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Al Capone

Alphonse Gabriel Capone (/kəˈpn/;[1] January 17, 1899 – January 25, 1947), sometimes known by the nickname "Scarface", was an American gangster and businessman who attained notoriety during the Prohibition era as the co-founder and boss of the Chicago Outfit from 1925 to 1931. His seven-year reign as a crime boss ended when he went to prison at the age of 33.

Al Capone
Capone in 1930
Born
Alphonse Gabriel Capone

(1899-01-17)January 17, 1899
DiedJanuary 25, 1947(1947-01-25) (aged 48)
Resting placeMount Carmel Cemetery, Hillside, Illinois, U.S.
Other names
  • Scarface
  • Big Al
  • Big Boy
  • Public Enemy No. 1
  • Snorky
Occupations
Known for
Spouse
(m. 1918)
Children1
Relatives
AllegianceChicago Outfit
Conviction(s)Tax evasion (26 U.S.C. § 145) (5 counts)
Criminal penalty11 years imprisonment (1931)
Signature

Capone was born in New York City in 1899 to Italian immigrants. He joined the Five Points Gang as a teenager and became a bouncer in organized crime premises such as brothels. In his early twenties, Capone moved to Chicago and became a bodyguard and trusted factotum for Johnny Torrio, head of a criminal syndicate that illegally supplied alcohol—the forerunner of the Outfit—and was politically protected through the Unione Siciliana. A conflict with the North Side Gang was instrumental in Capone's rise and fall. Torrio went into retirement after North Side gunmen almost killed him, handing control to Capone. Capone expanded the bootlegging business through increasingly violent means, but his mutually profitable relationships with Mayor William Hale Thompson and the Chicago Police Department meant he seemed safe from law enforcement.

Capone apparently reveled in attention, such as the cheers from spectators when he appeared at baseball games. He made donations to various charities and was viewed by many as a "modern-day Robin Hood".[2] However, the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, in which seven gang rivals were murdered in broad daylight, damaged the public image of Chicago and Capone, leading influential citizens to demand government action and newspapers to dub Capone "Public Enemy No. 1".

Federal authorities became intent on jailing Capone and charged him with twenty-two counts of tax evasion. He was convicted of five counts in 1931. During a highly publicized case, the judge admitted as evidence Capone's admissions of his income and unpaid taxes, made during prior (and ultimately abortive) negotiations to pay the government taxes he owed. He was convicted and sentenced to eleven years in federal prison. After conviction, he replaced his defense team with experts in tax law, and his grounds for appeal were strengthened by a Supreme Court ruling, but his appeal ultimately failed. Capone showed signs of neurosyphilis early in his sentence and became increasingly debilitated before being released after almost eight years of incarceration. In 1947, he died of cardiac arrest after a stroke.

Early life

 
The young Capone with his mother

Alphonse Gabriel Capone was born in Brooklyn, a borough of New York City, on January 17, 1899.[3] His parents were Italian immigrants Gabriele Capone (1865–1920) and Teresa Capone (née Raiola; 1867–1952).[4] His father was a barber and his mother was a seamstress, both born in Angri, a small comune outside of Naples in the Province of Salerno.[5][6] Capone's family had immigrated to the United States in 1893 by ship, first going through Fiume (modern-day Rijeka, Croatia), a port city in what was then Austria-Hungary.[3][7] The family settled at 95 Navy Street, in the Navy Yard section of Brooklyn. When Al was aged 11, he and his family moved to 38 Garfield Place in Park Slope, Brooklyn.[3]

Capone's parents had eight other children: James Vincenzo Capone, who later changed his name to Richard Hart and became a Prohibition agent in Homer, Nebraska; Raffaele James Capone, also known as Ralph Capone or "Bottles", who took charge of his brother's beverage industry; Salvatore "Frank" Capone; Ermina Capone, who died at the age of one; Ermino "John" Capone; Albert Capone; Matthew Capone and Mafalda Capone. Ralph and Frank worked with Al Capone in his criminal empire. Frank did so until his death on April 1, 1924.[8] Ralph ran Capone's bottling companies (both legal and illegal) early on and was also the front man for the Chicago Outfit until he was imprisoned for tax evasion in 1932.[9]

Al Capone showed promise as a student but had trouble with the rules at his strict parochial Catholic school. His schooling ended at the age of 14 after he was expelled for hitting a female teacher in the face.[10] Capone worked at odd jobs around Brooklyn, including a candy store and a bowling alley.[11] From 1916 to 1918 he played semi-professional baseball.[12] Following this, Capone was influenced by gangster Johnny Torrio, whom he came to regard as a mentor.[13]

Capone married Mae Josephine Coughlin at age 19, on December 30, 1918. She was Irish Catholic and earlier that month had given birth to their son Albert Francis "Sonny" Capone (1918–2004). Albert lost most of his hearing in his left ear as a child. Capone was under the age of 21, and his parents had to consent in writing to the marriage.[14] By all accounts, the two had a happy marriage.[15]

Career

New York City

Capone initially became involved with small-time gangs that included the Junior Forty Thieves and the Bowery Boys. He then joined the Brooklyn Rippers, and then the powerful Five Points Gang based in Lower Manhattan. During this time he was employed and mentored by fellow racketeer Frankie Yale, a bartender in a Coney Island dance hall and saloon called the Harvard Inn. Capone inadvertently insulted a woman while working the door, and he was slashed with a knife three times on the left side of his face by her brother, Frank Galluccio; the wounds led to the nickname "Scarface", which Capone loathed.[16][17][18] The date when this occurred has been reported with inconsistencies.[19][20][21] When Capone was photographed, he hid the scarred left side of his face, saying that the injuries were war wounds.[17][22] He was called "Snorky" by his closest friends, a term for a sharp dresser.[23]

Move to Chicago

In 1919, Capone left New York City for Chicago at the invitation of Torrio, who was imported by crime boss James "Big Jim" Colosimo as an enforcer. Capone began in Chicago as a bouncer in a brothel, where it is thought the most likely way for him to have contracted syphilis. Capone was aware of being infected at an early stage and timely use of Salvarsan probably could have cured the infection, but he apparently never sought treatment.[24] In 1923, Capone purchased a small house at 7244 South Prairie Avenue in the Park Manor neighborhood in Chicago's South Side for US$5,500.[25]

According to the Chicago Daily Tribune, hijacker Joe Howard was killed on May 7, 1923, after he tried to interfere with the Capone-Torrio bootlegging business.[26] In the early years of the decade, Capone's name began appearing in newspaper sports pages where he was described as a boxing promoter.[27] Torrio took over Colosimo's criminal empire after the latter's murder on May 11, 1920, in which Capone was suspected of being involved.[10][28][29]

