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Jewish casino 'mobster' threatens to kill jewish Girls Gone Wild porno kingpin, 'mobster' wins $40-million from terrified jury

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UPDATED: Monday, October 15, 2012 14:28
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Monday, October 15, 2012 1:52 PM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!




Grammy singer Quincy Jones took a dive to avoid swimmin wit da dinosaur fishes in a Vegas desert. The Wynn-Francis feud stretches over several years and multiple lawsuits. It began in 2008, when Wynn officials sued Francis to collect a $2-million gambling debt. Wynn also won $7.5 million in a defamation suit against Francis, who'd claimed the casino used deceptive practices to keep him betting.



http://news.yahoo.com/casino-mogul-wynn-denies-threat-kill-girls-gone-
011300550.html

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-wynn-francis-20120912,0,164987
4.story

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0012_0_1
1917.html

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Is_joe_francis_Jewish
http://www.meetjoefrancis.com


Joe Francis celebrates in Hollywood after losing $40M case

Quote:


The Kosher Nostra has always worked with the CIA in blackmail plots

The truth about Harry's Vegas host who was barred from running a casino, unproven claims of 'Mafia links' and a probe over drug dealing

In Britain, the authorities have proved harder to convince. When he tried to open a casino in London to exploit the influx of rich Arabs in the early Eighties, Scotland Yard denied him a licence.

This is a man who bought Impressionist masterpieces?… only to hang them on the walls of his casinos; who reputedly blew his finger off while playing with a gun given to him by a former Mob hitman.

Money is no object. In 2005, Wynn sank $2.7 billion into building just one hotel — the curved glass and steel Wynn Las Vegas. He then did the same again a few years later with the Encore.

So enamoured is he with the idea of himself as Sin City royalty that he arranged his wedding last year to coincide with that of Prince William and Kate Middleton.

Hollywood star Clint Eastwood was best man and lingerie model Caprice a bridesmaid. The reception, held in the ballroom of Wynn’s Encore resort, boasted a 500-strong guest list which included Sylvester Stallone, Steven Spielberg, Lionel Richie, Sir Philip Green and Celine Dion.

After years of hard graft and wheeler-dealing, he has earned the right to behave as he wishes. The son of an East Coast bingo parlour operator and hardened gambler, the brash and handsome Wynn Jnr expanded the family business to Las Vegas with a string of clever investments and ambitious hustling.

In the Seventies and Eighties, when Wynn was building his empire, Las Vegas was full of the mobsters who had originally built its gambling industry.

Some say it was impossible to work in the city and not come into contact with mafiosi, even unwittingly. Others have suggested that, even so, Wynn had an unusually large number of brushes with the Mob.

In 1967, he was with some business associates of noted mobsters on a private yacht cruise on a lake in Nevada when a naked young woman somehow fell over the back of the boat and was chopped almost in half by the propeller blades. Her death prompted an investigation, but everyone on board denied having seen the incident.

And he had trouble with officials in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in 1986 after investigators discovered mobster Tony Castelbuono, a friend of Wynn, was laundering the profits of heroin trafficking at his gambling tables. Wynn almost lost his gambling licence.

Part of his success has been his ability to turn on the charm with important people. But Wynn is notorious, too, for his temper. In 1991, he reached an out-of-court settlement for an undisclosed sum with the former president of Wynn’s Golden Nugget casino, who described Wynn as a womanising, brutal boss.

In allegations made in documents lodged at court, it was said that he would get so angry that his ‘eyes bulged and he started screaming at the top of his lungs and banging his head on the table’.

His vision may be failing, but for years he was infamous for his roving eye, keeping keys to empty rooms at his various hotels for trysts. He was known to favour his female blackjack croupiers.

All that came to a stop when he met the beautiful Mrs Wynn. Usually described as a ‘British socialite, 48-year-old Andrea was, in fact, born in New York but, as her proud husband likes to stress, was raised in England and France. Tres sophistique.

It all sounds rather less chic when you learn that the family moved to France because her father, a wheeler-dealer named Victor Danenza, fled there in 1976 to escape an FBI fraud investigation.

Before becoming the second Mrs Wynn, Andrea had lived in London with her first husband, Texan banker Robert Hissom, a former polo-playing friend of Prince Charles.

