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Los Angeles
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  Labor & Labour  ·  Labour Party (GB) I  ·  Labour Party (GB) II  ·  Ladder  ·  Lady  ·  Lake & Lake Monsters  ·  Land  ·  Language  ·  Laos  ·  Las Vegas  ·  Last Words  ·  Latin  ·  Laugh & Laughter  ·  Law & Lawyer (I)  ·  Law & Lawyer (II)  ·  Laws of Physics & Science  ·  Lazy & Laziness  ·  Leader & Leadership  ·  Learner & Learning  ·  Lebanon & Lebanese  ·  Lecture & Lecturer  ·  Left Wing  ·  Leg  ·  Leisure  ·  Lend & Lender & Lending  ·  Leprosy  ·  Lesbian & Lesbianism  ·  Letter  ·  Ley Lines  ·  Libel  ·  Liberal & Liberal Party  ·  Liberia  ·  Liberty  ·  Library  ·  Libya & Libyans  ·  Lies & Liar (I)  ·  Lies & Liar (II)  ·  Life & Search For Life (I)  ·  Life & Search For Life (II)  ·  Life After Death  ·  Life's Like That (I)  ·  Life's Like That (II)  ·  Life's Like That (III)  ·  Light  ·  Lightning & Ball Lightning  ·  Like  ·  Limericks  ·  Lincoln, Abraham  ·  Lion  ·  Listen & Listener  ·  Literature  ·  Little  ·  Liverpool  ·  Loan  ·  Local & Civic Government  ·  Loch Ness Monster  ·  Lockerbie Bombing  ·  Logic  ·  London (I)  ·  London (II)  ·  London (III)  ·  Lonely & Loneliness  ·  Look  ·  Lord  ·  Los Angeles  ·  Lose & Loss & Lost  ·  Lot (Bible)  ·  Lottery  ·  Louisiana  ·  Love & Lover  ·  Loyalty  ·  LSD & Acid  ·  Lucifer  ·  Luck & Lucky  ·  Luke (Bible)  ·  Lunacy & Lunatic  ·  Lunar Society  ·  Lunch  ·  Lungs  ·  Lust  ·  Luxury  

★ Los Angeles

Los Angeles: see Gangs US: Los Angeles & California & United States of America & Earthquake & Art & Oakland & San Diego & San Francisco & Hollywood

Simon Reeve TV - Frankie Boyle TV - Ellie Goulding - Ice Cube - Andrew Graham-Dixon - Christopher Hitchens - Mobsters: Mickey Cohen TV - James Ellroy - Bruce Henstell - Alex Alonso - Gangland TV - Sergeant Fred Reynolds - Ross Kemp TV - American Gangster TV - Masterminds: The Dunbar Heist TV - Gangster Squad 2013 - Crash 2004 - Escape From LA 1996 - Kiss Kiss Bang Bang 2005 - Drugs Inc TV - Celia Morgan - Raymond Chandler - The Graduate 1967 - Martin Amis - Jordan Maxwell - LA Street Racers TV - Gangsters: Americas Most Evil TV - Andy Warhol - David Hasselhoff - George Carlin - Rick Riordan - Jack Kerouac - Dorothy Parker - Quentin Crisp - Henry Miller - Ken Burns TV - Invasion of the Bee Girls 1973 - O J: Made in America TV - LA92: The Riots TV - The LA Riots: 25 Years Later TV - On the Streets 2017 - Louis Theroux TV - Wartime Crime TV - Breaking History: LA Burning: The Riots 25 Years Later TV - Den of Thieves 2018 - The Brits are Coming 2018 - Drug Lords 2018 - Dope 2019 - Simon Reeve TV - People Magazine Investigates TV - Collateral 2004 - Storyville: Whirlybird: Live Above LA TV - MS13: The New Mafia: America’s Deadliest Gang TV - The Crimes that Changed Us TV - Inside Beverley Hills: The Land of the Rich & Famous TV - The Proof is Out There TV - The Soloist 2009 - Ancient Aliens TV -   

 

 

 

Half a million Americans are homeless, and the problem can often be seen at its starkest in the shadows and backstreets of the City of Angels.  The Americas with Simon Reeve III, BBC 2019

 

 

Eventually they’re [North Korea] going to be able to hit LAX.  Which means we lose what?  James Corden and half a million rapists.  Frankie Boyle’s New World Order, BBC 2017  

 

 

Christmas in LA is weird.  There’s no snow.  It’s not even cold.  Ellie Goulding

 

 

I remember wishing there was snow in LA.  And how jealous we used to get of those Christmas specials with kids playing in the snow.  Ice Cube

 

 

Richard Diebenkorn saw the city’s [Los Angeles] bright planes of colour.  Andrew Graham-Dixon, Art of America 3/3: What Lies Beneath, BBC 2011

 

 

It’s [Los Angeles] mostly full of nonsense and delusion and egomania.  They think they’ll be young and beautiful for ever, even though most of them aren’t even young and beautiful now.  Christopher Hitchens

 

 

When Mickey wasn’t selling papers and hustling on the streets he was boxing.  Mobsters: Mickey Cohen, Biography 2008

 

Where he had failed as a boxer he hoped to succeed as a gangsta.  Mickey Cohen would soon meet another notorious Jewish mobster – Bugsy Siegel.  Together they would re-write mob history in Los Angeles.  ibid.  

 

Mickey Cohen was ready to take on Hollywood.  ibid.

 

When visionary New York gangsta Meyer Lansky looked west he saw an untapped resource.  Lansky wanted to secure some of the rackets for himself ... Siegel was the perfect choice for Lansky.  ibid.

