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Lords of Dopetown!

Any Mafia/OC related news articles can be posted in here for others to read.

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Lords of Dopetown!

Postby mafioso on Mon Oct 29, 2007 10:15 pm

Lords of Dopetown


Frank Lucas and Nicky Barnes once ruled the drug trade in Harlem. They came out of retirement to talk business.

By Mark Jacobson Published Oct 25, 2007




Image

Nicky Barnes, left, and Frank Lucas


During the Harlem heroin plague of the seventies, few dealers were bigger than Frank Lucas and Leroy “Nicky” Barnes. Both made millions selling dope, lived the wide-brimmed-hat high life, enabled the addiction of whole neighborhoods, and, eventually, got caught. Both were locked up and later cooperated with authorities—some might call it snitching. Now, with Lucas confined to a wheelchair and Barnes in some Witness Protection Program locale, each is the subject of a current film. Barnes reports on his life and times in the flava-full documentary Mr. Untouchable. Lucas hit the ultimate Hollywood jackpot, getting Denzel Washington, no less, to play him in American Gangster (reviewed this week in “The Culture Pages”).


And so, three decades after their heyday, these former street titans are still generating commerce. This makes sense, as both insist they were businessmen, first and foremost. The trick for an ambitious black man in the seventies dope game was to minimize the sway of the Italian distributors who had controlled the Harlem scene for decades. Using sheer volume as an edge, Barnes cut increasingly favorable deals with his Mafia partners. He had the biggest clientele—hundreds of thousands of repeat (and repeat) buyers. It was a captive market, and he was their low-cost retailer. Lucas, more of a boutique operator, managed to bypass the Italians altogether by establishing the grisly but exceedingly lucrative “cadaver connection”—a direct line from Asia’s “Golden Triangle” poppy growers straight to 116th Street, smuggling heroin inside the coffins of American soldiers killed in the Vietnam War.



When the possibility emerged that these two old-school street rivals might be willing to engage in what could only be called a historic conversation—they haven’t spoken in 30 years—it was easy to envision yelling, phone slamming, and maybe even a death threat or two. Lucas, as I knew well (from writing in this magazine the original piece upon which American Gangster is based), could go off at any moment. And Barnes, who likes to quote Moby-Dick and King Lear, mocks Lucas’s “country boy” lack of education and perceived lack of finesse in Mr. Untouchable. When it came down to it, however, the two old drug-kingpins-in-winter revealed a familiarity that bordered on a kind of love. Or at least respect for a fellow tycoon.



NICKY BARNES: Hey, hey, what’s up, playa?



FRANK LUCAS: Hey, Nick.



NB: I heard you’re in a wheelchair. What’s going on?



FL: Broke a leg, Nick. Two places.



NB: Damn.



FL: So what’s with you, man?



NB: Chilling, dude.



MARK JACOBSON: You two guys talking is something of an occasion. Ever think you’d be in the history books?



NB: I don’t know about history—



FL: Hey, Nick! I told everybody and their momma you’ll be hooking up with me in Harlem in the next two years.



NB: You won’t see me in Harlem … I gave up 109 federal felony offenses ’cause I had powder in Brooklyn and the Bronx. Too many people would be gunning for me in New York.



FL: Come on, Nick, you don’t give a damn about them little kamikazes out in the street. I been knowing you for fortysomething years.



MJ: Do you remember when you guys first met?



FL: When was it, Nick? The night you come outta jail. Was that 1970, ’69, ’68?



NB: Yeah, ’70. We met through Jimmy Terrell. Remember Jimmy Terrell? Remember Goldfinger?



FL: ’Course I remember the Goldfinger.



NB: We were in Smalls, drinking. You remember this dude Prat that had that habitual stool right next to—



FL: Yeah, Prat! He didn’t live long after that, did he?



NB: Somebody knocked him over. He owed somebody some money or something.



FL: Right. He was going at somebody’s woman…



MJ: You guys have been described as being competitors. Is that true?



