‘No telling what we’ll find’: bodies in Lake Mead spark mob speculation
Show caption A man exits the marina walking on an access ramp on Lake Mead, near Boulder, Nevada. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA Nevada ‘No telling what we’ll find’: bodies in Lake Mead spark mob speculation The dropping lake level exposed a second set of human remains within a week, flooding Las Vegas with lore about organized crime Associated Press Tue 10 May 2022 12.59 BST Share on Facebook
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Las Vegas is being flooded with lore about organized crime after a second set of human remains emerged within a week from the depths of a drought-stricken Colorado River reservoir, just a 30-minute drive from the notoriously mob-founded Strip.
“There’s no telling what we’ll find in Lake Mead,” said the former Las Vegas mayor Oscar Goodman on Monday. “It’s not a bad place to dump a body.”
Goodman, as a lawyer, represented mob figures including the ill-fated Anthony “Tony the Ant” Spilotro before serving three terms as a martini-toting mayor making public appearances with a showgirl on each arm.
He declined to name names about who might turn up in the vast reservoir formed by the Hoover Dam between Nevada and Arizona.
“I’m relatively sure it was not Jimmy Hoffa,” he laughed. But he added that a lot of his former clients seemed interested in “climate control” – mob speak for keeping the lake level up and bodies down in their watery graves.
Instead, the world now has climate change, and the surface of Lake Mead has dropped more than 170ft (52 meters) since 1983. The lake that slakes the thirst of 40 million people in cities, farms and tribes across seven south-western states is down to about 30% of capacity.
Half on the ground, an access ramp connects the Marina on Lake Mead, near Boulder, Nevada. Photograph: Étienne Laurent/EPA
“If the lake goes down much farther, it’s very possible we’re going to have some very interesting things surface,” observed Michael Green, a University of Nevada, Las Vegas history professor whose father dealt blackjack for decades at casinos including the Stardust and the Showboat.
“I wouldn’t bet the mortgage that we’re going to solve who killed Bugsy Siegel,” Green said, referring to the infamous gangster who opened the Flamingo in 1944 on what would become the Strip. Siegel was shot dead in 1947 in Beverly Hills. His assassin has never been identified.
“But I would be willing to bet there are going to be a few more bodies,” Green said.
First, the dropping lake level exposed Las Vegas’s uppermost drinking water intake on 25 April, forcing the regional water authority to switch to a deep-lake intake it completed in 2020 to continue to supply casinos, suburbs and 2.4 million residents and 40 million tourists a year.
The following weekend, boaters spotted the decomposed body of a man in a rusted barrel stuck in the mud of newly exposed shoreline. The corpse has not been identified, but Las Vegas police say he had been shot, probably between the mid-1970s and the early 1980s, according to the shoes found with him. The death is being investigated as a homicide.
A few days later, a second barrel was found by a KLAS-TV news crew, not far from the first. It was empty.
On Saturday, two sisters from suburban Henderson who were paddle boarding on the lake near a former marina resort noticed bones on a newly surfaced sand bar.
Photos provided Lindsey Melvin show the human remains she and her sister discovered on a sandbar. The National Park Service confirmed in a statement that the bones are human. Photograph: Lindsey Melvin/AP
Lindsey Melvin, who took photos of their find, said they thought at first it was the skeleton of a bighorn sheep native to the region. A closer look revealed a human jaw with teeth. They called park rangers, and the National Park Service confirmed in a statement that the bones were human.
There was no immediate evidence of foul play, Las Vegas police said on Monday, and they are not investigating. A homicide investigation would be opened if the Clark county coroner determines the death was suspicious, the department said in a statement.
More bodies will be discovered, predicted Geoff Schumacher, the vice-president of the Mob Museum, a renovated historic downtown Las Vegas post office and federal building that opened in 2012 as the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement.
“I think a lot of these individuals will likely have been drowning victims,” Schumacher said, referring to boaters and swimmers who have never been found. “But a barrel has a signature of a mob hit. Stuffing a body in a barrel. Sometimes they would dump it in the water.”
He and Green both cited the death of John “Handsome Johnny” Roselli, a mid-1950s Las Vegas mobster who disappeared in 1976 a few days before his body was found in a 55-gallon (208-liter) steel drum floating off the coast of Miami.
A rusted metal barrel, near the location of where a different barrel was found containing a human body, sits exposed on shore during low water levels due to the western drought at the Lake Mead Marina. Photograph: Patrick T Fallon/AFP/Getty Images
David Kohlmeier, a former police officer who now co-hosts a Las Vegas podcast and fledgling TV show called The Problem Solver Show, said on Monday that after offering a $5,000 reward last week for qualified divers to find barrels in the lake, he heard from people in San Diego and Florida willing to try.
But National Park Service officials said that is not allowed, and that there are hundreds of barrels in the depths – some dating to the construction of Hoover Dam in the 1930s.
Kohlmeier said he also heard from families of missing people and about cases like a man suspected of killing his mother and brother in 1987, a hotel employee who disappeared in 1992, and a father from Utah who vanished in the 1980s.
“You’ll probably find remains all throughout Lake Mead,” Kohlmeier said, including Native Americans who were the area’s earliest inhabitants.
Green said the discoveries have people talking not only about mob hits, but about bringing relief and closure to grieving families.
“People will talk about this for the right reasons and the wrong reasons,” the professor said. “They’re going to think we’re going to solve every mob murder … But it’s also worth remembering that the mob did not like murders to take place in the Las Vegas area, because they did not like bad publicity going out under the Las Vegas dateline.”
Boaters look at the growing ring around Lake Mead. Photograph: Caitlin Ochs/Reuters
The right reason, Green said, is the visible evidence that the west has a serious water problem. “The ‘bathtub ring’ around the lake is big and getting bigger,” he said.
Whatever story emerges about the body in the barrel, Goodman predicted it will add to the lore of a city that, with lake water, sprouted from a creosote bush-covered desert to become a marquee gambling mecca.
“When I was the mayor, every time I went to a groundbreaking, I’d begin to shake for fear that somebody I may have run into over the years will be uncovered,” he said.
“We have a very interesting background,“ Goodman added. “It certainly adds to the mystique of Las Vegas.”