Torrio headed an essentially Italian organized crime group that was the biggest in Chicago, with Capone as his right-hand man. Torrio was wary of being drawn into gang wars and tried to negotiate agreements over territory between rival crime groups. The smaller North Side Gang, led by Dean O'Banion, came under pressure from the Genna brothers who were allied with Torrio. O'Banion found that Torrio was unhelpful with the Gennas' encroachment, despite his pretensions to be a settler of disputes.[30] In a fateful step, Torrio arranged the murder of O'Banion at his flower shop on November 10, 1924. This placed Hymie Weiss at the head of the gang, backed by Vincent Drucci and Bugs Moran. Weiss had been a close friend of O'Banion, and the North Siders made it a priority to get revenge on his killers.[31][32]

During Prohibition, Capone was involved with Canadian bootleggers who helped him smuggle liquor into the U.S. When Capone was asked if he knew Rocco Perri, billed as Canada's "King of the Bootleggers", he replied: "Why, I don't even know which street Canada is on."[33] Other sources, however, claim that Capone had certainly visited Canada,[34] where he maintained some hideaways,[35] but the Royal Canadian Mounted Police states that there is no "evidence that he ever set foot on Canadian soil."[36]

Boss

 
Unemployed men outside a soup kitchen opened by Capone in Chicago during the Depression, February 1931

An ambush in January 1925 left Capone shaken but unhurt. Twelve days later, Torrio was returning from a shopping trip when he was shot several times. After recovering, he effectively resigned and handed control to Capone, aged 26, who became the new boss of an organization that took in illegal breweries and a transportation network that reached to Canada, with political and law-enforcement protection. In turn, he was able to use more violence to increase revenue. Any establishment that refused to purchase liquor from Capone often got blown up, and as many as 100 people were killed in such bombings during the 1920s. Rivals saw Capone as responsible for the proliferation of brothels in the city.[32][37][38][39]

Capone often enlisted the help of local members of the black community into his operations; jazz musicians Milt Hinton and Lionel Hampton had uncles who worked for Capone on Chicago's South Side. A fan of jazz as well, Capone once asked clarinetist Johnny Dodds to play a number that Dodds did not know; Capone split a $100 bill in half and told Dodds that he would get the other half when he learned it. Capone also sent two bodyguards to accompany jazz pianist Earl Hines on a road trip.[40]

Capone indulged in custom suits, cigars, gourmet food and drink, and female companionship. He was particularly known for his flamboyant and costly jewelry. His favorite responses to questions about his activities were: "I am just a businessman, giving the people what they want"; and, "All I do is satisfy a public demand." Capone had become a national celebrity and talking point.[16]

 
The entrance to Capone's mansion in Palm Island, Florida, located at 93 Palm Avenue. Capone bought the estate in 1928 as a winter retreat and lived there until his death in 1947.

Capone based himself in Cicero, Illinois, after using bribery and widespread intimidation to take over town council elections, making it difficult for the North Siders to target him.[41] Capone's driver was found tortured and murdered, and there was an attempt on Weiss' life in the Chicago Loop. On September 20, 1926, the North Siders used a ploy outside Capone's headquarters at the Hawthorne Inn aimed at drawing him to the windows. Gunmen in several cars then opened fire with Thompson submachine guns and shotguns at the windows of the first-floor restaurant. Capone was unhurt and called for a truce, but the negotiations fell through. Three weeks later, on October 11, Weiss was killed outside the North Siders' headquarters at O'Banion's former flower shop. The owner of Hawthorne's restaurant was a friend of Capone's, and he was kidnapped and killed by Moran and Drucci in January 1927.[42][43]

Capone became increasingly security-minded and desirous of getting away from Chicago.[43][44] As a precaution, he and his entourage would often show up suddenly at one of Chicago's train depots and buy up an entire Pullman sleeper car on a night train to Cleveland, Omaha, Kansas City, Little Rock or Hot Springs, Arkansas, where they would spend a week in luxury hotel suites under assumed names.

In 1928, Capone paid $40,000 to Clarence Busch of the Anheuser-Busch brewing family for a 10,000 square foot (930 m2) home at 93 Palm Avenue on Palm Island, Florida, between Miami and Miami Beach.[45]

Feud with Aiello

In November 1925, Capone's consigliere, Antonio Lombardo, was named head of the Unione Siciliana, a Sicilian-American benevolent society that had been corrupted by gangsters. An infuriated Joe Aiello, who had wanted the position himself, believed Capone was responsible for Lombardo's ascension and resented the non-Sicilian's attempts to manipulate affairs within the Unione.[46] Aiello severed all personal and business ties with Lombardo and entered into a feud with Capone.[46][47]

Aiello allied himself with several other Capone enemies, including Jack Zuta, who ran vice and gambling houses together.[48][49] Aiello plotted to eliminate both Lombardo and Capone, and starting in the spring of 1927 made several attempts to assassinate Capone.[47] On one occasion, Aiello offered money to the chef of Joseph "Diamond Joe" Esposito's Bella Napoli Café, Capone's favorite restaurant, to put prussic acid in Capone's and Lombardo's soup; reports indicated he offered between $10,000 and $35,000.[46][50] Instead, the chef exposed the plot to Capone,[47][51] who responded by dispatching men to destroy Aiello's bakery on West Division Street with machine-gun fire.[47] More than 200 bullets were fired into the bakery on May 28, 1927, wounding Joe's brother Antonio.[46]

During the summer and autumn of 1927, a number of hitmen Aiello hired to kill Capone were themselves slain. Among them were Anthony Russo and Vincent Spicuzza, each of whom had been offered $25,000 by Aiello to kill Capone and Lombardo.[47] Aiello eventually offered a $50,000 bounty to anyone who eliminated Capone.[50][47] At least ten gunmen tried to collect on the bounty but ended up dead.[46] Capone's ally Ralph Sheldon attempted to kill both Capone and Lombardo for Aiello's reward, but Capone henchman Frank Nitti's intelligence network learned of the transaction and had Sheldon shot in front of a West Side hotel, although he survived the incident.[48]

In November 1927, Aiello organized machine-gun ambushes across from Lombardo's home and a cigar store frequented by Capone, but those plans were foiled after an anonymous tip led police to raid several addresses and arrest Milwaukee gunman Angelo La Mantio and four other Aiello gunmen. After the police discovered receipts for the apartments in La Mantio's pockets, he confessed that Aiello had hired him to kill Capone and Lombardo, leading the police to arrest Aiello himself and bring him to the South Clark Street police station.[48][52] Upon learning of the arrest, Capone dispatched nearly two dozen gunmen to stand guard outside the station and await Aiello's release.[48][53] The men made no attempt to conceal their purpose there, and reporters and photographers rushed to the scene to observe Aiello's expected murder.[51] When released, Aiello was given a police escort out of the station to safety. He later failed to make a court appearance after his attorney claimed he suffered a nervous breakdown. Aiello disappeared with some family members to Trenton, NJ, from whence he continued his campaign against Capone and Lombardo.

