Eddie Nash and The Wonderland Murders


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The Starwood, which became the premiere LA area punk club between 1980 and 1981, was permanently closed down in 1981 due to the Club owner Eddie Nash's drug bust and involvement in the "Wonderland murders". Nash owned several clubs that featured either New Wave or punk music (basically the few legit clubs that one could go to to go dancing or hear live punk/new wave music) including The Starwood, in West Hollywood, The Odyssey, on Beverly Boulevard near the Beverly Center Phazes in Reseda and The Seven Seas on (I believe) Hollywood Boulevard in the Downtown Hollywood area. Nash was allegedly heavily involved in drugs and with organized crime.


BREAKING NEWS: (Feb. 2007) on Eddie Nash, click here.


Below is a few articles culled from the LA Times and some links to more info on the Eddie Nash saga.





The cable station known as "Court TV" occasionally runs their docu-drama about the Wonderland Murders. Below is an a description and a link to their coverage.


On the evening of July 1, 1981 four people were bludgeoned to death in a split-level home on a street in the Laurel Canyon section of Hollywood called Wonderland Avenue. Police believed they were murdered in retaliation for a robbery some days earlier of heroin, cocaine, jewels and cash belonging to underworld figure and drug kingpin Adel Gharib Nasrallah, aka Eddie Nash. The link between Eddie Nash and the people at 8764 Wonderland Avenue was 1970's porn super star John Holmes. By the late 1970's Holmes had a $1500 a day cocaine habit. Although he was a marquee figure in the porn industry and stared in over 2,500 porn films, his unreliability brought about by his addiction cost him work. Like the character played by Mark Wahlberg in "Boogie Nights" (who was based on Holmes), John Holmes was reduced to petty crimes including drug running to support his habit. It did not take long for Eddie Nash to figure out who had set him up. When the drug dealer found Holmes, he forced the porn star to lead Nash's thugs to the house on Wonderland Avenue. Holmes was then made to watch as each of the victims was brutally murdered. The Los Angeles police video-taped the crime scene which was later submitted as evidence in the trial of Holmes. (This was the first time that video was introduced as evidence in a criminal trial.) Holmes was acquitted and died of an AIDs-related illness in 1998. Though Eddie Nash went to jail for unrelated narcotics possession following the murders (his attorney argued that the $1 million worth of cocaine was for his personal use), he has evaded conviction twice for participating in the crime; once in 1990 because of a hung jury and again 1991 by acquittal. Nash was indicted in May 2000 on racketeering charges including the bribery of a juror in his 1990 trial.

See Court TV's Indept Report Page






'Drug' Seized in Arrest of Eddie Nash Is a Mothball Narcotics: No charges are filed against the man who was acquitted of the 1981 killings of four people in Laurel Canyon.

Los Angeles Times
September 26, 1995

Author: Nicholas Riccardi; Special To The Times
Edition: Valley Edition
Section: Metro
Page: B-1

It took five hours, but the feds found what they were looking for--a small white ball of what they said appeared to be methamphetamine.

The FBI agents and Los Angeles police let Eddie Nash change out of his pajamas, then led him from his condominium here in handcuffs as TV cameras rolled. Authorities had long considered Nash the one who got away--a convicted drug dealer who was acquitted of murder charges in the notorious bludgeoning deaths of four people in a Laurel Canyon drug den.

Now they had him, and the buzz spread through LAPD stations and the courts--Eddie Nash had finally been caught.

One problem. That ball of supposed methamphetamine was actually a mothball. The district attorney's office declined to file charges, and Nash was cleared again.

The arrest brought back bad memories for Nash, now a fit 66-year-old man who said in an interview last week that he's reformed and trying to leave his past behind.

"After 14 years," he sighed as he spoke from his two-story Tarzana home, "they've cut me up and started all over. . . . To tell you the truth, I'm embarrassed to go out on the streets."

San Fernando Superior Court Judge Ronald Coen, who once prosecuted Nash as a deputy district attorney, had a different reaction.

"Oh my god, he did it again," Coen said when he heard that Nash would not be prosecuted. "The guy again lands on his feet."

The charges have ranged from narcotics possession to arson to murder, but the end result has almost always been the same--Eddie Nash, whose very name evokes images of film noir, is acquitted and authorities are left with egg on their faces.

Now Nash says he's kicked the cocaine addiction he blames for his financial and legal troubles of a decade ago, and wants to be left alone so he can watch his two sons, ages 19 and 22, become men. Although some of his old foes are skeptical, Nash points to his record--no convictions since his one for narcotics possession in 1982.

"I've been living a good, clean life for the last 14 years," he said. "I'm sure they've been surveying, watching."

LAPD Detective Tom Lange, who investigated the Laurel Canyon slayings for 10 years, takes news of Nash's reformed life with a grain of salt. "That could be," Lange said, "but he still has those same acquaintances, the same people he runs with."

The early 1980s were heady times for Nash, a Palestinian native who immigrated to the United States in 1950 and is also known as Adel Nasrallah.

