- Thomas Jefferson McGinty
Thomas Joseph McGinty was an early Cleveland mobster, one of the city's largest bootleggers during the Prohibition, as well as a longtime boxing promoter.
A former professional boxer, McGinty was hired as muscle for the "
Cleveland Plain Dealer "'s circulation department and, by 1913, headed a gang of labor sluggers competing against rival "Cleveland News " sluggers theMayfield Road Mob under Arthur McBride during Cleveland's "Circulation Wars".Although a longtime boxing promoter, during Prohibition he became one of the largest bootleggers in the city during the early 1920s. Operating from "McGinty's Saloon" on
West 25th Street with two relatives, McGinty was indicted by a federal grand jury in 1924 on charges of operating a "gigantic wholesale and retail conspiracy". Although initially in hiding, McGinty turned himself in after several days and, pleading not guilty, he was convicted and sentenced to 18 months imprisonment. After his release fromAtlanta Federal Penitentiary , he soon resumed his bootlegging activities without further interference from authorities (who may have been paid off by McGinty).During the 1930s, McGinty was involved in syndicate gambling operations as owner of Cleveland's "
Mounds Club " and, whose gambling operations includedYoungstown, Ohio andCovington, Kentucky and as far away as Florida, as well as a stockholder of the Las Vegas casino "Desert Inn " withMoe Dalitz ,Morris Kleinman ,Lou Rothkopf and others during the 1950s [http://www.nevadaobserver.com/Organized%20Crime%20in%20the%20United%20States%201950%203.htm] . He was also involved inMeyer Lansky 's "Hotel Nacional " inHavana, Cuba [http://cuban-exile.com/doc_176-200/doc0190.html] .Further reading
*Reid, Ed and Demaris, Ovid. "The Green Felt Jungle". Montreal: Pocket Books, 1964.
References
*Fox, Stephen. "Blood and Power: Organized Crime in Twentieth-Century America". New York: William Morrow and Company, 1989. ISBN 0-688-04350-X
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