Benny Binion

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Benny Binion at the 1979 World Series of Poker.

Lester Ben "Benny" Binion (November 20, 1904 – December 25, 1989) was an American gambling icon and mob boss.

Early history

Benny Binion was born and raised in Pilot Grove, Texas in Grayson County, north of Dallas. His parents initially kept him out of school due to poor health. His father, a horse trader, let him accompany him on trips. While the outdoor life restored his health, Benny Binion never had any formal education.[1] As he traveled with his father, the young Benny learned to gamble, a favorite pastime when horse traders met up with farmers and merchants during county fair trade days.[2]

Criminal history

Binion's FBI file reveals a criminal history dating back to 1924, listing offenses such as theft, carrying concealed weapons, and two murder convictions.[3]

Binion moved to El Paso when he was 18.[4] There, he began moonshining.[5] A year later, at age 19, Binion moved to Dallas where he set up moonshining operations, for which he was twice convicted.[6] In addition to his moonshining, in 1928, Binion opened up an even more lucrative numbers game.[7]

In 1931, Binion was convicted of shooting and killing an African American rum-runner, Frank Bolding, "cowboy style."[8] This was the origin of Binion's "Cowboy" nickname.[9] Binion received a two-year suspended sentence.[10]

In 1936, Binion established a network of private dice games at several Dallas hotels, including the Southland Hotel in downtown Dallas. This came to be known as the Southland Syndicate.[11] By the end of 1936, Binion had gained control of most gambling operations in Dallas, with protection from a powerful local politician.[12]

In 1936, Binion and a henchman killed a numbers operator and competitor, Ben Frieden, emptying their pistols into him. Binion then apparently shot himself in the shoulder and turned himself in to police, claiming that Frieden had shot him first. Binion was indicted, but the indictment was later dismissed on the grounds that Binion had acted in self-defense.[13] In 1938, Binion and another henchmen allegedly killed Sam Murray, another of Binion's competitors in the gambling rackets. Binion was never indicted for this murder, and charges were dropped against his henchmen.[12]

By the early 1940s, Binion had become the reigning mob boss of Dallas. He then sought to take over the gambling rackets in Fort Worth. The local mob boss of that city, Lewis Tindell, was murdered shortly afterwards.[14]

The Chicago Outfit made a successful move into Dallas after World War II. With the 1946 election of a Dallas County Sheriff Steve Gutherie, Binion lost his fix with the local government and fled to Las Vegas.[15]

While in Dallas, Binion had begun a long-running feud with Herbert Noble, a small-time gambler in Dallas, which continued after Binion moved to Las Vegas. Binion demanded that Noble increase his payoff to Binion from 25 to 40 percent, which Noble refused to do.[16] Binion posted a reward on Noble's scalp that eventually reached $25,000 and control of a Dallas crap game.[17] Noble survived numerous attempts on his life, sometimes narrowly escaping with gunshot wounds. In November 1949, Noble's wife was killed in a car bombing intended for him.[18] In retaliation, Noble planned to fly his private plane to Las Vegas to bomb Binion's house, but was restrained by local law enforcement before he could execute his plan.[19] In August 1951, as Herbert Noble drove up to his mailbox, a bomb exploded nearby, killing him instantly.[20]

Binion lost his gambling license in 1951, and was sentenced to a five-year term in 1953 at Leavenworth federal penitentiary for tax evasion.[21]

Casino years

Benny Binion with his youngest daughter Becky (eventual owner of Binion's Horseshoe) in front of the famous $1 million display (c. 1969).

In Las Vegas, Binion became a partner of the Las Vegas Club casino, but left after a year because of disagreements about limits on bets. In 1951, Benny purchased the building which had previously housed the Las Vegas Club, and opened it as the Westerner Gambling House and Saloon.

