November 15: Kefauver Day Sponsored by Zappos.com

November 15: Kefauver Day Sponsored by Zappos.com

Date: November 15, 2017
Time: 9 a.m. - 10 p.m.
Cost: Free for Nevada residents and buy-one-get-one for non-residents
Bypass the line - Reservations available after 4 p.m.
Please consider making a $5 donation to help support the Museum’s efforts to provide educational programming throughout the year.
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Click on image to read more about the Kefauver Hearings.

On November 15, The Mob Museum celebrates Kefauver Day in honor of the Kefauver Committee hearing that took place in our building’s courtroom on that date in 1950. We’ve extended our evening hours to 10 p.m. for this year’s Kefauver Day, giving you additional time to experience the Museum. Kefauver Day is free for Nevada residents and buy-one-get-one for non-residents

The hearings, officially known as the U.S. Senate’s Special Committee to Investigate Crime in Interstate Commerce, came to be known as the Kefauver hearings after the committee’s chairman, Senator Estes Kefauver of Tennessee.

  • Please consider making a $5 donation to help support the Museum’s efforts to provide educational programming throughout the year.

    Bypass the Lines. Starting at 4 p.m., RSVPs available. Please note: If you are not at check-in at your scheduled time, please be advised we will have to release those tickets after five minutes.

The Las Vegas Kefauver hearing – one of 27 held nationwide in 14 cities – commemorates a pivotal time in the national fight against organized crime as well as events that influenced the development of Las Vegas. Well-known Las Vegas residents who testified included Moe Sedway, manager of the Flamingo Hotel; Wilbur Clark, front man for the Desert Inn; and Clifford Jones, Nevada’s then lieutenant governor.

The public was entranced by the Kefauver hearings. They followed their revelations in newspapers and magazines, in the popular newsreels of the time, on the radio and, most of all, through the new technology of television. Some movie theaters installed televisions to bring the hearings to the public live. One researcher reported that daytime viewership grew 20 times higher in New York during the hearings — “that twice as many viewers watched the hearings as watched the 1950 World Series.”

The Kefauver hearings revealed extensive evidence of organized crime’s infiltration of American business and politics and inspired an array of law enforcement initiatives to bring down the Mob.