A history of betting on the East Side. Making it as a professional gambler in the first part of the twentieth century was a long shot, but wagering on the wide open scene of East St. Louis could help even the odds. Folks who were feeling lucky enough might grab a copy of Louis Cella's racing form, or get the inside scoop from turf men like Barney Schreiber. Students of the art of bookmaking had plentiful mentors in local legends like Adam "Mulepole" Fritz. But even then, a hot streak could attract the attention of a representative of the Chicago Outfit such as Frank "Buster" Wortman. The nephew of Vic and Jim Doyle, who built the Ringside Casino into the Midwest's largest casino, author James Doyle connects the dice rolls of bygone St. Louis Kingpins to high stakes players in New York and New Orleans.
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True Crime, Pt. 1: Jack the Ripper - The Story of a Murderer (Audiodrama)

True Crime Northern Virginia in the '50s & '60s

Northern Ohio Cold Cases

Historic Louisville Murders

The Thibodaux Massacre : Racial Violence and the 1887 Sugar Cane Labor Strike

California's Lamson Murder Mystery : The Depression Era Case that Divided Santa Clara County

Crooked Politics in Northwest Indiana

The Boy Nevada Killed: Floyd Loveless and the Juvenile Capital Punishment Debate

True Crime Stories of Burlington, Vermont

Condemned for Love in Old Virginia : The Lynching of Arthur Jordan

Mafia Cop Killers in Akron : The Gang War before Prohibition