He owned several tony restaurants and clubs in the Hollywood area, and authorities estimated his worth at $30 million. Nash lived in a sprawling hillside house in Studio City, and by his own admission, was addicted to cocaine.

"In the '80s, cocaine was not what it is now," Nash said. "It was accepted as a recreational drug. We never knew the real danger of it."

Police still maintain that Nash wasn't just a user, but a well-connected, mid-level dealer. "He wasn't a street mover," Lange said Friday. "He was probably near the top of the middle guys. The street people would come to him."

Nash has adamantly denied dealing drugs. He blames petty dealers and users for what he calls the false accusation that connected him to a grisly July 1, 1981, murder in a Laurel Canyon drug house. Four people were bludgeoned to death on Wonderland Avenue, four blocks from then-Gov. Edmund G. (Jerry) Brown's home. The ensuing investigation would run 10 years, with three trials and no convictions.

Detectives publicly tied the slayings to Nash, alleging that the victims had robbed his mansion days earlier and that he had sent his bodyguard, with pornographic film star John C. Holmes--a regular Nash client, according to authorities--to get revenge. But police said they had insufficient evidence to charge Nash, who bitterly contested the allegations.

Authorities raided Nash's home three times in the seven months after the slayings, confiscating over $1 million worth of cocaine. During one raid, Nash's bodyguard shot at narcotics officers, mistaking them for robbers, the bodyguard's defense attorney argued in court.

A Los Angeles jury found Nash guilty of possessing nearly two pounds of cocaine for sale, even though Nash's attorney said the cocaine was for his client's personal use. Superior Court Judge Everett E. Ricks handed Nash the maximum sentence--eight years in state prison. Business at his restaurants and nightclubs plummeted.

Holmes, who was acquitted of the Laurel Canyon slayings after a celebrated trial, died in 1988 after refusing to tell a grand jury who was responsible for the killings.

Nash, meanwhile, had been paroled from prison after his sentence was cut in half. He also had been acquitted of federal arson charges on an unrelated matter. But a few months after Holmes' death, police said they had accumulated enough evidence to implicate Nash in the killings and arrested him and his bodyguard.

His first murder trial in 1990 ended in a hung jury, split 11-1 in favor of his conviction. In his second trial, in 1991, Nash was acquitted. Jurors said they thought the prosecution's witnesses, who included Liberace's ex-lover as well as other avowed drug addicts, weren't credible.

"They picked up a few snitches, drug addicts, and 10 years later they arrested me on a murder charge," Nash said. Reflecting bitterly on his diminished financial security, he blamed his cocaine habit and persecution by law enforcement for ruining his life.

"Prior to that I was operating the finest restaurants in this town--Starwood, DelMonico's, discos," he said softly. "I had many, many clubs and dining rooms and restaurants. . . . I worked 44 years to get where I was. You get hooked on a lousy drug and you don't know where you're going."

He had lost his mansion. His business properties were in limbo. Nash retreated to his comparatively modest Tarzana residence and tried to get his life back in order.

"After that last trial," Lange said, "you never heard from him again."

Until Sept. 12, 1995.

At 6 a.m. that morning, authorities were conducting raids across the Los Angeles area to break up what they described as the Russian-Armenian mafia. The prime target: alleged godfather Hovsep Mikaelian. Lange said Nash had known Mikaelian back when the detective started investigating the Laurel canyon murders. Now the FBI, closing in on its quarry, tapped Mikaelian's phone.

According to papers filed in support of a federal search warrant, Mikaelian had called Nash the night of Aug. 13 and asked if he had any marijuana.

Nash's name appears only three times in the 135-page document, but that was enough for the FBI to secure a federal search warrant of his home. Nash said he was awakened the morning of Sept. 12 by the pounding of police against his door.

"They came to roust me, for no reason whatsoever," Nash said. He said he was vacationing in China at the time of Mikaelian's alleged call, and noted that according to federal officials, Mikaelian was a major drug dealer. "Why would he want to call Ed Nash for a little weed?"

During the search, police found a little white ball in a jewelry box that a field test determined to be methamphetamine, LAPD Capt. Jeff Coombs said. But a more sophisticated lab test the next day showed it was something else--a mothball stuck with pieces of stale bread, Nash said--and the district attorney's office announced that they would not charge Nash.

"It would have been nice . . . " Coombs said.

Nash says the incident humiliated him in front of his neighbors and family, even though he is innocent. Even after a lifelong dance with the law, he said, an early morning arrest is hard to take gracefully.

"It takes a long time to overcome all that negative publicity," Nash said. Now, he said, he wants to get back to rebuilding his life, "if I'm left alone, peacefully."






Surprise Plea Ends Lurid Case Crime: Eddie Nash was suspected of ordering four killings tied to the decadent nightclub and drug scene of early '80s.

