The Mob Museum, the
National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, is located in Downtown Las
Vegas, Nevada and opened February 14th, 2012. The Museum is housed in the
former Las Vegas Post Office and
Courthouse, built in 1933 and listed on the National Register of Historic
Places. The museum is on Stewart Avenue, two blocks north of Fremont Street, the main
artery of the downtown casino district.
Developed under the
creative direction of Dennis Barrie, co-creator of the International Spy Museum and the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame, the museum is governed by a non-profit board, the
"300 Stewart Avenue Corporation," in partnership with the City of Las Vegas. The
museum is dedicated to the contentious relationship between organized crime and law
enforcement within the historical context of Las Vegas and the entire United
States.
The centerpiece of the Mob Museum is the second floor courtroom, which was the
location of one of fourteen national Kefauver Committee
hearings to expose organized crime held in 1950 and 1951. The Museum also
acquired the blood-stained wall where the St. Valentine's Day massacre
took place.
Other exhibits focus on Mob violence, casino money skimming operations, and
wiretapping by law enforcement.
In 2000, the federal
government sold the former post office and federal courthouse to the city for
$1, with stipulations that the building be restored to its original look and be
used for a cultural purpose.
Then-Mayor Oscar Goodman, himself a
former Mob defense attorney, had the idea for a mob museum in 2002. The idea
faced early opposition from Italian-American groups, while being supported
by the FBI, including the
former head agent in Las Vegas, Ellen Knowlton, who joined as president of the
museum's board.
The project budget was
estimated at $50 million, including $26 million for restoring the building. Funding
included federal, state, and local grants. Goodman
generated controversy by suggesting that federal stimulus money
could be used for the museum.
Opening Day
The museum opened Feb. 14 to the public at 2 p.m. (The morning and day before
were reserved for press and dignitary ceremonies.) Admission for adults is $18;
$10 for Nevada residents. The tour begins on the third floor where the actual
wall of the St. Valentine's Day Massacre is on display, accessible by elevator
or stairs, and winds its way down to the second and first floors.
There is a gift shop on the first floor. Using photos, text, displays,
interactive techniques, hands-on exhibits, and other first-class museum methods,
the visitor learns about the history of organized crime, Prohibition and the
business opportunity it provided, Las Vegas's first casinos, Howard Hughes, J.
Edgar Hoover and the origins of the FBI, Al Capone, Eliot Ness, and much more. A
visitor can sit in a replica electric chair, listen to actual wire taps, train
in a police simulator, or "fire" an actual Tommy Gun. Allow two hours
minimum.
0 comments:
Post a Comment