■ lirHe Was Good To ■ ■ • His Mother They killed, they robbed, they kidnapped. But they took care of family, too. Jake Guzik 111 AP/Wide World 52 he people in my walk of life that I've been associated with throughout... always had a very, very strong fam- i ly tie," said Mickey Cohen. T "We had a code of ethics like the ones among bankers, other people in other walks of life, that one never involved his wife or family in his work." As ruthless and violent as they may have been, Jewish gangsters adhered to this code throughout their lives. ROBERT ROCKAWAY Dave Berman was a good SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS example. He was born in Russia in 1904, and came to the United States with his parents one year later. He grew up in Ashley, N.D., and Sioux City, Iowa. Very early Dave displayed the aggressive- ness and tough- ness that charac- terized him all his life. Those who knew him remember that "he was always looking for an angle" to make extra money. Like so many other children of immigrants, Davie sold news- papers. He bought the papers for a penny a piece and sold them for two cents, three for a nickel. He turned all the money he earned over to his mother. His fearlessness led him to become the protector of the Jewish newsboys. Once when he and the other newsboys were in a drugstore drinking sodas, two big, strapping farm- boys walked in. One of them glared at the Jewish boys, and in a loud voice announced that "for a penny, I'd kill a Jew today." Davie went to the cash register and got change for a nickel. He then walked over to the much bigger boy, dropped the money on the counter in front of him and said, "I'm a Jew, take me on." In a flash, both boys were on the floor, punching, bit- ing and kicking each other. The bigger boy's friend jumped in, followed by the newsboys. They battered each other with their fists and chairs. Blood was everywhere. When it looked like the bigger boys might kill the smaller ones, Davie pulled a knife and the farm- boys fled. Davie's friends regarded him with awe. As he put the knife away, Berman remarked, "You've got to use what you have to get by." This became his lifelong motto. He soon discovered that he would never earn the kind of money he wanted by selling papers or working in a shop or store. So he looked for another career path. He chose gambling. Berman began hanging around the Chicago House Hotel and ran errands for local and visiting gamblers. They liked Davie and taught him the tricks of their trade. Berman was a good pupil and rapidly mastered the art of rigging and cheating. He learned how to mark cards, to conceal tiny mir- rors in the palm of his hand and to use loaded dice in crap games. At 15, Davie could beat anyone in Sioux City at pool, poker and shooting dice. Seeing a bright future for himself in his chosen profession, Berman dropped out of school. By 16, Davie worked full time for Sioux City's gam- blers. Because he was tough and good with his fists, they used him as a debt collector. Berman saw his opportunity and took it. He put together a gang of local hoodlums and hired them out to gam- blers. After the boys admin- istered their first few beat- ings, the mere threat to send Davie and his friends to see someone was enough to get the debts paid. Before he reached 17, Berman had his own apart- ment and wore fashionable clothes. He was tall, at 5 foot 10 inches, lean and with high cheek bones. His friends referred to him as "Dave the Dude." Davie never forgot his par- ents. He kept them supplied with the finest cuts of kosher meat and a steady supply of fresh fruit and vegetables. He bought his mother beautiful clothes and regularly gave his father money. When Prohibition came, Berman was ready. He became a bootlegger. Still a teen-ager, Davie rode shotgun in the back of cars and trucks, transporting illegal booze to and from Iowa. After a year of working for others, he became self- employed. By 1921, he oper- ated 20 distillery plants. His family still had no idea what exactly he did for a liv- ing. All they knew was that he was in some kind of "busi- ness." Davie's parents saw less and less of their son, but he still supported them gen- erously. Berman also distrib- uted money to his relatives. When his sister Lillian mar- ried, Davie paid for a huge and lavish wedding. In 1927, Berman ventured to New York to work in a new racket. New York mobsters retained him to kidnap wealthy men engaged in ille- gal activities and hold them for ransom. Since the men were criminals, they would not readily complain to the police. It seemed like a per- fect setup. In May 1927, Davie and his associates kidnapped a boot-