FL: Well, Nick wasn’t gonna catch me—I was paying $4,000 a key. Nick, you was probably paying $65,000 or $70,000, weren’t you?



NB: During that time I was paying $35,000.



FL: And I was paying $4,000. So there was no fight then.¹



MJ: Which one of you guys had the best dope?



FL: Mark, here you go! Stirring shit up. Man, I had the best dope in the world. I had 98 to 100 percent pure.



NB: Frank had a nice package, no doubt. I had to get a pen and a pad and mediate my stuff. But when you took the mix out, my thing was close to his. Close enough for somebody not to wait on one when they could get the other. Frank, you were mostly on 116th Street, right?



Image

Nicky Barnes with then-wife Thelma at a party in the seventies.
(Photo: Beverly James)


MJ: Suppose each one of you got a pound. Frank Lucas’s business model against Nicky Barnes’s business model—head-to-head, who’s going to make the most money?



FL: That’s easy. The one who got the best dope, that’s who.



NB: Frank’s right. It is always about the product. Once I had a fight with a guy named Steve Austin. I had better dope. Steve knew it. He came up and knocked on the window of my car. “Yo, dude,” he said, “we don’t want you over here.” I said, “I’m gonna put my foot in your motherfuckin’ ass.” In those days, you didn’t shoot nobody because he was on your turf, you know. You had to have hand-to-hand combat. But the buyers didn’t care, because they followed the powder, not the guys who controlled the neighborhood.



MJ: When the movies come out, there’ll be a lot of controversy about whether you guys are being glorified. What about that?



FL: Nick is a good dude who should be glorified, not me.



MJ: Why do you say that?



FL: Because he’s a hell of a good guy.



MJ: But you were both in the same business.



FL: You in the same business as other writers. You don’t go to slit their throat. Do you?



MJ: Frank. I mean, c’mon.



NB: No one should be elevated because of what they did in the drug business. The way we operated—there was a lot of violence, like, ten to twelve homicides, to keep the whole operation running. You can’t glorify that. It’s not something Frank or I would tell any of our children to get into.



FL: Absolutely right, Nick.



NB: Heroin wreaked a lot of havoc and a lot of pain in the black community. I shouldn’t have done it. Maybe I was aware, but I just didn’t give a fuck. I wanted to make money, and that’s what I did. Looking back, I wouldn’t have made those decisions, but it’s a hell of a lot different and much easier to sanitize yourself after the fact.



FL: In our business, you get paid by fear. When the fear factor comes in, that’s when you start to make money. Violence is part of it. You ain’t gonna sweet-talk no motherfucker.



MJ: Who was more corrupt: the dealers or the cops?



FL: The cops was more corrupt. You shake hands with a drug dealer, you got their word. If they don’t do what they say, they’re gonna die. Everyone knows that.



NB: Yeah, yeah, I go with that.



FL: A drug dealer gonna live to his word. I’m not talking about a junkie. I’m talking about a man like Frank Lucas or Nicky Barnes.



MJ: Rudy Giuliani chased both you guys when he was D.A. What do you think about him running for president?



NB: Giuliani would make a good president because he’s a principled guy.



FL: When Giuliani tells you something, he means it. But I don’t think we’re ready for an Italian president. I don’t think we’re ready for a black president. I don’t think we’re ready for a woman president, but I tell you right now: I think Hillary Clinton will win this thing hands down.



NB: Hillary will be the next president.



FL: No question about it.



MJ: You guys have said some pretty harsh things about each other over the years. Nick, what’s your biggest bitch with Frank?



NB: Well, I read he had this multimillion-dollar contract on my life.



FL: Nick, hold on there! You know me a long time, and you know me well. If I had a contract on you, I’d have been hanged 20 or 30 years ago. You know doggone well that I wouldn’t do that.



NB: This was when they had the grand jury. I was with Matty Madonna and Herbie Sperling. You were on the third floor at the MCC.² Do you remember that, Frank?



