Sins & Survivors: A Las Vegas True Crime Podcast - The Champ Nobody Wanted - The Tragedy of Sonny Liston
Episode Date: June 2, 2026Sonny Liston was one of the greatest heavyweight boxers of all time, but his death in Las Vegas has never felt as simple as the official explanation. The coroner said natural causes... but was it?His ...life and boxing career are the stuff of legend. Liston had giant fists, an almost impossible reach, shocking athleticism, and what one writer described as “the ability to take a punch that would stagger a water buffalo.” But behind the myth was a man shaped by poverty, violence, prison, racism, exploitation, and a public that seemed to fear him even when he became champion.In this episode, we look at the rise and fall of Charles “Sonny” Liston: from rural Arkansas to a Missouri State Penitentiary, from heavyweight glory to the controversial Ali fights, and finally to the mystery that still surrounds his death.Listen now to hear Sonny’s tragic story, and subscribe to get the episode ad-free, plus our Swing Shift bonus episode where we discuss the making of this one.https://sinspod.co/128Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/sins-survivors-a-las-vegas-true-crime-podcast--6173686/support.Domestic Violence Resourceshttp://sinspod.co/resourcesClick here to become a member of our Patreon!https://sinspod.co/patreonVisit and join our Patreon now and access our ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content & schwag! Get ad-free access for only $1 a month or ad-free and bonus episodes for $3 a monthApple Podcast Subscriptionshttps://sinspod.co/appleWe're now offering premium membership benefits on Apple Podcast Subscriptions! On your mobile deviceLet us know what you think about the episodehttps://www.buzzsprout.com/twilio/text_messages/2248640/open_sms
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To listen ad-free, visit sinspod.co slash subscribe. Starting at $2.99 a month, you'll also get access to our
exclusive bonus content episodes when you join through Patreon or Apple subscriptions. Thanks for
supporting the show. It was the evening of January 5, 1971, and Geraldine Liston headed home to
the house she shared with her husband, former heavyweight champion of the world, Sunny Liston.
They lived in the Paradise Palms neighborhood at 2058 Ottawa Drive. Paradise Palms was
was absolutely full of Las Vegas celebrity royalty at the time, including Johnny Carson, Dean Martin,
Dionne Warwick, and Buddy Hackett, among so many others.
When Geraldine entered the house, she knew something was wrong. There was a horrible smell.
She thought Sonny might have burned his dinner, but nothing was on the stove.
She'd been worried about Sonny while she was gone for a week over New Year's, and when she
entered their bedroom, she discovered Sunny. He was dead, and he had been gone a while,
probably close to a week. How could this have happened to Sunny? How could this have happened to Sunny?
had his past finally caught up with him, the rumor mill hasn't stopped even today, 54 years later.
Hi, and welcome to Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast, where we cover missing persons, unsolved cases, and the leading cause of homicide in the Las Vegas area, domestic violence.
I'm your host, Sean. And I'm your co-host, John.
We've covered cases in the past where boxing has come up, specifically with regard to the 1981 murder of Jamie Walker, a teenager from a prominent family who lived in the historic,
West Side of Las Vegas, who died in just a horrific manner.
In that case, heavyweight boxer Willie Lee Shannon was identified as her killer via DNA analysis
35 years after the crime, and in 2015, he was convicted on this evidence.
He was allowed to live for 35 years on borrowed time, hiding out in Florida, escaping justice
until Las Vegas Metro had crime scene DNA analyzed and finally caught him.
It's a heartbreaking story involving a family's long wait for justice.
If you want to hear the rest of it, head over to sinspa.co.co.
Today, though, we have a much different story.
You may not even know the name Sunny Liston, unless you're a boxing buff or a historian.
People referred to Sunny at the time as the champ nobody wanted.
There are reasons for that, having to do with the violent and complicated reputation he had
long before he became champion, and even into his later years.
But even if you have heard his name, what you may not know is that Sunny is thought of as one
of the greatest boxers who ever lived, write alongside names like Muhammad Ali and Joe Lewis.
So many books and documentaries have been written about Liston.
Despite the official story, How He Died and Who Was Responsible remains a mystery.
Sunny's life is a complex and tragic story.
