As Sammy Davis Jr. slips through a police roadblock the morning after the big heist, driving a garbage truck, the CJ-3B sits in the background ready for action. The '59 Ford (foreground) and '59 Olds cruisers look better prepared for any high-speed chase that might develop, but the Jeep looks better equipped in case somebody runs out of gas and needs a push....
The Jeep is also glimpsed at the roadblock during the night (below) while power to the casino is blacked out, and a Caddy passes in the foreground. In this shot you can see the "Sheriff's Jeep Posse" lettering on the hood, and what appears to be a loudspeaker mounted at the top of the grille.
Lt. Dennis Larsen of the Metropolitan Police Museum Association of Nevada describes the Jeep Posse: "There was a Jeep Posse in Clark County from the early 40's till the early 80's. It was composed of volunteers from around the community and they performed Search and Rescue missions in conjunction with the Clark County Sheriff's Department Search and Rescue unit. The Sheriff's Department did not have enough personnel to perform all the rescues around the 8,000 square miles in Clark County so they would use the volunteers to help out. These people became very skilled in their rescue techniques and were recognized throughout the country. They were all deputized as Clark County Sheriff's Deputies and carried credentials identifying them as members of the Department. Their vehicles were painted Black & White with red lights and sirens. It was not uncommon for them to respond to a rescue with lights and siren."
Lt. Larsen also provides the recent history of the Posse: "In the 1980's the Clark County Sheriff's Department was no longer in existence and the members of the Jeep Posse were under the control of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department's Search and Rescue Section. Due to liability concerns they were disbanded and the department created a volunteer Search & Rescue unit. They are still involved in all search and rescues that take place in Clark County and even our neighboring states, but they are no longer commissioned police officers, and do not drive marked personal vehicles."
It's interesting to see the smaller but more glamorous Las Vegas of 1960 in Ocean's Eleven, very different from the sprawling family resort city with many huge hotels, which it is today. The Vegas of that era had only a few casinos -- and it had CJ-3B's in the Jeep Posse. "How cool baby, as Frank (Ol' Blue Eyes) would say!" comments Jim Veen, who spotted the Jeep in this film.
Michael Coy at the Internet Movie Database describes the Ocean's 11 story: "Sketchy and virtually irrelevant, the plot concerns a bunch of paratroopers-turned-playboys who, craving money and thrills, mount simultaneous burglaries of five of Las Vegas' big casinos. The slackness of the plotting is part of the film's relaxed, tongue-in-cheek style as Sinatra and Dean Martin indulge themselves in what is almost a home movie."
The 2001 remake stars Brad Pitt (with Don Cheadle, left), and George Clooney as Danny Ocean. A reviewer at Crazy for Cinema says, "Though I'm usually a sucker for the classics, I think Clooney and company out-cooled the Chairman and his cronies. I expected the 1960 pic to have class and style. Unfortunately, it doesn't have much of either... which makes the thin plot and phoned-in performances even harder to watch. It's Frank's mystique and power that got this film made, giving the boys something to do to fill their downtime while they performed in Vegas."
So don't rush out to rent the film except for nostalgia purposes. Elsewhere on the web, you can read more about the original Ocean's 11.
Thanks to Jim Veen, Dennis Larsen, and to 1960 Clark County Sheriff "Butch" Leypoldt. -- Derek Redmond
See real Los Angeles Sheriff's Jeeps in 1957, in Anytime, Anywhere on The CJ3B Page.
Return to The CJ-3B in the Movies.
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