Political alliances

Chicago politicians had long been associated with questionable methods, and even newspaper circulation "wars", but the need for bootleggers to have protection in city hall introduced a far more serious level of violence and graft. Capone is generally seen as having an appreciable effect in bringing about the victory of Republican mayoral candidate William Hale Thompson, who had campaigned on a platform of not enforcing Prohibition and at one time hinted that he'd reopen illegal saloons.[54] Thompson allegedly accepted a contribution of $250,000 from Capone. Thompson beat Democratic candidate William Emmett Dever in the 1927 mayoral race by a relatively slim margin.[55][56]

On the day of the so-called Pineapple Primary on April 10, 1928, voting booths were targeted by Capone's bomber, James Belcastro, in wards where Thompson's opponents were thought to have support, causing the deaths of at least fifteen people. Belcastro was accused of the murder of lawyer Octavius Granady, an African-American who challenged Thompson's candidate for the Black vote, and was chased through the streets on polling day by cars of gunmen before being shot dead. Four policemen were among those charged along with Belcastro, but all charges were dropped after key witnesses recanted their statements. An indication of the attitude of local law enforcement toward Capone's organization came in 1931 when Belcastro was wounded in a shooting; police suggested to skeptical journalists that Belcastro was an independent operator.[57][58][59][60][61]

A 1929 report by The New York Times connected Capone to the 1926 murder of Assistant State Attorney William H. McSwiggin, the 1928 murders of chief investigator Ben Newmark and former mentor Frankie Yale.[62]

Saint Valentine's Day Massacre

Capone was widely assumed to have been responsible for ordering the 1929 Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, despite being at his Florida home at the time of the massacre.[63] The massacre was an attempt to eliminate Bugs Moran, head of the North Side Gang, and the motivation for the plan may have been the fact that some expensive whisky illegally imported from Canada via the Detroit River had been hijacked while it was being transported to Cook County, Illinois.[64]

Moran was the last survivor of the North Side gunmen; his succession had come about because his similarly aggressive predecessors, Weiss and Vincent Drucci, had been killed in the violence that followed the murder of original leader Dean O'Banion.[65][66]

To monitor their targets' habits and movements, Capone's men rented an apartment across from the trucking warehouse and garage at 2122 North Clark Street, which served as Moran's headquarters. On the morning of Thursday, February 14, 1929,[67][68] Capone's lookouts signaled four gunmen disguised as police officers to initiate a "police raid". The faux police lined the seven victims along a wall and signaled for accomplices armed with machine guns and shotguns. Moran was not among the victims. Photos of the slain victims shocked the public and damaged Capone's image. Within days, Capone received a summons to testify before a Chicago grand jury on charges of federal Prohibition violations, but he claimed to be too unwell to attend.[69] In an effort to clean up his image, Capone donated to charities and sponsored a soup kitchen in Chicago during the Depression.[70][2]

The Saint Valentine's Day Massacre led to public disquiet about Thompson's alliance with Capone and was a factor in Anton J. Cermak winning the mayoral election on April 6, 1931.[71]

Feud with Aiello ends

Capone was primarily known for ordering other men to do his dirty work for him. In May 1929, one of Capone's bodyguards, Frank Rio, uncovered a plot by three of his men, Albert Anselmi, John Scalise and Joseph Giunta, who had been persuaded by Aiello to depose Capone and take over the Chicago Outfit.[72] Capone later beat the men with a baseball bat and then ordered his bodyguards to shoot them, a scene that was included in the 1987 film The Untouchables.[73] Deirdre Bair, along with writers and historians such as William Elliot Hazelgrove, have questioned the veracity of the claim.[73][74] Bair questioned why "three trained killers could sit quietly and let this happen", while Hazelgrove stated that Capone would have been "hard pressed to beat three men to death with a baseball bat" and that he would have instead let an enforcer perform the murders.[73][74] However, despite claims that the story was first reported by author Walter Noble Burns in his 1931 book The One-way Ride: The red trail of Chicago gangland from prohibition to Jake Lingle,[73] Capone biographers Max Allan Collins and A. Brad Schwartz have found versions of the story in press coverage shortly after the crime. Collins and Schwartz suggest that similarities among reported versions of the story indicate a basis in truth and that the Outfit deliberately spread the tale to enhance Capone's fearsome reputation.[75]: xvi, 209–213, 565  George Meyer, an associate of Capone's, also claimed to have witnessed both the planning of the murders and the event itself.[3]

In 1930, upon learning of Aiello's continued plotting against him, Capone resolved to finally eliminate him.[50] In the weeks before Aiello's death, Capone's men tracked him to Rochester, New York, where he had connections through Buffalo crime family boss Stefano Magaddino, and plotted to kill him there, but Aiello returned to Chicago before the plot could be executed.[76] Aiello, angst-ridden from the constant need to hide out and the killings of several of his men,[77] set up residence in the Chicago apartment of Unione Siciliana treasurer Pasquale "Patsy Presto" Prestogiacomo at 205 N. Kolmar Ave.[50][78] On October 23, upon exiting Prestogiacomo's building to enter a taxicab, a gunman in a second-floor window across the street started firing at Aiello with a submachine gun.[50][78] Aiello was said to have been shot at least 13 times before he toppled off the building steps and moved around the corner,[79] attempting to move out of the line of fire. Instead, he moved directly into the range of a second submachine gun positioned on the third floor of another apartment block, and was subsequently gunned down.[50][78]

Federal intervention

In the wake of the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre, Walter A. Strong, publisher of the Chicago Daily News, asked his friend President Herbert Hoover for federal intervention to stem Chicago's lawlessness. He arranged a secret meeting at the White House, just two weeks after Hoover's inauguration. On March 19, 1929, Strong, joined by Frank Loesch of the Chicago Crime Commission, and Laird Bell, made their case to the President.[80] In Hoover's 1952 Memoir, the former President reported that Strong argued "Chicago was in the hands of the gangsters, that the police and magistrates were completely under their control, …that the Federal government was the only force by which the city's ability to govern itself could be restored. At once I directed that all the Federal agencies concentrate upon Mr. Capone and his allies."[81]

That meeting launched a multi-agency attack on Capone. Treasury and Justice Departments developed plans for income tax prosecutions against Chicago gangsters, and a small, elite squad of Prohibition Bureau agents (whose members included Eliot Ness) were deployed against bootleggers. In a city used to corruption, these lawmen were incorruptible. Charles Schwarz, a writer for the Chicago Daily News, dubbed them Untouchables. To support Federal efforts, Strong secretly used his newspaper's resources to gather and share intelligence on the Capone outfit.[82]

Trials

 
Capone's cell at the now decommissioned Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, where he spent about nine months starting in May 1929
 
