The last boss of Brighton Boris "Biba" Nayfeld and the rise of the Russian mob in America

Douglas Century

Book - 2022

Boris Nayfeld, a.k.a. "Biba," is the last living boss of the old-school Russian mob in America, and he's survived to tell it all. Filled with sex, drugs, and murder, Biba's story is a mind-boggling journey that took him from petty street crime in the USSR to billion-dollar embezzlement in America. Born in Soviet-era Belarus, abandoned by his parents in infancy, Biba's brutal upbringing left him hungry for more--more power, control, and money. Taking advantage of the rampant corruption in the Soviet Union, Biba's teenage hooliganism quickly turned into bolder "black cash" rackets, making him, by Soviet standards, a very rich young man. When authorities took notice and threatened him with "the supr...eme measure"-- execution by firing squad--he managed to get out of the USSR just in time. Within months of landing in America, his intimidating presence and street smarts quickly made him legendary in the Soviet émigré community of Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, and launched him to the top of New York's Russian Jewish mob, one of the world's most inventive, powerful and violent criminal organizations. After decades as a globe-trotting boss, and three stints in U.S. federal prisons he remains unbroken and unrepentant, even as his entire life has unraveled around him. Now seventy-four years old, Biba is a lion in winter. Douglas Century vividly brings the notorious gangster to life in these pages, telling not only his epic journey but also the history of the Russian mob in America.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
True crime stories
Case studies
Published
[New York] : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Douglas Century (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xvi, 395 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780063014954
  • Map of Boris Nayfeld's Europe
  • Map of Boris Nayfeld's Brooklyn
  • Author's Note
  • Prelude
  • Introduction
  • Part 1.
  • Chapter 1. The Internat
  • Chapter 2. Khuligans
  • Chapter 3. The Zone
  • Chapter 4. Dead Souls
  • Chapter 5. The Blatnoy
  • Part 2.
  • Chapter 6. America
  • Chapter 7. Little Odessa
  • Chapter 8. The Uncrowned King
  • Chapter 9. The Wrecking Crew
  • Chapter 10. The Bratva
  • Chapter 11. El Caribe
  • Chapter 12. Brooklyn Nocturne
  • Chapter 13. The Long Con
  • Chapter 14. Gasoline
  • Chapter 15. Murder on Ocean Parkway
  • Chapter 16. The Big Schneyer
  • Chapter 17. Ambush on Avenue U
  • Chapter 18. A Bend in the River
  • Chapter 19. "This Was My Revenge"
  • Part 3.
  • Chapter 20. The Wall
  • Chapter 21. China White
  • Chapter 22. Old New Year in Paradise
  • Chapter 23. The War
  • Chapter 24. The Musors
  • Chapter 25. Fairton
  • Part 4.
  • Chapter 26. Krysha
  • Chapter 27. Oligarchs and Gangsters
  • Chapter 28. Odessa Mama
  • Chapter 29. The Last Party
  • Chapter 30. Crime and Punishment
  • Acknowieobments
  • Glossary
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The life of a ruthless mobster, based on personal interviews. When Boris Nayfeld was born in 1947 in Gomel, Belarus, his father was thousands of miles away "doing time in a Soviet gulag for black marketeering." His mother abandoned him and his brother three years later, leaving them in the care of their grandmother. "I never loved [my mother]," he said later in life. "To be honest, I'm only grateful for one thing: she didn't have an abortion." Perhaps unsurprisingly, it wasn't long before he was hanging out with gang members, on his way to his own first experience with Soviet prisons. Century, the author of Hunting El Chapo and other bestselling true-crime books, thrillingly chronicles Nayfeld's criminal career in the Soviet Union, where stealing from the state was a main source of illicit income. However, living visibly beyond one's nominal means was a good way to earn unwelcome attention, and in 1979, Nayfeld and his family took part in a general exodus of Jews to the U.S. It wasn't long before he found himself in Brighton Beach, where "bilking the system was widely admired, a demonstration of intelligence and adaptability." Nayfeld quickly allied himself with those who could ease his path, especially Evsei Agron, a pickpocket from Leningrad who'd become a kingpin in Brooklyn. Under Agron's mentorship, Nayfeld took part in a stunning variety of scams, from passing counterfeit Russian coins to recent immigrants to insurance fraud, eventually hitting a real jackpot with fuel-tax evasion. Century wisely lets his subject tell most of the story in his own vivid words, painting his career in crime as a regular job, with prison just a cost of doing business and violence one useful item in the toolbox. True-crime fans will find this one irresistible, and the lengthy glossary of terms is a welcome addition. A fascinating, page-turning story of a genuine scoundrel. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.