Murder in
Las Vegas
At approximately
4:30 a.m.
on
October 11, 1979, a dead man was found floating face down in the swimming pool of his
residence at 2303 Rawhide Avenue in Las Vegas. He’d been shot in the head several times by a small-caliber handgun.
The corpse was that of 46-year-old Sherwin “Jerry” Lisner. His wife
Jeannie, a cocktail waitress at the Aladdin, found the body. She’d left
work early after becoming concerned when her husband failed to answer her
telephone calls and made the grisly discovery.
According to investigating
police officers, Lisner had put up quite a fight. Bullet holes were
discovered throughout the inside of the dwelling, and blood was found on
the walls and floor leading from the garage, through the residence, and
out to the pool. Although the house had been ransacked, the cops didn’t
believe robbery or burglary was the motive. They declined to speculate on
the reason Lisner was killed, but they did have a theory on how the murder
went down. The killer, or killers, knocked on the garage door, surprising
Lisner. When he answered the knock, the shooting started. Although
wounded, the victim attempted to escape his assailant, running through his
home, the would-be killer in close pursuit and bullets flying. After a
valiant effort to survive, Lisner’s luck ran out when he reached the
pool. No murder weapon was found and no suspect named.
But the police had their
suspicions on the why and who of it. They knew that the dead man had mob
connections and was in legal trouble. He’d been arrested by the FBI on
July 11 and charged with interstate transportation of stolen property,
aiding and abetting, grand larceny, and conspiracy. Free on $75 thousand
bail, Lisner was scheduled to go on trial October 29 in U.S. District
Court in Washington, D.C.
Lisner was also believed to have
been acquainted with Chicago Outfit enforcer and Las Vegas organized crime kingpin Tony Spilotro. And it was rumored that the
deceased had been negotiating with the FBI to work out a deal in the cases
pending against him in Washington. Could those negotiations have included providing incriminating
information against Spilotro, one of the FBI’s prime targets?
Metro investigators knew all
this and suspected that Spilotro might well be behind the killing.
However, they couldn’t immediately prove their suspicions and kept their
thoughts to themselves.
As it turned out the cops were
pretty close to the truth in their idea of what occurred at Lisner’s
house that night. But they
were wrong in that Lisner had not been surprised by the arrival of his
killer, he had been expecting him. And the victim had drawn his last
breath in his living room, not outside by the pool.
There was no error in their
belief that Tony Spilotro was behind the murder, however. When the
soon-to-be dead man answered his door that evening he invited his murderer
inside. In a matter of moments the visitor began to fire a total of ten
bullets aimed at his host’s head, with several finding their mark. The
assassin wasn’t Tony Spilotro himself, but he was there at Tony’s
behest. The man was Spilotro’s trusted associate who ran a crew of
burglars and robbers known as the Hole in the Wall Gang. His name? Frank
Cullotta.