Mug shot of Capone in Miami, in 1930

On March 27, 1929, Capone was arrested by FBI agents as he left a Chicago courtroom after testifying to a grand jury that was investigating violations of federal prohibition laws. He was charged with contempt of court for feigning illness to avoid an earlier appearance.[83] On May 16, 1929, Capone was arrested in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for carrying a concealed weapon. On May 17, 1929, Capone was indicted by a grand jury and a trial was held before Philadelphia Municipal Court Judge John E Walsh. Following the entering of a guilty plea by his attorney, Capone was sentenced to a prison term of one year.[84] On August 8, 1929, Capone was transferred to Philadelphia's Eastern State Penitentiary. A week after his release in March 1930, Capone was listed as the number one "Public Enemy" on the unofficial Chicago Crime Commission's widely publicized list.[85]

In April 1930, Capone was arrested on vagrancy charges when visiting Miami Beach; the governor had ordered sheriffs to run him out of the state. Capone claimed that Miami police had refused him food and water and threatened to arrest his family. He was charged with perjury for making these statements, but was acquitted after a three-day trial in July.[86] In September, a Chicago judge issued a warrant for Capone's arrest on charges of vagrancy and then used the publicity to run against Thompson in the Republican primary.[87][88] In February 1931, Capone was tried on the contempt of court charge. In court, Judge James Herbert Wilkerson intervened to reinforce questioning of Capone's doctor by the prosecutor. Wilkerson sentenced Capone to six months, but he remained free while on appeal of the contempt conviction.[89][90]

In February 1930, Capone's organization was linked to the murder of Julius Rosenheim, who served as a police informant in the Chicago Outfit for 20 years.[91]

Tax evasion

 
Capone's FBI criminal record in 1932, showing most of his criminal charges were discharged or dismissed

Assistant Attorney General Mabel Walker Willebrandt is said to have originated the tactic of charging obviously wealthy crime figures with federal tax evasion on the basis of their luxurious lifestyles.[92] In 1927, the Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Sullivan that the approach was legally sound: illegally earned income was subject to income tax.[93]

The key to Capone's conviction on tax charges was not his spending, but proving his income, and the most valuable evidence in that regard originated in his offer to pay tax. Ralph, his brother and a gangster in his own right, was tried for tax evasion in 1930. Ralph spent the next 18 months in prison after being convicted in a two-week trial over which Wilkerson presided.[94] Seeking to avoid the same fate, Al Capone ordered his lawyer to regularize his tax position, and although it was not done, his lawyer made crucial admissions when stating the income that Capone was willing to pay tax on for various years, admitting income of $100,000 for 1928 and 1929, for instance. Hence, without any investigation, the government had been given a letter from a lawyer acting for Capone conceding his large taxable income for certain years he had paid no tax on. On March 13, 1931, Capone was charged with income tax evasion for 1924, in a secret grand jury. On June 5, 1931, Capone was indicted by a federal grand jury on 22 counts of income tax evasion from 1925 through 1929; he was released on $50,000 bail.[95] Capone was then indicted on 5,000 violations of the Volstead Act (Prohibition laws).[75]: 385–421, 493–496 [96][95]

On June 16, 1931, at the Chicago Federal Building in the courtroom of Wilkerson, Capone pleaded guilty to income tax evasion and the 5,000 Volstead Act violations as part of a 2+12-year prison sentence plea bargain. However, on July 30, 1931, Wilkerson refused to honor the plea bargain, and Capone's counsel rescinded the guilty pleas.[95] On the second day of the trial, Wilkerson deemed that the 1930 letter to federal authorities could be admitted into evidence, overruling objections that a lawyer could not confess for his client.[97][98][99] Wilkerson later tried Capone only on the income tax evasion charges as he determined they took precedence over the Volstead Act charges.[95]

Much was later made of other evidence, such as witnesses and ledgers, but these strongly implied Capone's control rather than stating it. Capone's lawyers, who had relied on the plea bargain Wilkerson refused to honor and therefore had mere hours to prepare for the trial, ran a weak defense focused on claiming that essentially all his income was lost to gambling.[100] This would have been irrelevant regardless, since gambling losses can only be subtracted from gambling winnings, but it was further undercut by Capone's expenses, which were well beyond what his claimed income could support; Wilkerson allowed Capone's spending to be presented at very great length.[100] The government charged Capone with evasion of $215,000 in taxes on a total income of $1,038,654, during the five-year period.[95] Capone was convicted on five counts of income tax evasion on October 17, 1931,[101][102][103] and was sentenced a week later to 11 years in federal prison, fined $50,000 plus $7,692 for court costs, and was held liable for $215,000 plus interest due on his back taxes.[104][105][106][107] The contempt of court sentence was served concurrently.[108][109][110] New lawyers hired to represent Capone were Washington-based tax experts. They filed a writ of habeas corpus based on a Supreme Court ruling that tax evasion was not fraud, which apparently meant that Capone had been convicted on charges relating to years that were actually outside the time limit for prosecution. However, a judge interpreted the law so that the time that Capone had spent in Miami was subtracted from the age of the offences, thereby denying the appeal of both Capone's conviction and sentence.[111]

Imprisonment

 
Cell 181 in Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary where Capone was imprisoned
 
Mug shot of Capone at Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, 1934

Capone was sent to Atlanta U.S. Penitentiary in May 1932, aged 33. Upon his arrival at Atlanta, Capone was officially diagnosed with syphilis and gonorrhea. He was also experiencing withdrawal symptoms from cocaine addiction, the use of which had perforated his nasal septum. Capone was competent at his prison job of stitching soles on shoes for eight hours a day, but his letters were barely coherent. He was seen as a weak personality, and so out of his depth dealing with bullying at the hands of fellow inmates that his cellmate, seasoned convict Red Rudensky, feared that Capone would have a breakdown. Rudensky was formerly a small-time criminal associated with the Capone gang and found himself becoming a protector for Capone. The conspicuous protection by Rudensky and other prisoners drew accusations from less friendly inmates and fueled suspicion that Capone was receiving special treatment. No solid evidence ever emerged, but it formed part of the rationale for moving Capone to the recently opened Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary off the coast of San Francisco, in August 1934.[112] On June 23, 1936, Capone was stabbed and superficially wounded by fellow Alcatraz inmate James C. Lucas.[113]

Due to his good behavior, Capone was permitted to play banjo in the Alcatraz prison band, the Rock Islanders, which gave regular Sunday concerts for other inmates.[114] Capone also transcribed the song "Madonna Mia" creating his own arrangement as a tribute to his wife Mae.[115]

 
Al Capone's inmate file from Alcatraz Prison

At Alcatraz, Capone's decline became increasingly evident, as neurosyphilis progressively eroded his mental faculties; his formal diagnosis of syphilis of the brain was made in February 1938.[116] He spent the last year of his Alcatraz sentence in the hospital section, confused and disoriented.[117] Capone completed his term in Alcatraz on January 6, 1939, and was transferred to the Federal Correctional Institution at Terminal Island in California to serve out his sentence for contempt of court.[118] He was paroled on November 16, 1939, after his wife Mae appealed to the court, based on his reduced mental capabilities.[119][120]

