Storming Las Vegas: How a Cuban-Born, Soviet-Trained Commando Took Down the Strip to the Tune of Five World-Class Hotels, Three Armored Cars, and Millions of Dollars
Storming Las Vegas: How a Cuban-Born, Soviet-Trained Commando Took Down the Strip to the Tune of Five World-Class Hotels, Three Armored Cars, and Millions of Dollars book cover

Storming Las Vegas: How a Cuban-Born, Soviet-Trained Commando Took Down the Strip to the Tune of Five World-Class Hotels, Three Armored Cars, and Millions of Dollars

Paperback – April 28, 2009

Price
$17.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
384
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345514417
Dimensions
5.27 x 0.85 x 7.94 inches
Weight
11.6 ounces

Description

“An amazing and absorbing story . . . [John] Huddy’s vivid, visceral prose and lean narrative make reading about this episode of extreme criminal violence much more than a guilty pleasure.”— Miami Herald “Harrowing . . . Storming Las Vegas showcases Mr. Huddy’s fine reporting and deft storytelling skill.”— Wall Street Journal “A gripping story of greed, violence, theft and public relations . . . a must for true-crime enthusiasts.” — Publishers Weekly , starred review“Revealing in what it shows about the criminal mind . . . [Huddy has] the perfect blend of skills and experience to tell the story of Vigoa.”— Seattle Times “A total page-turner . . . riveting from beginning to end.” —Laura Ingraham, The O’Reilly Factor “A thought-provoking, demented Horatio Alger story.”— Entertainment Weekly John Huddy, a network producer and print journalist for three decades, has won two Emmys for editorial writing and on-air commentary and other national awards for producing, newswriting, and documentary filmmaking. Huddy is a former Miami Herald columnist and critic whose print and broadcast subjects have included Charles Manson, Federico Fellini, O. J. Simpson, Steve Martin, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, and Burt Reynolds. He lives in Granada Hills, California. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. BOOK ONE xa0 GUNFIGHT ON LAS VEGAS BOULEVARD xa0 Chapter 1 xa0 FIRST BLOOD xa0 It is June 28, 1999, 9:52 a.m. xa0 Pedro Sandoval tosses his empty plastic water bottle into the wheel well and double-checks his paperwork as the moving van threads its way down the Strip to the Desert Inn Hotel and Casino at 3145 Las Vegas Boulevard. It's going to be a long, hard day. The blistering heat rises from the desert, eventually reaching 110 degrees by midday. The crew is scheduled to drop off twenty-four electronic slot machines, each costing $15,000, weighing six hundred pounds, and featuring stars like Pat Sajak whooping and hollering on the sound track. Lots of bells and sirens for the fanny-pack and flip-flop crowd. xa0 At 9:54 the eighteen-wheeler pulls up to the south side of the hotel, next to the Desert Inn Race & Sports Book. xa0 After manhandling five of the machines onto a forklift, Pedro wipes the sweat from his brow and glances toward the Sports entrance as an off-duty showgirl pedals by on her red bicycle. Beyond the casino doors is a strip of landscaping about thirty feet long and twenty feet wide; there, something catches Pedro's eye. On a morning devoid of breeze, it seems odd that the rosemary plants in the mini-oasis appear to be moving. Pedro looks again. The thick shrubbery shakes vigorously and then, to Pedro's amazement, expels two dark shapes. Pedro blinks. "What the fuck?" xa0 As a second, smaller truck-gray and boxlike, with blue striping on its side-turns off Spring Mountain Avenue and approaches the casino entrance, the shapes from the shrubbery come into focus: two men dressed in black from head to toe. They are moving, all too quickly, toward Pedro and the eighteen-wheeler. They are armed. xa0 Pedro Sandoval, a former paratrooper, recognizes the firearms and issues new orders to his three-man slot machine crew, perhaps the most prudent and useful instructions he has given in his twelve years as a foreman. "Fuck the slots!" he yells. "Vamonos, vamonos, muchachos! Vete de aquí! Get out of here!" xa0 The movers break and run in the direction of Las Vegas Boulevard. xa0 The gunmen are now within thirty yards of the moving van, but they have no interest in the slot machines or the laborers fleeing the scene. The men in black have been hiding in the bushes