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They were branded the “Jewish Mafia,” or the “Kosher Nostra” — four violent street-tough Jews with lots of criminal smarts who dominated tabloid headlines and the wanted posters that festooned the bulletin boards of US post offices across the land: Among them was Meyer Lansky, dubbed the kingpin of organized crime in America; Arnold Rothstein, known as “The Brain,” considered the pioneer executive of the nation’s crime wave in the Roaring Twenties; Benjamin Siegel, known as “Bugsy,” handsome, hot-headed and ruthless with Hollywood good looks, and then there was Louis “Lepke” Buchalter, who then-FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover called “he most dangerous criminal in the United States. But decades before their crimes made them legends, there was Fredericka Mandelbaum, a portly German immigrant mother of four — the ultimate Jewish mother who a Drew Barrymore of the era — the mid to late 1800s — might have lovingly called “Mamala.

” Except for her looks. At a mannish 6 feet tall, apple-cheeked and of Falstaffian girth, she weighed between 250 and 300 pounds and resembled what one reporter viewed as “the product of a congenial liaison between a dumpling and a mountain.” She dressed in voluminous black, brown or dark blue silk gowns, topped with a sealskin cape, a bonnet of ostrich feathers and covered, eventually, in diamonds estimated at a worth of more than $40,000 — earrings, necklaces, brooches, bracelets and rings — worth some $1.



3 millio.

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