Kennedy, Sinatra and the Mafia (2023) Movie Script

1
The first known episode
where Jack Kennedy and Frank Sinatra
kind of come together
in Vegas is at the Sands Hotel.
The Rat Pack was the Mount
Rushmore of men having fun.
They each got something
out of the friendship
and, plus, they both were
womanisers.
Sinatra is the one who can give
Jack Kennedy easy entree
to any woman he wants.
Kennedy himself loves all this.
It's like a fairy tale.
And this is the junction
of politics and show business.
And what he got up to in Vegas
with Frank Sinatra
would not have been OK
if made public at the time.
Frank Sinatra knew a lot
of guys in the Mob.
It was Frank to whom Joe Kennedy,
Jack's father, turned when he wanted
help from organised crime
in getting Jack elected.
The Mafia thought it had a
get-out-of-jail-free pass
because of the work that
they had done for Kennedy
in the election.
And just the opposite happens.
As soon as Robert Kennedy
becomes the Attorney General,
he goes after the Mafia.
Sinatra's very upset.
But, worse than that,
Sam Giancana is upset.
And that's where it gets
rather murky.
Nothing they're doing is escaping
the notice of the FBI.
J Edgar Hoover finds out that
Kennedy is having this affair
with Sam Giancana's mistress.
The President of the United States
was palling around with one guy
who was an obvious associate,
at the very least, with mobsters
and carrying on an affair
with a woman who was an associate
and hanging out with mobsters.
This diabolical triangle
all really kicked off by Sinatra.
And Hoover has got all the threads
and he can go to the President
and kind of say, "Gotcha!"
Which leads into the greatest amount
of conspiracy theory we've ever had.
All the "who killed Kennedy"
all starts then,
because the Mob have got a very
good reason to do it.
And that is why it remains
important to know what happened
between Sinatra and Kennedy
and the Mob.
GUNSHOTS, SIREN
In the early years of the 20th
century,
a lot of the immigrants that came
through Ellis Island, they all came
to the area around New York City.
So, many of them went to Brooklyn,
some went to Queens,
others came to that fringe area just
over the Hudson River,
which ended up being Weehawken
and Hoboken and those cities
around New York City.
Downtown Hoboken was a true melting
pot, predominantly a German town,
second by the Irish
and then the Italians.
And the way it usually works
is whoever is the latest group
to arrive sort of has to dig
themselves up.
And so the Italians
were discriminated against.
Many times, they did not
know English.
Many times, they were a bit insular
and they tended to live
in certain districts in Hoboken.
You had to mind your Ps
and Qs and you wouldn't want
to call the Italians any names
and you wouldn't want to call
the Irish any names
because it would catch up to you.
Frank's family - his mother, Dolly,
his father Marty -
had come over to the United States
as children.
They were both from families
that were struggling to get a foot
on the ladder.
Both of those families were involved
on the periphery of criminality.
Marty was involved on the periphery
of bootlegging
but Dolly also worked in those days
as an abortionist.
She was also a political animal.
She was very much involved
with the Democratic machine
in Hoboken, and part of that was
being associated with other Italians
trying to make a living.
And one of those Italians she rubbed
up against early was a guy called
Angelo "Gyp" DeCarlo.
Gyp was a small time mafiosi
associated with the bigger powers
in New York and New Jersey,
and by bigger powers I mean people
like Frank Costello, Willie Moretti,
Meyer Lansky, the people
who were really in charge
of the nightclub scene in New York
and New Jersey in those days.
Frank was born in the early hours
of December 12th, 1915,
and he was blue when he came out.
He was blue because he was 13 lb,
and somebody called a doctor.
Doctor came - an actual physician -
and in short order picked up
this blue baby
and ran cold water from the faucet
of the cold water,
flat over the blue baby and suddenly
screamed, came to life.
It was Frank Sinatra.
It's hard to begin to even
describe all the differences
between Jack Kennedy
and Frank Sinatra.
But Jack Kennedy was a prince.
Jack Kennedy was born in May
of 1917,
the son of Joe Kennedy,
who came up amidst the rough
and tumble of Boston
in the early 1900s.
The Kennedy family, Irish Catholic.
There was a heritage that
they were quite conscious of,
and it was one that was not looked
upon with great favour
in large segments of American
society,
particularly since
they were Catholics.
Society was ruled by the WASPs -
White Anglo-Saxon Protestant.
And they were the so-called
Brahmins who ruled Boston.
It was just understood
that presidents of banks are WASPs.
Anybody who runs for office
is a WASP.
That's the way it worked.
But that's something that Joe,
the father, confronted.
Joe Kennedy, on the one hand,
was a very aggressive businessman
who knew how to cultivate people,
knew how to obtain favours,
but he was also very manipulative,
and a crook.
The myth that he created
was that he made his money
in the stock market selling short.
The truth was, he engaged
in insider trading.
He created these syndicates where
friends would pump up the price
of a stock, and then they'd all sell
and they'd make a fortune.
And his stock market manipulations
today would put him in jail.
He also was a bootlegger
during Prohibition.
He would order in Scotch
from England.
He would give it to organised crime.
All of this was illegal.
So that was Joe Kennedy's connection
began then with the Mob,
because they were in business
together.
During Prohibition,
that was the heyday of the Mob.
They branched out into drugs.
They branched out into prostitution.
They branched out into gambling.
They've got their tentacles in a lot
of different things at that point.
So that connection was there.
They knew he was malleable.
Joe could influence because
he'd just buy people,
because they just had so much money.
He understood, money first,
politics next.
The plan was he would make
the money,
he would make the fortune,
and his sons would then go
into politics and get power,
which he didn't have.
He had economic power,
but he wanted political power.
He clearly wanted to create
a dynasty.
Frank Sinatra has described
his youth as being rough and tumble.
There were neighbourhood skirmishes.
Kids got into scrapes
with each other.
Kids would make fun of each other.
As an Italian-American, he knew
that he was not in an echelon
of American society that
was well respected.
And also, he was small,
he was skinny.
He was spoilt.
He was a mama's boy.
There came a point in his young life
where Frank Sinatra decided,
I want to be a singer.
The family had a bar.
It was called
the Marty O'Brien Association,
and Frank would go shine shoes.
It was frequented by what we would
now know
as some of the most famous
names in the Mafia.
Well, the wiseguys, big mobster
chieftains as they would become,
hitmen and lots of kind of gofers.
Then Frank would start singing,
and the people, the audience,
really enjoyed it, and he saw
that type of positive response.
It was a Frankie, Little Frankie
fan club by the mobsters.
And because Sinatra had grown up
feeling puny and looked down upon,
he very quickly came to idolise
these guys.
He saw them as men of strength,
men of honour.
And that's where kind of
he was adopted by major -
as in major, major - mobsters.
He got a job singing
at the Rustic Cabin,
and the job was given to him
by the local mobster in his area.
Willie Moretti was a pretty
substantial power in organised crime
in northern New Jersey,
and he was a close
neighbour of Frank's.
And in the end, singing
at the Rustic Cabin
gave Frank Sinatra one of his first
big breaks.
Frank got a job with Harry James,
a brilliant trumpet player.
He hired Sinatra on the spot
with one condition -
he wanted Sinatra to change
his name to Frankie Satin.
S-A-T-I-N.
And Frank Sinatra says,
"The name is Sinatra.
"Frank fucking Sinatra."
