Description:

Lansky Meyer

Meyer Lansky Tells His Daughter, “don’t worry about me being here life is a risk where ever you are…”



Autograph Letter Signed “Dad,” one page, 8.5” x 10.75”. Herzlia, Israel, October 8, 1970. To Meyer Lansky’s daughter Sandra Lombardo, with original mailing envelope addressed by Lansky. On verso of Sharon Hotels stationery. Light offset of plastic tape from verso of envelope. Fine condition.



In part, “Saturday is Yom Kippur the only thing that will move the Birds. Everything will be closed. You do get room service which is good enough fopr me but I have made preporations [sic long before I knew about room service. My Ulcers couldn’t hold out that long … All is well and don’t worry about me being here life is a risk where ever you are…” He adds “P.S. Unless something g urgent don’t bother sending Special delivery”



Robert Lacey in “Little Man: Meyer Lansky and the Gangster Life” (Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1991) writes, “In 1964, Meyer’s old friend Doc Stacher had avoided the worst consequences of a conviction for tax evasion by consenting to deportation and going to Israel to live. In July 1970, Meyer Lansky decided not to wait for the conviction – or anything else … Lansky landed in Israel on July 27, 1970 … He wanted to stay in Israel – and he wanted to live there not as a visitor, but as an Israeli citizen.”



On December 7, 1970, Lansky requested Israeli citizenship under Israel’s Law of Return which gives any Jew the right to be granted Israeli citizenship. However, it denies citizenship to a Jew “with a criminal past, likely to endanger the public welfare.” In March 1971, Lansky was charged with being involved in a conspiracy to skim from the Flamingo Hotel, his old Las Vegas venture with Bugsy Siegel. In May, Lansky’s U.S. passport was revoked and in September, his application for Israeli citizenship was denied. “Meyer Lansky v. the State of Israel” was heard before the Israeli Supreme Court and on September 11, 1972, the court ruled unanimously against Lansky. After trying to find refuge outside the United States, on November 7, 1972, Meyer Lansky returned to Miami and was promptly arrested by FBI agents aboard the plane.



In a 1988 interview with Robert Lacey, Anna Strasberg revealed that Meyer Lansky had phoned her husband, Lee Strasberg who was nominated for the 1975 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for the role of Hyman Roth in “The Godfather, Part II.” With her husband’s knowledge, Anna listened in on the extension. Lansky said, “You did good.” Lee replied, “Thank you. I tried.” Lansky added, almost with a sense of humor according to Anna, “Now, why couldn’t you have made me more sympathetic? After all, I am a grandfather.”



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