Author Harold Conrad wrote of him, he died the day he was born, and in a way that perfectly
describes how his early life followed him all the way up until his death.
Charles Sunny Liston was born in rural eastern Arkansas to a family of sharecroppers,
which means they farmed land owned by white landowners in the sharecropping system,
which was common in the Jim Crow South.
They worked the land for a portion of the crops but didn't own anything themselves.
The family farmed cotton, molasses, sorghum, corn, peanuts, sweet potato, and pecans.
And they worked on the plantation in rural St. Francis County, Arkansas,
near the small community of Morledge, known as Sandslaw.
It was a dusty, isolated area in the Mississippi Delta region of Arkansas,
filled with poverty, overcrowded small homes, tin roofs, and family struggling to survive.
Sonny's father was Toby Liston.
Toby's parents were formerly enslaved people, and Toby has been called a miserable miscreant
of a man by one of Sunny's biographers.
His mother was Helen Baskin, and she was Toby's second.
wife, and she was almost 30 years younger than her husband, so she was just a teenager when they
got married. Sunny was the 24th of 25 kids fathered by Toby and Helen's ninth child.
Sunny has said that he thinks the only reason Toby had him was that he needed more hands to
help with the farming. We weren't able to find out much about his other 24 siblings,
but with that many children, Sunny said he felt lost in the crowd and given what
we've learned about him, he was definitely a victim of neglect and absolutely a victim of physical
abuse. Toby used his kids as free labor and he used to say, if you're old enough to sit at the table,
you're old enough to work in the fields. And Sonny has said that his father beat him every day
and often told people that his father never gave him anything except a beating.
As far as when Sonny was born, his date of birth is unclear. Berg certificates weren't mandatory
in that area of Arkansas until
1965. There was no official record of his birth.
Even Sunny himself wasn't really sure when he was born.
And later, for purposes of his boxing career,
he used the birthday of May 8, 1932,
which would have made him only 39 years old when he passed away.
People who have written about him have said that
based on census records and statements from his mother,
he could have been born July 22nd, 1930.
One author, Paul Gallander, wrote that he thought he was born
1919 or earlier, which is obviously a huge discrepancy, but most sources accept that he was born
between 1929 and 1932. I personally don't believe Paul Gallander, it doesn't make sense to me,
given the timeline we'll talk about it in a minute. And even Geraldine referred to him as a 50-year-old
man in 1971, so it seemed like even she had relatively no idea how old he was. Arrest records imply
that he was born 1927 or 1928, but those are not super reliable either. For the purposes,
of ages when we talk about him here, we'll just note that his official birthday was May 8, 1932,
but knowing that it was probably more likely sometime in 1929 or 1930.
Helen left Arkansas in 1946 to get work in a factory in St. Louis, Missouri, with some of her
children, but she left Sonny behind with his abusive father. A year after she left, Sunny sold
pecans to earn enough money to get to St. Louis, partially by hitchhiking. At this point,
he was most likely somewhere between 14 and 16 years old.
Sunny had no idea where she might be in St. Louis, but he headed there anyway.
And the St. Louis police helped him when he got there by letting him sleep in the police station
until he finally located his mother.
And that would be just about the last time the police would be helpful or nice to him.
Not only in St. Louis, but everywhere, Sunny went.
When Sunny arrived in St. Louis, he enrolled in school, but that didn't last long.
He also couldn't find a steady job.
His friend Ray Monson said in an interview that he had to stop going to school early.
Since Sunny was functionally illiterate, he was in classes with much younger, much smaller kids,
and he really struggled.
The younger kids teased him mercilessly according to him,
and he ended up leaving school to keep from hurting them.
Sunny would later tell interviewers that he had left school because there were too many kids.
But that was the end of Sunny's formal education.
His skills in reading and writing were rudimentary, and he never felt confident in his writing ability.
And he used cards pre-printed with his autograph when folks would ask for it.
Once Sunny was in St. Louis as a young man and he needed money, he ended up joining up with a gang.
And he started committing crimes like robbery, stealing, and other kinds of street violence.
This would have been between the years of 1946 and 1949.
During that time, local St. Louis newspaper started linking him to someone they called
the yellow shirt bandit because of the shirt sunny wore.
In 1949, he was arrested and charged with felony armed robbery and sentenced to five years in prison.