FL: Absolutely.



NB: There was a corrections officer who said that Frank Lucas went to one of the other corrections officers and told him that Nicky Barnes was down there, and he was trying to set him up.



FL: You believe that? Nick! Listen to me, and hear me real good: Anybody tells you that, they’re a damn liar. You’ve been too close to me.



NB: Just what I heard.



MJ: Nick, when the New York Times called you “Mister Untouchable,” that even got the president’s attention.³ When you first found out about Carter seeing the paper, what did you think?



NB: I thought I had made a mistake, but it was done then. I still thought that I had a really good chance of winning that case, because there’s a difference between a trial in a federal court and one in a state court.


FL: Yeah.



NB: Well, I had powder in all five boroughs. Not just uptown.



FL: You were big, Nick, all over.


FL: All the difference in the world.



NB: In federal court, they can railroad your ass, man. In state court, you can get a fair hearing and a fair jury.



MJ: A topic that comes up a lot—it came up at a showing of Nick’s movie, and it will when American Gangster opens—is that you can sell a lot of drugs and kill people—



FL: Stop right there. Nick ain’t ever killed nobody. Me either.



MJ: I know you’re a Gandhi kind of guy, Frank. I’m saying you can do all kinds of crimes, but a lot of people feel if you snitch, that’s worse. What do you guys think about that?



FL: I never in my life, not to this day, testified on nobody. Ain’t no sonofabitch in the world who’s ever gotten put in on account of me. Bad cops, yes. But rat that shit—no, no, no, no, no.



NB: When it comes to testifying, I testified against the guys who were in the Council along with me.4



FL: Like Guy Fisher.



NB: Yeah, Guy Fisher, Frank James, Wally, Coco, Kenny, and you know, a couple of other guys. When I went into the joint, I gave Guy Fisher a woman of mine and told him to look out for her, take care of her. I didn’t expect him to start fucking her.



FL: Guy Fisher’s a punk. What do you expect out of a fucking punk?



NB: I expected him to do what I was askin’ him to do. Not to betray me. Look, he had women of his own who were as attractive as mine.



FL: You had good-looking women, Nick!



NB: I don’t know why he had to bone her, and I don’t know why the other Council members let him live after they knew he did it. That’s why I cooperated. If I couldn’t get out, I could still pull those motherfuckers in with me.



MJ: Any second thoughts, Nick?



NB: No, man. When I realized they left me on the battlefield to die, I said, “Fuck it!” … I said, “I’ll pull those motherfuckers in, let them see what it’s like.” I would rather be out here in the witness program than to be in jail with them. Why would I wanna be in there with them kinda black males? I don’t regret it. I saw this show on CNN, with Anderson Cooper. Cats were talking about “Don’t snitch, no matter what happens.” Well, I can’t see how a guy can be considered strong if he lets a bunch of assholes walk all over him and he doesn’t respond, just because of some code that a bunch of idiots have cooked up. Anderson Cooper asked this rapper, “Suppose a child was molested and you knew who this molester was. Would you tell the police?” He said, “No.” So that’s what I’m sayin’—the street guidelines are just moron bullshit.



MJ: Frank? Do you think there’s a time when it’s good to cooperate?



FL: I told you before. I never testified on nobody.



MJ: Some cases were made, Frank.



FL: Look! I have remorse about what I did.



NB: Frank, talk a little softer. You’re yelling.



FL: I have remorse. I never sold nothing to a kid in the street, but I found out that my people had. I didn’t want to sell to kids. I didn’t want to make them junkies. I didn’t want to be a part of it. I justify it by saying during my time, I couldn’t get a job on Wall Street, not even washing toilets. I went to school three days and the teacher wasn’t there two of them. I had to make a living. I didn’t want to be just a damn bum in the street. So that’s what I did. But it’s complicated. When you get there, every rat in the goddamned woods is gonna come running to you. And anytime you don’t got no money, everybody disappears. Tell ’em, Nick.