That nine months with Harry James
has so many memories
for Frank Sinatra and his family
attached to it.
Frank was a young married
at that point.
His young bride Nancy came
along with them on the road.
It really gave Frank an opportunity
to cut his teeth,
working with a real touring band
that was also performing on the
radio regularly and making records.
Frank always wanted to be bigger
than Hoboken, and he was.
And Sinatra retains, from young
manhood until the very end
of his life, this idolatry
for the Mafia, the mafiosi.
Sinatra is said to have said,
"I would rather be a don
of the Mafia
"than President
of the United States."
Joe Kennedy had this vision
that he's going to establish
something that is unprecedented
in American history,
and that is a dynasty -
our version of the Royal Family.
The eldest, Joseph Kennedy Jr,
was the son who was really anointed
from birth to run for everything,
up to and including the presidency.
And I think he was being groomed
throughout his childhood,
and he was bigger and more
charismatic and a better athlete
than his younger brother,
John F Kennedy.
John F Kennedy - bookish,
wry and detached.
Also funny, but in a quieter way.
He seemed destined for a quieter,
contemplative life of some kind.
But then everything changed
in World War II.
Unfortunately, Joe Jr, he flew
in a plane loaded with explosives
that was supposed to explode
over Europe, and he was killed.
Joe Sr was absolutely devastated.
They say he just used to walk
along the beach silently
and just look out at the ocean,
because all his hopes had been put
in his oldest son
and he had to transfer.
I think he looked at JFK
as kind of a... Not a ne'er do well,
but certainly Joe Jr was,
you know, was the golden boy.
And so all of the family's
hopes and dreams,
particularly for public life,
public service, now fall to Jack.
It wasn't long before Frank
was approached by Tommy Dorsey,
who at that moment
was the biggest and most successful
big band leader in history.
Once Frank Sinatra joined
the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra,
the focus became the singer.
# You know, the one I love
# Belongs to somebody else
# You ain't nowhere
# That's why
# She sings her songs
for somebody else
# Whoa, oh, oh... #
When he sang, all the women
in the audience
at whatever venue
Sinatra was entertaining
would edge toward the bandstand,
toward where Sinatra was singing.
# For somebody else
# Do-do do-do
# And when I hold her... #
All of a sudden, young girls wanted
to go not just to dance,
but to stand in front of this
wondrous singer named Frank Sinatra.
So by the end of 1942,
Frank realises,
"I could do this as a solo act,"
and he decides that he's going to
leave the Dorsey band.
Tommy Dorsey was a terrific
band leader,
but Tommy Dorsey was also
a brilliant businessman.
The contract that Sinatra signed
with Dorsey is extortionate, really.
Unto perpetuity, a percentage of
Sinatra's earnings.
Frank Sinatra knew a lot
of guys in the Mob.
Everybody who sang in clubs
at that point knew the boys,
the wiseguys,
because they controlled the clubs.
Now, he liked hanging around with
the boys because Frank Sinatra
was fascinated by power,
and these guys exuded power.
Willie Moretti had long
been involved with his career,
and when Sinatra went to him
and said, "I've got a major problem
"here with my boss, Tommy Dorsey,"
Moretti went down there,
shoved a gun in his mouth,
and made him sell his contract
for a dollar.
"Let him go, or you're dead."
Which is, it's back to the,
"It's an offer you can't refuse."
It was a business relationship.
Sinatra was a commodity to these men
who ran the nightclubs.
In 1947 Sinatra attends a Mafia
conference in Havana
in tribute to Lucky Luciano,
who was the head of this conference
in Havana.
Lucky Luciano, who had been deported
from the United States,
was the ultimate godfather
of American organised crime,
the man that was considered the
founder of the American Mafia.
And he had been allowed
to leave his home in Sicily
and return as far across
the Atlantic as Havana,
where in that period,
in the 1940s and '50s,
lots and lots of organised
crime figures had casinos
where lots of Americans
went to play,
and where the Mob was holding
a little group gathering,
and Frank was their chosen
entertainment.
Now Frank arrived in Havana
aboard a flight from Miami
with the Fischetti brothers,
with whom he was extremely close.
They were all underlings
of the Chicago Outfit.
When he arrived, he was seen getting
off the plane with a briefcase.
And in that briefcase,
later reports suggested
he was carrying $2 million in
cash for Lucky Luciano.
And also, back in Naples, when Lucky
Luciano's apartment was raided,
they found a gold cigarette case
inscribed to Luciano
from his pal, Frank.
Frank talked around his connection
with the Mafia,
but it is clear that throughout his
life, Frank was close to the Mob.
It's very interesting
to look at the beginnings
of John F Kennedy
in electoral politics,
because in some ways
he's not gifted.
He's awkward.
He's extremely skinny.
He hasn't filled out his frame yet.
He was not a natural politician.
He didn't have that instinct to dive
into a crowd and shake hands,
sort of embracing people
and getting to know them.
He was the kind of guy who would go
to an event, stand in a corner,
and his aides had to kind
of like get him...
"Come on, Jack, you've got
to shake hands." Right?
He's green. He needs practice.
He is not terribly good
at public speaking at first,
but he works hard.
He campaigns with his family.
In fact, it's an entire
family affair.
The family's money gets behind it.
His mother and his sisters
get behind it.
It's a really extraordinary
operation to get him into Congress.
That's when he starts to put
together this Irish mafia
that's going to be so important
for his later career,
because the key people there are
going to stick with him
over the next 17 years.
Bobby Kennedy was a fantastic
political organiser.
He was really running the campaign,
so he brought his friend
Kenny O'Donnell along,
who was a big organiser.
My dad was at Jack's side.
He was his right hand guy.
He was his logistics guy
and his kind of political antenna.
There's also going to be
Dave Powers.
There's going to be Larry O'Brien.
They were all Irish Catholics.
And, you know, they were truly
the brains behind
what became this Kennedy
political machine.
He blows away the competition
in 1946 at a young age.
And it's a sign that it isn't
just luck or his father's money -
that he is gifted in his own
way also.
By 1952, Jack Kennedy was now
confident enough that he runs
for the United States Senate,
which is a huge promotion, right?
Every senator thinks of himself
or herself
as the next president, right?
Not so true of members of the
House of Representatives.
It's a steep hill
he's trying to climb up.
A lot of Massachusetts
is not Boston.
It's not Irish and Catholic.
And amazingly, he does win.
He's now on track.
By 1952, he is clearly on track
for what his father wants.
Frank really was the first
multimedia superstar.
He was on film.
He was on television
in the early '50s.
He was on radio.
He was making records.
He was having these mass
sell-out live appearances
all over the country.
He would open his mouth
to start singing,
and this tidal noise
would spring up,
and all he could do
was stand there moving his lips.
They just wanted to see him.
He was the heart-throb.
He was the Beatles of the 1940s,
really.
They would sit in their seats,
they would pee in their seats.
They would not leave.
They would tear his clothes off.
They would scream,
they would trample,
you know, anyone to get to Frank.
It was hysteria.
And there was no-one more
successful than Frank Sinatra.
And then suddenly it all went away.
Frank Sinatra's career almost
came unstuck permanently
because the world began
to notice that he was associated
with organised crime.
Here he was, an Italian-American,
consorting with these
Italian-American criminals.
So Sinatra must be a criminal
himself.
His record company dropped him.
His movie studio dropped him,
his agents dropped him,
his publicist.