since four in the morning, sleeping, fidgeting, quarreling, dreaming of untold riches and pristine beaches in Costa Rica, beautiful women in Spain, oceanfront villas in Portugal, and leggy, bronze women in Rio. Although the desert night is balmy and the early morning uncomfortably warm, the two men wear black fatigue trousers, black boots, black sweatshirts, black hoods, black baseball batting gloves, and black ski masks. The shorter man clutches a white garbage bag. His taller, heavier partner carries a duffle bag containing hand grenades and spare ammunition magazines that rattle. The larger man has a .45-caliber Glock pistol in his right hand. xa0 The squat gray truck that just pulled off Spring Mountain Avenue and rolled to a stop in front of the Desert Inn is the target of the gunmen. Often called an armored car, the vehicle is a 25,500-pound 1994 International Harvester 300 truck with 10-gauge galvanneal zinc-alloy steel plating, level-three window armor capable of stopping a .44 Magnum, five gun ports, and high-security six-pin key-lock cylinders. There is an emblem on the truck and the word BRINK'S spelled out in large blue letters. Inside are a driver and two guards. Each carries a .38-caliber pistol in a holster. xa0 The Brink's truck, on the road since six in the morning, began the day at the Sahara Hotel and Casino, then picked up cash at hotels along the southern end of the Strip, including Circus Circus, Westward Ho, the Stardust, Treasure Island, the Mirage, Caesars Palace, Harrah's, and the Venetian. The Desert Inn will be the last stop before the armored car heads for the suburbs to make additional pickups at shopping centers. xa0 The gunmen close in. xa0 Pay attention to the shorter man. There is something different about him. He walks like a prizefighter on his way to the ring, witnesses will later recall. He dances, he bobs, he weaves, he's ready for action, he's ready to do damage, but now he is telling us to pay attention. Look at me, he is saying. Look at how nimble I am, how strong and swift and sure. I am the leader. Look at me and do as I say. xa0 The second gunman, taller and heavier, is described by eyewitnesses as "lumbering," most likely because of the obvious body armor he wears and the spare ammunition and duffel bag he carries. xa0 Now the shorter man reaches into the garbage bag and pulls out a compact black weapon with a long banana clip that curls forward. When compared to a hunter's .30-30 or a U.S. Army M16, it is stubby and compact. The gun has no wooden stock, a large front sight, and a prominent flash suppressor. Thanks to the hurried, energetic way the gunman approaches the truck, he almost seems like a casino host greeting an important arrival. xa0 The Brink's truck is now stopped in front of the Desert Inn's south casino entrance facing Las Vegas Boulevard and the Frontier Hotel and Casino. The engine rumbles. Two thirty-six-inch-wide side doors, with continuous stainless-steel hinges, shock-absorbing nylon-web straps, and nonslip internal steps, swing open. xa0 Chuck Fichter is the designated guard on this run. Randy Easton is the driver, and Donald Bowman will handle the money-the messenger, in Brink's terminology. Sometimes Fichter drives the truck, but today Chuck will exit the vehicle first, move into a prearranged position by the casino doors, and cover the messenger, who physically transports the money into the casino on a two-wheel metal dolly known as the money cart. At five foot eight, 180 pounds, Fichter is stocky, square jawed, gray haired, and athletic, and although he is fifty-six, he could pass for a man in his mid-forties. Despite degrees from Indiana University and Northern Arizona University, and dual careers as a high-school social studies teacher and a tennis instructor, Fichter considers himself adrift in life. A self-described hedonist, he came to Las Vegas in 1989. But now Fichter has become a drinker, a gambler, a man attracted to any female with a discernible pulse. Fichter admits he is out of control. He was once a devout Catholic, an altar boy at St. Ann's church back home in Dixon, Illinois. For two years, Fichter worked as a casino supervisor in a sports betting operation, but he grew tired of rousting angry drunks and took the Brink's job, he says, because it requires absolutely no intellect. He has never fired a gun in anger and, unlike