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Before Bugsy's bones were cold
in the ground, Dragna began plotting against Mickey Cohen. It was now
or never, Jack reasoned, and he pulled out all the stops to get Mickey
out of the way. A combination of uncanny luck on Mickey's part and
incompetence on the part of the Dragna crew made the War of the Sunset
Strip look like a Hollywood comedy.
One of the first salvos was
fired as Mickey was heading home to Brentwood and was ambushed. Under
fire from shotguns and Tommy guns, the hit looked like one of those
unbelievable scenes in a movie where the bad guys open up on the star
with a platoon of heavy weapons, yet the star manages to avoid every
shot. In Mick's case, it was really happening. As the glass exploded
from his Cadillac, he lay on his side and managed to steer his car up
Wilshire Boulevard without hitting anything.
"I'm probably at my coolest in
an emergency," he said. "The minute I sensed what was happening, I
fell to the floor and drove that goddamn car all the way down Wilshire
with one hand. I probably couldn't do it again in a thousand times."
He escaped with just a little
damage from flying glass.
Twice Dragna tried to get
Mickey in his home, the first time using a bangalore -- a long,
tube-like explosive device used by the military to clear barbed wire
and beachheads -- but the TNT failed to detonate. The next time, a
dynamite bomb exploded beneath the Cohen house, but the blast was
directed away from the living space by a concrete floor vault that
shielded Mickey and his family.
"Actually, the neighbors got
it worse than I did from the concussion," he recalled.
Sharpshooting hit men were
only slightly luckier. Once as Mickey and several friends were sitting
in a crowded after-hours diner, a Dragna shooter opened up with a
.30-06 rifle and hit Mickey in the arm, tearing away much of the
flesh. Buckshot from another gunman ripped through the diner, striking
a couple of innocent patrons, injuring them slightly. Unfortunately,
Neddy Herbert, a longtime friend of Mickey's, was killed in the
shootout.
Another shooter was even less
fortunate. Mick was coming out of a joint and was walking toward his
new Caddy. He bent down to examine a scratch on the fender and as he
did so, felt a bullet whiz past his head and ricochet off the car. The
gunman didn't stick around for another shot.
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| Senator
Charles W. Tobey |
In 1950, the war attracted the
attention of the Senate Select Committee on Organized Crime in
Interstate Commerce, better known as the Kefauver Committee. Mickey
was subpoenaed to testify before the commission and was lambasted by
New Hampshire Senator Charles Tobey.
"I remember the old senator
kept calling me a 'hoodlum.' He really used some terms that were
uncalled for, from a senator in that type of thing," Cohen said.
"Is it not a fact that you
live extravagantly, surrounded by violence?" the New Hampshire senator
asked Mickey.
"Whaddya mean 'surrounded by
violence,'" Mickey replied, indignant. "People are shooting at
me!"
The exchange and appearance did little for
Mickey and based on the findings of the Kefauver Commission, he was
indicted, tried and convicted of income tax evasion and sentenced to
four years in federal prison.
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