Everybody dropped Sinatra.
And so by the time he gets together
with Ava Gardner
and Nancy divorces him in 1950,
he is...
He's on his ass.
He has no more career.
He has no more money.
It's all gone.
And not only that,
he is in quite ill repute.
And in the early 1950s, when no-one
else was there to help him,
the Mob stepped in to help him.
The Mob let him play all of the
clubs all over again,
and sometimes he was playing
to half empty clubs,
but he really owed them
from that time on.
The Mob had been in Hollywood
from the '30s.
They've got money in the studios.
They've got money in the actors.
They could close the sets.
They could close Hollywood.
They could close the racetrack.
Could blink certain people,
and just, that was it.
So their influence was monumental.
Sinatra gets a role in
From Here to Eternity.
Suddenly, inexplicably,
everybody hates him.
You couldn't even get fleas
to attend a concert.
I mean, he was that down.
And suddenly he gets this major
starring part in the biggest movie
that year in Hollywood.
It was felt that he owed
the Mob for his success.
And he owed them later for getting
him into Las Vegas
for the start of what would be
an almost endless run in Las Vegas,
where he made a fortune and where
the Mob made a fortune.
Early 1950s and mid 1950s, Las Vegas
was a sleepy one-horse town.
It literally, in the downtown
of Las Vegas,
there was this sort of bright
flashing block
where you went to gamble.
But as Sinatra grew in power
and fame,
he began to change Las Vegas.
It got bigger.
It got glitzier.
More money flowed in,
and it became a place that was no
longer a one-horse town,
because they built and they built
and they built
along the Strip in Las Vegas
more and more hotel casinos.
This was accelerated by the fall
of Batista in Cuba.
The Mob is kicked out of Havana.
And so between Sinatra's rise
and Batista's fall,
Las Vegas becomes the world capital
of naughtiness, of fun and sin.
Lucky Luciano sent Bugsy Siegel
out to Las Vegas
to really build up the whole
gambling industry there.
Sinatra was actually offered a
9% share of the Sands,
because it was the great business
model to bring top entertainers
to fill up these casinos.
Frank was hired in those early days
in Vegas to play at the Sands
every single year until
the late 1960s.
There, he built what can only
be described as a sort of empire,
a cast of players who were just
as talented as he was,
some arguably more talented,
if you speak of someone like Sammy
Davis Jr, the young black dancer.
Dean Martin, very funny,
very witty, very charismatic.
Joey Bishop, brilliant comedian.
Peter Lawford, the handsome,
not necessarily terribly talented,
"Brother-in-Lawford",
as they called him,
the brother-in-law of soon-to-be
presidential candidate John Kennedy.
So you had this group
that Frank headed.
They became known first as The Clan
and then as the Rat Pack,
and they were just the summit,
the summit of everything
in the '50s.
They said that the Rat Pack
was the Mount Rushmore
of men having fun.
They made enormous fun for the huge
audiences who came to watch them,
and they had a lot of fun
on the side.
Women everywhere.
A lot of the women were young
actresses and so on,
but a lot of the women
were also prostitutes,
and they didn't make much
secret of that.
The Rat Pack was good for the Mob
because it brought
the huge audiences,
and Las Vegas
was good for the Rat Pack.
It was a happy marriage of minds.
Everybody loves a comeback, and
Sinatra had the biggest one ever.
And so people loved him
just for rising out of the dirt
and brushing himself off
and becoming a star again.
Nobody has ever failed so badly
and come back so huge as Sinatra.
Sinatra first met Kennedy
through Peter Lawford,
who married Kennedy's
younger sister, Pat.
The first known episode
where Jack Kennedy and Frank Sinatra
kind of come together
is at the Sands Hotel.
It was really the thunderbolt
for both of them in different ways.
Obviously not a sexual thing,
but something touching on sexuality
because they were both extremely
attractive men
and both understood at once
each other's magnetism.
Sinatra, of course, was
this extraordinary singer
and presence in Hollywood,
in the music industry, in film.
Kennedy, of course, was a rising
star in politics,
the son of a famous American family
who had been splashed
over all the papers.
And I think they were drawn
to each other because they both
were drawn to that notion
of excellence, of competence,
of star appeal.
Frank Sinatra was just, you know,
I don't think smitten
is too strong a word.
He was smitten by him.
And it wasn't just Frank.
I mean, that whole generation
thought, this is our guy.
Jack sort of sees him as his,
not way in because he didn't need
a way in.
But, like, everybody loves Sinatra,
you know?
This is after the fall.
So Sinatra's back.
And by the time they really connect,
you know,
Sinatra is the biggest thing
on the planet at this point.
Sinatra gets out of it
this politician on the rise,
and with the Kennedy family
background,
they lend a certain
respectability to Frank Sinatra.
So he's getting a seat at the main
table of political power.
And so they each got something
out of the friendship.
And plus they both were womanisers.
JFK was, of course, married
to the glamorous Jackie Kennedy.
But unseen by the public
at that time
was his extraordinary
addiction to bedding women.
And Frank was a master
at having a good time
and helping others
have a good time.
Jack Kennedy instantly understands
Sinatra is the key to the kingdom
and the kingdom of the most
beautiful women in the world.
Sinatra is the one who can give
Jack Kennedy easy entree
to any woman he wants at all.
Sinatra fulfilled very much
the role of pimp for Kennedy
when he was in California,
because Peter Lawford has the
beach-side house
down in Santa Monica.
All the parties go on there.
The LAPD are policing it.
So anybody goes there with a camera
or a notebook or just a passer-by,
they're shuffled away very quickly.
So it's very private and people
are there and you've got parties.
You've got Kennedy there,
you've got Marilyn Monroe there,
you've got Warren Beatty.
It's like a fairy tale.
So I think for Kennedy, this is...
Who's been brought up very strict
kind of parameters of his life
because he's got to follow this path
and worked very hard,
and his kind of escape
is into the glamour.
And of course, Sinatra
is like freedom.
He sees this kind of flyaway lad
who seems to be able to do anything
and get away with anything.
So I think that's the attraction.
This is a really good looking guy
from a very wealthy family
and from the very beginning,
I mean, women were attracted to him.
And again, it's natural.
You have money and looks,
combination.
You're going to attract girls.
And I think a lot of these people
realise this guy is on the rise.
And this is the junction
of politics and showbusiness.
He is the sexiest of politicians
in a time when politicians
didn't do that.
And what he got up to in Vegas
with Frank Sinatra
would not have been OK
if made public at the time.
There were a lot of secrets
about the Kennedys
that the press sort of kept
to itself.
They weren't about to report
on the philandering
of this young senator
from Massachusetts.
But the historical record shows
that there was a great deal
of philandering.
And if the press decided
to report it,
it probably would have ruined
Senator Kennedy's career,
which gets to a certain amount
of recklessness on his part.
As 1960 is beginning,
everybody wants something new.
It's a new decade.
The same guy's been president
for eight years.
Everyone knows he's leaving,
but no-one knows who's coming in.
So the Democrats want someone
new and exciting,
and it's the perfect time
for a young, charismatic
candidate to emerge.
I am today announcing my candidacy
for the Presidency
of the United States.
Kennedy offered a breath of fresh
air, not through what he had to say,
but the image that he portrayed.
He was young, he was handsome,
he was smart, he was clever,
and he was telegenic
in a television age.
We stand today on the edge
of a new frontier.
The frontier of the 1960s.