MJ: Most people say you guys hated each other, but it seems like you were buddies. What’s the story?



NB: I’ll tell you what a lot of people don’t understand. See, you read in the paper about people having shooting wars about turf. But both of us operated in that 116th Street area, and it was no problem. If only one of us had had powder out there, every time the police came out, they would have been able to surveil out that one group. But if there’s a lot of people out there …



MJ: Did you ever think there’d be this whole hip-hop thing? You guys are both mentioned in a million rap songs.

FL: All the difference in the world.



NB: In federal court, they can railroad your ass, man. In state court, you can get a fair hearing and a fair jury.



MJ: A topic that comes up a lot—it came up at a showing of Nick’s movie, and it will when American Gangster opens—is that you can sell a lot of drugs and kill people—



FL: Stop right there. Nick ain’t ever killed nobody. Me either.



MJ: I know you’re a Gandhi kind of guy, Frank. I’m saying you can do all kinds of crimes, but a lot of people feel if you snitch, that’s worse. What do you guys think about that?



FL: I never in my life, not to this day, testified on nobody. Ain’t no sonofabitch in the world who’s ever gotten put in on account of me. Bad cops, yes. But rat that shit—no, no, no, no, no.



NB: When it comes to testifying, I testified against the guys who were in the Council along with me.4



FL: Like Guy Fisher.



NB: Yeah, Guy Fisher, Frank James, Wally, Coco, Kenny, and you know, a couple of other guys. When I went into the joint, I gave Guy Fisher a woman of mine and told him to look out for her, take care of her. I didn’t expect him to start fucking her.



FL: Guy Fisher’s a punk. What do you expect out of a fucking punk?



NB: I expected him to do what I was askin’ him to do. Not to betray me. Look, he had women of his own who were as attractive as mine.



FL: You had good-looking women, Nick!



NB: I don’t know why he had to bone her, and I don’t know why the other Council members let him live after they knew he did it. That’s why I cooperated. If I couldn’t get out, I could still pull those motherfuckers in with me.



MJ: Any second thoughts, Nick?



NB: No, man. When I realized they left me on the battlefield to die, I said, “Fuck it!” … I said, “I’ll pull those motherfuckers in, let them see what it’s like.” I would rather be out here in the witness program than to be in jail with them. Why would I wanna be in there with them kinda black males? I don’t regret it. I saw this show on CNN, with Anderson Cooper. Cats were talking about “Don’t snitch, no matter what happens.” Well, I can’t see how a guy can be considered strong if he lets a bunch of assholes walk all over him and he doesn’t respond, just because of some code that a bunch of idiots have cooked up. Anderson Cooper asked this rapper, “Suppose a child was molested and you knew who this molester was. Would you tell the police?” He said, “No.” So that’s what I’m sayin’—the street guidelines are just moron bullshit.



MJ: Frank? Do you think there’s a time when it’s good to cooperate?



FL: I told you before. I never testified on nobody.



MJ: Some cases were made, Frank.



FL: Look! I have remorse about what I did.



NB: Frank, talk a little softer. You’re yelling.



FL: I have remorse. I never sold nothing to a kid in the street, but I found out that my people had. I didn’t want to sell to kids. I didn’t want to make them junkies. I didn’t want to be a part of it. I justify it by saying during my time, I couldn’t get a job on Wall Street, not even washing toilets. I went to school three days and the teacher wasn’t there two of them. I had to make a living. I didn’t want to be just a damn bum in the street. So that’s what I did. But it’s complicated. When you get there, every rat in the goddamned woods is gonna come running to you. And anytime you don’t got no money, everybody disappears. Tell ’em, Nick.



MJ: Most people say you guys hated each other, but it seems like you were buddies. What’s the story?