Elaine made around $740?million from the settlement — one of the biggest payouts in U.S. divorce history. The costly divorce appears not to have troubled Mr Wynn, who is delighted with his new wife.

At 70, he shows no sign of slowing down — though controversy continues to dog him. He is embroiled in a three-year court battle with Joe Francis, founder of the soft-porn video empire Girls Gone Wild.

In documents lodged at court, Francis claims Wynn threatened — in an email — that he would kill him over a $2??million gambling debt. Wynn is alleged to have written that he would hit Francis ‘in the back of the head with a shovel’.

In Asia, where Wynn now earns 70??per cent of his profits from the gambling mecca of Macau, a resort on the South China Sea, he is embroiled in a battle with a former business partner, Kazuo Okada.

This week, Okada sued Wynn for $140?million for libel after each accused the other of paying bribes within the Asian gambling industry.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2196443/The-truth-Harrys-Vegas
-host-barred-running-casino-Mafia-links-probed-drug-dealing-dont-ask-naked-girl-died-boat-trip.html


http://www.tmz.com/2012/08/23/prince-harry-naked-photos-pictures-priva
te-security-royal-family-pissed
/



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Monday, October 15, 2012 2:15 PM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


When the Chicago mob sent word Steve 'Wynn' Weinberg should be turned around

by Steve Miller
Electric Nevada
1996

Maybe Genovese crime family boss Anthony 'Fat Tony' Salerno, on that November, 1984 day in New York, was still suffering the effects of his stroke three years earlier.

Because as he listened to the Chicago mob's demand that he rein in Las Vegas gaming mogul Steve Wynn, Fat Tony seemed deaf not only to the Chicago messenger -- John 'Peanuts' Tronolone -- but also to the chance that an FBI microphone might pick up the conversation.

As luck would have it, there was a live microphone, and it had been hidden there in Fat Tony's Palma Boys Social Club since at least the previous March.

That mike has turned out to cast a very long shadow.

Not only did the mike mean the end the 60-year criminal career of Anthony Salerno. Its output -- even today, a dozen years later -- still threatens the carefully tended public image of the putative Las Vegas sun king, Steve Wynn.

The story behind the Chicago mob's concerns and why they went to Fat Tony can be found in Running Scared: The Life and Treacherous Times of Las Vegas Casino King Steve Wynn, a book researched and written by Las Vegas Review-Journal news columnist John L. Smith, and published last year by Barricade Books of New York.

Though tightly documented, the book has been the subject of a massive campaign of attempted suppression by Wynn. [See accompanying story.]
The meeting between Tronolone and Salerno at the Palma Boy Social Club, was, in part, a legacy of the earlier era, in the '70s, when the mob-dominated Teamsters Central States Pension Fund had helped Allan Glick buy the Stardust and Fremont casinos.

After Allan Glick's connection to organized crime was exposed, Glick, in 1979, sold his holdings in the Stardust and Fremont to Allan D. Sach's Trans-Sterling Corporation, which federal investigators quickly surmised was little more than a mob-connected holding company for Glick's original mob sponsors. Trans-Sterling was put under the trusteeship of Victor Palmieri and Co., and in 1984, after federal indictments outlined a mob-skimming operation at the Stardust, Sachs, too -- as part of a settlement with the Nevada Gaming Commision -- agreed to sell out.

The promissory notes held by Trans-Sterling for the Teamster-generated mortgages on the Stardust and Fremont hotels had a face value of $73.9 million, and Palmieri's initial attempts to find a buyer at that price failed.

"Then, on Oct 15, 1985," writes Smith, "Palmieri contacted Irwin Molasky -- a man intimately familiar with the Teamsters pension fund -- who, in turn, reached out for Steve Wynn."

Wynn, at this pre-Mirage time merely CEO of the downtown Las Vegas Golden Nugget casino, wanted at least a 20 percent profit, and over the next two weeks, his corporate vice-president, Clyde Turner, negotiated with Palmieri.

By the end of October, a final draft of the deal had been cut. It allowed Wynn and company to pick up the notes -- which would reach their full $73.9 million face value in 1991 -- for a mere $58.6 million. As it would happen, just four months later, in February of 1985, the Boyd Group prepaid the face price of the notes, took over the Stardust and Fremont, and gave Wynn an immediate profit of $14.4 million on his investment.