The frontier of unknown
opportunities and perils.
The frontier of unfilled hopes
and unfilled threats.
I'm asking each of you to be
pioneers towards that new frontier.
This was what I think many Americans
believed was the best of themselves.
And I think in many ways, that's
what Kennedy offered to Americans -
a sense of what they could be.
John Kennedy is the first Catholic
who is running for president
in a serious way since Al Smith
of New York in 1928.
And Al Smith was defeated handily
in 1928,
in part because
of his Catholic faith.
The Ku Klux Klan would burn crosses
outside of his campaign rallies.
Newspapers predicted that the Pope
would for some reason
leave the Vatican
and move to Washington.
People believed this stuff.
So that was the X factor in 1960.
Was the American public ready
for a Catholic president?
Kennedy, in order to try to wrap up
things as quickly as he could,
understands that
the primaries themselves,
the presidential primaries that were
held in a variety of states,
which were few and far between
in those days,
and didn't have nearly the
importance then as they do now,
they were still going to be crucial
for Kennedy's ultimate appeal.
The West Virginia primary
between Kennedy and Hubert Humphrey
was pivotal because West Virginia
was a Protestant state, right?
There were no centres
of Irish Catholicism
in Wheeling, West Virginia.
So the test would be how
would West Virginia react
to a Catholic candidate?
I am not the Catholic
candidate for President.
I am the Democratic Party's
candidate for President,
who happens also to be a Catholic.
I do not speak for my church
on public matters,
and the church does not speak
for me.
So the Kennedys poured money
and resources into West Virginia
because they believed, and it
turned out rightfully so,
if they could show the rest
of the Democratic Party that, look,
a Catholic can win in this highly
Protestant state,
well, that would send a message
to the rest of the Democratic Party.
So the stakes were
unbelievably high.
If I should win this election, I
will faithfully execute the office
of President of the United States
and will, to the best of my ability,
preserve, protect and defend
the Constitution, so help me God.
I think as Kennedy campaigned and
was making these remarkable
speeches about how he was going
to implement change in America,
I think Frank was really inspired
and wanted to help in any way
that he could.
And the best way that he could help
was by lending his name
to the campaign and saying,
"I support Jack."
He was really vital in terms
of the campaign,
and I don't think
people understand this.
He raised a ton of money.
He set up kind of a pseudo
Kennedy campaign headquarters
at the Villa Capri in Hollywood.
He was like a don. He'd sit there
and they'd set up phone lines
and he'd call everyone
he could think of -
all the people in the business, and
he'd get them to either give money
or commit to doing
something for Jack.
And I mean, he worked it constantly
and worked frenzied.
Frank really, really took it
upon himself to gather
all of his Rat Pack cronies
and send them out,
working at different events,
travelling around the country,
playing different affairs,
raising money.
He was very dynamic in that way.
People remarked on it at the time,
but more importantly,
it was Frank to whom Joe Kennedy,
Jack's father, turned when he wanted
help from organised crime
in getting Jack elected.
His connections with the Mafia go
back to when he was a bootlegger
during Prohibition.
He was in partnership with major
organised crime figures,
and so he just parlayed
those connections
when it came to getting support
for Jack.
From the 1930s on, Joe Kennedy
had spent a lot of time at a resort
casino on the shore of Lake Tahoe
called Cal Neva,
and it was a place where Joe Kennedy
loved to go and relax
and mix and mingle
with beautiful young women.
And the Mob was there.
And that was where Joe Kennedy
and the head of the Chicago Outfit,
Sam Giancana, became friendly.
Sam Giancana ruled the Mafia
in that area of the United States.
He's been called the heir
to Al Capone.
And he was a very vicious, powerful,
slightly mad character.
His nickname was Mooney,
kind of mad as the moon,
which he then dubbed
himself as Momo,
but he was known to be a very odd,
dangerous guy.
He was such a psychopath,
the US Army wouldn't allow him
to join the army during the war.
He was regarded as too dangerous
to be in the army.
He was extremely powerful
and he was close to Frank,
and that was important.
Joe Kennedy knew that he needed some
help from organised crime.
He also knew that he could not go
directly to Sam Giancana
for any help with the election.
And so Sinatra was Joe Kennedy's
intermediary.
And so he summoned Frank across
the country to Hyannis Port
and they had a meeting.
And he said to him, "I want you
to bring people on board."
And Frank's mission was to bring
on board, particularly Sam Giancana,
to enable him to swing every
possible vote for Jack
in places where there would be tight
primary elections
and then where there
would be a tight general election.
The Mob controlled the unions.
The unions were big players
in politics
because they could get out
huge blocs of voters.
So if the Mob controlled the union
and the Mob wanted somebody to win,
they would put the word out
to the union
that we want your guys
to vote for our guy.
So Sinatra went to Momo and said,
the big man needs your help,
and we will give you... We'll make
sure that the hounds will be off
your trail as soon as Jack
enters the White House.
And, you know, they were not
inclined to support Kennedy.
This is something people
lose sight of.
They didn't like Jack Kennedy
because of Bobby Kennedy.
Robert Kennedy was an infamous
anti-Mob guy
and was known to be an anti-Mob
crusader.
In the late 1950s,
organised crime was only beginning
to really come under attack
as an entity. There'd been a big
push by Bobby Kennedy as a counsel
to the Senate Rackets Committee
to target the influence
of organised crime
on organised labour
and people that were being targeted
in particular, were people
who were leaders of the various
organised crime families.
You've got people in Detroit,
at least 15,
who have police records,
and it's not so shocking that you
should be involved
in taking the Greenleaf money.
Mr Kennedy, it is shocking to even
involve a man
with that kind of blood taint money.
And I don't go for that,
Mr Kennedy.
I don't go for that kind of action.
It was very dangerous times,
you know.
They were... Bobby was right on the
edge going after these guys.
And one of the people that he went
after was Sam Giancana.
Giancana is a guy that if you give
him the wrong look, you're dead.
I mean, you're talking
about a very scary guy,
but Bobby wasn't scared.
Can you tell us anything about
any of your operations?
Or are you just gonna giggle every
time I ask you a question?
I decline to answer because
I honestly believe
my answer might incriminate me.
I thought only little girls
giggled, Mr Giancana.
That's the same Giancana that then
gets recruited for the campaign.
Kennedy becomes like Sinatra,
someone who is going to be assisted
by the Mafia to get what he wants,
which is to become the President
of the United States.
So the Mob are on his side.
What the Mob wanted to get
out of that
was for the Kennedy administration,
once it won, to go easy on mobsters.
There was a repeated,
a modus operandi, if you will,
of cash being exchanged
to get the vote out,
votes being cast and then a slim
or substantial victory.
He won West Virginia, where
the issue of Kennedy's Catholicism
had become a very big deal.
And then they turned out
the vote in Illinois as well.
And he won by a wild margin
in Chicago,
a small margin state-wide, which
tells you something right there,
that the machine had done its work
in the city of Chicago.
And Frank helped engineer that.
On election night, while the
Kennedys were sitting up late
waiting for the election
returns to come in,
Frank was working the phones
from his home in California,
and one of the people he was calling
was Giancana.
Giancana was sitting in his office
in Chicago telling him,
"We're going to pull it out.
We're going to pull it out."
And himself working the phones.
So you see this real connection
between the campaign
of Jack Kennedy, Frank Sinatra,
and the organised crime figures
who are helping to make
that victory possible.
