legger named Abraham Scharlin and held him for $20,000. A few days later police arrested Berman for kidnapping in a shootout near Central Park. Berman and a co-conspira- tor, Joe Marcus, were lounging on West 66th Street when they saw two detec- tives approach. Berman had a pistol tucked in his belt, but a detective grabbed him before he could draw it. Marcus was not so lucky. He drew his gun, but not fast enough. The detective shot him dead. The police grilled Berman, but he wouldn't talk. One of the detectives told Davie that if he pleaded guilty he would go free. Berman looked at him and said, "Hell, the worst I can get is life." Davie's defiance made headlines and New Yorkers loved it. For weeks people went around saying, "Hell, the worst I can get is life." The police finally found Scharlin hidden in Brooklyn, but he refused to identify Berman as the kidnapper. The authorities charged Davie with attempted felo- nious assault and violation of the Sullivan Law. Berman still kept mum. In November 1927, Davie was sentenced to 12 years in Sing Sing. In prison, he developed ulcers that would plague him all his life. The police never found out who Berman's accomplices were. Davie proved to be a model prisoner and was released after seven and a half years. The warden made a special request to have him freed, cit- ing Berman's exemplary behavior, high IQ and "total rehabilitation." As soon as he got out, the "rehabilitated" Berman solidi- fied his links with organized crime. He moved into New York's Mayflower Hotel and began a life-long affiliation with Bugsy Siegel, Meyer Lansky, Lucky Luciano and Frank Costello. With their encouragement and backing, in 1934 Berman relocated to Minneapolis, where his brother Chickie and his mother lived. He concentrated on gambling and built a city-wide gam- bling syndicate. According to the FBI, Berman's bookmak- ing establishments were pop- ular because "he always locat- ed them near Hebrew cafes which served excellent Hebrew food." The menus of these restau- rants listed delicacies such as tongue, flanken, boiled chick- en, goulash, kreplach, knaid- lach, knishes and potato pan- cakes, most of which were cooked in chicken fat. When the United States entered World War II, Berman wanted to enlist and "kill ten Nazis for every Jew." Rejected by the U.S. Army because he was too old and a convicted felon, Davie joined the Canadian army in 1942. He was wounded in action on the Italian front and honor- ably discharged in 1944. Berman married 20-year- old Gladys Evans, a profes- sional dancer, in 1939. Their daughter Susan was born in 1945. Berman adored Susan, and until his death he did everything in his power to shield her from knowing about the life he led. She writes: "He told his friends that I must never know the secrets of his past because the knowledge might destroy me." Susan's mother, Gladys, "remained fanatical about keeping me away from any- thing that might mention my father — newspapers, detec- tive magazines, books." As a result, while she was growing up Susan never questioned what she later came to see as "unusual" precautions taken for her safety. "We had kidnap drills," she says. Berman told her: "If anyone asks if you're Davie Berman's daughter, say no, run, scream, yell, use whatever you have to get away." Susan's memory of her father was of a man who read to her, hugged her and played with her. She enjoyed a won- derful, albeit sheltered, child- hood. "He lived in the midst of a world that was dangerous, violent and severe," she says. "But he fabricated a child- hood for me that seemed all- American and completely nor- mal, disguising his real career as carefully as he man- aged it." Many years after Davie's death, Susan finally learned who and what he had been. It was painful for her, but she still remembers him as a lov- ing and wonderful father Bugsy Siegel 11 0. **$ A* 464 4.644.4 "who was a gangster, not a gangster who was a father." or more than 30 years, Abner "Longy" Zwillman was one of America's leading gangsters. He had connec- tions everywhere, from his home base of Newark, N.J., to Las Vegas, Los Angeles and Hollywood. And he was on intimate terms with America's top mobsters, Jews and Italians. Despite this, he kept his family totally sepa- rated from and uninvolved in his illegal businesses. Longy had three sisters and three brothers: Barney, Harry and Irving. According to Itzik Goldstein, who knew Longy very well, Longy was wonderful to his family. F The Los Angeles mansion Siegel shared with his longtime love, Vir- ginia Hill, and where he was murdered. "The only thing is he never wanted his brothers to be connected to the mob," says Itzik. Through an associate, Louis Kaufman, Longy con- trolled Local 244 of the Motion Picture Machine Operators Union. Longy used his influence with the union to get jobs for his relatives. "Irving was a motion pic- ture operator (projectionist); Harry was a motion picture operator," says Itzik. "Barney had a shoe store. As the years went by, he went into the liquor business. He had a cou- ple of liquor stores." As long as he lived, Zwillman supported his rela-