 

Off-track betting was still illegal.  It was a high-stakes racket.  Bookmakers would pay as much as $1,200 a week for access.  ibid.

 

And when Mickey went out he liked attention.  ibid.

 

For the first time in his life Mickey Cohen felt he was on the A-List.  ibid.

 

While Mickey embraced life in LA, Bugsy Siegel was bored with the same old Hollywood scene.  In 1945 Bugsy came up with an idea that he pitched to the Mob families – an investment opportunity.  The Flamingo hotel.  A first-class destination in Las Vegas, Nevada, complete with a hundred and five rooms, private bungalows, and a casino.  Siegel told them all they had to do was put up the money to build the place and watch their wallets grow.  ibid.

 

By the time Mickey arrived in Las Vegas it was too late.  The hotel was already $5 million over budget.  Bugsy had promised the Mob a sure thing;  the Flamingo was anything but ... The Assassin fired into the house hitting Bugsy three times in the head, killing him instantly.  Bugsy Siegal had bet everything on Vegas.  And lost.  ibid.    

 

With Bugsy dead, Mickey Cohen operated LA’s illegal gambling and wire service himself: Mickey Cohen was now the boss of Hollywood.  And when Mickey went out, the locals took notice.  ibid.     

 

The underworld attracted the attention of the Senate sub-committee on organised crime ... For hours Mickey answered questions.  ibid.

 

In April 1951 the once lucky gangsta was formally charged with tax evasion.  ibid.

 

Even in prison Mickey was a big player ... After almost four years in prison Mickey was released for good behaviour.  Cohen was a free man again.  ibid.

 

Mickey took divorce badly.  ibid.

 

Mickey agreed to an unprecedented interview on The Mike Wallace Show ... ‘I have killed no men that in the first place didn’t deserve killing.’  ibid.

 

The Feds sent him away again: for tax evasion.  This time he was sent to Alcatraz.  ibid.

 

The Mobster was partially paralysed and would have to walk with sticks for the rest of his life.  ibid.

 

Times had changed and many of his associates had died.  By the end of 1973 Mickey was a shell of his former self.  But still enjoyed watching a fight.  ibid.

 

Mickey Cohen died in his sleep.  ibid. 

 

 

The race-wire broadcasts the results to bookmaking runs throughout Los Angeles.  So that people could lay bets up to the last moment.  It was split-second timing.  And Mickey [Cohen] was the king.  James Ellroy, author L A Confidential

 

 

Mickey Cohen didn’t spend time at school; he spent time on the street as a newsboy scuffling for pennies and for coins.  Bruce Henstell, author Sunshine and Wealth

 

 

The Number One issue at that time was police brutality.  So by the time you get to the early sixties you had an environment that was ripe for riot, and that is exactly what happened.  Alex Alonso, street gangs online

 

 

They’ll destroy anyone in their way.  Hundreds of gangs draw battle lines from one district to the next.  In a racially charged war everyone becomes a target.  And no-one sees an end in sight.  Gangland s1e5: Race Wars, History 2007

 

A violent sub-culture.  Its inhabitants live and die in a vast war-zone that stretches across LA county.  Home to more than nine hundred street gangs.  Bloods and Crips rule south-central ... They fight for dominance.  ibid.

 

Black and Hispanic gangs hold absolute power in some parts of the neighbourhood.  ibid.

 

Drug dealing and the territory that goes with it is power.  ibid.

 

The gang capital of the world is also the most diverse city.  ibid.

 

Race is now playing a leading role in gang-related killings ... People are targeted for having the wrong coloured skin.  ibid.

 

Entire neighbourhoods get drawn in.  ibid.

 

In south-central Los Angeles on April 29th 1992 one of the worst race riots erupted in American history.  The trigger was the acquittal of four white police officers in the beating of Rodney King.  ibid.  

 

Race-based violence had been a part of Los Angeles for almost a century.  ibid. 

 

In the late 1960s many gang members joined the Black Nationalist Movement.  Groups like the Black Panthers promoted black power and self-defence.  And launched social programs to help the urban poor.  ibid.

 

Gangs explored ever greater money-making opportunities with the rise of crack cocaine.  Kids who grew up in poverty were selling thousands of dollars’ worth of drugs a day.  ibid.  

 

Drugs raised the stakes of the turf wars.  ibid.

 

The first and most prominent of these gangs was the Crips who rose to power in the 1970s.  ibid.

 

Since the early 1990s police have seen violence on the streets increase between Black and Latino gangs.  ibid.

 

There’s a gang-related shooting here almost every day.  ibid.

 

The racist attitudes that divide Black and Hispanic gang members in prison often become ingrained in them before the time they return to the outside world.  ibid.

 

 

The Mexican mafia is the most influential prison gang in California.  Gangland s1e13: Root of All Evil, History 2008

 

 

South-central LA is their battleground.  It’s a lifestyle lived without rules.  Gangland s2e5: Crip or Die

 

But you weren’t a true Crip until you put in work.  ibid.

 

Crips don’t die, they multiply: Crip or Die.  ibid.

 

Between 1984 and 1989 at the height of the crack epidemic the homicide rate for black teenage males in Los Angeles more than doubled ... The drug that had made the Crips rich was also destroying them.  ibid.

 

 

Their membership reaches into the tens of thousands and stretches across America.  The 18th Street Gang rewrote gangsta culture forging a massive criminal enterprise.  Gangland s2e7: Murder by Numbers

 

The gang specialised in extortion.  ibid.

 

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