But this conviction turned out to be a huge turning point in his life.
He was sent to the Missouri State Prison in Jefferson City.
At this point, he tells the authorities he's 20 years old, which is probably close to true,
putting his real birth year at 1929 or 1930.
The local papers said at the time that he was 22 years old.
old, but if we used his 1932 birthday, he'd only be 17. But prison offered the structure that
Sonny lacked growing up, and it was so much more stable than his childhood.
Sunny said, I didn't mind prison. I figured I had to pay for what I did. It was the first time
in my life, I got three square meals a day. One of the reasons prison was such a turning point
in his life is that it was here that he discovered boxing, and this is where he became
Sunny List in the Boxer. At this point, Sunny was about safe.
6-foot-1 and between 200 and 220 pounds, and he had an 84-inch reach, which is disproportionately
large for someone of his height. Just for comparison purposes, Muhammad Ali has a reach of 78 inches,
and he's 6-foot-3. Floyd Patterson, who was a former heavyweight champ, is 6 feet tall and
had a 72-inch reach. Lennox Lewis also had a reach of 84 inches, but he was 6'5, so this was an
incredible advantage in the boxing ring. Also, his fists were gigantic. They were 15 inches around.
It's commonly said that his hands were so big that they looked like hams. And one author said that when he
hit you in the face, he hit you in the whole face. And they had to have special gloves made for him
to fit those enormous hands. The boxing and athletic director in the prison named Reverend Alloy-Stevens
quickly identified Sonny and wanted him in his prison boxing program. Reverend Stevens taught him
boxing and realized he had unbelievable raw strength, power, and potential. The other inmates did not
like sparring with him, and they were understandably afraid. And this is where he started developing
his jab. Usually the jab isn't a power punch. It just keeps an opponent away, but with his,
it had absolute knockout power. It's been called the strongest jab in boxing history. It worked
very well with his natural talent and long reach. He ended up winning the prison boxing championship,
and Stevens advocated for him and helped him get paroled early because of his boxing.
He was paroled October 31st, 1952 after only three years served.
After that, Father Stevens helped hook him up with boxing contacts,
and that started his amateur boxing career.
He wasn't really ready for the big show yet, but it wouldn't be long.
So back he went to St. Louis with a new focus, amateur boxing.
Father Stevens stayed involved with Sonny after prison,
and he helped him arrange fights, connected him with trains,
and local fight promoters, and at the time he was training with a person named Marvin Bartel in St. Louis.
His amateur time is really characterized by him developing his raw technical skills and his
overwhelming physical stature, accounts of frightening sparring sessions and amateurs refusing to fight him,
and extremely short amateur fights. He started winning local championships right away. He fought
in local St. Louis fight clubs, and he won the St. Louis Golden Gloves heavyweight title.
Record keeping from that era is pretty spotty, but he was winning everything there was to win.
Less than a year after leaving prison, though, on September 2nd, 1953, he turned pro,
and that's when he got his birth certificate, and they picked May 8, 1932 as his birthday.
In his first fight, he knocked out Don Smith in 33 seconds in the first round,
and that pretty much set the tone for his career.
He was late to the game with his age, he needed money,
amateurs couldn't handle him, so the only thing to do was for him to go pro.
At that point between 1953 and 1955, of course, the mob started taking notice of him.
And that's not unusual, because at the time, boxing was heavily controlled by organized crime.
And that's mostly because of betting and fight fixing.
John Vitale, alleged union racketeer, handled him.
And there are allegations that Sonny was acting in some capacity as a mob enforcer,
a lone shark collector, and a strike breaker.
There's little actual definitive proof of this, but the claims are quite common.
So this continued until about 1956 when he had a turning point in an incident with a local
St. Louis police officer named Thomas Mello. It was May 7, 1956, and it was reported in the
St. Louis Globe that Sunny Liston had been arrested for allegedly beating and robbing a St. Louis
police officer. This officer named Thomas Mello apparently approached a cab parked in an alley
and threatened to write the cab a ticket. Sunny and his friend Willie Patterson, who was driving the cab,
got into an argument with the officer and allegedly dragged the officer into the alley and brutally beat him.
They broke his leg, he had a head injury, and they took his gun, which was later recovered at a
relative's house.