But three months earlier, in November of '84, when 'Peanuts' Tronolone came to see Salerno, what the Chicago mob had wanted was for Salerno to turn Wynn around. Wynn, they said, should let the sale of the notes go through at a lower price, with less immediate profit for the Golden Nugget.

At the Palma Boy Social Club, the business office of Anthony Salerno, this was the conversation the FBI mike recorded about the pending sale of the notes to the Boyd Group:

Quote:

Tronolone: Jack Zero [Jack Cerone, of the Chicago crime family] told me, he said, 'You got to do this. No fucking telephones. Nothing. You gotta go and see this thing move right away. You gotta tell Salerno to tell Vince [Vincent Vinci] to get somebody to get Steve Wynn to stop. He's blocking the sale. He's blocking the sale.
Salerno: What can I do with Steve?
Tronolone: Humm?
Salerno: Who am I going to get?
Tronolone: Mel Harris. He's our guy. Mel Harris.



Earlier that same year, in March, FBI surveillance had twice registered Harris visiting Fat Tony at the Palma Boys Social Club.

Mel Harris had an interesting history. A successful condominium developer in South Florida, he was also the son of a notorious Miami-based mob bookmaker, recently deceased. An acquaintance of Steve Wynn since the 1960s, he had also known the famed mob mastermind Meyer Lansky. And he had attended high scholl in Miami with Wynn's wife, the former Elaine Pascal.
But what perhaps was most remarkable about Harris, however, was how he had been hired by Wynn, that past summer, as a vice-president at the very successful Golden Nugget in Atlantic City.

Although Harris had no casino management experience of any kind, Wynn had named him that August, 1984 to the board of directors of Golden Nugget Las Vegas, and made him vice-president of marketing at the Atlantic City resort.

The employment contract Wynn provided Harris made him -- notwithstanding the lack of experience or training -- one of the highest paid executives in all of legalized gaming.

"His five-year deal," wrote Smith in Running Scared, "paid an annual salary of $400,000 and gave him an option to purchase 250,000 shares of convertible preferred stock, which in 1984 sold at a year-ending price of 9 3/8. That's potentially another $4.6 million. Harris was also handed a stock option agreement that would enable him to purchase up to 500,000 shares at a 25-percent discount...."

One thing Harris did have, in August 1984, the time of his employment at the Atlantic City Golden Nugget, was good connections to the man believed by organized crime experts to be the capo di tutti capi of America's La Cosa Nostre -- Genovese crime family boss Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno.

On March 6, 1984, only a few weeks after the death of his father, reports Smith, FBI surveillance recorded Mel Harris entering the Palma Boy escorted by Genovese associate and frequent Las Vegas visitor Sammy Spiegel.
"At the Palma Boy, Salerno and Harris talked for 24 minutes. In his deposition before New Jersey investigators, Harris recalled only exchanging 'pleasantries concerning his late father' with" Salerno.

"Two weeks later, this time in the company of convicted racketeer Milton Parness, Harris again met with Salerno at the Palma Boy. Parness and Salerno had served time together in prison.

The second Salerno-Harris sit-down lasted forty-nine minutes. Harris, before gaming regulators, would recall that meeting only after being confronted with the fact of the federal law enforcement surveillance.
This was the man Tronolone was saying could turn Steve Wynn around.

Quote:

Salerno: Where is he, over there?
Tronolone: He's from the office. He's right under him. He's the secretary.
Salerno: Yeah?
Tronolone: Yeah. Vice-secretary, first vice-president in command, Mel Harris is. Remember I told you all of this. The only guy who can talk to Mel Harris is you.
Salerno: He's blocking the sale?
Tronolone: He's blocking the sale. Now, if the sale is made, there's plenty of money in there for everybody. He told me to tell you.
Salerno: Is that the Stardust?
Tronolone: Huh?
Salerno: Stardust?
Tronolone: Yeah. Stardust. He's blocking that sale. He wants somebody to tell these people not to block it. Let the sales go through. If the sale goes through, he said, 'Tell Tony that there's money for all of us.' He says, 'It's paramount to tell him that.' How much, I think Mel and he can sit down after. 'If he lets that fucking sale go through, there's plenty of money for all of us.'
Salerno: How much time we got?
Tronolone: Right away you have to start on it.
Salerno: Yeah, but, ah, you sure Mel could tell him?
Tronolone: Huh?
Salerno: Mel could talk to him?
Tronolone: Mel, Mel's a shrewd man. Mel's his right-hand man. Mel, Mel could find a way to tell him.
Salerno: In other words, Steve Wynn is looking to buy this, right?
Tronolone: Right. He's looking. You see. But he's blocking it. That shit, that's not for sale. But he's blocking the sale, see? The combination from Chicago. Their people are buying... now trying to... they put, put a $52 million bid in for it.
Salerno: How can he [Wynn] go in it when I'm in it?
Tronolone: You can't call him no more. You gotta send word to him.