In 1951, he purchased the Eldorado Club and the Apache Hotel, opening them as Binion's Horseshoe casino, which immediately became popular because of the high limits on bets. He initially set a craps table limit of $500, ten times higher than the limit at his competitors of the time.[22] Because of the competition, Binion sometimes received death threats, although eventually casinos raised their limits to keep up with him. Additionally, the Horseshoe would honor a bet of any size as long as it was the first one made.[23]

Binion was in the vanguard of Las Vegas casino innovation, being the first in the downtown Glitter Gulch to replace sawdust-covered floors with carpeting, dispatch limousines to transport customers to and from the casino, and offer free drinks to players.[24] Although comps were standard for high rollers, Binion gave them to all players.[25] He also shied away from the gaudy performing acts typical of other Las Vegas casinos.[26]

Binion said he followed a simple philosophy when serving his customers: "Good food, good whiskey cheap, and a good gamble."[27][28]

Binion was known to be generous to patrons. For many years the Horseshoe had a late night $2 steak special, with most of the meat for the steaks coming from cattle on Binion's ranches in Montana. The Horseshoe is also believed to be the first major casino to offer 100-times-odds at craps (a patron with a bet on the pass or don't-pass lines could take or lay up to 100 times their bet in odds).[citation needed] The Horseshoe was one of the more profitable casinos in town.[29]

One of the tourist attractions in Binion's was a large horseshoe with $1 million in $10,000 bills, embedded in plastic.

Binion was forced to sell his share of the casino to pay approximately $5 million in legal costs, resulting from his trial and conviction. His family regained controlling interest in the Horseshoe in 1957, but did not regain full control until 1964. Benny was never allowed to hold a gambling license afterwards, although he remained on the payroll as a consultant.

Binion styled himself a cowboy throughout his life. He almost never wore a necktie, and used gold coins for his cowboy shirts. Despite being technically barred from owning guns, he carried at least one pistol all his life, and kept a sawed-off shotgun close by. His office was a booth in the downstairs restaurant, and he knew many of his customers by name.

Family

Binion and his wife, Teddy Jane, had five children: two sons, Jack and Ted, and three daughters, Barbara, Brenda and Becky.

Jack and Ted took over as president and casino manager, respectively, in 1964. Benny's wife, Teddy Jane, managed the casino cage until her death in 1994. In 1998, Binion's daughter, Becky, took over the presidency after a legal battle, and Jack moved on to other gambling interests. Becky's presidency saw the casino sink into debt. In 2004, federal agents seized $1 million from the Horseshoe's bankroll to satisfy unpaid union benefits, forcing its closure and eventual sale to Harrah's Entertainment. It now operates as Binion's Gambling Hall and Hotel under the ownership of TLC Gaming Group.

Ted was under nearly constant scrutiny from the Nevada Gaming Commission from 1986 onwards for his involvement in drugs and associating with known mob figures. His gaming license was revoked in 1989, and he died in mysterious circumstances about a decade later. Ted's live-in girlfriend and a man with whom she was having an affair (Sandra Murphy and Rick Tabish) were charged and convicted of his murder, but the verdict was later overturned. They were retried and acquitted.[30]

Legacy

In January 1949, Binion arranged for Johnny Moss and "Nick the Greek" Dandalos to play a head-to-head poker tournament which ended up lasting five months, with Nick the Greek ultimately losing a reported two million dollars. The 42-year-old Moss had to take breaks to sleep occasionally, during which the Greek, then 57, went over to the craps table and played. After the final hand, and losing millions of dollars, Nick the Greek uttered one of the most famous poker quotes of all time, "Mr. Moss, I have to let you go."

After years of arranging heads-up matches between high-stakes players, the seed of an idea grew. Binion invited six high-rollers he knew to play in a tournament in 1970. They would compete for cash at the table, after which they would vote on a winner. Johnny Moss, then 63, was voted champion by his younger competition and received a small trophy. The next year, a freeze-out format with a $10,000 buy-in was introduced, and the World Series of Poker was born.

Binion's creation of the World Series helped the game of poker spread and become popular. He actually underestimated how popular it would become: in 1973, he dared to speculate that someday the tournament may have 50 or more entrants; the 2006 main event alone had 8773 entrants.

Benny never forgot his Texas roots and was a key player in getting the National Finals Rodeo to move to Las Vegas. He never forgot the cowboys after they arrived; he always paid the entry fees for all of the cowboys for their championship event. When the casino closed, Boyd Gaming took up the tradition that Binion started by continuing to pay all the entry fees. Every year during the NFR there is a large rodeo stock auction called "Benny Binion's World Famous Bucking Horse and Bull Sale."

