Skip to navigation | Skip to content

Share your knowledge. Make a difference.

American Gangster-Frank Lucas

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic (by 0 people)   Your rating: 1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic

Ranked #1242 in Movies & TV, #24293 overall

Rated G. (Control what you see)

The Real American Gangster

 

He grossed US$1 million a day selling drugs on 116th Street. Federal judge Sterling Johnson, who was special narcotics prosecutor in New York at the time of Lucas' crimes, called Lucas' operation "one of the most outrageous international dope-smuggling gangs ever.

AMERICAN GANGSTER 

FRANK LUCAS

Biography of frank lucas the real american gangster
Frank Lucas-American Gangster
The Life and Times of a true American Gangster

FRANK LUCAS - HARLEM DRUG LORD 

Lord Of Dopetown

Frank Lucas was born September 9, 1930, in Lenoir County, North Carolina. He moved to Harlem in 1946, becoming the driver and protégé of gangster Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson.

When Johnson died in 1968, Lucas took over his heroin empire and expanded it during the drug-fueled period of the late 1960s and early 1970s.

Lucas was particularly known for the "Cadaver Connection." Lucas smuggled huge amounts of undiluted heroin from Thailand into the U.S. in the coffins of fallen American servicemen.

By establishing his own drug connection in the jungles of Vietnam, he cut out the middleman and undercut the competition. Lucas claimed to have grossed $1 million a day, selling his "Blue Magic."

Lucas also relied on a tightly controlled crew called "The Country Boys." He preferred using relatives and men from his hometown in North Carolina because they were less likely to steal from him.

Lucas was depicted as an entrepreneur who broke through the racial barriers of traditional organized crime in the biopic American Gangster, released in theaters on November 2, 2007.

Lucas was arrested in 1975 and was soon facing up to 70 years in prison. He quickly turned into a government informant, most notably against the then-corrupt Special Investigations Unit of the NYPD. Out of 70 SIU officers, 52 were eventually either jailed or indicted.

"The only people I every ever informed on were them ... cops who took my money," Lucas insists. But prosecutors involved in the case, including Richard "Richie" Roberts, contradicts that.

Lucas' sentence was reduced to five years. But when he got out, he was quickly arrested again for drug dealing, albeit on a much smaller scale. Lucas spent seven more years in prison, and when he got out in 1991, Roberts came to his financial aid.

Russell Crowe plays Roberts in the film, though the character is a composite of the many detectives and prosecutors who arrested and tried Lucas. Today, they are good friends. Roberts is Lucas's defense attorney and the godfather to his 11-year-old son, whose education Roberts has paid for.

Lucas, who uses a wheelchair because of complications from a leg he broke in two places some time ago, lives with his wife and son in Newark, N.J. He supports a charity founded by his daughter, Yellow Brick Roads, that raises money for the children of incarcerated parents.

Lucas says he's repentant.

"I did some terrible things," he said recently. "I'm awfully sorry that I did them. I really am."

FRANK LUCAS BIOGRAPHY 

American Gangster

In 1976, Lucas was sentenced to a total of 70 years in prison on drug violations. During a prison visit by his attorney, Gino Gallina, Lucas assaulted the lawyer after Gallina told him he'd "lost" $200,000 of Lucas' money. Lucas threatened to kill him if he didn't get his money back, and the man was gunned down gangland style on a Greenwich Village street shortly afterwards. It's not clear whether Lucas was behind the killing, or the Gambino crime family, against whom Gallino was set to testify.

In 1981, Lucas' sentence was reduced to time already served. He wound up back behind bars in 1984 when he was convicted of trying to exchange one ounce of heroin and $13,000 for one kilogram of cocaine. He was sentenced to seven years.

Frank Lucas' life of crime started when he was just a little boy of six, living in North Carolina. Five members of the Ku Klux Klan showed up one night at the shack where he was living and killed his 13-year-old cousin, Obadiah, for looking at a white woman.

As the oldest boy in the family, Lucas had to put food on the table. He began stealing food and later, mugging drunks. He eventually had to leave home in his teens, after taking $400 from his boss and setting the man's place on fire.

Lucas headed for Harlem, New York, where he continued his life of petty crime. He took a step up when he caught the attention of mobster Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson. According to Lucas, Johnson took the boy under his wing and showed him the ropes, although Bumpy's wife, Mayme, claims Johnson never fully trusted Lucas and describes Frank as "little more than a flunky to Bumpy."

Frank LucasHowever, when Johnson died of a heart attack, Lucas took everything he'd been taught by the man and started his own drug dealing business. He went one step further, when he realized American servicemen were getting their hands on drugs in Vietnam. Lucas flew over there and made arrangements to buy drugs at a much better rate than he could ever get in New York, and flew a friend in from North Carolina to build coffins for dead soldiers, complete with false bottoms where drugs could be stashed when the bodies were flown back to the States.

At one point in his career, Lucas boasted he was making a million dollars a day. He staked out a spot on 116th street in Harlem and killed anyone who tried to get in his way. His methods of intimidation worked, inspiring both fear and respect in those around him. He was well-liked, even by the police and judges that he often had to deal with.

Arrested on Jan 28,1975 for New Jersey state and Federal drug violations, Frank Lucas was convicted and sentenced to 70 years in prison. After serving a nonconsecutive 14 year term, he was released in 1991 to a changed Harlem, decimated, in part, by the deleterious effects of his legacy. Today, Lucas, wheelchair-bound, fully understands the nature of his impact on his beloved NY community. His mission, now, is to amend that legacy. To the youth of the nation, he is now committed%u2026 committed to show, by example, via his Frank Lucas Foundation, that redemption is available to all, even to that venerable, retired gangster we all hate to love.

MTV Interview With Frank Lucas 

American Gangster

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.

American Gangster Trailer 

Life and Times of an American Gangster

YouTube thumbnail
AMERICAN GANGSTER- Full Traile...

Runtime: 1:55 | 2498890 views | Comments

YouTube thumbnail
Great scene from "American Gan...

Runtime: 2:00 | 95045 views | Comments

YouTube thumbnail
AMERICAN GANGSTER - Trailer # ...

Runtime: 2:24 | 396005 views | Comments

Great Stuff on Amazon 

American Gangster

Amazon Price: $12.49 (as of 10/07/2008)

New Guestbook 

Like this lens? Want to share your feedback, or just give a thumbs up? Be the first to submit a blurb!

X
playboy1

About playboy1

Hello Squidoo members and visitors.
My name is Playboy and i am a freelance writer,
web designer, and nightclub promoter. I'm compiling a vast array of lenses and im sure you'll find something to your liking. I am born in Toronto,Ontario and grew up in Vancouver,BC but i've been living in Fabulous Las Vegas for the past 5 years.

I hope you enjoy my lenses and keep coming back to see what new lenses i have put together for your pleasure.

take care and have a great day.

playboy

playboy1's Pages

See all of playboy1's pages