Chicago aftermath

The main effect of Capone's conviction was that he ceased to be boss immediately on his imprisonment, but those involved in the jailing of Capone portrayed it as a considerable undermining of the city's organized crime syndicate. Capone's underboss, Frank Nitti, took over as boss of the Outfit after he was released from prison in March 1932, having also been convicted of tax evasion charges.[121] Far from being smashed, the Outfit continued without being troubled by the Chicago police, but at a lower level and without the open violence that had marked Capone's rule. Organized crime in the city had a lower profile once Prohibition was repealed, already wary of attention after seeing Capone's notoriety bring him down, to the extent that there is a lack of consensus among writers about who was actually in control and who was a figurehead "front boss".[71][75]: 468–469, 517–518, 524–527, 538–541  Prostitution, labor union racketeering, and gambling became moneymakers for organized crime in the city without incurring serious investigation. In the late 1950s, FBI agents discovered an organization led by Capone's former lieutenants reigning supreme over the Chicago underworld.[122]

Some historians have speculated that Capone ordered the 1939 murder of Edward J. O'Hare a week before his release, for helping federal prosecutors convict Capone of tax evasion, though there are other theories for O'Hare's death.[123]

Illness and death

Due to his failing health, Capone was released from prison on November 16, 1939,[124] and referred to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore for the treatment of syphilitic paresis. Because of his unsavory reputation, Johns Hopkins refused to treat him, but Baltimore's Union Memorial Hospital did. Capone was grateful for the compassionate care that he received and donated two Japanese weeping cherry trees to Union Memorial Hospital in 1939. After a few weeks of inpatient and outpatient care, on March 20, 1940, a very sickly Capone left Baltimore and travelled to his mansion in Palm Island, Florida.[125][126][127] In 1942, after mass production of penicillin was started in the United States, Capone was one of the first American patients treated by the new drug.[128] Though it was too late for him to reverse the damage to his brain, it did slow down the progression of the disease.[119]

In 1946, his physician and a Baltimore psychiatrist examined him and concluded that Capone had the mentality of a 12-year-old child.[83] He spent the last years of his life at his Palm Island mansion, spending time with his wife and grandchildren.[129] On January 21, 1947, Capone had a stroke. He regained consciousness and started to improve, but contracted bronchopneumonia. He suffered a cardiac arrest on January 22, and on January 25, surrounded by his family in his home, died after his heart failed as a result of apoplexy.[130][131] His body was transported back to Chicago a week later and a private funeral was held.[132] He was originally buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Chicago. In 1950, Capone's remains, along with those of his father, Gabriele, and brother, Frank, were moved to Mount Carmel Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois.[133][134]

In popular culture

Capone is one of the most notorious American gangsters of the 20th century and has been the major subject of numerous articles, books, and films. Particularly, from 1925 to 1929, shortly after he moved to Chicago, he enjoyed his status as the most notorious mobster in the country. He cultivated a certain image of himself in the media that made him a subject of fascination.[135][136]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "the definition of al capone". Dictionary.com. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved October 2, 2018.
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Cited sources

  • Eghigian, Mars Jr. (2005). After Capone: The Life and World of Chicago Mob Boss Frank "The Enforcer" Nitti. Naperville, Ill.: Cumberland House Publishing. ISBN 1581824548.
  • Keefe, Rose (2005). The Man Who Got Away: The Bugs Moran Story: A Biography. Nashville, Tennessee: Cumberland House Publishing. ISBN 1581824432..

Further reading

  • Bair, Deirdre (2016). Al Capone: His Life, Legacy and Legend. New York: Nan A. Talese. ISBN 978-0385537155.
  • Binder, John J. (2017). Al Capone's Beer Wars: A Complete History of Organized Crime in Chicago During Prohibition. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, ISBN 978-1633882850.
  • Capeci, Dominic J. "Al Capone: Symbol of a Ballyhoo Society." Journal of Ethnic Studies 2.4 (1975): 33–46.
  • Capone, Deirdre Marie (2010). Uncle Al Capone: The Untold Story from Inside His Family. Recap Publishing LLC. ISBN 978-0982845103.
  • Collins, Max Allan, and A. Brad Schwartz (2018). Scarface and the Untouchable: Al Capone, Eliot Ness, and the Battle for Chicago. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 978-0062441942.
  • Helmer, William J. (2011). Al Capone and His American Boys: Memoirs of a Mobster's Wife. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, ISBN 978-0253356062.
  • Hoffman Dennis E. (1993). Scarface Al and the Crime Crusaders: Chicago's Private War Against Capone. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0809319251.
  • Kobler, John (2003). Capone: The Life and Times of Al Capone. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 0306812851.
  • MacDonald, Alan. Dead Famous: Al Capone and His Gang. Scholastic.[ISBN missing]
  • Michaels, Will (2016). "Al Capone in St. Petersburg, Florida" in Hidden History of St. Petersburg. Charleston, SC: The History Press. ISBN 978-1625858207.
  • Pasley, Fred D. (2004). Al Capone: The Biography of a Self-Made Man. Garden City, New York: Garden City Publishing Co. ISBN 1417908785.
  • Schoenberg, Robert J. (1992).Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, ISBN 0688128386.

External links

  • South Beach Magazine The Un-Welcomed Visitor: Al Capone in Miami. (with photos)
  • FBI files on Al Capone
  • at the Crime Library
  • Al Capone at IMDb  

