Palomino Club (Las Vegas)

Last updated

The Palomino Club is a landmark North Las Vegas strip club. Since 2006 the club has been owned by Adam Gentile.

Contents

History

It was founded in 1969 but the building was built a couple decades prior. One of the notable differences between the Palomino and other Las Vegas strip clubs, is that it is allowed to have both a liquor license, and totally nude dancers. Other clubs with liquor licenses are restricted to topless dancers. This difference, according to 2003-2006 owner Luis Hidalgo Jr., is because the club was grandfathered until approximately 2025 with the different rules. [1]

In 2000, a high-profile murder trial involved the Palomino Club owner's son, Jack Perry, who had shot and killed one of the employees he thought was trying to buy the club. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 14 years to life in prison.

In 2002, the owner of the "Olympic Garden" club sued the owners of the Palomino, claiming they conspired with cabdrivers to divert customers. It was evidently a common practice for some clubs, such as Palomino and Cheetah's, to offer $5–$25 per customer to cab drivers, to encourage the drivers to bring customers to their club instead of someone else's. This put "non-kickback" clubs such as the Olympic Garden at a disadvantage. The case was eventually dropped. (Jordan, 2004) [2]

Luis Hidalgo, Jr., took over the club in 2003. One of the changes that he instituted was to start an all-male nude act, known as the "Palomino Stallions", to try to attract female customers.

In 2005, Luis Hidalgo Jr., his son, Luis Hidalgo III. and Hidalgo, Jr.'s longtime girlfriend, Anabel Espindola, were charged - and eventually found guilty - as co-conspirators in the contract murder of a former employee who had been telling competitors that Hidalgo Jr. was still paying cabdrivers to divert customers to the Palomino Club. Their former doorman, Timothy TJ Hadland, had been found shot dead on a road near Lake Mead on May 19, 2005, just two weeks after quitting the club. Three other Palomino employees, and the actual killer, were also found guilty on charges related to Hadland's killing. [3] Their case was later shown on the TV show The First 48 on March 31, 2011 as a "Lost Episode". [4]

In 2007, Hidalgo sold the club to his lawyer, Dominic Gentile, in order to cover legal fees. [5] Gentile is one of the city's more prominent defense attorneys, and received the land as payment from former Palomino owner Luis Hidalgo Jr. in exchange for Gentile's representation of Hidalgo in the investigation of the May 19, 2005, shooting death of Timothy Hadland. Dominic in turn turned the operation of the club over to his son, Adam Gentile, who had previously been the General Manager of Club Paradise.

In 2009 Gentile let cameras into the club to film King Of Clubs , a new reality series slated to premiere in Fall 2009 on Playboy TV. [6] That same year (2009), Hidalgo, Jr. and his son were sentenced to life in prison. [7] The son's girlfriend took a plea deal for voluntary manslaughter in exchange for her testimony.

See also

Notes

  1. "Palomino Club" listing at vegas.com
  2. reviewjournal.com - News: FOUR CHARGED: Police say rumors led to slaying
  3. Jeff Pope (23 June 2009). "Two sentenced in killing of adult club doorman". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
  4. Local Strip Club At The Center Of Alleged Murder For Hire Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  5. "Mixing horror and erotica at the Palomino Club is a delicate dance". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 2014-12-21.
  6. "King of Clubs has Gentile's Focus". Las Vegas Sun. Retrieved 2014-12-21.
  7. David Kihara (23 June 2009). "Ex-strip club owner, son sentenced to life in prison in 2005 slaying". Las Vegas Review-Journal. Retrieved 20 January 2016.

Related Research Articles

Anthony Spilotro American mobster (1938–1986)

Anthony John Spilotro, nicknamed "Tony the Ant", was an American mobster and caporegime for the Chicago Outfit in Las Vegas during the 1970s and '80s.

Michael Spilotro American mobster

Michael Peter "Micky" Spilotro was the younger brother of Anthony "Tony the Ant" Spilotro and was an associate of the Chicago organized crime organization referred to as "The Outfit".

Ted Binion American gambling executive

Lonnie Theodore Binion, or Ted Binion, was a wealthy American gambling executive and one of the sons of famed Las Vegas casino magnate Benny Binion, owner of Binion's Horseshoe. Ted Binion's death has been a subject of controversy; girlfriend Sandra Murphy and her lover Rick Tabish were initially charged and convicted in Binion's death, but were later granted a new trial and acquitted on the murder charges.

Craig Michael Titus is an American former professional bodybuilder and convicted murderer.

Konstantinos "Gus" Boulis was an entrepreneur, land developer, casino operator, and restaurateur of Greek descent, who was murdered in 2001. The murder has been alleged to be in connection with the sale of his company, SunCruz Casinos.