Later, when federal prosecutors used the tapes in their prosecution of Salerno and 15 other mobsters and their associates on 40 federal charges, ranging from murder to union corruption, they told Federal District Judge Mary Johnson Lowe that the tapes definitely connected Wynn to Fat Tony Salerno and the Genovese crime family.

"They were unhappy with [Wynn] at that point because they thought the offer was high enough," federal prosecutor Alan Cohen told the judge, "but Wynn was holding out for full face value and enough was enough. 'Let's go through with the deal. Stop holding out for the full amount.'"

Judge Lowe: "..what evidence is there ... Salerno would be acting against his apparent best interests by dumping on Wynn because Wynn was holding up the sale...?"

Cohen: "..while Salerno was going to get a piece out of Wynn's end, the people in Chicago and in Kansas City were going to get a piece out of the other end, and you'll see in the transcript it says, the message that Tronolone carries is, 'We can all make money from both ends.' And what Salerno had to do was to get Wynn to go ahead and sell so that the people in Chicago and Kansas City could get out of their end -- the Stardust and Fremont owners -- and Salerno could get out of his end what he could get out of Wynn. Each of the respective organized crime families had, as they say in the tapes, 'We have it on each end. We have it in Las Vegas and you have it here.'"

"This tape is absolutely crystal clear enterprise proof ... of what Tronolone does on behalf of this enterprise," Cohen said. "He is acting here clearly as a conduit between the organized crime people and Chicago, Jackie Cerone, and Salerno, and carrying a message to Salerno asking Salerno to get Wynn, who is demonstrably -- and Mel Harris -- demonstrably under Salerno's control, to do something which would financially advantage the people in Chicago and people in New York."

http://www.newsnet1.com/electricnevada.com/pages96/wynn.htm

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Monday, October 15, 2012 2:28 PM

PIRATENEWS

John Lee, conspiracy therapist at Hollywood award-winner History Channel-mocked SNL-spoofed PirateNew.org wooHOO!!!!!!


Steve 'Wynn' Weinberg Pursues Five Lawsuits In Attempt to Suppress Book on Mafia Ties

Steve Wynn -- national leader of the casino industry and commonly believed to be the most powerful man in the state of Nevada -- has a unique problem.
The bigger he gets, the more people want to know his life story. But the only in-depth biography that's available turns out to be a book Wynn is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to suppress.

To make matters worse, the publisher of the biography, Barricade Books, in New York, is headed by the combative Lyle Stuart, an ex-libel lawyer himself and publisher for many years of controversial and provocative books, including the infamous The Anarchist's Cookbook - a book of bomb recipes, among other items.

When Barricade first announced the forthcoming book -- Running Scared: The Life and Treacherous Times of Las Vegas Casino King Steve Wynn -- in its May catalog, the paper where author John L. Smith worked, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, immediately began receiving angry phone calls. Wynn, a major advertiser and major power in the state, wanted author John L. Smith fired from his job as columnist. "What was the paper 'going to do' about Smith?" was the refrain.

But the only deference Wynn got from Smith's editors was an instruction to the columnist not to mention the book's name or its publisher's name in his four-times-a-week column.

Two days later, Wynn sued Smith for libel. According to Lyle Stuart, the suit would be the first of four launched by Wynn. A fifth suit was brought against Wynn by Stuart.

"He sued four times," Stuart told Electric Nevada. "First he sued John Smith, on the catalog copy. And I wrote to the lawyer and said, 'Hey, pal, you sued the wrong guy. He didn't even see it until it was in print.' Which was true. 'I wrote it; sue me.'"

