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Jukebox Empire

The Mob and the Dark Side of the American Dream
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Jukebox Empire follows the many twists and turns in one mans pursuit of the American dream, from a self-taught electronics genius to money launderer for the mob. This book exposes how the jukebox industry became the vertically integrated business model for organized crime at a time when there was a jukebox in every restaurant, diner, bar, barracks, arcade, and canteen throughout the country. Anyone can afford a nickel for a song and every week the jukeboxes generate millions of dollars in cash, untaxed income, that needed to be laundered.. Beneath this wholesome veneer lies a seamy underworld of juke joints, operators routes, smoke-filled showrooms, and violence. Rabinovitch reveals the details of the mobs international money-laundering scheme to finance running guns to Cuba. The investigation pieces together an epic puzzle that begins in Chicago with the invention of a jukebox and spans the casinos of Havana and the financial giants of Europe, leading to what the FBI called "the biggest bank robbery in the world."

David Rabinovitch is an EMMY, Peabody, and Gemini Award-winning film maker. With a background in investigative journalism, he has written for the Toronto Globe & Mail, San Francisco Chronicle, TIME Magazine, and U.S. News & World Report. He was raised in the prairie town of Morden, Manitoba, where his uncle Wolfe Rabin’s exploits remain a subject of myth and lore. He divides his time between the Pacific Northwest and Baja California.

Illustrations

Cast of Characters

Preface

Introduction

Chapter One – Origins

Chapter Two – Pay to Play

Chapter Three – Coin Men

Chapter Four – Crimebusters

Chapter Five – Biggest Bank Robbery in the World

Chapter Six – Dollye

Chapter Seven – Air Chase

Chapter Eight – Front Page

Chapter Nine – Biggest Burglary Solved

Chapter Ten – Wheels of Justice

Chapter Eleven – Scheme and Artifice

Chapter Twelve – Shoot the Moon

Conclusion

Acknowledgements

Bibliography

About the Author

Threatened by extortion, bombing, acid attacks, and his brothers kidnapping, William "Wolfe" Rabin turns to the Mob for protection and ends up the mastermind behind the largest money-laundering scheme in history to finance running guns to Cuba.

Award-winning filmmaker Rabinovitch, who has an investigative-journalism background, looked into his own family’s history and learned that his uncle Wolfe Rabin was involved in the jukebox empire, in which it was easy to falsify how many songs were actually sold. This book, full of research, shows that the Mafia understood that and tapped into it as a way to evade taxes as well, and Rabin worked with them in this money-laundering business….He describes how the jukebox was invented and how it became a staple throughout the United States but devotes most of the book’s pages to the story of the famous robbery—the FBI called it the biggest of its kind at the time—in which millions of dollars in bonds were stolen….A well-researched book[.] and Rabin worked with them in this money-laundering business….He describes how the jukebox was invented and how it became a staple throughout the United States but devotes most of the book’s pages to the story of the famous robbery—the FBI called it the biggest of its kind at the time—in which millions of dollars in bonds were stolen….A well-researched book[.]
— Library Journal

This is a brilliant depiction, in evocative prose, of the corrupt juke box industry as controlled by the mob. Anyone interested in how the mob can launder money through a seemingly innocent American past time should read Jukebox Empire.
— Jeffrey Sussman, author of Sin City Gangsters, Boxing and the Mob, and Big Apple Gangsters

It reads like a novel but the characters and events described by David Rabinovitch are real and chilling. Fans of The Untouchables and Godfather II will thank me for recommending Jukebox Empire.
— Peter Edwards, co-author of Bad Blood and The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime

Jukebox Empire is the engrossing story of William Rabin, a key figure in the development of the jukebox industry in America who rubbed shoulders with major Mafioso from the US and Canada. Author David Rabinovitch, the nephew of William Rabin, weaves together a compelling story of family and crime that even touches on key events of US history in the 1950s and 60s. Rabin was a character who, before this book, was missing from the US Mafia historical timeline, but is here rightfully placed in the canon as one of the many key figures in the story of organized crime in the 20th century.
— Scott M. Deitche, author of Garden State Gangland: The Rise of the Mob in New Jersey, Hitmen: The Mafia, Drugs, and the East Harlem Purple Gang and other crime books

It is a compelling book from beginning to end. David Rabinovitch takes us into the dark meanders of the American underworld and tells the story of a man who, thanks to jukeboxes, managed to create an empire. It is an eye-opening, informative, and fascinating book. Jukebox Empire is must-read.
— Antonio Nicaso, author of Business or Blood, Global Mafia, and Made Men

Jukebox Empire is part family journey, part mob story, as Rabinovitch vividly retraces his uncle’s life of crime from Canada to Chicago to Cuba. The personal story of Wolfe Rabin helps illuminate misunderstood aspects of organized crime in the twentieth century. A delightfully entertaining story of jukeboxes, money laundering, and stolen bonds.
— Alex Hortis, author of The Mob and the City: The Hidden History of How the Mafia Captured New York

What a fantastic story. It has everything: action, incredible characters, suspense, humor. Cant wait to see the movie.
— Fred Fuchs, producer, The Godfather III, Tucker: The Man and his Dream, The Virgin Suicides

When David investigated his uncle’s exploits, the result filled gaps in our knowledge of the history of organized crime, popular culture, the music industry, 20th century history and politics, and the Cuban Revolution. A unique combination of family memoir and investigative journalism.
— Gary Jenkins, producer/host, Gangland Wire Crime Stories podcast

A fast-paced, colorful romp through a slice of the twentieth century American underworld, Jukebox Empire has a cinematic quality, not surprising given its filmmaker author. A chilling tale of the path leading a talented son of Jewish immigrant parents in a remote town in Manitoba to the heights and depths of the American mob.
— David Kertzer, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara, The Pope at War, The Pope and Mussolini, and former Provost of Brown University

David Rabinovitch has taken a family secret and turned it into an exciting, fast-moving story about his father’s brother, William “Wolfe” Rabin, who was “raised in an immigrant Jewish family in a remote Canadian prairie town and who became a jukebox tycoon, a crony of gangsters, and the mastermind behind an audacious and complex international money-laundering scheme.” Rabinovitch has molded this personal family history into a riveting chronicle that is part organized crime, part money laundering, and part jukebox history. Jukebox Empire is a tour-de-force account of the Mob’s growing infiltration into legitimate American industry and how it affected one man who was obsessed with power and money at all costs.
— Joe Saltzman, Professor of Journalism, Annenberg School of Communication, University of Southern California

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