Harry Sagansky
Harry J. "Doc" Sagansky (January 6, 1898-January 28, 1997) was a Jewish organized crime figure in Boston who controlled one of city's largest bookmaking operations during the 1950s. He is also the oldest organized crime figure to serve a federal prison sentence at the age of 91.
Growing up in Boston, Massachusetts, Sagansky sold newspapers while working his way through school and eventually graduating in dentistry from Tufts University in 1918. Opening a pratice at a liquor store at Scollay Square, he would become involved in illegal gambling during Prohibition.
By 1931, he begun investing in several businesses including part ownership of two Boston nightclubs and operated a loan agency, which authorities suspected was worth an estimated $90 million. In 1943, he was arrested during a police raid on one of his gambling dens. He would later be charged with his role in the gambling syndicate and served a prison sentence for attempting to bribe a city official for political protection for a "Beano game".
During the 1950s, his involvement in illegal gambling operations was investigated by Kefauver Hearings which authorities would claim was "the largest racket kingdom in existence in the city of Boston."
Throughout his life, Sagansky was a philanthropist whose donations towards Beth Israel Hospital would help contribute a nursing station and an observation unit as well as his his alma mater Tufts Dental School. He later died of natural causes while at Brandeis University's Beth Israel Hospital at the age of 99.
Futrher reading
- Hersh, Seymour M. The Dark Side of Camelot. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1997. ISBN 0-316-35955-6
External links
- South Coast Today - Obituaries: Harry Sagansky, 99
- Harry Sagansky v. United States of America, on Petition For A Writ Of Certiorari To The United States Court Of Appeals For the First Circuit
- The Grandfather of all Bookmakers by Mike Barnicle, Boston Globe