L.A. Noir
To Melinda
—and the boys
“This is the city—Los Angeles, California. I work here. I’m a cop.”
—Sgt. Joe Friday,
“A cop-syndicate rules this city with an iron hand.”
—Mickey Cohen, gangster
“The only time to worry is when they tell the truth about you.”
—William H. Parker, chief, Los Angeles Police Department
Prologue
part one The Fallen City
1: The Mickey Mouse Mafia
2: The “White Spot”
3: The Combination
4: The Bad Old Good Old Days
part two The Struggle for Authority
5: “Jewboy”
6: Comrade Bill
7: Bugsy
8: Dynamite
9: Getting Away with Murder (Inc.)
10: L.A. Noir
11: The Sporting Life
part three The Enemy Within
12: The Double Agent
13: Internal Affairs
14: The Evangelist
15: “Whiskey Bill”
16: Dragnet
17: The Trojan Horse
18: The Magna Carta of the Criminal
19: The Enemy Within
part four All the Way or Nothing
20: The Mike Wallace Interview
21: The Electrician
22: Chocolate City
23: Disneyland
24: Showgirls
25: The Muslim Cult
26: The Gas Chamber
27: Watts
28: R.I.P.
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Select Bibliography
Credits
OTHER CITIES have histories. Los Angeles has legends. Advertised to the world as the Eden at the end of the western frontier, the settlement the Spaniards named El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora la Reina de los Angeles turned out to be something very different—not the beatific Our Lady the Queen of the Angels advertised by its name but rather a dark, dangerous blonde.
—
For more than sixty years, writers and directors from Raymond Chandler and Billy Wilder to Roman Polanski and James Ellroy have explored L.A.’s origins, its underbelly, and (yes) its blondes in fiction and films like
For more than forty years, from Prohibition through the Watts riots, politicians, gangsters, businessmen, and policemen engaged in an often-violent contest for control of the city. Their struggle shaped the history of Los Angeles, the future of policing, and the course of American politics. In time, two primary antagonists emerged. The first was William H. Parker, Los Angeles’s greatest and most controversial chief of police. His nemesis was Los Angeles’s most colorful criminal, featherweight boxer-turned-gangster Mickey Cohen.
IN 1920 Los Angeles surpassed San Francisco as California’s largest city. It was a moment of triumph for