many Brink's guards, has no military or law enforcement background. He earns $9.50 an hour. xa0 Fichter's partner is forty-nine-year-old Donald Bowman. Other Brink's employees marvel that Fichter and Bowman are close friends. Fichter is intense and educated, a talker and a cynic, while Bowman is easygoing, a listener, a man who takes life as it comes. At six foot one and 205 pounds, Bowman has rough, calloused hands from a career in construction. He's also an ex-marine, having spent two tours in Vietnam as an ammunition handler. As a rifleman, Bowman qualified as a crack shot. Bowman tells Fichter that he was in Vietnam for two Christmases, '67 and '68, and his claim to fame was "seeing Bob Hope twice. The second time, he brought Ann-Margret." xa0 Today the two men, between stops on the Strip before they reach the Desert Inn, talk about the amount of cash aboard the truck. They've never seen the truck so filled with money bags, and Fichter is concerned. There are so many stops and pickups now, so much cash to haul back and forth to the casinos-doesn't anybody ever win in this town? xa0 Bowman grins, but Fichter is not necessarily joking. The local Brink's manager is bucking for a promotion, and the truck guys get the short end of the stick, Fichter says. He feels the manager is overloading the trucks with too much cash. The two men have picked up so much money today that the cash is stuffed in what the guards call body bags-sacks that when filled come up to the courier's waist. xa0 "People think this is easy work, but it's not," Fichter says as the armored vehicle approaches the Desert Inn. "In and out of the trucks, up and down the ramps, working your way through the crowded casinos, pulling heavy loads on carts-this is hard work. If anything goes wrong, God forbid, it's never Brink's' fault." xa0 Bowman smiles broadly. He's heard this before. xa0 "The Brink's mentality is, if there's a robbery, it must be an inside job," Fichter continues. "The driver didn't do the right thing. The messenger didn't do the right thing. The guard didn't do the right thing." xa0 The truck turns off Las Vegas Boulevard and enters the south Desert Inn parking lot. Instead of picking up money, as they have at the other casinos, Fichter and Bowman will deliver cash to the Desert Inn-and a cart loaded with heavy boxes containing $500 in nickels, dimes, and quarters. xa0 The brakes squeal loudly. Bowman starts to load his dolly. "Well, compared to roofing work or what I did in Vietnam, I'll take this job any day," he tells his friend. xa0 The former marine ammo loader has one more thing to say to Fichter: "Sure there's a risk to this job, and I think about it every day. When we go into a bad neighborhood, we yell out loud, 'Lock and load! Get ready! Don't be lax at this stop!' In L.A. we did that plenty of times. Here in Vegas, when we pull up to the check-cashing store over on Rancho, I always yell, 'Lock and load!' before we jump out. I try to get everybody fired up because there are certain areas that are dangerous. Of course, you can kick back and get lax in other places. Most places aren't so bad . . ." His voice trails off. This is a long speech for Donald Bowman, the quiet Marine. xa0 Fichter reaches for his door handle. Nobody says lock and load. The Brink's men step out into the bright sunshine and gasp at the heat. "Like stepping into an oven, every fucking time," Fichter says. xa0 It is 10:02, and the temperature is already 108 degrees. xa0 The robbery that's about to unfold, unlike the typical Vegas 7-Eleven stickup, has been tirelessly rehearsed for four weeks at an old junkyard south of Las Vegas. It is the end of the financial quarter for casino accountants, and one well-kept Vegas secret is this: To inflate their books and show an abundance of cash, hotels move as much money as possible from the casinos to the local banks in time for the quarter's end. Once the cash is posted, the accountants return the money to the hotels at the beginning of the new accounting period. xa0 The plan calls for the gunmen to wait until the Brink's guards exit the vehicle, enter the Desert Inn, and return to the truck an estimated fifteen minutes later, pulling behind them a dolly piled high with cash. The leader of the crew has been following the truck for months on its daily 6:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. route and