Controlled by the heavy hand of the mob and fueled by government
corruption, Newport evolved through the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries into a notoriously robust center of criminal activity.
With top political and law enforcement officials often on the take, the
seedy status quo became so excessive that a May 1961 issue of Time
magazine declared, Newport has developed such a gaudy brand of gambling
and prostitution that it stands today as one of the nation's most
blatant sin centers. Eastern Kentucky University Professors Gary Potter
and Thomas Barker, both experts on organized crime, along with Jenna
Meglen, offer up a captivating chronicle of Newport's criminal
development, complete with thought-provoking assessments of the possible
advantages that organized crime brought to the city commonly considered
to be Las Vegas's predecessor.