NB: I’ll tell you what a lot of people don’t understand. See, you read in the paper about people having shooting wars about turf. But both of us operated in that 116th Street area, and it was no problem. If only one of us had had powder out there, every time the police came out, they would have been able to surveil out that one group. But if there’s a lot of people out there …



MJ: Did you ever think there’d be this whole hip-hop thing? You guys are both mentioned in a million rap songs.



FL: Call them songs? When I came along, we had singing. They might make up songs about me, but I don’t have to like them.



MJ: What about you, Nick? You’re like a hip-hop folk hero.



NB: I never thought anything like this would happen. When hip-hop first started, everybody—I mean the music entrepreneurs—predicted that hip-hop would be dead in five years. They said, “Those motherfuckers ain’t gonna make no money.” But hip-hop rolled along, and look what they’re doing now. They got Jay-Z, Damon Dash, Kanye West, 50 Cent. These guys are doing something legitimate.



FL: At least Nick knows the names. I don’t know none of them. I know Puffy Combs, because of his father.



NB: Oh, Melvin! Melvin Combs.



FL: Melvin used to be at my house a couple of times a week. I’m proud to see Melvin’s son like that.



MJ: Nick, are you curious about how you’re portrayed in American Gangster?



NB: Yeah. But when I heard that Cuba Gooding was doing it, I thought it’ll probably be decent. He’s an Academy Award winner.



MJ: What about Denzel as Frank?



NB: I knew if Denzel played the lead, then it wouldn’t be a bullshit part or a fucked-up script.



FL: Denzel Washington did more than a good job, he did a hell of a job. Nobody in the world’s as good as Denzel.



MJ: Man, I thought you guys might be more at odds. This is a love-in.



FL: We are friends, so you’re missing the whole point.



NB: There were a lot of the people who we were both hooked up with who we both like. Jimmy Terrell, for example, and Turtle and Claude, Peter MacDougal, Frank Moten.



NB: What about the guy who died in the mob riot?



FL: Aww, what was his name? Got killed on the George Washington Bridge. What was his fuckin’ name?



NB: I forgot his name, too, but we knew all of these guys. I guess there’s some nostalgia in it.



FL: It was the good old boys back then, that’s what it was.



NB: Frank, are you taking anything for your broken leg?



FL: They gave me a whole bunch of shit.



NB: There’s a Website out there of a guy named Gary Null. He’s an alternative practitioner, and he offers all kinds of vitamin supplements to cure bone injuries. You really ought to go check him out.



FL: Yeah? I’m going to take this down, man.



MJ: The vitamin connect. Hey, what do you want to have on your epitaph? What do you want your legacy to be?



NB: I’ll tell you what I want them to say on mine. I want them to say, “Boy oh boy, he was old. God damn, he was old.”



FL: Fuckin’ old.



http://nymag.com/guides/money/2007/39948/
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BET PROFILES FRANK LUCAS!

Postby mafioso on Wed Oct 31, 2007 1:14 pm

BET PROFILES FRANK LUCAS

MEET THE BADDIE BEHIND 'AMERICAN GANGSTER'


By LINDA STASI


Image

Frank Lucas, the real "American Gangster



October 31, 2007 -- Lucas was an authentic N.Y.C. character in an era that was so full of gangsters, madmen, pimps, pushers, prostitutes and disco divas, there were almost no regular people left to worship and abhor all of them.

But this is one guy who never wanted the attention or the adoration. He wanted the money and the power.

Tonight BET's shock-doc "American Gangster" profiles the criminal you probably never heard of before - the baddest of the black mobsters - who grew up the son of Southern sharecroppers and rose to become the biggest importer and dealer of heroin in the world.

How big? How's a million bucks a day for starters? How's the fact that the Mafia bought its dope wholesale from him?

Tonight, the real Frank Lucas steps into the spotlight to tell his story beginning at the beginning when, as a 6-year-old, his uncle was killed by the Klan for "reckless eyeballing" - i.e., looking at a white woman.

Lucas made his way to Harlem and eventually into the life and good times of notorious mobster Bumpy Johnson.

