
Frank (Lefty) Rosenthal
After a half-century pretending it didn’t exist, Las Vegas now embraces its mob heritage, with great gusto. The latest example came in a Las Vegas Review-Journal story posted online today. It breathlessly reported the sale of the site where Frank (Lefty) Rosenthal, a legendary organized crime character who secretly oversaw the illegal skimming of proceeds at four mob-owned casinos, was blasted out of his car in 1982 by a bomb as he turned the ignition.
Lefty somehow survived reasonably intact but refused to name names. No one was ever charged. He soon retired from organized crime and left town but still was added to the Nevada gaming regulators’ “Black Book” of folks banned from entering a Nevada casino. His story became the basis for the popular, surprisingly historically accurate 1995 movie, “Casino,” with Robert De Niro playing the Rosenthal role, renamed Sam (Ace) Rothstein, and Sharon Stone as his glamorous-but-troubled wife.
In real life, Lefty ended up in Miami Beach, where he ran a sports betting site and consulted on off-shore gambling operations. He died at age 79 in 2008 in his apartment on Collins Avenue of a reported heart attack.
For years since, the well-known web site FindAGrave.com featuring celebrity final resting spots has reported that Lefty was buried in Visitation Cemetery in Norfolk, N.Y. That’s a hamlet of 4,453 folks just a few miles from the St. Lawrence River and Canada. This would be hundreds of miles from any of his known haunts–he was a Chicago native who learned sports betting in the bleachers at Wrigley Field–and unlikely on its face. This was especially so since Lefty was Jewish, and Geri McGee Rosenthal, his divorced wife and mother of their two children, was buried in Los Angeles.
So after the FindAGrave page came to my attention at the New To Las Vegas world headquarters a few years ago, I resolved to sleuth out the truth. Continue reading



