Sinatra told me about links with the Mob Daughter Tina claims that singer
secured Mafia help for Kennedy
By Hugh Davies Entertainment Correspondent
FRANK Sinatra told his daughter Tina that he was involved with the Mafia in
helping John F Kennedy win the crucial West Virginia primary election in 1960,
she claims in her autobiography.
The singer's connection with the Mob has long been suspected, but FBI files show
that J Edgar Hoover, the bureau chief, was never able to find evidence.
Tina, 52, says in her book My Father's Daughter, to be published next week, that
he told her all about it.
Sinatra said that Joseph Kennedy, who was masterminding his son's campaign,
contacted him, anxious to get the Mafia's help in securing the trade union vote.
This was in the gift of Sam Giancana, who ruled much of the Chicago underworld.
Tina says that her father was approached because Joseph Kennedy "knew dad
had access to Sam Giancana".
She writes: "It would be in Jack Kennedy's best interest if his father did
not make the contact directly. Dad was on an errand."
Tina says Sinatra told her that he had agreed to act as a go-between and that
Giancana said he would help the Kennedys. The mobster told him: "It's a
couple of phone calls."
But after Kennedy reached the White House he told his brother Robert, the
attorney general, to crack down on the Mafia.
Tina said that Giancana, thinking that the Kennedys were reneging on a deal, was
furious.
"Sam was saying: 'That's not right. You know he owes me', meaning Joe
Kennedy. Dad, I think, said: 'No, I owe you. I asked for the favour'."
Tina says that, to repay the gangster, her father "went to Chicago and
played in Giancana's club, the Villa Venice".
The singer took his fellow "rat packers", Dean Martin and Sammy Davis
Jnr, with him to stage a demanding 16 shows in eight days.
Tina also claims that Sinatra acted as a courier for the Central Intelligence
Agency.
"Because he controlled his own air travel, the CIA would ask him - and many
others with that capacity - to courier a body, a living person, you know, not a
corpse, but a diplomat, or papers." Sinatra never revealed who or what he
was transporting. Tina says: "We asked him; he didn't say."
The book is expected to make relations with Tina's stepmother Barbara even
frostier.
Tina, Nancy and Frank Jnr, the children of Sinatra's first marriage to Nancy,
have never got on with his fourth wife, who was with him when he died in 1998 at
the age of 82.
Tina told CBS that none of them was told immediately that Sinatra had died.
"There were 80 minutes between his arriving at the hospital and expiring.
We just weren't called. Barbara didn't want us called. Why she didn't want to
call us, I can only imagine."
Writing of her father's last concerts, when he often forgot his words, Tina
says: "I begged him to stop." But Sinatra, despite his wealth, told
her he needed to keep making money.
Suffering from dementia and physical illness, he lost his taste for life.
"None of us thought he would become that frail. It's funny how you delude
yourself. When he died I think he was unhappy; he was tired and I think he was
ready."