Although Lucas, now in his 70s, told Matt Lauer last weekend that he won't talk about murders (there is no statute of limitations for that crime), in this interview he does just that.

Granted, it's some vague character named Tango whose murder he describes: "I took a .45, aimed it at his chest, but hit him in the forehead. That was the beginning and the end of Tango!" You can't make up stuff like that.

Lucas never hit it "Donald Trump rich" (as he calls it) until the Vietnam War era. That's when he realized that the GIs were getting high every day on the good heroin of Southeast Asia. So he bought up poppy fields and started smuggling drugs back into the U.S. - on government planes.

The show features not just Lucas, but also the men who brought him down and the men who chronicled his fall - former narcotics prosecutors Sterling Johnson, former DEA agent Lou Rice and authors Nick Pileggi and Ron Chepesniuk.

Oh yeah, and Denzel makes an appearance too.

He says: "Frank is very charming, very humble, and he'll have you working for him by the end of the day."

A great documentary about a very bad, if very intriguing guy.

AMERICAN GANGSTER
Tonight at 10 on BET
NO matter what Denzel Washington has accomplished with his reel-life role as 1970s mob-muscle-turned-drug-kingpin Frank Lucas, he can't be bigger than Lucas was in real life.



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Real 'American Gangster' Frank Lucas Talks!

Postby mafioso on Wed Nov 07, 2007 10:46 am

Real 'American Gangster' Frank Lucas Talks About Hanging With Diddy's Dad, Possible Sequel

Ex-convict is now building a Boys & Girls Club-type facility in NYC: 'I want to be remembered for helping these kids.'


By Jayson Rodriguez


Being an American gangster isn't all it's cracked up to be. At least not to Frank Lucas, the inspiration behind the Denzel Washington flick of the same name, which is currently sitting atop the box office.

According to the New York magazine article the movie was based on, Lucas, 80, once ruled New York's Harlem neighborhood with a fist so heavy he was able to cut out the Mafia, thereby increasing the profit margins of his ruthlessly run drug operation.

Lots of money was made, and Lucas' legend grew to ridiculous heights. But the good times didn't last forever: Lucas was locked up for nine years. And though he's doing well enough now, when he was released from prison, he didn't even have enough money saved to buy a pack of cigarettes.


"The government took all my money and everything I had," Lucas told MTV News, recalling his arrest. "The properties in Chicago, Detroit, Miami, North Carolina, Puerto Rico — they took everything. My lawyer told me they couldn't take the money in the offshore accounts, and I had all my money stored in the Cayman Islands. But that's BS; they can take it. Take my word for it. If you got something, hide it, 'cause they can go to any bank and take it."

His reign may be over, but Lucas still hopes to rule over Harlem under a new regime, by building a Boys & Girls Club-type facility and encouraging kids to follow the path he didn't take years ago. In this exclusive interview, the original American gangster — who once claimed he cleared $1 million a day selling dope — talks about what his days are like now, recalls meeting Diddy's dad, clears up the inaccuracies of the movie and even dishes on whether a sequel is in the works.

MTV: Since you were a consultant on "American Gangster," I suppose congratulations are in order for the film landing at #1. Did you ever think your life story was worthy of a movie; and are you surprised by the opening-weekend success?

Frank Lucas: Did you expect for anything else but it to be #1? I'm in there. [He laughs.] But I'll tell you the truth: I had no idea. I never thought about a movie.

MTV: There have been several magazine articles written on your life — as well as a documentary on your onetime rival, Nicky Barnes, called "Mr. Untouchable" — that seem to contradict each other and the plot of the movie.

Lucas: Ask me, and I'll tell you the truth.

MTV: In "Mr. Untouchable," Barnes seemed frustrated because he claimed he was the smoother of you two; he dressed in a more business-appropriate fashion, and you were more flamboyant. He disdainfully called you a country boy.