Sinatra had a dangerous
misapprehension of his relationship
with the men of the Mob.
He thought they loved him.
He thought they felt about him
as deeply as he felt about them.
These were cold, calculating guys.
He was a commodity to them, and only
as long as he brought home the bacon
was he persona grata to the Mafia.
In 1960, thanks to Frank Sinatra
and his friends, you know,
Hollywood and American politics
kind of fused together.
We hadn't seen the likes
of Jack Kennedy
and look who he surrounded
himself with -
Frank Sinatra
and Frank Sinatra's friends.
And who's singing
a campaign song for Jack Kennedy
but Frank Sinatra!
You know, you try to think
of it today.
He had the biggest celebrity
on the planet supporting him,
somebody people adored.
# Come on and vote for Kennedy... #
And that gives his campaign,
on top of his youth,
on top of his good looks,
on top of his beautiful wife,
it gives his campaign such a sense
of the dynamism in the country,
the youth of the country,
the hope of the country,
a sense of the involvement,
the commitment to the future.
That was exciting.
# K-E-double-N-E-D-Y
# Jack's the nation's
favourite guy
# Every one wants to back Jack
# Jack is on the right track... #
To everyone's delight,
Jack Kennedy wins the election.
Now we have the first Catholic
president.
We have a president who has all
sorts of friends in Hollywood.
This is going to be an inaugural
gala like none other.
And sure enough, it was.
John Kennedy says to Frank Sinatra,
I'd like you to produce
the inaugural gala
and Frank Sinatra being kind
of the king of Hollywood,
he knows every A-lister in Hollywood
and they all turn up to perform
at the inauguration.
You would have thought it
was the Oscars.
You know, Hollywood comes out
in their finest tuxedos and dresses.
The red carpet,
it's a Hollywood production.
When you're dealing with the
television age and you're dealing
with this relationship between
the President of the United States
and one of America's most beloved
movie stars and singers,
who has all sorts of friends
in Hollywood,
you look at that inaugural gala
and you say, yeah, this is it.
This is showbiz and politics
come together
and neither will ever be the same.
And arguably, that's true.
I know we're all indebted to a great
friend, Frank Sinatra.
APPLAUSE
You cannot imagine the work
that he has done
to make this show a success.
Tonight there are two shows
on Broadway that are closed down
because the members
of the cast are here,
and I want he and my sister
Pat's husband, Peter Lawford,
to know that we're all
indebted to them,
and we're proud to have them
with us.
APPLAUSE
It was a big night for Frank,
as it should have been,
because he was this guy,
you know, he's come
from really nowhere.
Now you've got the guy who's
going to the White House, you know,
standing up and saying,
we want to thank you, Frank Sinatra.
Without you, this couldn't have...
I mean, you don't get heights
like that.
That was a big deal.
He said to my dad, "We did it.
"We're in the White House."
You know, and it was very much
a "we" thing.
The friendship, of course,
is at its height then
and then the problems
ensue after that.
The fact is that there's somebody
else who has helped Jack Kennedy
get elected, and that is the head
of the Chicago Outfit, Sam Giancana.
Frank Sinatra, and the people around
him had been very instrumental
in helping Jack Kennedy
get elected president.
Sinatra was treated with gratitude
by the Kennedys at the beginning.
The moment he was elected,
Jack started to look at Frank
in terms of his liabilities
instead of his positives.
The people close to him
and his advisers could see
that Frank Sinatra could be a
dangerous figure to be seen next to
a man, to their man
in the White House.
Once you're in the White House,
it's just everything changes.
Your relationship with everyone
changes.
And Frank couldn't see that
because he thought things would
continue the way they...
In the way they did before -
that he could just pick up the phone
and chat with them.
And I think that was very hard
for him.
I think the first step
in the unravelling of the friendship
actually happens when Joe Kennedy
has his stroke.
NEWSREEL: Joseph P Kennedy,
father of the President,
has improved after suffering
a stroke,
Press Secretary Salinger announces,
as his sons and daughter arrive
in Palm Beach to be by his side.
One of the nation's richest men,
Mr Kennedy is one of the few fathers
to see his son become president.
Joe Kennedy liked Frank Sinatra.
They understood each other.
Two immigrants who had worked
their way up, in effect.
So without Joe there,
it starts to crumble a bit.
Bobby Kennedy and Jackie were not
as big Frank Sinatra fans.
Jacqueline Kennedy had very mixed
feelings about Frank Sinatra.
She understood, of course,
that in the ways in which
he could help her husband.
But she also understood
about the womanising,
and she was high culture,
and Frank Sinatra was not
always high culture.
Frank Sinatra is soon edged
out of the picture,
not only because of Jackie Kennedy's
dislike for him,
but because of Bobby Kennedy's
dislike for him.
Bobby Kennedy and the people
around him were concerned
about Sinatra's links to the Mafia,
which he did have,
and which,
in the view of Bobby Kennedy,
should not be allowed to besmirch
the Kennedy presidency.
At the same time as Frank was
starting to really relax
and enjoy his relationship
with the President,
and the fruits of his labours...
..John Kennedy appointed his brother
Robert to be the Attorney General,
and one of Robert Kennedy's
first missions
was to go after organised crime.
The people who got you elected
and helped you get there, you're now
telling them - what they would say,
that you ratted on them.
So the Kennedys rat on the Mafia.
You don't get something for nothing.
And I think even though the Mob
didn't expect to have carte blanche
and do whatever they wanted
unopposed,
I don't think they expected to have
this tremendous microscope
put on them, and have them
systematically dismantled.
That was the goal.
To the point where even Kennedy
aides at the time,
they intervened and said
to Bobby Kennedy,
"Can't you just back off a little?"
I mean, but he was hell bent.
Politics mean nothing to Bobby,
you know. It's right or wrong.
The first day in the Oval Office
and they're talking about
all this stuff,
and the first thing Bobby says
is he's going to set up a, you know,
a "Get Hoffa" and a "Get Giancana",
you know, squad.
First thing he said, day one.
It's like a Saturday.
And my father says to him, you know,
Bobby, like a dog with a bone.
There came a time, a year
or so into the Kennedy presidency
when known mafiosi were leaving
the United States,
fleeing justice
and going back to Sicily.
He was winning, in a way,
against the Mafia
in the United States, in a way that
no Attorney General ever had before.
Sam Giancana hits the roof.
He thought, "What are they doing?!
"We put this man in power.
They owe us.
"Why are they coming after us?"
And that was one of the big
concerns that the Mafia had.
Why have the Kennedys turned on us?
Because we did them favours.
They never thought,
when they're supporting Kennedy
and Frank got them involved,
they never thought Bobby
would be the guy
who's their archenemy
going into the AG office.
And even though Frank Sinatra
had promised Momo Giancana
that Frank could get his good friend
Jack Kennedy to tell his brother
Bobby to just let up a little bit
on the Chicago mob,
it never happened.
The Mafia thought it had a
get-out-of-jail-free pass
because of the work that
they had done for Kennedy.
And just the opposite happens.
They're getting arrested.
They're getting busted.
They're getting shut down all over.
And so they are furious.
They felt quite betrayed
by the whole thing.
And whereas Frank Sinatra
had been very good at repaying debts
and turning up at Mob nightclubs,
it was perceived
the Kennedys were not.