"So then an attorney of mine, who's been running the whole thing, negotiated with him something I've never done in 40 years in publishing, but I thought, 'Okay, there's a point to this.'

"We agreed to show them the manuscript," said Stuart, "so they could make what they said were factual correction of errors. And then it was up to us -- that was the agreement -- up to us to decide whether we'd make them.
Okay? I thought this would be good, in terms of getting it as accurate as possible."

In return, Wynn withdrew his libel action against John L. Smith.

But -- wrote Stuart later in a foreword for Smith's book -- "Wynn obviously misunderstood my wanting the book to be as accurate as possible.

"A few days before our scheduled meeting, when asked about the book, Wynn boasted to an interviewer: "There won't be any book. I've cowed the publisher."

Wynn's two attorneys began the meeting by presenting a four-inch stack of documents and saying: "We don't expect you to publish this book."

But Stuart replied, "Listen carefully. You've got it all wrong. No matter what, we're publishing this book."

Two days later, on learning Stuart was going ahead with the book, Wynn sued for the second time.

"Once again, the suit was about the catalog copy," says the publisher. "This time he included my wife and me."

Part of the understanding that had ended the first suit, says Stuart, was that Wynn himself would attend the meeting. When he did not, Stuart says he considered that a breach of faith.

"Until that morning, I'd been a Mirage high-roller," wrote Stuart, author of several books on casino gambling.

"I had a casino credit line of $100,000. The failure of Wynn to appear for our meeting changed this. I never play where a casino owner breaks his word.

"I immediately canceled my credit line. In the future, I'll stay and play at other Las Vegas casinos. No Wynn casino will ever again win a penny of my gaming money."

When this account of Wynn's alleged breach of faith appeared as part of Stuart's foreword for Smith's book, Wynn sued a third time.

"When they saw my foreword," Stuart told EN, "they brought a suit -- a very funny suit.

"They didn't want to be looked at as book-burners, so they didn't say they wanted to suppress the book in Nevada, but they wanted those two pages torn out of every copy!"

For the record, Wynn's attorneys argued that the problem with the two pages was that, in them, Stuart had broken a confidentiality agreement surrounding the first meeting -- "an agreement not to tell anybody about the meeting, that Steve Wynn and I were supposed to have," says Stuart.

But Wynn had already broken that agreement too, according to the publisher.
"He talked about it on a radio station and we had a tape of that, and he talked to the New York Times."

Stuart says the judge in that case got irritated over the lack of specifics coming from Wynn and his attorneys on the question of whether Wynn had talked with the Times.

"So the judge got angry," said Stuart. "She said, 'Listen, we're in Las Vegas; call him up, he's here.' So she gave them a week to bring in an affidavit."

When Wynn's affidavit came in, it said, according to Stuart, that "he did remember talking to the Times, but he didn't remember what he said.

"So that bullshit didn't work, and that case is pretty dead. At the same time, they still tried to go ahead, saying 'Even if he broke it, Stuart also broke it!'

Stuart calls that "a real dopey" argument.

"And of course the judge wouldn't have any of that. That case they want to withdraw, but we're not letting them.

"That's the third case. And then he's suing me in Kentucky, for libel, for the book. Now, Kentucky is the best state in the union for people bringing libel actions. Which is why they picked Kentucky; it took us a while to figure that out."

But even there, says Lyle Stuart, Wynn is having little luck.

Although the Barricade counsel moved to have Wynn's Kentucky suit thrown out -- on the grounds that Kentucky was not the right forum -- the court in that jurisdiction gave Wynn 30 days to appear and, according to Stuart, explain personally why there should be a libel case in Kentucky.

On the very last day, said the publisher, Wynn appeared.

"He said [the book] was going to destroy a deal he had going there. So they said, 'What deal?' He said, 'It's a secret deal,' So the court said, 'When you're ready to tell us what it is, you come back again.' And so that was the last of that.

"So.. the whole thing is a farce, really..."

The suit brought by Barricade Books charges Wynn with "tortuous interference," a legal term for interference with contracts.

"They've interfered with our agreements," says Stuart, "by threatening about 52 people with their 2-and-a-half-pound package that they sent all over the world, saying that if they had anything to do with this book, they would sue."