Los Angeles Times

September 11, 2001

Author: Josh Meyer; Times Staff Writer
Edition: Home Edition
Section: PA
Page: A-1

Former Hollywood nightclub owner Eddie Nash pleaded guilty Monday to federal racketeering charges, abruptly ending his 20-year cat-and-mouse game with authorities who have long believed he played the lead role in one of Southern California's more lurid murder mysteries.

Nash, now 72 and ailing, for years was suspected of ordering the bludgeoning deaths of four people at a Laurel Canyon drug den in 1981. The case, known as the "Wonderland murders," came to symbolize the seamy side of the California lifestyle and even resulted in pornographic film star John Holmes facing murder charges before eventually being acquitted.

Nash's guilty plea means he might be out of prison in less than two years. He faced a potential life term if convicted of all charges in a trial.

On Monday, Nash admitted paying a $50,000 bribe to the lone holdout on a 1991 state court jury that voted 11 to 1 to convict him of murder. After that mistrial, a second trial ended in Nash's acquittal.

Nash also pleaded guilty Monday to one count each of money laundering and wire fraud during a hearing at U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.

Prosecutors said the plea agreement finally allows law enforcement authorities to close the books on Nash's role in a murder case that has bedeviled them for years.

"What has been important to us and the law enforcement community in Los Angeles is that Mr. Nash stand up in court and admit his conduct," said Assistant U.S. Atty. Daniel A. Saunders. "That is something he has never done before."

Nash rose to his feet during what was supposed to be a routine court appearance and acknowledged that he had conspired to commit murder and that he had engaged in a long-running racketeering and drug-dealing enterprise.

Despite that acknowledgment, a defense lawyer then denied that Nash played any role in the quadruple slayings, which prosecutors said were carried out in retaliation for the armed robbery of as much as $1 million in drugs, jewelry and cash from his home.

"The record should be clear," lawyer Donald M. Re told U.S. District Judge Carlos R. Moreno, "that the defendant is not admitting, and in fact denies, involvement in committing those murders."

Outside the courtroom, prosecutor Saunders said the plea clearly spells out Nash's complicity in the murder plot because he admitted sending several accomplices to retrieve the stolen goods, even if they had to use violence.

"He's admitting to conspiring to kill them but not to actually going forward and participating in a scheme to murder anyone," Saunders said. "I guess he'll claim that the fact that they were murdered that night was a coincidence. I think the public can fill in the blanks."

Nash was facing trial for his alleged role in the slayings, for racketeering and for possessing and selling cocaine and other drugs over a 17-year period.

The agreement requires Nash to serve 37 months in federal prison, including one year of time served since his arrest, and to pay a $250,000 fine.

One of his three defense lawyers said Monday that Nash is expected to spend about one year in federal prison when sentenced Nov. 19--less time than it would have taken for him to go to trial in the case.

"We want Eddie home so he can get medical attention," Re said of his client. He said Nash agreed to the deal rather than fight the charges because he was suffering from emphysema, ulcers and a host of other ailments.

Nash, whose given name is Adel Nasrallah, was indicted by a federal grand jury in May 2000 on 16 criminal counts ranging from racketeering to wire fraud to money laundering.

Prosecutors said Nash and his associates--many of whom are identified as organized crime figures--trafficked in large amounts of heroin, cocaine and marijuana out of various Hollywood nightclubs Nash owned, including the Seven Seas, Starwood, Odyssey, Ali Baba's and the Kit Kat Club.

In the course of carrying out their criminal enterprise, prosecutors said, they engaged in murder, violence, intimidation, bribery and money laundering.

Among the racketeering activities cited in the indictment were the July 1, 1981, murders of Ronald Launius, William Deverell, Barbara Richardson and Joy Audrey Miller on Wonderland Avenue in Laurel Canyon, just down the block from a house owned by then-Gov. Jerry Brown.

After Nash's two state court trials, authorities kept investigating. During one search of his house, police found $1 million worth of cocaine. He served four years in state prison for narcotics possession.

Then in 1995, an organized crime figure in an unrelated case was caught on tape boasting to an undercover informant that he had helped bribe the holdout juror in the Wonderland murder trial, Saunders said. Prosecutors said Monday that the statute of limitations had passed and that the juror no longer could be prosecuted.

From there, authorities ratcheted up the investigation and began presenting evidence to the grand jury, culminating in Nash's indictment. Long considered "the one who got away" by authorities, Nash was arrested May 19, 2000, at his Tarzana townhouse.

His arrest culminated a four-year investigation by the FBI, IRS, California attorney general's office and the Los Angeles Police Department's organized crime and vice division.

Retired LAPD Det. Tom Lange, who spent 20 years involved in the case as the original investigator, said he was frustrated that Nash faces only a total of 37 months.

But Lange said prosecutors were hampered by stale evidence, missing or dead witnesses and the fact that "there was never any evidence he was at the [murder] scene."

"There were a lot of negatives for the prosecutors going into this," Lange said. "So I believe it's a righteous plea. How much more do they want to be perceived as beating up on an old man? So it works out well for all of them."






See VKN's There's No Place Like Holmes for a detailed account on the Wonderland case.



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