L.A. Mafia History Tour: Gangsters, Mobsters & Crime Legends

5.0
(5 reviews)
Los Angeles, USA

3 hours (approximately)
Offered in: English

Uncover Los Angeles’ hidden mafia history on a dark and immersive true crime tour. From bloody labor strikes to Hollywood blackmail and mob murders, explore the city’s most shocking criminal underworld. Experience the chilling origins of LA’s power players—enhanced with custom AI-generated visuals.

What's Included

3-hour gangster tour of LA
Fifteen minute break for restrooms and refreshments (sold separately)
Access to visual background material for passengers traveling with smart phones having data access
Guide
Gratuities
You will have the opportunity to purchase some from a one-time Mob HQ

Meeting and pickup

Meeting point
6801 Hollywood Blvd

We will meet customers in front of the Pandora storefront on level 2 of the Ovation (Hollywood and Highland) center.

End point
This activity ends back at the meeting point.

Itinerary

Duration: 3 hours (approximately)
  • (Pass by)

    This historic Art Deco landmark in Hollywood once housed the corner office of infamous mobster “Handsome Johnny” Roselli, a key figure who bridged the worlds of organized crime and the movie industry. Glimpse the setting where Hollywood glamour met Mafia intrigue, and uncover one of Los Angeles’s most captivating underworld stories.

    Admission ticket free
  • Hollywood (Pass by)

    Cruise Hollywood's storied streets on your funeral limo tour, the glittering heartland where 1930s-40s mobsters like Mickey Cohen and Bugsy Siegel ruled with ruthless ambition amid Tinseltown glamour. From your vehicle, glimpse the haunts of LA's gangster underworld, blending mob violence, corruption, and shadowy power plays that defined the city's golden age of organized crime.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Discover Hollywood’s iconic Crossroads of the World, a striking 1930s landmark built on the very site where notorious bootlegger Charlie Crawford met his violent end. Once a hotspot of Prohibition-era crime, this glamorous complex embodies the clash between old Hollywood elegance and the city’s dark underworld history.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Former site of Tops Café, the classic Hollywood soda fountain where screen legend Lana Turner was famously discovered and launched into stardom. Once a buzzing hangout for rising stars and dreamers, this landmark captures the magic of old Hollywood and its timeless allure of “being discovered.”

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Step inside the original headquarters of The Hollywood Reporter, where founder Billy Wilkerson—known as “The Hollywood Godfather”—built his media empire and shaped the power dynamics of Tinseltown. From this historic Art Deco publishing house, Wilkerson’s sharp pen and iron-fisted influence helped define the rise and fall of Hollywood’s Golden Age elite.

    Admission ticket free
  • 1

    Step inside and grab a cocktail inside the Hollywood Syndicate’s real-life headquarters, where Los Angeles’ most notorious mobsters once ran their underground empire. Explore the original vault famously used by Bugsy Siegel for secret gambling operations, and experience a hidden piece of Hollywood’s true crime history firsthand.

    20 minutes Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The historic studio lot where violent labor union battles once erupted under the influence of the Hollywood Syndicate’s organized crime network. Gaze upon the very grounds where power, profit, and blood shaped old Hollywood’s dark labor history in the shadow of the mob.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Discover the former residence of “Handsome Johnny” Rosselli, the suave mob fixer who bridged the worlds of Hollywood, Las Vegas, and organized crime. This historic site was once under constant FBI surveillance, offering a rare glimpse into the shadowy glamour of mid-century mob life in Los Angeles.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Visit Virginia Hill’s first Los Angeles residence, a glamorous hideout that once anchored her rise from small-town girl to infamous mob courier in Hollywood’s underworld. Stand where Bugsy Siegel’s notorious companion began her Beverly Hills story, and uncover how this seemingly elegant address became entwined with organized crime and classic Hollywood scandal.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Sunset Tower Hotel on the Sunset Strip is a Hollywood landmark where infamous mobster Bugsy Siegel was dramatically arrested for illegal gambling in the 1940s. Today, this Art Deco icon still exudes old Hollywood glamour, offering visitors a glimpse into Los Angeles’ glittering yet dangerous underworld of crime and celebrity.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    This unassuming residence once served as the luxurious home and working bordello of Hollywood madam Brenda Allen, a key figure in Los Angeles’ underground sex trade and police corruption scandals of the 1940s. From here, Allen ran a high-end call girl operation that catered to powerful studio executives and celebrities, making this address a hidden hotspot in Hollywood’s darker, scandal-filled history.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Once a glittering hotspot on the Sunset Strip, the former site of the mob-linked Trocadero restaurant drew Hollywood celebrities, studio power players, and underworld figures for high-end dining, dancing, and backroom gambling. Today, visitors stand on this unassuming stretch of Sunset Boulevard and imagine the glamorous nights, quiet mob meetings, and whispered deals that helped shape Los Angeles’ dark Hollywood history.