The publisher says Wynn's ploy did frighten the two largest distributors in America away from carrying Smith's book.

"Ingram is the largest; they're the one who chickened out right away. The second one, Baker and Taylor, continued to sell it. In fact, they sold 3,000 the following week, and then when they heard ... that Ingram was frightened, they decided maybe they better not carry it. So they stopped.
"So we think we have a pretty good case," says Stuart. "They also frightened the airport shop in Las Vegas.

"I mean they've gone place after place after place. And threatening everybody, threatening agents, threatening salesmen, you know, threatening book shops. So we have a pretty good case. Our case is solid; their case, I think, is going to fall apart.

"You know, he doesn't care about money -- Wynn -- and the lawyers love it, because they can fly to New York, and spend a day here, taking somebody's deposition who's never heard of the book, and then fly back..."

Stuart says Wynn's phalanx of lawyers have deposed everyone in sight, even the Barricade Books receptionist.

"I think they took six or seven people connected to the company. They took everybody whose name they could find in the catalog. It was kind of dumb.

"The big strength of our case is, they made all these threats without even seeing what's in the book. It was only afterward that they saw the book. And much of what they accused us of saying, wasn't in the book."

Electric Nevada sought responses from Los Angeles attorney Barry Langberg, Wynn's lead counsel on the various suits going on around the country, and also from Wynn's Mirage Resorts headquarters in Las Vegas.

In Los Angeles, neither Langberg nor his assisting counsel responded to calls by press time. At Mirage Resorts, Allen Feldman, vice president of public affairs, said Mirage would not comment, nor would it make available a package of allegations sent to booksellers and book distributors around the United States.

"Well, you're welcome to get a copy of any of the court documents involved," said Feldman. "We won't comment on this, now that it's in litigation."

Electric Nevada received from Barricade Books a copy of the original May catalog page that triggered Wynn's initial lawsuit, and also a copy of a slightly revised page from the company's October listing.

In the revisions, publisher Stuart appeared to have made some effort to be less bellicose.

For example, both texts spoke of Wynn's "carefully crafted public image" of "the handsome, university-educated operator in the modern mob-free casino industry."

However, while the ensuing text in May had said "The image is fiction," in October it said "The trouble is that the image may be fiction."

The May text had said " Running Scared discloses the true Steve Wynn, a dark picture Wynn has fought hard to keep in the closet of his past."
But the October text said " Running Scared reveals a somewhat different Steve Wynn, one whose reality Wynn has fought to keep in the closet of his past."

And while the May text had said the book "details why a confidential Scotland Yard report called Wynn a front man for the Genovese family," the October text rephrased it as "a confidential Scotland Yard report, published here for the first time, revealed things about Wynn that deprived him of a license to open a Steve Wynn casino in London."

http://www.newsnet1.com/electricnevada.com/pages96/wynnsuit.htm

Quote:



Prince Harry spends holiday at Sir Richard Branson's Whore Island before filming porno film in Steve 'Wynn' Weinberg's Vegas whorehouse

Prince Harry stayed at the Wynn Hotel.


The drinks were courtesy of billionaire Steve Wynn, who owns the Wynn hotel.


According to a police report:


"The strong inference that can be drawn from the new intelligence is that Stephen Wynn... has been operating under the aegis of the Genovese family since he first went to Las Vegas in the 1960s to become a stockholder in the New Frontier Casino.

"It must be said that some of the data supporting this view, taken on its own, is not conclusive. However, the connections are so numerous and significant that it would be impossible to accept coincidence as a reasonable explanation.

"It has been alleged by a confidential informant that Wynn's late father, Michael Wynn formerly Weinberg, ran his bingo parlour in Maryland under the auspices of Anthony 'Fat Tony' Selerno, then a member and now one of the ruling triumvirate of the Genovese family."

- Detective Chief Inspector Sparks and Detective Constable Summers of the Criminal Investigation Department of New Scotland Yard in a September 9, 1983 Special Report to their Superintendent regarding the fitness of Steve Wynn for a license to operate a proposed casino in Great Britain.

On February 25, 2004, Kenny Wynn, brother of Stephen, was served with a search warrant at his home in connection with a child pornography investigation.

http://aangirfan.blogspot.com/2012/08/prince-harry-and-mafia.html


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