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The murder of Al Bramlet, powerful union boss, 42 years later

Less than 400,000 people lived in Clark County in 1977, Tony Bennett and Joey Heatherton were rockin’ the Congo Room at the Sahara, and Al Bramlet was the most powerful labor leader in Nevada.

He ran the Culinary Union Local 226 with an “iron hand, building it from a struggling 1,500-member union in 1954 to a mighty force that virtually shut down Las Vegas during the now-infamous 1976 Strip strike,” the Review-Journal described in an article on Feb. 24, 1978, marking the one-year anniversary of his disappearance and murder.

According to a 1999 Review-Journal story, the 60-year-old Bramlet was handcuffed and gagged with duct tape by three men after arriving at McCarran Airport following a business trip to Reno on Feb. 24, 1977. He had just telephoned his daughter from the airport, telling her he would be home shortly. Bramlet never made it home.

His nude, partially decomposed battered body was discovered by hikers about three weeks later under a pile of rocks, west of Mount Potosi. He was shot six times, including in each ear.

One of the three men who abducted Bramlet, Eugene Vaughan, spilled the beans to a woman. Police found out and Gramby Hanley, and his father, Tom, pleaded guilty and got life sentences without parole.

Vaughan cooperated and got less of a sentence.

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