|
While Mickey was doing time at McNeil Island,
his friend Johnny Stompanato began dating actress Lana Turner. The
relationship would have profound, life-changing implications for
everyone involved. To the end, Mickey denied that John Stompanato was
a gangster, or even a "bodyguard." He claimed Stompanato was just a
close associate who dabbled in that gray area which straddles the line
between legal and unlawful.
Stompanato was a handsome, intense former Marine
who managed to always find a wealthy woman to support him. His
services were not for sale, as such, but it would not be unfair to
call him a gigolo.
 |
Johnny
Stompanato (left) with Mickey Cohen
(AP/Wide World)
and Lana Turner (AP) |
Lana Turner was beautiful, wealthy and very
high-maintenance. She was an alcoholic with a track record of
attracting the wrong men and was known for her whirlwind romances and
quick marriages, followed by equally quick divorces. The Stompanato-Turner
combination was electric and doomed almost from the get-go, but
neither Lana nor Johnny could break away. They fought continuously,
loved passionately and intimidated each other, but the two dominant
personalities were attracted like moths to flame, with equally tragic
results.
There was no love lost between Mickey Cohen and
Lana Turner, however. Since each was close to Johnny, they saw the
other regularly and Lana, whom Mickey said was possessive, blamed
Mickey when Johnny failed to come when she called.
Stompanato told Mickey over and over of his
feelings for Lana Turner, so when Mickey received the telephone call
that Lana's daughter, Cheryl Crane, had stabbed Johnny to death, he
was shocked.
"I hung up the phone and drove over to Lana's
home and pulled into the driveway and Jerry Geisler, the lawyer, is
coming out," Mickey remembered. "He says, 'If Lana sees you she's
gonna fall out all together. John's dead, the body's at the morgue.'"
Mickey was the one to break the news to Johnny's
family in Illinois and was asked by the family to make the necessary
arrangements. As he sat in the morgue, Mickey began to have his doubts
about the story he had been told about how Johnny was killed.
"I don't believe Cheryl killed him," he said. "I
don't want to outright accuse anyone, but I don't believe it was
Cheryl or Lana who done this thing. Somebody must have come in somehow
and stabbed him."
The feud between Lana and Mickey simmered, and
with the backing of the studio, Lana let it be known she was afraid
that Mickey would seek revenge. Mickey called Lana on the story and
she blamed the studios, but days later, the pair made headlines again
when they showed up at the same restaurant and Lana, spotting Mickey
before he saw her, fled through the kitchen exit.
Mickey said he was angered by the beating Johnny
took in the press and struck back by releasing the letters Lana wrote
to Johnny to the press. They showed a different relationship between
the lovers than what was being portrayed by the media. The plan
backfired when it appeared Mickey was trying to blackmail Turner, but
he maintained it was merely to show the truth about how Lana felt
about John Stompanato.
In the end, Cheryl Crane was not found
criminally responsible for John's death. Mickey bemoaned the coroner's
jury verdict in the press: "This is the first time I've ever heard of
a guy being convicted of his own murder," he said.
|