After the conviction of Kuehnle in 1911, Smith Johnson's son became boss of the organization. Under his son's new regime, the organization would enjoy its most successful 30 years in its history.[citation needed]
Smith Johnson's son Enoch Lewis "Nucky" Johnson was born in 1883. Nucky became undersheriff in 1905 while his father was sheriff of Atlantic City. The younger Johnson was eventually elected sheriff in 1908. In 1909, he became secretary of the very powerful Atlantic County Republican Executive Committee.[4] After the conviction of Kuehnle on corruption charges in 1911, the younger Johnson became boss of the organization.
Johnson also held several other jobs, including: Atlantic County Treasurer (1914–1941), County Tax Collector, publisher of a weekly newspaper, bank director, president of a building and loan company, and director of a Philadelphiabrewery.[2][3]
Johnson was known to be a very well dressed and nice man who would rarely say no. He wore tailored suits, owned the entire ninth floor of the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, and he owned a chauffeur-driven $14,000 1920 powder blue Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost; which was his trademark car.[4] It was known that when Nucky prospered, everyone prospered in his organization and the city. Johnson once explained, "When I lived well, everybody lived well."[2] Johnson has been described as running his criminal-political empire with a "velvet hammer".[5]
Johnson and Luciano began forming the Big Seven during the mid-to-late 1920s. The group was supposed to help solve bootlegging disputes and serve as a predecessor to the National Crime Syndicate in the 1930s. It was around this time that Johnson met a bellhop at the Ritz, named Jimmy Boyd; the two took an instant liking to each other. Johnson began grooming Boyd to become the next boss of his organization, and soon, Boyd was Nucky's top enforcer/right-hand man and controlled all of the brothels, casinos, speakeasies, and numbers rackets in Atlantic City.[6][7]
From 13 to 16 May 1929, Johnson hosted the Atlantic City Conference at the Ritz-Carlton and Ambassador Hotels on the boardwalk.[8][9] Johnson made arrangements for the attendees accommodations and guaranteed there would be no interference from law enforcement since his brother, Alfred Johnson was the sheriff of Atlantic County.
Johnson's enforcer Jimmy Boyd is never mentioned by anyone to being at the convention, but since Boyd was Nucky's right-hand man and an important figure in the organization, it is most likely that he was there to help make decisions for the organization.
During the late 1930s and early 1940s, FBI special agent William Frank and his team of agents investigated into the activities of Johnson and his organization but were unable to do so successfully.[10]
Frank Farley
In 1941, Johnson was convicted of tax evasion charges and was sentenced to 10 years in a federal prison and fined $20,000.[4] Following his conviction, New Jersey SenatorFrank "Hap" Farley took over the organization.[11]
Fred Masucci: 1930s–1950s—Numbers operator; born in ?, died in ?[14]
Ben Rubenstein: 1930s-1950s—Numbers operator and Masucci's partner; possibly Jewish mob associate; born in ?, died in ?
Harold Scheper: 1920s-1950s—Numbers operator; operated in the black community; born in ?, died in ?
Harry "Cherry" Haggerty: 1930s–1960s—Numbers operator and Scheper's partner; probation with Scheper since 1947 during the Kefauver Committee; born in ?, died in ?
Francis B. Gribbin: Heroic police officer who fought against illegal gambling in Atlantic City. He and the other members of the "Four Horseman" were framed for shaking down the illegal gambling clubs and jailed. It was untrue - they were the ones who acted against illegal gaming when the Atlantic City Police Department didn't.
Jack Portock: 19??–1940s—Former corrupt policeman; part of the "Four Horsemen"; born in ?, died in ?
Frederick J. Warlich: 1919–1996;Former policeman, part of the "Four Horsemen", who fought against corruption, by shutting down Nucky's illegal gambling rings.
Francis L. Smith: 19??–1951—Former racketeer; witness at the Kefauver Committee; born in ?, died in ?
Joseph McBeth: 19??–1950s—Treasurer of the Republican County Committee; born in ?, died in ?
Lester Burdick: 19??–1950s—Race-wire service operator; born in ?, died in ?
Louis Kessel: ??1941—Nucky's German assistant and valet; born in ?, died in ?.