Sunny's wife, Geraldine, said in an interview afterwards that the officer had used a racial slur on him.
A police officer in St. Louis at the time named James Reddick found him a few nights later and had a
conversation with him and told him that he was going to get his head caved in if he didn't stop what he was doing.
This resulted in a nine-month prison sentence.
at the time he had a professional record of 15 and 1, and he was quickly climbing the rankings.
So that incident followed him for the rest of his career.
Every police officer in America heard about this, and it strengthened the perception that
Sonny was a dangerous, mob-controlled criminal.
And it made him hard to market for fights.
So that's why there's a gap in his fighting record between 1956 and 1958, because he was in prison.
After he got out, there is an interesting anecdote that's hard to verify, but it comes from
a book called The Devil and Sunny Liston by Nick Tosh's.
He allegedly got into another altercation with a police officer,
and in that case, picked up the police officer,
turned him upside down, and put him into a trash can.
That one's really hard to verify,
but his reputation with police and promoters was already really bad at the time,
and this didn't help.
It's one of those stories that you hear about Sunny Liston
that seems like a little bit of boxing legend,
but I also wouldn't put it past Sunny Liston
to turn a cop upside down and put him in a trash can.
By 1957, Sunny's relationship with the St. Louis Police
police was at an all-time low, and he was encouraged to leave the city. Several sources indicate that
this was a leave or else situation, and the sentiment definitely comes across in that interview with
James Reddick, that same former St. Louis police officer who basically told him he was going to get his
head caved in if he didn't leave town. This was around the time that he married Geraldine Clark
in 1957, who he stayed married to for the rest of his life, but wasn't at all faithful to. There
only child, Daniel, Dan or Danny, was, according to one account we read, presented to him by a waitress that Sunny had slept with as being his son. But Geraldine adopted him and raised him as her own. A man named William Bill Wingate, who's also a boxer, according to reports, is another one of Sunny's children, but Geraldine is not his mother. There's a lot of controversy around this, and we could not confirm that he was his son.
He asserted that he was. He's since passed away, but his birthday and birth location are also in question given where Sunny was living at the time.
Geraldine herself had children from a previous relationship, at least two daughters that we read about, who were in their teens when she met Sunny. So he had two stepdaughters as well. And the family records, as with everything in Sunny's early life, are spotty and incomplete.
At that point, Sunny took the hint and left St. Louis for Philadelphia. And at that point, Sunny took the hint and left St. Louis for Philadelphia. And at that point,
and he was handed over to a new mob manager in Philadelphia named Frank Carbo and Frank Blinky Palermo,
and he was managed by Joseph Barone, who was a friend of Carbone's.
At this point in his career, he was absolutely crushing opponents,
really earning a legitimate claim to a shot at Floyd Patterson's heavyweight belt.
He was thought of as the best heavyweight alive at that time,
and quotes about him included people saying he probably had the best left jab in heavyweight history.
It was the kind of jab that went through you, according to boxing historian Hank Kaplan.
He would hit the speedbag so hard that it broke.
He would hit the headgear on his sparring partner so hard that it would knock the stuffing out of them.
He was known as the toughest guy on the planet, and that kind of became his identity.
There was one journalist who said,
Guy started bleeding during the national anthem.
There was one interesting interview when he was talking to Howard Kosell after one of his fights,
and he asked Sonny, it seems like you plan a vastly increased use of your right hand,
and Sonny replies, I'm planning on using both of them.
He was thought of as being bad with the press, but it didn't seem like that to me.
That exchange is an example how it seemed like he just had a dry sense of humor that no one really knew what to do with.
But the white media did not like him, and he didn't like them, and he didn't trust them.
Stories at the time referred to him with really blatant, offensive, racist language,
and his brushes with the law really slowed down his bid to get a shot at the heavyweight championship.
Also, it's pretty obvious that Floyd Patterson and his manager knew full well what was going to happen when that match finally happened.
That Floyd Patterson wouldn't have much of a chance against Liston, so they made up excuses and leaned on his criminal record and his ties to organized crime to dodge the fight.
President Kennedy even chimed in and said he didn't want Liston to get a shot at the heavyweight title.