capone, this, article, about, gangster, other, uses, disambiguation, capone, redirects, here, other, uses, capone, disambiguation, alphonse, gabriel, capone, january, 1899, january, 1947, sometimes, known, nickname, scarface, american, gangster, businessman, a. This article is about the gangster For other uses see Al Capone disambiguation Capone redirects here For other uses see Capone disambiguation Alphonse Gabriel Capone k e ˈ p oʊ n 1 January 17 1899 January 25 1947 sometimes known by the nickname Scarface was an American gangster and businessman who attained notoriety during the Prohibition era as the co founder and boss of the Chicago Outfit from 1925 to 1931 His seven year reign as a crime boss ended when he went to prison at the age of 33 Al CaponeCapone in 1930BornAlphonse Gabriel Capone 1899 01 17 January 17 1899New York City U S DiedJanuary 25 1947 1947 01 25 aged 48 Palm Island Florida U S Resting placeMount Carmel Cemetery Hillside Illinois U S Other namesScarfaceBig AlBig BoyPublic Enemy No 1SnorkyOccupationsGangsterbootleggerracketeerKnown forBoss of the Chicago OutfitSaint Valentine s Day MassacreSpouseMae Coughlin m 1918 wbr Children1RelativesRichard James Hart brother Ralph Capone brother Frank Capone brother AllegianceChicago OutfitConviction s Tax evasion 26 U S C 145 5 counts Criminal penalty11 years imprisonment 1931 Signature Capone was born in New York City in 1899 to Italian immigrants He joined the Five Points Gang as a teenager and became a bouncer in organized crime premises such as brothels In his early twenties Capone moved to Chicago and became a bodyguard and trusted factotum for Johnny Torrio head of a criminal syndicate that illegally supplied alcohol the forerunner of the Outfit and was politically protected through the Unione Siciliana A conflict with the North Side Gang was instrumental in Capone s rise and fall Torrio went into retirement after North Side gunmen almost killed him handing control to Capone Capone expanded the bootlegging business through increasingly violent means but his mutually profitable relationships with Mayor William Hale Thompson and the Chicago Police Department meant he seemed safe from law enforcement Capone apparently reveled in attention such as the cheers from spectators when he appeared at baseball games He made donations to various charities and was viewed by many as a modern day Robin Hood 2 However the Saint Valentine s Day Massacre in which seven gang rivals were murdered in broad daylight damaged the public image of Chicago and Capone leading influential citizens to demand government action and newspapers to dub Capone Public Enemy No 1 Federal authorities became intent on jailing Capone and charged him with twenty two counts of tax evasion He was convicted of five counts in 1931 During a highly publicized case the judge admitted as evidence Capone s admissions of his income and unpaid taxes made during prior and ultimately abortive negotiations to pay the government taxes he owed He was convicted and sentenced to eleven years in federal prison After conviction he replaced his defense team with experts in tax law and his grounds for appeal were strengthened by a Supreme Court ruling but his appeal ultimately failed Capone showed signs of neurosyphilis early in his sentence and became increasingly debilitated before being released after almost eight years of incarceration In 1947 he died of cardiac arrest after a stroke Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 New York City 2 2 Move to Chicago 2 3 Boss 2 4 Feud with Aiello 2 5 Political alliances 2 6 Saint Valentine s Day Massacre 2 7 Feud with Aiello ends 2 8 Federal intervention 2 9 Trials 2 10 Tax evasion 2 11 Imprisonment 3 Chicago aftermath 4 Illness and death 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Cited sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life nbsp The young Capone with his mother Alphonse Gabriel Capone was born in Brooklyn a borough of New York City on January 17 1899 3 His parents were Italian immigrants Gabriele Capone 1865 1920 and Teresa Capone nee Raiola 1867 1952 4 His father was a barber and his mother was a seamstress both born in Angri a small comune outside of Naples in the Province of Salerno 5 6 Capone s family had immigrated to the United States in 1893 by ship first going through Fiume modern day Rijeka Croatia a port city in what was then Austria Hungary 3 7 The family settled at 95 Navy Street in the Navy Yard section of Brooklyn When Al was aged 11 he and his family moved to 38 Garfield Place in Park Slope Brooklyn 3 Capone s parents had eight other children James Vincenzo Capone who later changed his name to Richard Hart and became a Prohibition agent in Homer Nebraska Raffaele James Capone also known as Ralph Capone or Bottles who took charge of his brother s beverage industry Salvatore Frank Capone Ermina Capone who died at the age of one Ermino John Capone Albert Capone Matthew Capone and Mafalda Capone Ralph and Frank worked with Al Capone in his criminal empire Frank did so until his death on April 1 1924 8 Ralph ran Capone s bottling companies both legal and illegal early on and was also the front man for the Chicago Outfit until he was imprisoned for tax evasion in 1932 9 Al Capone showed promise as a student but had trouble with the rules at his strict parochial Catholic school His schooling ended at the age of 14 after he was expelled for hitting a female teacher in the face 10 Capone worked at odd jobs around Brooklyn including a candy store and a bowling alley 11 From 1916 to 1918 he played semi professional baseball 12 Following this Capone was influenced by gangster Johnny Torrio whom he came to regard as a mentor 13 Capone married Mae Josephine Coughlin at age 19 on December 30 1918 She was Irish Catholic and earlier that month had given birth to their son Albert Francis Sonny Capone 1918 2004 Albert lost most of his hearing in his left ear as a child Capone was under the age of 21 and his parents had to consent in writing to the marriage 14 By all accounts the two had a happy marriage 15 CareerNew York City Capone initially became involved with small time gangs that included the Junior Forty Thieves and the Bowery Boys He then joined the Brooklyn Rippers and then the powerful Five Points Gang based in Lower Manhattan During this time he was employed and mentored by fellow racketeer Frankie Yale a bartender in a Coney Island dance hall and saloon called the Harvard Inn Capone inadvertently insulted a woman while working the door and he was slashed with a knife three times on the left side of his face by her brother Frank Galluccio the wounds led to the nickname Scarface which Capone loathed 16 17 18 The date when this occurred has been reported with inconsistencies 19 20 21 When Capone was photographed he hid the scarred left side of his face saying that the injuries were war wounds 17 22 He was called Snorky by his closest friends a term for a sharp dresser 23 Move to Chicago In 1919 Capone left New York City for Chicago at the invitation of Torrio who was imported by crime boss James Big Jim Colosimo as an enforcer Capone began in Chicago as a bouncer in a brothel where it is thought the most likely way for him to have contracted syphilis Capone was aware of being infected at an early stage and timely use of Salvarsan probably could have cured the infection but he apparently never sought treatment 24 In 1923 Capone purchased a small house at 7244 South Prairie Avenue in the Park Manor neighborhood in Chicago s South Side for US 5 500 25 According to the Chicago Daily Tribune hijacker Joe Howard was killed on May 7 1923 after he tried to interfere with the Capone Torrio bootlegging business 26 In the early years of the decade Capone s name began appearing in newspaper sports pages where he was described as a boxing promoter 27 Torrio took over Colosimo s criminal empire after the latter s murder on May 11 1920 in which Capone was suspected of being involved 10 28 29 Torrio headed an essentially Italian organized crime group that was the biggest in Chicago with Capone as his right hand man Torrio was wary of being drawn into gang wars and tried to negotiate agreements over territory between rival crime groups The smaller North Side Gang led by Dean O Banion came under pressure from the Genna brothers who were allied with Torrio O Banion found that Torrio was unhelpful with the Gennas encroachment