And that particularly Bobby Kennedy,
I mean,
he was behind the
Joseph Valachi testimonies,
which ended up with 317 mobsters
being banged up.
So, I mean, they felt the pain
of what Bobby Kennedy was doing.
So they were angry,
very angry.
And what's important to understand
in the background to all
these relationships is how much
the FBI has been monitoring
not only Frank Sinatra from the time
he first got into the business -
it's almost sick how much
they monitored him -
but they'd been monitoring Jack
Kennedy the same amount of time.
By the time Jack Kennedy
is in office,
J Edgar Hoover, he's been in power -
literally in power - for...
..35 years, and he was an almost
immovable object
in the American psyche.
Part of the reason he kept his job
for so long was because he would
make clear to the presidents that he
knew where the bodies were buried,
that he knew where the dirt was.
And from the 1960s, because he was
continuing to age,
he was also fearful that
any new administration
would try to push him out.
So he was very much clinging
for power
and using the power
he had accumulated
over all of those many years
of knowing where all the bodies
were hidden.
And he was very prepared to use
that same kind of power and leverage
with the Kennedy brothers.
J Edgar Hoover started as a low
level G-Man,
eventually advocated for the
creation of the FBI,
and then when the FBI got created
shortly after that,
he became its director,
and he stayed on as director
for an unprecedented period of time.
He was the FBI director
for Roosevelt, for Truman,
for Eisenhower, for Kennedy,
Johnson and Nixon.
Blackmail was a favoured technique,
and his method was to ask
for a meeting with them
and, you know, just very nicely
reveal to them
that he had this information
about their association
with the underworld or the fact that
they were sleeping with so and so,
and he would just speak
to him very nicely
and tell him that he
had this information
and that he certainly
would keep it confidential.
And when he told people that
they wanted him to keep it
confidential and they protected him.
And Hoover has his own agenda.
He despises Frank Sinatra.
And, you know, everybody says,
well, you know,
it's because of the Giancana
and the mobster connection.
I think he also just didn't like him
because he was Italian
and Frank Sinatra and successful.
I mean, I really think it was that,
you know,
and he's also...
He despises Jack Kennedy.
His disrespect for them goes back to
before they were at the White House
and in the Justice Department.
I mean, he really regarded
them as reckless.
He did not like the direction
that a lot of Kennedy policies
were going in, particularly
with respect to civil rights.
He was an inveterate anti-communist.
He had feared, especially
regarding civil rights,
that the communists had infiltrated
the civil rights movement
and was deathly afraid of that.
And he was anti-Kennedy.
He didn't like them as playboys.
He didn't like the way
that they threw themselves around,
they threw their money around.
And so he was somebody not
to be tangled with.
Hoover and the FBI are watching
Sinatra closely.
They're watching Jack Kennedy
closely.
And they also started paying
attention to Sam Giancana.
One can read wiretap after wiretap
of various mafiosi
expressing their absolute outrage,
their...
Their threats, their vows of revenge
against both Sinatra
for failing them -
failing to act as an intermediary -
and against the brothers
for continuing to persecute them
after they had offered
all of this help.
Principal among those angry threats
were those that came
from Sam Giancana.
Sam Giancana at one point is quoted
as saying,
"I'll never get another penny
to the Kennedys
"because of what they're doing now."
He was furious.
You can hear these tapes where one
of Giancana's associates says,
"Do you want me to take care
of Frank?"
And Sam Giancana says,
"No, I have other plans."
And the other plans are that
Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin
played Giancana's nightclub,
Villa Venice in Illinois, for free.
All these people are being watched.
Nothing they're doing is escaping
the notice of the FBI.
And so all of these factors
are coming together,
and Hoover has got all the threads.
And what happens is once
you're in the White House,
he has the opportunity to pull
them all together.
Which he hadn't been able
to do before.
And he can go to the president
and kind of say, "Gotcha!"
Virtually as soon as Jack Kennedy
entered the White House,
one thing that Hoover knew
was that the presidential candidate
and then the President-elect,
and then the new President,
had a girlfriend.
While Frank Sinatra and the Rat Pack
were filming Ocean's 11
in Las Vegas,
they did a performance
at the Sands Hotel.
Senator Kennedy was at that
performance.
At the time, Frank Sinatra was
preparing to help campaign
for then Senator Kennedy,
and around that same time,
at the Sands Hotel,
Frank Sinatra introduced Jack
Kennedy to his former girlfriend,
Sinatra's former girlfriend,
Judith Campbell.
Jack Kennedy is smitten
by Judy Campbell.
She's clever.
She's not a doormat.
She's assertive.
And Jack Kennedy found all
these things very attractive,
and he found something
in her that he wanted more of.
And so they had a thing
that lasted for a little while,
even as Jack Kennedy entered
the White House in January 1961.
Judith Campbell was a stunningly
beautiful young woman
who was somewhat reminiscent
of the young Elizabeth Taylor.
Well-spoken, middle class.
You know, she was not the image
of a party girl or someone who was,
you know, a person of loose or cheap
morals, as they would have said
and described it in those days.
She was a "classy dame"
and therefore she would have
appealed to Frank.
She would have appealed
to Jack Kennedy,
she would have appealed
to Mooney Giancana.
And this is the nub of the story
about Judith Campbell.
At the same time that she was seeing
the President,
she was having a sexual affair
with Sam Giancana.
Frank introduced her.
So by now you have an intersection
of Frank Sinatra, Sam Giancana,
Judy Campbell, and the President
of the United States.
The fact that the President
of the United States
was engaged in a relationship
with a woman who had a relationship
with this powerful mobster
in Chicago, is...
I'm saying it - in some ways,
I still find it hard to believe
that a man could be that reckless.
They were all at the height
of their power, you know,
and they couldn't imagine
that they had to live by the rules
everybody else did,
because they had never had to.
And it works well until it doesn't.
When Jack Kennedy takes office
and enters the White House,
Sam Giancana,
along with J Edgar Hoover,
is very aware that Judy Campbell's
visiting the President
in the White House, and Sam Giancana
and J Edgar Hoover both understand
that this is a cudgel they can wield
over the most powerful man
in the world.
In the midst of all this, as if the
story couldn't get any crazier,
the FBI stumbles upon a CIA plot...
..to assassinate Castro.
The plot is to be carried out
by the very mobsters
that is hanging out with Sinatra,
hanging out with the president's
girlfriend, Sam Giancana.
He's in the thick of this plot.
He's working with the CIA
to assassinate Castro.
Judith Campbell claims she was
a messenger taking messages
from Kennedy, and possibly
money from Kennedy, to Sam Giancana
to carry on this CIA plot.
You have this crazy situation
where very early in the presidency
of John F Kennedy, the head
of the FBI realises
that the President is sleeping
with a woman
who's an associate of mobsters.
He's being politically supported
by a prominent singer
who's an associate of mobsters.
The mobsters are all complaining
that they didn't get what they paid
for by supporting Kennedy.
And meanwhile, these same mobsters
are working with the CIA
to assassinate Castro.
J Edgar Hoover, who was no friend
of the Kennedy presidency,
had something, and something
very big, on the President.
Now he wants to make sure
it's clear - I'm going nowhere.
Hoover had the goods and was able
to put pressure on the Kennedy
administration to break its ties
to Sinatra.
And the big break comes in 1962.
About a year or so into Kennedy's
presidency,
he's going to make
a trip to California.
