Exhibit designs unveiled

For Immediate Release
Contact: Melissa Warren, Faiss Foley Warren PR
702-528-6016; melissa@ffwpr.com
Eryn Sebelius 702-234-6684; eryn@ffwpr.com

Contact: Ceres Hill, The Mob Museum
702-229-2711; cereshill@themobmuseum.org

SEVERAL MOB MUSEUM EXHIBIT DESIGNS UNVEILED

National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement taking shape inside historic downtown post office and former federal courthouse

LAS VEGAS (March 25, 2010) — Construction on The Mob Museum, the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, is progressing toward a 2012 opening, and for the first time, project leaders unveiled today the design of a few key exhibits. Three exhibits within the museum include Mob Mayhem, The Skim and Bringing Down the Mob.

The Mob Mayhem exhibit furthers the understanding of violence as a way of life within the world of organized crime. During the Roaring ‘20s, many violent mob acts made headlines and began to change public perception of organized crime via the viciousness of its crimes that often involved innocent bystanders. Visitors will see some of the weapons used by mob hit men and learn more about the hidden messages of murder. This exhibit is the setting for the Museum’s iconic artifact—the wall from Chicago’s St. Valentine’s Day Massacre – and sets the stage for law enforcement strategies that will combat it.

The Skim, the illegal skimming of profits off the top of a casino’s earnings, was commonplace in Las Vegas for decades. The Skim supplied money to the hidden ownership of some casinos – ownership that was most often hidden from regulators. The exhibit illustrates the concept of the count room, and how money could be taken off the top, walked out the door, handed off to couriers and sent to the cities where the hidden crime syndicates were located.

Bringing Down the Mob focuses on wiretapping – one of the most important tools used to effectively investigate and prosecute organized crime cases beginning in the late 1960s.In this highly interactive exhibit, visitors will learn about the technology, listen in on the mob, learn to interpret coded conversations, examine photos and surveillance footage, take part in a weapons training exercise and learn about living a new life in witness protections programs.

Dr. Dennis Barrie, director of cultural and interpretive planning for Westlake Reed Leskosky (WRL), a nationally recognized integrated design and engineering firm headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, is serving as creative director for The Mob Museum. He oversees the team responsible for the design and creation of the museum’s immersive and interactive exhibits highlighted by rare artifacts from the mob and law enforcement.

According to Barrie, The Skim exhibit is designed to provide one of the museum’s most memorable settings in which walls will be covered with bills and stacks of money. The exhibit also illustrates how these skim cases were eventually cracked through a number of governmental strategies and new laws.

According to Ellen Knowlton, president of 300 Stewart Avenue Corporation, the non-profit board that is working alongside the city of Las Vegas to oversee development and construction of the museum, years of work and planning are coming to fruition as the museum begins to take shape.

“The goal of the museum is to tell the real and full story of organized crime and how law enforcement defeated and continues to battle the mob,” said Knowlton, a 24-year FBI veteran who previously headed up the FBI’s efforts in Las Vegas as the former FBI Special Agent in Charge, Las Vegas Division.

“Given world-wide fascination with organized crime and the world-class team behind the project, the museum is poised to become an important historic destination and tourist attraction in downtown Las Vegas – on par with the city’s other must-see attractions. We are confident it will draw hundreds of thousands of annual visitors to the area. As such, it’s an important part of the city’s downtown redevelopment efforts.”

Core and shell construction are 30 percent complete just seven months following the August 2009 “wall-breaking” by museum board members, Las Vegas Mayor Oscar B. Goodman and former U.S. Senator, Richard Bryan. Interior demolition and construction preparation work is almost complete and new construction is underway.

An internationally distinguished museum director, cultural historian and an expert in popular culture whose career includes 11 years with the Smithsonian Institution and eight years as the director of the Cincinnati Contemporary Arts Center, Barrie is best known as the co-creator of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland and the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C. Both are highly compelling, successful and popular museums that are playing major roles in reinvigorating the communities and neighborhoods in which they are located.

According to Barrie, The Mob Museum is significant for Las Vegas where older buildings are generally destroyed to make room for new development – not preserved. “The Mob Museum preserves a fascinating chapter of Las Vegas and American history and is located in an historic building that is home to the very courtroom, where, in 1950, the Kefauver Hearings on Organized Crime were held to expose and control organized crime,” he said.

“It’s as if the story of organized crime has come full circle in one of the country’s most fabled cities, within the very building where Congress won its first major victory against the mob, and where alleged mobsters once played a role in shaping the city’s destiny as the ‘Entertainment Capital of the World.’”

The 41,000-square-foot Mob Museum includes approximately 17,000 square feet of exhibition space on three floors in addition to a specialty retail store, special event areas, educational areas and office space. Admission is $18 plus tax for adults ages 18 and over; $12 plus tax for children ages 5 to 17 and students ages 18 to 23 with ID; $14 plus tax for seniors, military, law enforcement and teachers; and $10 plus tax for Nevada residents of all ages. Museum hours will be Sundays through Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.; and Fridays and Saturdays 10 a.m. until 8 p.m.

About The Mob Museum
The Mob Museum is a world-class destination in downtown Las Vegas dedicated to the thrilling story of organized crime and law enforcement. It presents an exciting and authentic view of the mob’s impact on Las Vegas history and its unique imprint on the world. With tales so intriguing they need no embellishment, The Museum reveals an insider’s look at the events and people on both sides of this continuing battle. True stories of mob history are brought to life in a bold and contemporary style via engaging exhibits and multi-sensory experiences. The Mob Museum puts the visitor in the middle of the action through high-tech theater presentations, iconic one-of-a-kind artifacts and interactive, themed environments. For more information, call 702-229-2734 or visit www.themobmuseum.org. Connect with us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/themobmuseum and on Twitter: @TheMobMuseum.