    Admission ticket free
  • Beverly Hills (Pass by)

    Glide through Beverly Hills on your funeral limo tour, the opulent enclave where mob money from figures like Bugsy Siegel funded lavish estates, influence--and a bloody end. From your limo, admire the pristine streets masking organized crime’s hidden hand in the machinations of LA’s richest playground.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Once the grand Samuel Goldwyn Estate, this gated Beverly Hills mansion at 1200 Laurel Lane now doubles as Taylor Swift’s private home and a living relic of Hollywood’s Golden Age. Fans of both classic cinema and modern pop culture are drawn here to see the Georgian Revival estate where legends like Charlie Chaplin once visited and where Swift now writes, records, and preserves this officially landmarked piece of Los Angeles history.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    This stately Beverly Hills mansion was once the home of Harry Cohn, the notoriously tyrannical Columbia Pictures boss whose ruthless reputation helped inspire the character of studio mogul Jack Woltz in The Godfather. From this hillside estate, Cohn ruled his empire with an iron fist, making it a must-see stop for film fans interested in classic Hollywood power, corruption, and the real-life stories behind The Godfather’s most infamous scenes.

    Admission ticket free
  • The Beverly Hills Hotel Spa (Pass by)

    The legendary Beverly Hills Hotel, known as the “Pink Palace,” was a glamorous nexus where Hollywood celebrities, studio moguls, and powerful gangsters quietly met over cocktails to talk business, scandal, and crime. In the mid‑20th century, this lush property also served as a prowling ground for notorious gigolo and mob enforcer Johnny Stompanato, who moved through its bungalows and bars in search of wealthy starls and underworld opportunity.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    This quiet Beverly Hills residence was once the glamorous home of Virginia Hill, the fiery mob courier and mistress of notorious gangster Bugsy Siegel. It was here, on the night of June 20, 1947, that Siegel was gunned down in a hail of bullets through the living room window, turning this upscale address into one of Los Angeles’ most infamous organized crime murder scenes.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    This Beverly Hills home is the site of one of Hollywood’s most shocking scandals, where mob-connected bodyguard and gigolo Johnny Stompanato was fatally stabbed during a violent argument with actress Lana Turner in 1958. Turner’s fourteen‑year‑old daughter, Cheryl Crane, intervened with a kitchen knife, turning this elegant corner residence into a cornerstone of Los Angeles true crime and classic Hollywood tragedy.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    This stunning Beverly Hills residence was once the glamorous home of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, the trailblazing duo behind I Love Lucy and pioneers of modern television production. According to long-circulated true crime lore, Desi’s high-profile success and rumored business entanglements allegedly made the estate a one-time target in a Chicago mob plot to assassinate him, adding an underworld twist to this otherwise classic Hollywood landmark.

    Admission ticket free
  • West Hollywood (Pass by)

    Cruise West Hollywood on your funeral limo tour, a nightlife enclave largely built by 1930s-50s mobsters who financed its bars, clubs, and vice dens. From your vehicle, envision the gangster-fueled empire of racketeering, glamour and FBI-evasion that shaped the city's shadowy origins.

    Admission ticket free
  • Sunset Strip (Pass by)

    Cruise the very pavement where Mickey Cohen ruled the Sunset Strip—his empire of gambling, celebrity scandal and flying bullets pulsing through Hollywood’s nightlife. Here, the glitz of the Golden Age met the grit of organized crime, leaving behind whispers of bullets, betrayal, and fame gone dark.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    This unassuming spot on Sunset Boulevard was once the Saharan Hotel, where powerful Sicilian mob boss Jack Dragna quietly spent his final days under an alias in the mid‑1950s. On February 23, 1956, Dragna died of a heart attack in his room here, turning this modest Hollywood motor hotel into a significant landmark in Los Angeles Mafia history and organized crime tourism.

    Admission ticket free
  • Comedy Store (Pass by)

    Once the glittering heartbeat of the Sunset Strip, the former site of Ciro’s drew Hollywood’s richest stars, studio moguls, and underworld mob figures to its velvet banquettes, spotlighted stage, and booze-soaked backrooms. Behind the glamorous façade, this legendary nightclub earned a violent reputation, with beatings, shakedowns, and whispered threats turning it into one of Los Angeles’ most notorious intersections of Hollywood nightlife and organized crime.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    Step back into mob history at the iconic Hollywood YMCA, the unexpected setting of the first—and famously tense—meeting between Mickey Cohen and Bugsy Siegel. Inside the men’s locker room of this historic building, Los Angeles’s criminal underworld took a pivotal turn that would shape the city’s mob empire for decades.

    Admission ticket free
  • The Roxy (Pass by)

    This former site of the Largo Club once pulsed with neon-lit nightlife, where legendary burlesque dancer and early adult film icon Candy Barr headlined the stage at the height of her fame. During her notorious romance with Los Angeles mob boss Mickey Cohen, this Hollywood hotspot became a sizzling crossroads of organized crime, sex, and celebrity scandal, making it a must-see stop for true crime and classic Hollywood history fans.

    Admission ticket free
  • (Pass by)

    The Beverly Estate—famous for the shocking horse head scene from The Godfather (1972)—served as the lavish mansion of film mogul Jack Woltz. This iconic location, once home to authentic Hollywood glamour, is a real treat for movie buffs exploring Los Angeles film history and The Godfather’s cinematic legacy.

    Admission ticket free

Additional info

  • Service animals allowed
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Not recommended for travelers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels
  • Additional stops you will see on the tour are excluded from the four listed above in order to keep your ride exciting and full of surprises.
  • Not recommended for travelers easily upset by disturbing content or emotionally sensitive to true crime materials.
Supplied by Grave Line Tours

Tags

Half-day Tours
Bus Tours
Private and Luxury
Movie Tours
4WD Tours
Classic Car Tours
Crime Tours
Limousine Tours
Luxury Car Tours
Small Group
New Product
Short term availability

Cancellation Policy

For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.

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