The purpose of the trip is for him
to do presidential things
that presidents always do, but also
to try to solidify political support
in California, which was
a very close race
that Nixon won in 1960 -
Nixon carried the state
of California.
And they really wanted
to shore up support in that state,
so they sent Kennedy to go there.
Peter Lawford, Kennedy's
brother-in-law,
has arranged for Frank Sinatra's
Palm Springs kind of compound
to be where Kennedy, the President,
will stay on his visit.
And Sinatra goes full Conrad Hilton
and, you know,
brings in the special soaps
and baths and walkie talkies.
Puts a flag up like the same flag
that's up at Hyannis Port,
where the Kennedy compound is.
You know, it's a bit like vacuuming
under the bed and under the carpet -
the Queen's coming.
For Sinatra, this is the fulfilment
of his greatest hopes for power,
for glamour, for reputation.
The President of the United States
is going to visit him
in Palm Springs.
And so Sinatra pulls out
all the stops.
He has a helicopter pad installed
for the presidential helicopter.
He has special telephone lines
installed so the President
can be in touch with anybody
around the world,
the military, if he needs to.
He has a special guest house
fitted out for the President.
Frank Sinatra does all this stuff to
make it welcoming for the President
right when Hoover lowers the boom
on this by informing Robert Kennedy
of how close his brother is to both
Judith Campbell and Sinatra,
and how close those two
are to the Mob.
Just as he did when he wanted to use
blackmail, he made an appointment
to see the President and suggest
that this was not a good idea.
Hoover was very slick that way.
He knew to be... To hold this in
until he had to use it,
and he never asked to see
the President unless it was serious.
So he got in,
he got his lunch with the President,
and he had his memo and he laid it
out right for him.
Like, "This is what we got.
Gotcha."
Bobby Kennedy realises the scandal
is going to destroy his brother's
presidency, because it's all going
to come out about Judith Campbell,
and it's going to explode.
Bobby Kennedy, who was practical
and really was ruthless,
he knew and he just said,
"That's it. The visit's off."
It wasn't like it was,
there was a big discussion about it.
It was a done deal.
Bobby Kennedy tells his brother,
you can't go.
You cannot stay with Frank Sinatra.
You can't be involved
with this woman any more.
You can't be involved
with Frank Sinatra any more.
You can go on this trip.
But if you're going to stop
in Palm Springs,
you can't stay at Frank Sinatra's.
And so this side visit,
which had been heavily publicised,
is suddenly terminated.
And Jack Kennedy was not foolish.
He was reckless, but not
foolish about politics.
He knew it was done.
And so the person who was going
to pay the price, of course,
was Frank, because he couldn't
stay there.
And, you know, I feel badly
for Frank
because Frank doesn't know
any of this is happening.
Nobody wants to tell Frank.
That's the reality.
And the President says to my dad...
My dad said, "I'll tell him,"
because my father is just -
he and Frank had this
very direct relationship.
And so he said,
"No, have Peter do it,"
because he wants it to go smoothly.
He doesn't want to... The president
didn't want to lose Frank.
This is what people don't get.
He wasn't trying to cut him loose.
He wanted him to understand
the circumstances.
So they tasked Peter Lawford
with it to explain the situation.
But Peter has a history of stalling
on these things with Frank.
And Frank doesn't have a great deal
of faith
in Peter's candour with him.
So Frank doesn't understand
because he doesn't understand
sort of the Kennedy way.
Like, this is "Don't take it
personally, Frank.
"This is not personal.
It's just politics."
And that's what needed to be said
to him.
But nobody actually says that.
Peter sort of dances around it.
Kennedy does, of all things,
Kennedy stays at Bing Crosby's
house in Palm Springs.
Bing Crosby is a Republican,
and this is like -
this is the final straw!
This is the most public of slights,
of insults,
of comedowns for Frank Sinatra.
It's a humiliation.
It is...
It's a humiliation on
as grand a scale
as the pleasure and honour
would have been
of hosting the President
at his compound.
And Sinatra goes into a fury.
Tina Sinatra said, who wrote
a very forthright biography,
interesting memoir about her father.
And she says, if the Kennedys
had tried to come up with a better
way of hurting my father,
it would have been impossible.
He was devastated by this break-up.
Sinatra is so kind of bereft by it,
he takes out a sledgehammer
and starts cracking up the concrete
helicopter pad.
He's so maddened by it all.
He blamed the messenger,
and he cut Peter Lawford out
of any planned roles in the movies.
They were done. And that friendship
never, ever recovered.
My father, at one point said,
reaches out to Sinatra, and says,
"Listen, Frank, if you're going
to be mad at somebody,
"be mad at me.
It was my decision.
"It was a political decision.
"I brought it to Bobby.
Bobby said, that's it, you know?
"And you're going to be mad
at someone, be mad at Bobby and I.
"But don't be mad at Peter. He just
did what we asked him to do."
And Frank's position was
it was the principle of the thing
for Frank.
Because if Peter had just spoke
the truth to him
and just said to him,
this is what it is and this is why
it's happening,
he said I could have dealt with it.
"If he had dealt with me like
a man," is the way Frank put it.
My father always felt that if the
President had just picked
up the phone and said to Frank,
"Look, this is what it is,"
it would have been fine
because Frank got the point,
but it was the way it was handled.
He was insulted at the way
it was handled
because he was a very proud man.
And as I said, they were giants
of their worlds.
And he expected to be treated
with a certain respect.
Frank Sinatra believed
in Jack Kennedy,
and from all appearances,
was very, very fond of Jack Kennedy.
I am not convinced that that feeling
was reciprocated.
I think that Jack Kennedy,
as Shirley MacLaine said,
"When Frank met Jack
"he met his match in terms
of cynical manipulators."
Sinatra was depressive.
He was furious.
Sinatra was never cynical.
Sinatra was not a cynic.
Sinatra couldn't be cold
and calculating
the way Jack Kennedy could be.
It broke Frank's heart,
broke Frank Sinatra's heart
to be discarded by Kennedy,
and in fact,
set him on a rightward drift
where, by the late 1960s,
he had moved from being a staunch,
lifelong Democrat into the orbit
of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan,
where he would stay for the rest
of his life.
Sinatra has lost this grip on power,
this access,
this unparalleled access, to the
greatest power in the world,
all through this...
This diabolical triangle
between Momo Giancana and
Jack Kennedy and Judy Campbell,
all really kicked off by Sinatra.
Sinatra's very upset.
But worse than that,
Sam Giancana is upset.
Which leads into...
..um, probably the greatest amount
of conspiracy theory
we've ever had, you know?
All the, "Who killed Kennedy?"
all starts then,
because the Mob have got very
good reason to do it.
SIRENS WAIL
It appears as though someone
in the limousine
might have been hit by the gunfire.
There had been plans for
a presidential visit to Dallas
for some time before November 1963.
There were people around President
Kennedy who were opposed to it,
thought he shouldn't go,
because there was clear hostility
to him in Texas,
but particularly in Dallas.
But he was he was determined to go.
The Democratic Party in Texas
is at sixes and sevens.
There's a division
between a liberal wing
and a conservative wing.
He needs to patch that up in advance
of the campaign season in 1964.
It's important that he shore up
a region that he knows is trouble
to him now, particularly
because he's advanced civil rights
legislation - that doesn't go
over terribly well in the South -
and particularly in Texas.
And Dallas itself is a trouble spot
of anti-liberal
and certainly anti-Kennedy
sentiment.
