SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

October 15, 2021

DIGS is the premiere luxury real estate lifestyle magazine serving the most affluent neighborhoods in the South Bay and Westside of Los Angeles, California.

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26 DIGS.NET | 10.15.2021 Big time gambling, complete with mobsters and shooting incidents, found its way to Redondo Beach during the Depression. Chip games, bingo parlors, and a casino were run in full view of the law between 1936 and 1939. For a fare of 25 cents, a water-taxi would transport a visitor to the gambling ship Rex which operated three miles off shore. The Rex was operated by a colorful character named Tony Conero. Tony was a rum runner during prohibition, and began his gambling career by building the Meadows , one of the first hotel casino operations in Las Vegas in the early 1930's near the intersection of Fremont Street and Charleston Boulevard. The hotel only had 30 rooms, and Tony only owned the casino for a couple of years. Many people believe that the Flamingo Hotel built by Bugsy Siegel was the first Las Vegas casino, but it was not built until 1945. After selling the Meadows casino in 1932, Tony outfitted a ship called the Rex for about $200,000 for off shore gambling and anchored it just past the 3 mile limit off of Redondo Beach. Games available included roulette, blackjack, poker and craps. It had 300 slot machines on board, and a bingo parlor that seated 500 players. While operating between May and December 1938, Cornero claimed that the Rex brought in $500,000 a month, and profits of more than $200,000 a month. Although gambling was not a Federal crime, local and state authorities were outraged. Boatloads of officials tried to board the Rex, but Cornero's crew bluffed them away, sometimes by aiming fire hoses. Cornero's brother, Frank, was even charged with kidnapping an investigator from the district attorney's office, though the charge was later dismissed by a judge who ruled there was insufficient evidence the investigator had been forced to board the Rex. Eventually Los Angeles County deputies were able to board the Rex. The sheriff brought photographers to capture the deputies axing roulette wheels and hurling craps tables overboard. Extensive litigation with the State of California followed, with Earl Warren, California Supreme Court Chief Justice, vowing to shut the gambling ships down. Finally, the federal government decided that while the gambling was not illegal, gambling ships would hamper preparations for a possible conflict in the Pacific and the Coast Guard seized the Rex in November 1939. Eventually, Tony would raise money from investors and constructed the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas in 1955, but died at the gambling tables of the Desert Inn by a heart attack before the completion of construction of the Stardust. The above is an excerpt from my book "Historic Tales of Palos Verdes and the South Bay". For more info see http://www.southbayhistory.com. S O U T H B A Y History Tidbits DRE#: 01368971 Maureen Megowan 310.541.6416 mdmegowan@gmail.com THE REX GAMBLING SHIP OCTOBER 15, 2021 | ISSUE 264 TO OUR READERS South Bay DIGS welcomes your feedback and encourages reader response to our editorial features. Please send your letters to the Publisher at 722 1st Street, Unit D, Hermosa Beach, California, 90254 or via email to WDOW@southbaydigs.com. Please include your name and contact information. Letters may be published and we reserve the right to edit. ADVERTISING For inquiries, please contact Publisher Warren Dow at 310.373.0142. EDITORIAL For editorial inquiries, please email Editorial@SouthBayDIGS.com On The Cover PRESENTED BY LAUREN FORBES OF LAUREN FORBES GROUP | COMPASS LIST PRICE $16,499,000 FEATURED ON PAGE 70 722 1st Street, Unit D, Hermosa Beach, California, 90254 Office: 310.373.0142 South Bay Digs Magazine is published every other Friday by m3 Media, LLC. Reproduction in any form or by any means is strictly prohibited without the prior written consent from m3 Media LLC. The Publisher and advertisers are not responsible or liable for misinformation, misprints, or typographical errors. All advertised properties are subject to prior sale or withdrawal without notice. Real estate advertised in this publication is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act. M3 Media will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. Any and all submissions to this publication become the property of m3 Media, LLC and may be used in any media. CREATIVE SERVICES & AD DESIGN/ORIGINAL ARTWORK PROVIDED EXCLUSIVELY BY SOUTH BAY DIGS. © 2021 Micro Market Media, LLC. All rights reserved. Publisher Marketing Director Business Development Director Digital Media Director Video Editor Senior Graphic Designer Graphic Designer Contributing Writers Senior Staff Photographer Warren J. Dow Kyle Coats Bud Moore Kieron McKay Matt Polizzi Rufus Agbede Jim Alba Jenn Thornton Constance Dunn Karine Monié Joclene Davey Abigail Stone Paul Jonason CO N N E C T W I T H U S Listen & subscribe on iTunes, digs.net or your favorite podcast provider. The Titans of Real Estate INFLUENCERS PODCAST .net

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