The NAACP also didn't like Sonny, but for a different reason, they loved Floyd, but they thought Liston was bad for the Civil Civil War.
rights movement because of his criminal past, so they didn't want him getting the fight either.
Of course, police around the country knew about the incident where he broke Officer Mello's
leg. They all conspired to harass him blatantly wherever they could. Off-camera, though, people
who knew him called him funny, shy, generous, and excellent with children, and there's evidence
of that. There's video of him being great with kids and exhibiting his dry humor, like in his
interview with Howard Cosell. He was also very insecure about his upbringing and education, and he hated
being asked about it, and of course the white press loved asking him about it.
But finally, though, Floyd Patterson couldn't duck Sunny Liston anymore, and he agreed to fight him.
And strangely, it seemed like he thought that he was doing Sunny a favor, when, in fact,
Sunny more than earned a shot at the title.
And there's evidence that Floyd was rightly terrified.
That first fight with Floyd took place September 25th, 1962 at Comiskey Park in Chicago,
while he lived in Philly.
It did not go well for Floyd Patterson.
Sonny beat the crap out of him in the first round,
and it was over in two minutes and five seconds.
It was the first time a heavyweight championship had ended in the first round.
He also offered Floyd a rematch immediately.
And there's an anecdote,
and a lot of stories you read about Liston flying back to Philadelphia
after the fight and planning his speech to the public
and how he would be a good champion and a good role model.
The story goes that they landed in Philadelphia, and there was no one to greet him, no press, no nothing, and it really had an effect on him.
The story comes from his friend Roy Munson and a former boxer named Jack McKinney.
He said that you just see him deflate and be like, screw this.
That story is another example of boxing legend and the mythology of Sunny Liston, and there's potentially some truth to the story, but also it's not quite as advertised.
It sounded like perhaps the deputy mayor was there, but they were at the wrong.
place to greet him, but the perception was that he was not greeted and wasn't treated like the
champ he was. And then even after he was the champ, the police continued to harass him, and they even
arrested him for something as minor as driving too slow. After that, he and Geraldine made the
decision to leave Philly, and he said famously, I'd rather be a lamppost in Denver than the mayor of
Philadelphia. So he felt really rejected in Philadelphia and decided Denver would be a better option.
In 1962, Geraldine and Sunny arrive in Denver, and Sunny came with his bad reputation intact.
He was thought of as an ex-con, a police assaulter, and a mob fighter.
But he quickly became friends with a Catholic priest named Father Louis Murphy, and Father Murphy became a mentor to him.
Murphy reportedly encouraged Sonny to stay out of trouble, avoid drinking, and embrace his responsibilities as a heavyweight champion.
but Sonny continued struggling with alcohol use,
the unwanted and unjustified attention from the police,
and just general public and media hostility.
The Denver police knew what kind of car he drove,
and they wanted to harass him.
And a journalist named Larry Merchant said that
they should throw him a ticker tape parade
made out of his arrest warrants.
Sunny worked hard to rehab and improved his image.
He appeared on the Ed Sullivan show.
and it was like they were trying to portray him as safe for middle America, which is really
coded language. There was a lot of racism towards him in the media, and the effort seemed like
it was all done to make him more palatable to white America. But he appeared on American
bandstand. He appeared on Night Train, where he did things like skipping rope to music, which people
loved because he was so athletic and it looked so cool when he would do it. But Sunny found all of this
difficult. He wasn't comfortable giving interviews. He hated it. He didn't trust the reporters,
because they often went after him for things like his illiteracy. But shortly after that,
Floyd Patterson got his rematch on July 24, 1963. And unfortunately, for Floyd, it didn't go
very much better. He did last longer. It was still a round one knockout, but Floyd lasted four
seconds longer than the first one. This one lasted two minutes and 10 seconds. So that solidified
Sonny Liston as the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. And he was at his absolute peak at this time,
and the boxing world thought that he was indestructible and unbeatable. Everyone, that is,
except of course, for a young 22-year-old Olympic boxing champion named Cassius Clay, who very much
wanted a shot at the heavyweight title. After the second Patterson fight, Liston was training in Las Vegas
at Taco's ringside gym, and the focus shifted on a fight with Cassius Clay. Cache's Clay was young and on the
rise. He was a popular Olympic gold medalist, and he desperately was trying to get Liston's attention,
and he wanted to be the heavyweight champ. There's a fun anecdote where Cassius Clay and Sunny Liston
were both at the Intercontinental, and they saw each other. Cassius Clay was playing at a card
table, and Liston walked up to him and smacked him in the head and told him he was too damn fresh,
according to Jack McKinney, who claimed he was there, which is another wild bit of boxing history. The first
fight he had with Cassius Clay took place on February 25th, 1964 in Miami Beach, just seven months
after his fight with Patterson. At the time, no one took Clay seriously. Clay spent the lead up to the
fight, taunting Sonny, calling him ugly, mocking him in public, trying to get in his head. There's even
one anecdote where he drove to Paradise Palms and parked outside Sonny's house and honked the horn
and pound it on his windows and tried to get him outside to come fight. Then at the way in,
Clay appeared almost hysterical. He was yelling, shaking, screaming at Sunny. People thought it was a
but doctors had to check Clay to make sure that he was all right.