Benny Binion was also the owner of the 1946, 1947 and 1948 National Cutting Horse Association (NCHA) World Champion, Bred by Binion, ridden and trained by George Glascock, the solid black 15 hand gelding is the only horse to capture the NCHA World Championship three years in a row.[31]

Binion died of heart failure at the age of 85 on December 25, 1989 in Las Vegas.[32] Poker great "Amarillo Slim" Preston suggested as an epitaph, "He was either the gentlest bad guy or the baddest good guy you'd ever seen."[33] He was posthumously inducted into the Poker Hall of Fame in 1990.

In popular culture

Relativity Media bought the screen rights to the book Blood Aces: The Wild Ride Of Benny Binion to be written for the screen by Cliff Dorfman, which will be a biopic on Binion's life.[34]

References

  1. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), pp. 7-9. ISBN 9780143127581
  2. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), pp. 12-13. ISBN 9780143127581
  3. Reid, Ed, and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle. Buccaneer Books, p. 154; Jay Robert Nash, World Encyclopedia of Organized Crime (1993). Da Capo Press
  4. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 13. ISBN 9780143127581
  5. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 14. ISBN 9780143127581
  6. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 23. ISBN 9780143127581
  7. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 27. ISBN 9780143127581
  8. Gary Cartwright, Benny and the Boys, Texas Monthly, October 1991
  9. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 25. ISBN 9780143127581
  10. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), p. 25. ISBN 9780143127581
  11. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), pp. 52-53. ISBN 9780143127581
  12. 12.0 12.1 Reid, Ed, and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle. Buccaneer Books, pp. 156-157.
  13. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), pp. 45-47. ISBN 9780143127581
  14. Reid, Ed, and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle. Buccaneer Books, p. 158.
  15. Reid, Ed, and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle. Buccaneer Books, p. 160.
  16. Doug Swanson. Blood Aces, (New York: Penguin Books, 2014), pp. 74-75. ISBN 9780143127581
  17. Gary Cartwright, Benny and the Boys, Texas Monthly, October 1991
  18. Gary Cartwright, Benny and the Boys, Texas Monthly, October 1991
  19. Gary Cartwright, Benny and the Boys, Texas Monthly, October 1991
  20. Reid, Ed, and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle. Buccaneer Books, pp. 157-176.
  21. Reid, Ed, and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle. Buccaneer Books, pp. 176-177.
  22. Linda Chase. Picturing Las Vegas, (Layton: Gibbs Smith, 2009), p. 17. ISBN 9781423604884
  23. A. D. Hopkins, Benny Binion, Las Vegas Review-Journal, February 7, 1999
  24. Linda Chase. Picturing Las Vegas, (Layton: Gibbs Smith, 2009), p. 17. ISBN 9781423604884
  25. Jack Sheehan. The Players: The Men Who Made Las Vegas, (University of Nevada Press, 1997), p. 62. ISBN 087417306X
  26. Linda Chase. Picturing Las Vegas, (Layton: Gibbs Smith, 2009), p. 17. ISBN 9781423604884
  27. Linda Chase. Picturing Las Vegas, (Layton: Gibbs Smith, 2009), p. 17. ISBN 9781423604884
  28. Oral History, Lester "Benny" Binion, University of Nevada, Reno, 1976
  29. A. D. Hopkins, Benny Binion, Las Vegas Review-Journal, February 7, 1999
  30. [1][dead link]
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Further reading

  • Ann Arnold. 1998. Gamblers & Gangsters: Fort Worth's Jacksboro Highway in the 1940s & 1950s Eakin Press
  • Cathy Scott. 2000. Death in the Desert: The Ted Binion Homicide Case 1st Book Library
  • Jim Gatewood. 2002. Benny Binion: The legend of Benny Binion, Dallas gambler and mob boss Mullaney Corp
  • Jay Robert Nash, 1993. World Encyclopedia of Organized Crime Da Capo Press
  • Ed Reid and Ovid Demaris. 1963. The Green Felt Jungle Buccaneer Books
  • Gary Sleeper. 2006. I'll Do My Own Damn Killin': Benny Binion, Herbert Noble, and the Texas Gambling War Barricade Books
  • Doug J. Swanson. 2014. Blood Aces: The Wild Ride of Benny Binion, The Texas Gangster Who Created Las Vegas Poker, Penguin ISBN 9780698163508

External links