and amassed a large amount of money which he used to buy a hotel in Newport once he got out of jail for his stint with Remus. He named the hotel “Glenn Hotel” after his son and he also maintained an illegal distillery in the basement of his hotel. Eventually, federal agents discovered his distillery and shut it down. His actions landed Schmidt in jail for a second time.
Glenn's Rendezvous, opened by Peter Schmidt in name of his son.
Flamingo Gambling Club Venice
After serving his 5 year sentence, Peter Schmidt, opened up a casino in his hotel which he named Glenn Rendezvous. When the Cleveland Syndicate started their campaign for control of all vice in the city, they offered Schmidt a deal for the deed of his establishment. Schmidt refused and instead opened a bigger, better and more exclusive club/casino named the Beverly Hills Club which was burned down by the syndicate when again he decided to refuse the mafia’s offer.
Buck Brady and his Audacity
A much smaller gambling entrepreneur was a man by the name of Buck Brady, he opened his own club which he named The Primrose which was where the common folk would go gamble, drink and pass the time. After a while, the Cleveland Four felt that Brady’s locale was cutting into the profits of their own clubs. In retaliation, the syndicate harassed the owner of the Primrose; tired of the incessant harassment, Brady took matters into his own hands and attempted to assassinate one of the syndicate’s muscle heads.
Brady’s efforts were futile and the syndicate “…gave Brady an offer he could not refuse. He lost his casino when the Syndicate offered him his life for the deed to the establishment” (cincyfocus.com). After acquiring the Primrose, the mafia remodeled it and renamed it “The Latin Quarter” and became a hot spot in the entertainment business in Newport.
Flamingo Gambling Club Penguin
Jimmy Brink and the Syndicate
In contrast to Schmidt and Brady, a man by the name of Jimmy Brink actually accepted the offer made to him by the Cleveland Syndicate. Brink opened a club, named the “Lookout House,” that contained a restaurant and a well equipped casino. The club itself also had a great view of the Cincinnati skyline. After the syndicate gained the control of the Beverly Hills Club thy decided to go for Brink’s establishment. Brink was quick to accept the mafia’s offer which included 125 thousand dollars, 10 percent ownership over the Lookout House and the Beverly Hills Club and was also the general manager for the Lookout House (Sin City Revisited). “Since the Lookout House was located in Covington which is in the neighboring Kenton County the Cleveland mafia had control of two major clubs in two counties that shared the same Grand Jury. What does this mean? Well, since the Grand Jury is needed for every indictment, the syndicate could keep at least one of their major cash sources safe from the law because they either had to be in Kenton County or Campbell County” says Mr. Gels (Mr. Jerome Gels is the man in the middle of the first picture on this page) on the syndicate’s activities with Brink’s club.
Bust-Out Joints
A new form of gambling place were the wicked bust out joints, which were smaller and greedier gambling establishments that would not let a costumer out until he or she was “bust” by using rigged games or games with nearly impossible odds of victory for the costumers. Bust-out joints owners would use all kinds of heinous acts to bust his/her costumers. One of the more prominent bust out joints was actually owned by a marshal, he would rig his games to take the costumer’s money. As well as cheating in the games he would also record the conversations they had with the prostitutes while they were “working”, he would later blackmail his costumers and extort them by threatening to show the tape to their spouses or to just show it in public.
Prostitution
Prostitution spread around Newport very fast and in a very large scale. It started with the brothels being established along one way streets that led out and into the city of Newport. The brothels that started spawning along Monmouth Street were called “Day Houses” which were opened during the day to attract the costumers that are on their way to work in Cincinnati. In contrast, brothels opened along York Street, which is a one-way street that leads to Newport from Cincinnati, said brothels were targeting the workers that wanted a “quickie” on their way back from working long hours, these brothels were called “Night Houses”.
Flamingo Gambling Club Atlantic City
The Latin Quarter Girls entertaining their costumers before a night of sin.
Flamingo Gambling Club Myrtle Beach
Many other “gentlemen clubs” were opened at casinos and clubs along the city. These were usually bigger and more organized than the Day and Night houses along York and Monmouth Street. Some of the more notorious brothels were the Hi-De-Ho Club and the Latin Quarter where vice was done (Wicked Newport: Kentucky’s Sin City). Many of the bust out joints also offered prostitution services for their customers. Prostitution was so bad in Newport and so open the public that there were over 9 brothels within a block of the police headquarters.