Experts expected Liston to destroy Clay. He was an 8-1 favorite. But when it came to the fight,
Clay was just too fast for Liston. He struggled to even hit Clay. Clay was 22 years old and in peak
physical condition. And many later believe the son he had really underestimated him and not
trained as hard as he could have. By round three, it was clear that Clay wasn't like anyone else he'd
face previously. After round four, Clay said that there was something in his eyes and he couldn't
see. He wanted to quit because his vision was blurry, but his trainer just thought he was scared and he
sent him out anyway into the fifth round, and somehow he survived by essentially running away from
Liston for the whole round. There are unproven allegations that Sunny and his corner use something to
blind Clay on purpose, possibly liniment, or that Clay's cut man got it in his eyes by mistake,
but there's no proof of that. Like we said, Clay survived round
five and then dominated the sixth round. When the seventh round was set to begin, Liston just refused to
come out. He said his shoulder had been hurt, which isn't really clear if that happened. And a lot of
people immediately thought the fight was fixed because it was 8 to 1 for Liston to win. There's a lot of
disagreement on that, but there's no actual evidence of it. So Cassius Clay won the fight and was a new
heavyweight champion of the world. Of course, they had to have a rematch set up immediately.
So Sonny started training again, this time for real, and he dropped a lot of
weight and got back to where he was previously and really sharpened up for the rematch.
The fight was initially planned for November 16, 1964 in Boston at the Boston Garden.
But unfortunately, right before the fight, his opponent, who is no longer Cassius Clay, he's now
Muhammad Ali, got a hernia and required surgery. So this is a problem because Sunny is absolutely
ready to go and has an end date in mind, but now he has to wait. And during the time between when
the fight was originally scheduled, and when it took place, there were congressional investigations
of the first fight as to whether it was fixed. The FBI was investigating a possible fix in the
second fight, and it was just continual distraction after distraction. The fight is finally rescheduled
for May 25, 1965, and it's been moved from Boston to Lewiston, Maine. Like we mentioned,
he's no longer Cassius Clay. He's known as Muhammad Ali, reflecting his close affiliation with
the Nation of Islam, which adds another layer of controversy to him at the time.
There were also allegations that the Nation of Islam threatened Sonny's family with death if he won
the fight, although there's no conclusive proof of that. Early in the fight, Sunny went down
after being punched in the face with what was eventually called the Phantom Punch. So he went
down and there was a referee standing between Ali and Liston because Ali refused to go to a neutral
corner like you're supposed to when there's a knockdown. There were trainers screaming, the ref couldn't
hear of the count. Liston finally got up, but the ref was told that he had been down for more than 10
seconds, and the fight was called off. He did get hit, but it's not clear how hard he really got hit.
You may know the famous photo of Muhammad Ali that everyone knows. It's that fight, with him standing
over Sonny Liston yelling, get up soccer, get up soccer, when he should be standing in a neutral
corner. Everyone thought that the fight was fixed. After the fight, I thought this was a nice story. Floyd
Patterson was at the fight, and he came in.
to Liston's locker room and consult him after the loss.
Following that, Sunny officially moved his residence to Las Vegas on April 5th, 1966,
and as part of the move, he actually had to fill out a convicted person's questionnaire.
