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and as a response to the KKK's anti -bootlegging efforts. The Smaldone crime family was <br />involved with bootlegging during Prohibition in the 1920s and with illegal gambling into the <br />1980s. The November 23, 1953 Denver Post described the Smaldone brothers as "[s]ons of a <br />small time North Denver bootlegger" who "took on the style of Chicago gangsters of the roaring <br />twenties" and "emerged as the underworld big shots." According to Denver and Louisville <br />newspapers, the Bug Dust Pool Hall building at 916 Main was one of the Smaldones' sites in the <br />state where they had lucrative gambling interests and even faced charges due to setting up a <br />rigged table with magnetized dice. <br />The Smaldone brothers consisted of Eugene "Checkers," Clyde "Flip Flop," and Clarence <br />"Chauncey." Chauncey, the last surviving brother, passed away in 2006. An extensive front page <br />article in the Nov. 5, 2006 Denver Post (Denver's Brother Hoods — The Denver Post) from the <br />time of Chauncey's death chronicled the Smaldone family's illegal activities. An interview with <br />Denver Post columnist Dick Kreck, also from shortly after Chauncey Smaldone passed away, <br />aired on Colorado Public Radio ( Denver's Last Mafia Boss Dies I Colorado Public Radio <br />(cpr.org)). In the interview, Kreck stated that "for forty years, [the Smaldones] essentially ran <br />gambling in Denver" and that they served prison sentences in federal prison on various charges. <br />In response to the question of how the Smaldone family came to lose its influence, Kreck stated <br />in the radio program: <br />The fact that the state's now involved in gambling kind of cut into their business. <br />You don't have to go to Louisville to play poker now — you can go to Central City. <br />KCFR also interviewed Kreck about the Smaldone family here: Author Dick Kreck: The <br />Untold Story of an American Crime Family I Colorado Public Radio (cpr.org) . Kreck wrote <br />a book entitled Smaldone: The Untold Story of an American Crime Family (Chicago Review <br />Press, 2010). <br />Louisville had appeal as a place where gamblers could go and not be bothered, and it appears <br />that for a time they were not bothered much. Louisville in the early 1950s was still a small, fairly <br />remote coal mining town and was known to be one of Colorado's several communities to which <br />Italians had immigrated for work and still had a significant presence. In addition, it was within <br />easy driving distance from Denver at a time when more and more people had automobiles. The <br />crackdown on gambling at the Bug Dust shows that there was a collision of cultures taking place <br />between Louisville's history of mostly being left alone and of its town board having the ability <br />to look the other way, and a new, strong effort by authorities (in the form of the Boulder <br />County sheriff) who began to crack down during a time of heightened morality in the 1950s. <br />5 <br />