knows its schedule, the number of stops, and the approximate arrival time at the Desert Inn. xa0 The men in black estimate there will be $10 million in the truck, and they are nearly right. Which is why the stocky, muscular leader of the crew says over and over during the run-throughs that are choreographed like a Balanchine ballet, "We are not after the money from the Desert Inn but the money already in the truck." Nevertheless, the gunmen plan to attack when the guards return from the casino because that's when both armored car doors will pop open-and expose the driver, as well as the guards, to gunfire. xa0 "You'll be fat and happy for the rest of your lives," the leader told his crew the day before the robbery. "Our children will go to the best schools, we will drive German-made sports cars with giant motors, and we will have houses all over the world." xa0 "Will the guards shoot back?" one of the crew asked. xa0 "Maybe we don't kill nobody," the leader said impatiently. "The guards have little pistols, and we have big guns. I don't want their fucking wallets or wristwatches or cheap little gold-plated wedding rings, I want the money in the truck. It's not their money. There's no reason for any hero bullshit." xa0 If you want God to laugh out loud, tell him you have great plans. xa0 At four in the morning, precisely on schedule in a robbery that is planned to the second, the gangsters arrive at the south end of the Desert Inn and hide in the rosemary bushes next to the Sports Book side door. At eight, two police cars pull up to the side entrance of the hotel, and the Metro officers enter the casino. The two robbers hiding in the shrubbery considered fleeing, but the police, barely thirty feet away, return and drive away. Later, a large moving van containing slot machines and fork lifts pulls up. Again the gunmen consider aborting. But then the leader realizes that the truck blocks the view of the boulevard, which is to the benefit of the robbery crew. The movers will force the armored truck to park closer to where the gangsters are hiding. xa0 But the wait is long, and the gunmen have grown impatient. Even as the Brink's armored car comes to a stop before the casino doors, the leader of the crew, anxious to spring his ambush, calls the criminal equivalent of a quarterback's audible. Reeking of rosemary and weary from more than six hours spent crouched in the shrubbery listening to his partner belch, pass gas, and snore-and perhaps unable to delay those extravagant fantasies of wealth and travel dreamed during those seven long hours in the dark-the leader springs out of the bushes, followed by his confederate. xa0 A third gunman, who serves as the getaway driver, waits in the parking lot in a bronze Isuzu Rodeo. The new plan is to take the Brink's guards as they exit the truck, and while the truck doors are still open, penetrate the interior of the vehicle and either disarm or kill the driver. Access to the truck's interior is essential to the heist in any case, but the new tactic requires two things to happen almost simultaneously: The gunmen must attack the guards before the side door closes, and they must kill or disable the guards at precisely the right instant. Too soon, and the Brink's men will reenter the armored truck, button up, and drive off. Too late, and the doors will close, with guards left outside to fire upon the robbery gang. xa0 It is 10:03. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • On September 20, 1998, Jose Vigoa, a child of Fidel Castro’s revolution, launched what would be the most audacious and ruthless series of high-profile casino and armored car robberies that Las Vegas had ever seen. In a brazen sixteen-month reign of terror, he and his crew would hit the crème de la crème of Vegas hotels: the MGM, the Desert Inn, the New York—New York, the Mandalay Bay, and the Bellagio. The robberies were well planned and executed, and the police–“the stupids,” as Vigoa contemptuously referred to them–were all but helpless to stop them. But Lt. John Alamshaw, the twenty-three-year veteran in charge of robbery detectives, was not giving up so easily. For him, Vigoa’s rampage was a personal affront. And he would do whatever it took, even risk his badge, to bring Vigoa down.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Overhyped and Ridiculously Long Book about a Vegas Crime Spree