despite his pretensions to be a settler of disputes 30 In a fateful step Torrio arranged the murder of O Banion at his flower shop on November 10 1924 This placed Hymie Weiss at the head of the gang backed by Vincent Drucci and Bugs Moran Weiss had been a close friend of O Banion and the North Siders made it a priority to get revenge on his killers 31 32 During Prohibition Capone was involved with Canadian bootleggers who helped him smuggle liquor into the U S When Capone was asked if he knew Rocco Perri billed as Canada s King of the Bootleggers he replied Why I don t even know which street Canada is on 33 Other sources however claim that Capone had certainly visited Canada 34 where he maintained some hideaways 35 but the Royal Canadian Mounted Police states that there is no evidence that he ever set foot on Canadian soil 36 Boss nbsp Unemployed men outside a soup kitchen opened by Capone in Chicago during the Depression February 1931 An ambush in January 1925 left Capone shaken but unhurt Twelve days later Torrio was returning from a shopping trip when he was shot several times After recovering he effectively resigned and handed control to Capone aged 26 who became the new boss of an organization that took in illegal breweries and a transportation network that reached to Canada with political and law enforcement protection In turn he was able to use more violence to increase revenue Any establishment that refused to purchase liquor from Capone often got blown up and as many as 100 people were killed in such bombings during the 1920s Rivals saw Capone as responsible for the proliferation of brothels in the city 32 37 38 39 Capone often enlisted the help of local members of the black community into his operations jazz musicians Milt Hinton and Lionel Hampton had uncles who worked for Capone on Chicago s South Side A fan of jazz as well Capone once asked clarinetist Johnny Dodds to play a number that Dodds did not know Capone split a 100 bill in half and told Dodds that he would get the other half when he learned it Capone also sent two bodyguards to accompany jazz pianist Earl Hines on a road trip 40 Capone indulged in custom suits cigars gourmet food and drink and female companionship He was particularly known for his flamboyant and costly jewelry His favorite responses to questions about his activities were I am just a businessman giving the people what they want and All I do is satisfy a public demand Capone had become a national celebrity and talking point 16 nbsp The entrance to Capone s mansion in Palm Island Florida located at 93 Palm Avenue Capone bought the estate in 1928 as a winter retreat and lived there until his death in 1947 Capone based himself in Cicero Illinois after using bribery and widespread intimidation to take over town council elections making it difficult for the North Siders to target him 41 Capone s driver was found tortured and murdered and there was an attempt on Weiss life in the Chicago Loop On September 20 1926 the North Siders used a ploy outside Capone s headquarters at the Hawthorne Inn aimed at drawing him to the windows Gunmen in several cars then opened fire with Thompson submachine guns and shotguns at the windows of the first floor restaurant Capone was unhurt and called for a truce but the negotiations fell through Three weeks later on October 11 Weiss was killed outside the North Siders headquarters at O Banion s former flower shop The owner of Hawthorne s restaurant was a friend of Capone s and he was kidnapped and killed by Moran and Drucci in January 1927 42 43 Capone became increasingly security minded and desirous of getting away from Chicago 43 44 As a precaution he and his entourage would often show up suddenly at one of Chicago s train depots and buy up an entire Pullman sleeper car on a night train to Cleveland Omaha Kansas City Little Rock or Hot Springs Arkansas where they would spend a week in luxury hotel suites under assumed names In 1928 Capone paid 40 000 to Clarence Busch of the Anheuser Busch brewing family for a 10 000 square foot 930 m2 home at 93 Palm Avenue on Palm Island Florida between Miami and Miami Beach 45 Feud with Aiello In November 1925 Capone s consigliere Antonio Lombardo was named head of the Unione Siciliana a Sicilian American benevolent society that had been corrupted by gangsters An infuriated Joe Aiello who had wanted the position himself believed Capone was responsible for Lombardo s ascension and resented the non Sicilian s attempts to manipulate affairs within the Unione 46 Aiello severed all personal and business ties with Lombardo and entered into a feud with Capone 46 47 Aiello allied himself with several other Capone enemies including Jack Zuta who ran vice and gambling houses together 48 49 Aiello plotted to eliminate both Lombardo and Capone and starting in the spring of 1927 made several attempts to assassinate Capone 47 On one occasion Aiello offered money to the chef of Joseph Diamond Joe Esposito s Bella Napoli Cafe Capone s favorite restaurant to put prussic acid in Capone s and Lombardo s soup reports indicated he offered between 10 000 and 35 000 46 50 Instead the chef exposed the plot to Capone 47 51 who responded by dispatching men to destroy Aiello s bakery on West Division Street with machine gun fire 47 More than 200 bullets were fired into the bakery on May 28 1927 wounding Joe s brother Antonio 46 During the summer and autumn of 1927 a number of hitmen Aiello hired to kill Capone were themselves slain Among them were Anthony Russo and Vincent Spicuzza each of whom had been offered 25 000 by Aiello to kill Capone and Lombardo 47 Aiello eventually offered a 50 000 bounty to anyone who eliminated Capone 50 47 At least ten gunmen tried to collect on the bounty but ended up dead 46 Capone s ally Ralph Sheldon attempted to kill both Capone and Lombardo for Aiello s reward but Capone henchman Frank Nitti s intelligence network learned of the transaction and had Sheldon shot in front of a West Side hotel although he survived the incident 48 In November 1927 Aiello organized machine gun ambushes across from Lombardo s home and a cigar store frequented by Capone but those plans were foiled after an anonymous tip led police to raid several addresses and arrest Milwaukee gunman Angelo La Mantio and four other Aiello gunmen After the police discovered receipts for the apartments in La Mantio s pockets he confessed that Aiello had hired him to kill Capone and Lombardo leading the police to arrest Aiello himself and bring him to the South Clark Street police station 48 52 Upon learning of the arrest Capone dispatched nearly two dozen gunmen to stand guard outside the station and await Aiello s release 48 53 The men made no attempt to conceal their purpose there and reporters and photographers rushed to the scene to observe Aiello s expected murder 51 When released Aiello was given a police escort out of the station to safety He later failed to make a court appearance after his attorney claimed he suffered a nervous breakdown Aiello disappeared with some family members to Trenton NJ from whence he continued his campaign against Capone and Lombardo Political alliances Chicago politicians had long been associated with questionable methods and even newspaper circulation wars but the need for bootleggers to have protection in city hall introduced a far more serious level of violence and graft Capone is generally seen as having an appreciable effect in bringing about the victory of Republican mayoral candidate William Hale Thompson who had campaigned on a platform of not enforcing Prohibition and at one time hinted that he d reopen illegal saloons 54 Thompson allegedly accepted a contribution of 250 000 from Capone Thompson beat Democratic candidate William Emmett Dever in the 1927 mayoral race by a relatively slim margin 55 56 On the day of the so called Pineapple Primary on April 10 1928 voting booths were targeted by Capone s bomber James Belcastro in wards where Thompson s opponents were thought to have support causing the deaths of at least fifteen people Belcastro was accused of the murder of lawyer Octavius Granady an African American who challenged Thompson s candidate for the Black vote and was chased through the streets on polling day by cars of gunmen before being shot dead Four policemen were among those charged along with Belcastro but all charges were dropped after key witnesses recanted their statements An