Lucas: Nah. You saw what it was [in "American Gangster"]. That's spoken. That was the way it was. Nicky was a flamboyant guy, who was kind of live. Me and him were friends; I guess we're still friends. He would jump out of cars and beat up junkies and all kinds of foolishness. I didn't like that. I tried to stay out of the limelight. Listen, if you go out there in the streets — a 5-year-old kid would know — if you're flamboyant, you're not gonna last but a minute. If you don't do flamboyant and stay out the limelight, you might last an hour or a day. I'm just using an example, you know?

MTV: How about your relationship with Richie Roberts, the detective who was instrumental in bringing you down? Are you two really still friendly with each other now? He joked with MTV News at the red-carpet premiere that when the two of you were on set, he saw a gleam in your eye and made a comment that he may have to take you in again.

Lucas: I'm not gonna make no joke. Richie Roberts couldn't arrest his mother. He couldn't catch a cold, you know what I'm saying? I'm not gonna get into that because there's a lot I could say. But I'll tell you, Richie Roberts is all right. He's my friend. But when you turn the cameras on, he gets all hyped. Real stupid. We still have good relations, we still do — except when he goes on TV. When the lights turn on, he doesn't even know what he's saying half the time.

MTV: In the film, Denzel Washington's character marries Miss Puerto Rico. There's no mention of them having kids, but you have a son who is an aspiring rapper.

Lucas: They got that wrong. She was some kind of homecoming queen, but I don't know about [being Miss Puerto Rico]. No doubt about it, she was a pretty girl. I have seven children altogether. But since I started making this movie, people [have been] coming up to me — I got 20 more now. [He laughs.]

MTV: In a previous interview, you pretty much said you aren't the biggest fan of hip-hop. How did you feel when you discovered your son, Frank Lucas Jr., was pursuing a career as a rapper?

Lucas: He is a rapper now, I guess. But there ain't much I can do about that. He's 30-something years old; he got to do what he got to do. He didn't go to college because I was away at the time. That was just that. I wanted him to get a degree; then he could have done what he had to do. Believe me, I'm trying to tell him to do it now.

MTV: Even though you aren't a fan of rap, you were friends with the father of one of hip-hop's most famous artists, right?

Lucas: Melvin Combs. He's a good friend of mind. That's Puff Daddy's father. He used to bring [his son] to my house every day, at least at least two or three times a week. And my daughter used to push him off the [toys]. He made it great. You see where he's at now. He's on top of the world now.

MTV: Were you and Melvin just friends or business partners?

Lucas: All the above. We did business and we were good friends. He was really a good friend of mine.

MTV: Do you remember how you met him?

Lucas: We all were out there on Seventh Avenue, and everybody knew everybody out there; I don't remember how I met him. But we had a good relationship. Me, him and [former street-basketball player] Pee Wee Kirkland. We were about as good of friends as you could get.

MTV: You played basketball with Pee Wee?

Lucas: Nah, I didn't play. I was doing other things.

MTV: When you were in prison, New York changed so much, particularly as the war on drugs turned from heroin to cocaine to crack. Were you surprised how much things had changed upon your release?

Lucas: It was shocking to me to see how the streets were being run. There was no leadership. Nobody could tell nobody nothing; everybody wanted to do their own thing. You think I'm lying — watch the 5 o'clock news and see how many kids get locked up for dumb stuff.

MTV: During your imprisonment, did you hear about the next generation of Harlem gangsters, like Rich Porter, AZ and Alpo?

Lucas: Who? What are their names? I heard of [the last one], but I didn't know him.

MTV: What about Mafia members like John Gotti?

Lucas: [Those are] real gangsters you're talking about now.

MTV: More so than you?

Lucas: Nah, I'm not saying that. That's for you to judge, that's not for me to say.

MTV: There have been pictures of you in a wheelchair. Is that a permanent situation?

Lucas: I broke my leg in two places about a year ago. I'll be up out of this doggone wheelchair, I guess, in about a month. I'll be glad to get rid of if because I'm tired of this wheelchair.