Credit must be given to the publisher of this book because the marketing of this book is superb. Cuban commando! Vegas robberies! Crime of a Lifetime! This kind of marketing would cause anyone interested in Vegas to be intrigued about this story - and candidly, it worked. I picked up the book on a Sunday morning in McCarran Airport in Vegas and was very excited to read it. Unfortunately, the actual story does not come remotely close to the promise of the cover.

For starters, the book is way too long (by at least 150 pages). I compliment the author for his passion but this story simply did not need the in-detail coverage of the life history of almost every person involved in the story (e.g. pages on the bio of a Brinks Security guard in one of those robbberies). This should have been a 200 page book at MOST (not 350 pgs).

Second, the actual robberies are not that exciting. The main villain essentially walks into casinos, pulls out guns and robs the cages...or robs the security guards transporting the money through the casinos. The raids are daring but they are not too complicated. The author also goes on way too long about each robbery and the writing is fairly chopppy, which makes it tough to always follow the story.

Finally, the main villain has interesting history but in the end, is simply a lunatic and a thug. He isn't some sort of brilliant criminal, which the author tries to suggest. In all, sadly, this is a typical Vegas book - lot of hype, little substance, and a post-reading feeling of "man, I wish that cover hadn't sucked me in."
14 people found this helpful
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Huddy shows a great knowledge of Las Vegas' boom history and highlights several ...

John Huddy brings real Las Vegas to life! This is a story about a not so average street criminal who represented a generation of Cold War Cubans and Marielitos. Jose Vigoa will go down in history as one of Vegas' scariest and most tactical armored car and casIno robbers. Huddy shows a great knowledge of Las Vegas' boom history and highlights several key players in local law enforcement.
1 people found this helpful
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YOU WONT PUT IT DOWN

The best true crime work since In Cold Blood. Superb reporting and skillful writing from a first-rate professional. Highly recommended. Where's the movie?
1 people found this helpful
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Storming Las Vegas

Had a hard time staying with this book, seemed to be a lot of self promotion bravado. It didn't seem very believable to me.
1 people found this helpful
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Good effort

Storming Las Vegas is at its best in the minute to minute details of the robberies, gunfights and car chases. Huddy has both an excellent grasp of the facts and the ability to build a tense, exciting narrative out of them. He even includes sketches from Vigoa to help set the scene as to who stood where. Full marks for those. On the other hand, I found some parts of the book sensationalistic and overwrought and the episodic nature of Vigoa's pre-1998 history often feels half-done. A good first effort.
1 people found this helpful
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Should be a movie.

Before 9/11 there was a Spetznaz operator of Cuban decent ripping off casinos on the strip.

Second time reading this book. Forgot every single thing except the death of Gary prestidge. God bless him.
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Five Stars

love it
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Amazing story very well told

This should make a great movie!!! Its a look at the dark side of a brillant criminal. Get this book.
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How to successfully rob a Casino

This book is an action packed thriller, from start to finish. It provides you with an inside look at the notorious criminal, that successfully robbed a good number of major Casinos. Yes, more than one!! Vigoa's story is THAT amazing. This is an account of true, real life events that actually happened. No bs, just straight forward in your face, smash and grab robberies. That leave the Casino's completely embarrassed and do not want anyone else to know. It also gives the reader insight on how one operative can teach others his traits, by using simple everyday methods that not everyone is familiar with.

This is another piece of Las Vegas history that not everyone has heard of or knows about. If you like Tom Clancy Commando type novels, then you may want to add this one to your collection. Especially if you are interested in Las Vegas capers.
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Welcome to a little big thrilling [scary] real world fiction...

Unbelievable but true

SLV is hard to put down, despite many technical details the author manages to keep the pace up and drive the story, at the same time giving an insight into the thoughts and motivations of each character, protagonist, antagonist and victims! Huddy avoids falling into the trap of glorifying the bad guy, Jose Vigoa (a Cuban-born Soviet trained special forces soldier), but shows how his values were bent out of shape by being a victim of the Cold War. After having survived multiple and brutal battlefields (there are some graphic details of violence in the book, not for the faint of heart), he still isn't a killer, but his values and morals are changed, or rather corrupted, by his fight for survival. He doesn't want to kill, but won't hesitate to do so if he deems it necessary - he think of them as "casualties", regrettable but unavoidable.

Being faced with the obscene riches of Las Vegas that seem to be there for the taking, being unemployable himself due to his previous criminal record Vigoa plans his robberies with the military precision and ruthlessness that enabled him to survive Afghanistan - and fails. In his own words "Good help is hard to get!"

Scary to think what would have happened if he would have had good help, Las Vegas, the Strip, it would be changed forever...