Jamiel Chagra American criminal

Jamiel "Jimmy" Alexander Chagra was an American drug trafficker, carpet salesman and professional gambler. He was implicated in the May 1979 assassination of United States District Judge John H. Wood Jr. in San Antonio, Texas.

Kathy Augustine American politician

Kathy Marie Alfano Augustine was an American politician from Nevada. A Republican, Augustine served in the Nevada Assembly (1993–1995) and in the Nevada Senate (1995–1999). She was Nevada's first female State Controller, serving from 1999 until she was murdered in 2006, except for a brief period of suspension during her 2004 impeachment trial.

Operation G-Sting, also called Strippergate, and referencing the G-String costume often worn by strippers and showgirls, was an FBI investigation into bribes and unreported campaign contributions taken by Clark County Commissioners in Clark County, Nevada and city council members in San Diego, California. These bribes were from the same lobbyist, representing two sets of strip clubs, and was the result of strip club owners Rick Rizzolo and Mike Galardi trying to remove local "no touch" laws affecting the girls in their clubs.

Patriarca crime family Italian-American organized crime group

The Patriarca crime family, also known as the New England Mafia, the Boston Mafia, the Providence Mafia, or The Office is an Italian-American Mafia family in New England. It has two distinct factions, one based in Providence, Rhode Island, and the other in Boston, Massachusetts. The family is currently led by Carmen "The Cheese Man" Dinunzio, who is part of the Boston faction. The family is primarily active in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut.

The Pittsburgh crime family, also known as the LaRocca crime family or Pittsburgh Mafia, is an Italian-American Mafia crime family based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. In 2021, the last known made member Thomas "Sonny" Ciancutti died.

Erin Leigh Callin Kenny is a former Democratic politician from Nevada.

The Kansas City crime family, also known as the Civella crime family or Kansas City Mafia, is an Italian-American Mafia family based in Kansas City, Missouri.

Frank Calabrese Sr. American gangster

Frank Calabrese Sr., also known as "Frankie Breeze", was a made man who ran major loansharking and illegal gambling operations for the Chicago Outfit. He is best known as a central figure in Operation Family Secrets and the subsequent Federal trial. Calabrese, who was battling myriad ailments, died on Christmas Day 2012 at the Federal Medical Center, Butner, in North Carolina.

Breed Motorcycle Club

The Breed Motorcycle Club was a one-percenter motorcycle club that was formed in Asbury Park, New Jersey in the United States in 1965. The club disbanded in 2006 after numerous prominent members were indicted on racketeering and drug trafficking charges.

<i>King of Clubs</i> (TV series) American reality TV series

King of Clubs was an adult reality series aired on Playboy TV that ended in May 2009. It revolved around the Gentile family and their operation of Las Vegas' historic Palomino Strip Club.

United States Penitentiary, Big Sandy High-security federal prison in Kentucky

The United States Penitentiary, Big Sandy is a high-security United States federal prison for male inmates in Kentucky, near Inez. It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, a division of the United States Department of Justice. The facility also has a satellite prison camp which houses minimum-security male inmates.

Michael "The Nose" Mancuso is an American mobster. He is a member of the American Mafia and the boss of the Bonanno crime family, one of Five Families in New York City. In June 2013, while imprisoned Mancuso was picked as the new official boss of the Bonanno family. On March 12, 2019, Mancuso was released from prison.

The Donna Lee Bakery murders occurred on the night of Saturday, October 19, 1974, in New Britain, Connecticut. Six people were found murdered inside the bakery. At the time, it was the worst mass murder in Connecticut history. Two local men were convicted of the murders: Ronald F. "Tiny" Piskorski, a 25‐year‐old former bar bouncer and circus‐bear wrestler, and Gary B. Schrager, a 31‐year‐old drifter.

Robert Lee Massie American murderer executed in California (1941–2001)

Robert Lee Massie was an American convicted murderer who was executed by the state of California for the 1979 murder of a liquor store owner in San Francisco. Massie's case was notable because he had previously been sentenced to death for another murder he committed in 1965, but that death sentence was overturned following Furman v. Georgia. He was resentenced to life in prison and then paroled in 1978, committing the second murder eight months after his release. Following his death sentence for the 1979 murder, it was overturned by the Supreme Court of California because his lawyer had not consented to a guilty plea. He was sentenced to death a third and final time in 1989 and was executed in 2001 at San Quentin State Prison via lethal injection.

Nathaniel Burkett American serial killer

Nathaniel Burkett was an American serial killer who killed at least five women in Nevada and Mississippi between 1978 and 2002. He was apprehended following a cold case examination in 2012, leading to his arrest for three of the murders, crimes for which he was convicted of in 2018. He died of COVID-19 in 2021.

References