MTV: Has your condition kept you from doing much?

Lucas: I do whatever I got to do. I'm putting things together, trying to build a facility where kids can go play ball and whatever. I'm waiting on the mayor right now to get another space to go ahead and do that. I got some help on the way, and I want to try to put that to use. I'm working with my daughter, Francine. ... I'm getting some finances lined up now so I can do it. I want to be remembered for helping these kids. If I can get them to follow what I ask them to do, I'll be happy.

MTV: Is that how you're able to support yourself?

Lucas: Well, I'm not going to get into that. Put it this way: I'm not in the drug business.

MTV: Now that your life is being talked about so much, but with details missing or overlooked, do you have any regrets about your portrayal?

Lucas: As far as I'm concerned, it was top-notch. The movie spoke a lot of truth, because when they shot scenes they would turn and ask me. They asked me a lot of questions. And I did the best of my abilities. The best way I could do it. But I guess they have to make a movie also. I wouldn't change anything. We might make another movie, I guess. We're just waiting to see what's going on. I really don't know what [the studio is] talking about. If I see the script and read it, maybe.


http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles ... tory.jhtml
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Nicky Barnes: 'American Gangster' not the straight dope!

Postby mafioso on Mon Nov 12, 2007 11:47 am

Nicky Barnes: 'American Gangster' not the straight dope



Monday, November 12th 2007, 10:31 AM



Image

Leroy (Nicky) Barnes



Legendary Harlem drug kingpin Leroy (Nicky) Barnes wants you to know who the real "American Gangster" was.

Speaking from his undisclosed location that the federal witness protection program assigned him, Barnes tells us he's not cool with the way he's portrayed in the new blockbuster, in which Denzel Washington plays Barnes' heroin-dealing competitor, Frank Lucas.

Barnes says, "I like Cuba Gooding Jr.," who has a minor role playing Barnes as a loud-mouthed buffoon. "He probably did the best he could. But they depict me as a footnote in Frank's life when it was the other way around.

"This whole thing about him being an entrepreneurial genius is nonsense," says Barnes. "I didn't see it. I did business in all five boroughs, Atlanta, D.C., Philly and Baltimore. Frank had 116th St. and maybe a few places in New Jersey."

Barnes also disputes Washington's characterization of Lucas as articulate and understated, in contrast to Gooding's pimped-out dimwit.

"I wore flashy clothes, but not outrageous," says Barnes. "Check out the photos of me at the time. And have you listened to Frank talk? Frank is functionally illiterate. I've read all of Shakespeare. I can quote his sonnets. I read Dickens, Melville, Emily Dickinson. I won a poetry contest against inmates from the entire prison system.

"I did things Frank is incapable of. They took attributes of me and gave them to Frank. He was an empty vessel."

Barnes, the subject of a book and a documentary, both titled "Mr. Untouchable," has heard his badness touted by Jay-Z and other rappers.

"They said I approached Frank for his dope," says Barnes. "I always got my drugs from the Italians. They have this scene where Frank yells at me for using the name of his dope - 'Blue Magic.' It never happened!

"This business about him being the protege of Bumpy Johnson - I never heard anything about Frank and Bumpy.

"Frank never went to Southeast Asia to get Ike Atkinson to bring him to a general in the Golden Triangle. Ike told me he won a bag of dope from some guys in a card game and unloaded it on Frank. His dope never came in the coffins of G.I.s from Vietnam. Check the public record!

"They're showing Frank as credible by undermining me. It's mythology. They portray Frank as their strident Afro-centric guy standing up to the white mobsters. Did you see Frank on Charlie Rose's show? He was the only one saying, 'Mister Rose.' He was like a lawn boy."

A Universal spokesman said the studio "has every confidence that the material facts are conveyed truthfully in 'American Gangster,' from abundant research with direct sources and from the public record."

Lucas did not return calls by deadline.



http://www.nydailynews.com/gossip/r_m/2 ... ml?ref=rss
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