It Didn’t Stay Here: Thousands of Las Vegas references in Jeffrey Epstein files

Jeffrey Epstein Las Vegas

Jeffrey Epstein

Perhaps the latest national pastime is pawing through the millions of documents that Congress forced the Trump Administration to cough up and put online concerning the long-running Jeffrey Epstein sexual abuse scandal. Anyone with an Internet connection, a high tolerance for mind-numbing detail and some time can partake.

That includes the staff at the New To Las Vegas world headquarters. But not, it seems, what’s left of the diminished Las Vegas or Nevada news media. None seems to have bothered taking the trouble to pursue the local angle and publish anything beyond wire-service reports.

’tis a pity. For as it turns out, there are simply thousands and thousands of documents referencing Las Vegas. Mainly collected or generated by the FBI, they range from the criminal to the mundane. Many names and institutions are identified. Reputations stand to be damaged.

This collectively makes some of the characters in the Epstein files terrific candidates for my long-running list, It Didn’t Stay Here. The criterion is simple: trouble elsewhere (in Washington, D.C., where the documents were released) for things that happened in that bug light of mischief called Las Vegas. It’s a firm rebuttal to that famous former Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority marketing slogan, “What Happens Here, Stays Here.” You can see the list nearby. Las Vegas’s large presence in the Epstein files also underscores Sin City’s amazing ability to pop up in far-flung national matters.

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No final resting spot for Lefty Rosenthal, Las Vegas mobster of ‘Casino’ fame

Lefty Rosenthal

Frank (Lefty) Rosenthal

After a half-century pretending it didn’t exist, Las Vegas now embraces its mob heritage, with great gusto. The latest example came in a Las Vegas Review-Journal story posted online today. It breathlessly reported the sale of the site where Frank (Lefty) Rosenthal, a legendary organized crime character who secretly oversaw the illegal skimming of proceeds at four mob-owned casinos, was blasted out of his car in 1982 by a bomb as he turned the ignition.

Lefty somehow survived reasonably intact but refused to name names. No one was ever charged. He soon retired from organized crime and left town but still was added to the Nevada gaming regulators’ “Black Book” of folks banned from entering a Nevada casino. His story–especially including the bombing–became the basis for the popular, surprisingly historically accurate 1995 movie, “Casino.” Robert De Niro played the Rosenthal role, renamed Sam (Ace) Rothstein, and Sharon Stone portrayed his glamorous-but-troubled wife (for which she was nominated for an Oscar).

In real life, Lefty ended up in Miami Beach, where he ran a sports betting site and consulted on off-shore gambling operations. He died at age 79 in 2008 in his apartment on Collins Avenue of a reported heart attack.

For years since, the well-known web site FindAGrave.com featuring celebrity final resting spots has reported that Lefty was buried in Visitation Cemetery in Norfolk, N.Y. That’s a hamlet of 4,453 folks just a few miles from the St. Lawrence River and Canada. This would be hundreds of miles from any of his known haunts–Lefty was a Chicago native who learned sports betting in the bleachers at Wrigley Field–and unlikely on its face. That was especially so since he was Jewish, and Geri McGee Rosenthal, his divorced wife and mother of their two children, was buried in Los Angeles.

So after the FindAGrave page came to my attention at the New To Las Vegas world headquarters a few years ago, I resolved to sleuth out the truth. Continue reading

Watching the bribery of ‘Melania’ in a Las Vegas theater

Melania

U.S. Rep. Michael (Ozzie) Myers, second from left, is recorded taking a $50,000 bribe during the FBI’s Abscam sting

Decades before becoming New To Law Vegas, I was a newspaper reporter in the Philadelphia area. In 1980 I helped cover the Abscam bribery scandal. That was an FBI sting in which agents secretly videotaped a plethora of elected officials mainly in New Jersey and Pennsylvania taking bribes to help out a phony Arab sheik. Some of the tapes became public record when they were played in open court during the resulting criminal trials, which sent nearly a dozen political heavies to prison. The scandal, which inspired the 2013 movie, “American Hustle,” is believed to be the first time the FBI used video in a big way to make criminal cases.

The TV-watching public was utterly transfixed watching actual footage of Congressmen, U.S. senators and a mayor accepting major bribes. “Money talks in this business and b—s— walks,” U.S. Rep Michael (Ozzie) Myers of Philadelphia famously declared after pocketing $50,000 of hundred-dollar bills in a New York City hotel room in 1979 (see nearby photo). He then added–somewhat less famously–“And it works the same way in Washington.”

How right he was.

The earthy video-recorded wisdom of Myers, who later went back to prison again for voter fraud but is still around at age 82, barreled back to me as I watched yet another recorded example of actual bribery–but this one this one out in the open and not secret. It was an early first-day showing yesterday of “Melania,” in a Las Vegas theater. The documentary about the First Lady and the 20 days up to Donald J. Trump’’ second inauguration on January 20, 2025, was simply terrible. It was so bad that fact alone amply supported numerous press accounts that Jeff Bezos’s Amazon wildly overpaid—a total of $75 million in rights and marketing–for the sole goal of currying favor for future regulatory actions with her husband, Donald J. Trump, again occupying the pinnacle of power in D.C.

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It Didn’t Stay Here: a civil lawsuit in Delaware for alleged sexual abuse in Las Vegas

Delaware’s famous Court of Chancery, now 234 years old, usually hears staid civil business dispute cases turning on dry, complicated, sleep-inducing contract language and mind-numbing lawyering. But every once in a while, a case pops up like Los Angeles City Employees’ Retirement System, on behalf of eXp World Holdings Inc. v. Glenn Sanford, Randall Miles, Dan Cahir, Jason Gesing, Eugene Frederick and James Bramble. 

The shocking claim: To enhance their personal wealth, leaders of the parent company of eXp Realty, a big publicly traded real estate brokerage incorporated in Delaware, largely turned a blind eye to allegations some of their biggest agents sexually assaulted fellow agents in Las Vegas and other cities. A judge’s recent ruling in Wilmington will allow the case to proceed.

Of course, most everything, especially liability, is being denied. But in a big way the eXp 6, as I might call the half-dozen defendants, still become the newest candidates for my long-running list, It Didn’t Stay Here. The criterion is simple: people in trouble elsewhere for something that happened in Las Vegas. The list is my New to Las Vegas rebuttal to “What Happens Here, Stays Here,” for many years the famous marketing slogan of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. You can see a list of the nominees nearby. A lawsuit like this is definitely trouble. Continue reading