He flew into Dallas on the
presidential aircraft that morning.
Was welcomed at the airport.
Smiles, cheers.
Glamorous president, glamorous wife,
come down the steps of the aircraft.
They get into the motorcade,
which was going to be ten
miles long,
to where then he was going to do
a speech at the Trade Mart.
Again, these are the Kennedys.
These are rock stars.
So if they're in an open motorcade
and they're waving to the people,
that's what you want.
They can see the pretty people,
and they wanted to see Jackie
in her pink dress
and JFK with his nice thick
head of hair.
And that's what they want, right?
So they're using, you know,
their looks and their charisma
to their advantage.
You also put yourself in danger
because a lot of powerful forces
hate you.
Kennedy had a lot of enemies.
And that is the background music
to what happens on November 22nd -
that the Mob, angry at Sinatra
for failing them,
angry at Bobby Kennedy
for persecuting them,
now chooses to go after JFK.
And that is why it remains
important to know what happened
between Sinatra and Kennedy
and the Mob.
They turned down Elm Street
through Dealey Plaza.
As they passed underneath the Texas
School Book Depository building,
shots were fired.
One of them hits Kennedy
in the neck and back.
It goes through him.
It goes through to the front seat
where the current Governor
of Texas, John Connally, is sitting.
And then the fatal shot hits Kennedy
in the back of the head.
It... It-it appears as though
something has happened
in the motorcade route.
Something, I repeat, has happened
in the motorcade route.
The limousine is now travelling
at a very high rate of speed.
Secret Service men standing up
in the limousine.
They are armed with submachine guns.
It appears as though someone
in the limousine might have been hit
by the gunfire.
At that moment, the President
was effectively dead.
He was rushed to Parkland Hospital,
but he was given the last rites
and he, as all the world knows,
did not survive.
It's official. As of just a few
moments ago,
the President of the United States
is dead.
The official investigation
into the assassination
of President Kennedy in Dallas was,
of course, the Warren Commission,
which concluded that the President
had been shot
by a former defector to the Soviet
Union, Lee Harvey Oswald.
And that he had fired at the
President from his vantage point
in the sixth floor window of
the Texas School Book Depository,
up and behind the President.
But the Warren Commission,
um, could see no motive for Oswald,
and it is very hard to see
the motive because good sources,
including his wife and other people,
say that Lee Harvey Oswald
was a person who approved the work
of President Kennedy,
who has actually spoke always,
if he spoke about him casually
in social situations,
if anything, liked
President Kennedy and supported him,
so why would he shoot him?
The Warren Commission decide
it's a lone gunman
and it's all done and dusted.
But meanwhile, even Bobby Kennedy
is asking himself,
am I responsible
for my brother's death?
Is something I did,
something I put into motion,
behind why my brother was killed?
And ten years later,
a new government inquiry,
the House Select Committee
on Assassinations,
comes to the conclusion that,
in fact,
there probably was a conspiracy.
There probably was more than one
actor involved,
and the most likely actor that
their chief counsel pegs
is organised crime.
The Mafia had the motive
and they had the means.
Their motive was that they were
furious at the Kennedy clan
for betraying their relationship
with the Mafia.
The Mafia felt they had helped to
put him in power, and Bobby Kennedy,
both into power, and were very angry
at this crusade
that Bobby Kennedy led against them.
So they definitely had a motive.
And of course, curiously,
through all the work
that they've been doing
with the CIA,
the CIA had given
the Chicago Mob poison pills
and all kinds of regalia
for killing someone.
So the idea of assassinating
a politician had already been seeded
by the CIA itself.
You know, the official story
is that Lee Harvey Oswald
was in that book depository,
and he uses this imported rifle,
got from mail order,
and somehow manages
to shoot Kennedy.
Hit him with those two shots
as the car was going away
through the trees.
Very bad angle.
And then the feat...
And actually get the three shots off
in 5.6 seconds.
None of the FBI marksmen
who attempted that shot could do it.
It didn't make any sense
from a logical standpoint.
From the shot that was supposedly
taken from the Book Depository.
And there has been argument ever
since about whether the accused
assassin, shortly afterwards himself
to be killed by Jack Ruby,
who had links to organised crime,
not least to organised
crime in Chicago.
There is still argument
about whether Lee Harvey Oswald
shot or shot at all, or shot
on his own, fired on his own,
or whether there were at least two,
and possibly more, assassins,
firing from a place usually accepted
to be the grassy knoll,
which was off to the right
of the President's car.
And what is fascinating
is that the Church Committee,
was, in 1975, to actually
investigate what were the links
between the CIA and the Mafia.
And strangely, Sam Giancana
was killed days before that.
Giancana was killed in a way
that the Mob uses
to ensure people's silence.
He was shot with a ring of bullets
around his mouth,
which is a way of telling the world,
we don't want you to talk.
The other bloke who was the top
gunman did testify
and then was found dead
a few days later.
So the Mafia were trying to cover
up their links with the CIA.
Whoever killed Kennedy was dead
not long after.
Certainly within the year
of killing Kennedy.
They do clean house.
And I think if you've done that,
you're going to not talk about it.
We're at November 21st, 1963.
The day before the assassination.
Frank Sinatra was making a movie
called Robin and the 7 Hoods.
They are shooting in a graveyard.
Sinatra wanders off to have a smoke
during the break.
He kind of goes up and is leaning
against this tombstone.
And he looks at the tombstone,
and the tombstone name
is John Kennedy.
Everybody laughed.
It was, of course, a totally
different John F Kennedy,
who'd died much earlier.
And then came the news that Kennedy
had been assassinated.
It's announced on the set,
when they're shooting.
They take a break.
They actually finish
the day's shooting,
and then Frank Sinatra goes
to Palm Springs, to his compound,
and he just holes up.
He is so devastated by this,
even though they were not the best
of friends any more by a long shot,
he still, he's mourning
the friendship.
He's mourning the loss to America.
To the world.
And he's in his room solitary
for a very, very long time.
Sinatra was devastated when
President Kennedy was assassinated.
I talked to his constant companion
and valet for many years,
who told me that Sinatra drank
himself stupid for days.
A couple of days,
just more and more whiskey, bourbon,
went down his throat.
And a week later,
Sinatra's son, Frank Jr,
was kidnapped and held for ransom.
And was eventually released
for money,
but Sinatra told his daughter
that he thought the kidnapping
of his son
was a message from the Mafia
to make sure that he shut his mouth
about anything he knew about
the possible Mob involvement
in Jack Kennedy's death.
Bobby Kennedy, in turn,
would be assassinated
when he was running for president
in 1968.
When one looks at the relationship
between Frank Sinatra,
the Kennedy White House,
and organised crime...
..you have to look at what
the quid pro quo was
that the Mob was expecting out
of the Kennedys.
And whether or not they felt
that the Kennedys lived up to it.
The answer is no, they didn't.
Sinatra, all his life -
who, after all, was a genius -
and I'll say it flat out,
he was a genius.
But he could never really totally
glory in his own genius
because he saw himself
as lesser than.
And Jack Kennedy was class
incarnate,
and Sinatra was helplessly and
hopelessly and pitifully
drawn toward what he considered
class his whole life,
because he didn't think
he had any.
And Jack Kennedy was the whole
package.
And so with the rupture in 1962
and then with the death
of Jack Kennedy, this was...
It was a wound that Sinatra felt
I think until the end of his days.