But he and Geraldine bought a very nice home in Paradise Palms at 2058 Ottawa in a neighborhood
full of Las Vegas celebrities.
And Sunny fit in well in Las Vegas.
He wasn't harassed as much by the police and gambling.
was accepted here. And over time, Sunny's image started to soften. He appeared on the cover of
the Beatles' Sergeant Pepper album. He appeared in an airline commercial with Andy Warhol. He was on Love American
style. He was in a movie with The Monkeys. But he kept fighting and he ended up winning 14 fights
in a row. He was fighting internationally and he was proving that he was still a serious contender.
However, it's rumored that Sunny was using cocaine, weed, even heroin, and we have more to say about that.
But there were also well-documented allegations of Sunny's selling drugs on the West Side, and on a small scale inside the Intercontinental Hotel, which was his known hangout.
That's the hotel that became the Las Vegas Hilton, and now it's currently the Westgate.
Sunny had well-known celebrity friendships with people like George Foreman, who was Olympic champion and sparring parties.
partner, and he called Liston gentle and kind.
Sunny's last fight was June 29, 1970 in New Jersey, against Charles Weppner, who was known
as the Bayonne bleeder, because not surprisingly, he bled a lot during fights.
Sunny won that fight by TKO, and there are unproven rumors that Sunny was supposed to throw that
last fight, but he didn't. He earned $13,000 for the fight, but once he paid off a debt and his
trainers, he was left with nothing. The couple had no money, according to Geraldine.
Geraldine said in an interview that people claimed Sunny was working for the mob, but they were broke.
In February of 1969, an incident happened that really hurt Sunny's reputation. There was a drug bust
at a place called Earl's Beauty Cage. Earl Cage was a beautician on the west side where he ran a
very popular beauty salon, and it was allegedly very popular because
Earl was selling drugs to women on the historic west side.
Sunny was there at the residence when the police raided the place, but Liston was the only person
who was let go.
There's little mention of the incident in the papers, just a headline like Sunny Liston
post bail, which was allegedly for DUI charge, not for drugs, and it never went to
court.
Police just walked Liston out to his car, according to Bill Alden.
But when something like this happens, people are going to be.
we're going to start asking questions, and it's no wonder that rumors started that Sonny was possibly a police informant.
As 1970 was coming to a close, Sunny's life was going in two directions. His relationship with Geraldine was strained at that point because of his alcohol use and his infidelity.
He also was at the same time improving his image with his relationships and his appearances on TV shows and in movies.
At the end of the year, Geraldine and Danny left town to visit her family,
for the holidays because her father was ill, leaving Sunny alone in Las Vegas. During these last
few days of his life, Sunny reportedly was continuing to make plans for the future. He was going
to meetings. He was planning future television appearances, and he was scheduling work for the new
year, 1971. He met with his close friend Davy Pearl to work on an appointment calendar for the coming
year. He reportedly drove to Los Angeles for meetings with a booking agent about those television
appearances, and in the early morning hours of December 29th, Sunny called his old friend Barney Baker
in Chicago and said, I got 20 big ones for you. Barney later said that Sunny sounded upbeat and
had planned to visit him, but Sunny never arrived. While Geraldine was out of town for New Year's,
she wasn't able to reach Sunny by phone and she was worried about him. She came home five days later
on January 5, 1971. She walked in the house around 9 p.m. and noted a horrible smell. She thought he
was cooking something, but there was nothing in the kitchen. She went upstairs and found Sunny, he was
lying on the bed. She immediately left the house and went to a friend's and called Sunny's doctor.
After a while, she got a hold of the doctor who came to the house and confirmed what she suspected
that Sunny was dead and had been for a while. She called the police three and a half hours later
at 11.59 p.m. There's some question about that timing, but there's never been any implication that
she was involved in any way with Sunny's death, but it raised questions about whether or not she was
tidying up the house in the meantime. It was clear from what the doctor said that he had been
dead close to a week. There was no immediate evidence for how he died. He had apparently fallen over
in the bedroom, breaking a small bench as he collapsed, and several of his friends were present at the house
as they were taking him out. In the kitchen, police discovered a small balloon of heroin and some
marijuana, but they didn't find any needles. The house wasn't in disarray. There was no sign of a break-in,
and nothing is missing. The strange thing was that
Geraldine was in the house for a while, and she didn't notice the bag of heroin in the kitchen,
so that's really strange. And that strangeness and accusation of heroin in the kitchen
might be why she never really fully cooperated with the police. Police assumed that this was an
overdose and that family members tidied up the crime scene. On January 5th, the initial autopsy
couldn't pinpoint a cause of death. They mentioned track marks on his arm as a possible cause,
and of course the local papers loved that and ran with it. But Sonny didn't let him.
Needles. We know this from his Philadelphia dentist, the doctor that treated him when he was in a car
accident just a few weeks earlier, and his trainers. In fact, at one point, he had to cancel a fight in
Africa because he refused to get the required vaccinations. And Joe Lewis reportedly said,
if there was heroin in his veins, someone other than Liston shot it in. Based on the description of
the crime scene, it was a complete mess. His funeral was held January 9, 1971, at the Palm Mortuary
Chapel in Las Vegas, which holds about four.
400 people, with about 1,000 people in attendance. Joe Lewis was one of his pallbearers,
and the celebrities in attendance included Ed Sullivan, Ella Fitzgerald, Nipsey Russell, Doris Day,
and the Inkspots, who sang Sunny, according to some reports.
The final coroner's toxicology report came back 10 days later, January 19th, two weeks after he died,
with a ruling that he died of natural causes, specifically lung congestion and heart failure.
so unfortunately there was no further investigation and it was never treated as a homicide.
The coroner said that the drugs weren't present in sufficient amounts to cause death,
so according to him, it wasn't the heroin that killed him.
There are other theories out there, and we will talk a little bit about each of them.
His housekeeper's name was Mildred Stevenson, and she later claimed that she entered
Sunny's house on December 31, using her key, and found him dead.
And according to this version, she called sports handicapper Lem banker and then locked
the house and left. If that's true, that would mean that multiple people may have known
Sonny was dead before Geraldine officially discovered the body days later, and there's no proof of
this. Trainer Johnny Taco later allegedly told friends that he became worried when Sunny failed to
appear at his New Year's Eve party. According to Taco's account, allegedly, he went to Sunny's
house with police, and Sunny was already dead, and there was a needle visible in Sunny's arm.
Taco allegedly claimed that the house didn't smell strongly of decomposition at that point.
and of course that version conflicts with later official documents and adds another layer of mystery to the timeline.
Almost immediately, theories began spreading through boxing circles in Las Vegas.
Major theories included that it was an accidental overdose of heroin, that it was an intentional hot shot murder, that it was mob retaliation, that it was drug dealer retaliation, that it was a heart attack that was later staged as an overdose.
Some people believe that Sonny had become involved with a dangerous drug dealers.
others believe that he knew too much about organized crime and boxing.
Another rumor claimed that he had never been paid for allegedly throwing the Ali rematch
and had become angry about it.
Another theory claimed that Sunny had refused to throw the Chuck Wepner fight months earlier
and was killed for it.
There are problems with all these theories, though.
The overdose theory has a lot of inconsistencies.
Sonny was very afraid of needles, so that doesn't make sense.
There's very unclear toxicology, and the timeline just doesn't work.
The murder theories also really lack hard evidence, but the investigation itself was lackluster
and limited and never pursued as a homicide. As we said earlier, Harold Conrad said,
I think he died the day he was born. And that line really reflects how many people viewed
Sonny's life. He was shaped by violence, poverty, fear, exploitation, and public rejection long
before his actual death. People have argued about Sonny Liston and his death for more than 50 years.
But long before he was found dead in Las Vegas, people decided what they thought.
of him. They called him a criminal. They called him dangerous. They called him a thug. And even worse things.
His friends knew him as someone who was funny, generous, and who loved children. He grew up in poverty
and was abused as a child, but rose to the top of the boxing world. But he never really
escaped his past. He was shaped by the times he grew up in, and his grave marker sums it up well,
simply saying, a man. Thanks for listening. If you're enjoying the podcast, it always helps if you can
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Sins and Survivors, a Las Vegas true crime podcast,
is research written and produced by your host, Sean and John.
The information shared in this podcast is accurate at the time of recording.
If you have questions, concerns, or corrections, please email us.
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