indication of the attitude of local law enforcement toward Capone s organization came in 1931 when Belcastro was wounded in a shooting police suggested to skeptical journalists that Belcastro was an independent operator 57 58 59 60 61 A 1929 report by The New York Times connected Capone to the 1926 murder of Assistant State Attorney William H McSwiggin the 1928 murders of chief investigator Ben Newmark and former mentor Frankie Yale 62 Saint Valentine s Day Massacre Capone was widely assumed to have been responsible for ordering the 1929 Saint Valentine s Day Massacre despite being at his Florida home at the time of the massacre 63 The massacre was an attempt to eliminate Bugs Moran head of the North Side Gang and the motivation for the plan may have been the fact that some expensive whisky illegally imported from Canada via the Detroit River had been hijacked while it was being transported to Cook County Illinois 64 Moran was the last survivor of the North Side gunmen his succession had come about because his similarly aggressive predecessors Weiss and Vincent Drucci had been killed in the violence that followed the murder of original leader Dean O Banion 65 66 To monitor their targets habits and movements Capone s men rented an apartment across from the trucking warehouse and garage at 2122 North Clark Street which served as Moran s headquarters On the morning of Thursday February 14 1929 67 68 Capone s lookouts signaled four gunmen disguised as police officers to initiate a police raid The faux police lined the seven victims along a wall and signaled for accomplices armed with machine guns and shotguns Moran was not among the victims Photos of the slain victims shocked the public and damaged Capone s image Within days Capone received a summons to testify before a Chicago grand jury on charges of federal Prohibition violations but he claimed to be too unwell to attend 69 In an effort to clean up his image Capone donated to charities and sponsored a soup kitchen in Chicago during the Depression 70 2 The Saint Valentine s Day Massacre led to public disquiet about Thompson s alliance with Capone and was a factor in Anton J Cermak winning the mayoral election on April 6 1931 71 Feud with Aiello ends Capone was primarily known for ordering other men to do his dirty work for him In May 1929 one of Capone s bodyguards Frank Rio uncovered a plot by three of his men Albert Anselmi John Scalise and Joseph Giunta who had been persuaded by Aiello to depose Capone and take over the Chicago Outfit 72 Capone later beat the men with a baseball bat and then ordered his bodyguards to shoot them a scene that was included in the 1987 film The Untouchables 73 Deirdre Bair along with writers and historians such as William Elliot Hazelgrove have questioned the veracity of the claim 73 74 Bair questioned why three trained killers could sit quietly and let this happen while Hazelgrove stated that Capone would have been hard pressed to beat three men to death with a baseball bat and that he would have instead let an enforcer perform the murders 73 74 However despite claims that the story was first reported by author Walter Noble Burns in his 1931 book The One way Ride The red trail of Chicago gangland from prohibition to Jake Lingle 73 Capone biographers Max Allan Collins and A Brad Schwartz have found versions of the story in press coverage shortly after the crime Collins and Schwartz suggest that similarities among reported versions of the story indicate a basis in truth and that the Outfit deliberately spread the tale to enhance Capone s fearsome reputation 75 xvi 209 213 565 George Meyer an associate of Capone s also claimed to have witnessed both the planning of the murders and the event itself 3 In 1930 upon learning of Aiello s continued plotting against him Capone resolved to finally eliminate him 50 In the weeks before Aiello s death Capone s men tracked him to Rochester New York where he had connections through Buffalo crime family boss Stefano Magaddino and plotted to kill him there but Aiello returned to Chicago before the plot could be executed 76 Aiello angst ridden from the constant need to hide out and the killings of several of his men 77 set up residence in the Chicago apartment of Unione Siciliana treasurer Pasquale Patsy Presto Prestogiacomo at 205 N Kolmar Ave 50 78 On October 23 upon exiting Prestogiacomo s building to enter a taxicab a gunman in a second floor window across the street started firing at Aiello with a submachine gun 50 78 Aiello was said to have been shot at least 13 times before he toppled off the building steps and moved around the corner 79 attempting to move out of the line of fire Instead he moved directly into the range of a second submachine gun positioned on the third floor of another apartment block and was subsequently gunned down 50 78 Federal intervention In the wake of the Saint Valentine s Day Massacre Walter A Strong publisher of the Chicago Daily News asked his friend President Herbert Hoover for federal intervention to stem Chicago s lawlessness He arranged a secret meeting at the White House just two weeks after Hoover s inauguration On March 19 1929 Strong joined by Frank Loesch of the Chicago Crime Commission and Laird Bell made their case to the President 80 In Hoover s 1952 Memoir the former President reported that Strong argued Chicago was in the hands of the gangsters that the police and magistrates were completely under their control that the Federal government was the only force by which the city s ability to govern itself could be restored At once I directed that all the Federal agencies concentrate upon Mr Capone and his allies 81 That meeting launched a multi agency attack on Capone Treasury and Justice Departments developed plans for income tax prosecutions against Chicago gangsters and a small elite squad of Prohibition Bureau agents whose members included Eliot Ness were deployed against bootleggers In a city used to corruption these lawmen were incorruptible Charles Schwarz a writer for the Chicago Daily News dubbed them Untouchables To support Federal efforts Strong secretly used his newspaper s resources to gather and share intelligence on the Capone outfit 82 Trials nbsp Capone s cell at the now decommissioned Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia where he spent about nine months starting in May 1929 nbsp Mug shot of Capone in Miami in 1930 On March 27 1929 Capone was arrested by FBI agents as he left a Chicago courtroom after testifying to a grand jury that was investigating violations of federal prohibition laws He was charged with contempt of court for feigning illness to avoid an earlier appearance 83 On May 16 1929 Capone was arrested in Philadelphia Pennsylvania for carrying a concealed weapon On May 17 1929 Capone was indicted by a grand jury and a trial was held before Philadelphia Municipal Court Judge John E Walsh Following the entering of a guilty plea by his attorney Capone was sentenced to a prison term of one year 84 On August 8 1929 Capone was transferred to Philadelphia s Eastern State Penitentiary A week after his release in March 1930 Capone was listed as the number one Public Enemy on the unofficial Chicago Crime Commission s widely publicized list 85 In April 1930 Capone was arrested on vagrancy charges when visiting Miami Beach the governor had ordered sheriffs to run him out of the state Capone claimed that Miami police had refused him food and water and threatened to arrest his family He was charged with perjury for making these statements but was acquitted after a three day trial in July 86 In September a Chicago judge issued a warrant for Capone s arrest on charges of vagrancy and then used the publicity to run against Thompson in the Republican primary 87 88 In February 1931 Capone was tried on the contempt of court charge In court Judge James Herbert Wilkerson intervened to reinforce questioning of Capone s doctor by the prosecutor Wilkerson sentenced Capone to six months but he remained free while on appeal of the contempt conviction 89 90 In February 1930 Capone s organization was linked to the murder of Julius Rosenheim who served as a police informant in the Chicago Outfit for 20 years 91 Tax evasion nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article IRS investigation of Al Capone nbsp Capone s FBI criminal record in 1932 showing most of his criminal charges were discharged or dismissed Assistant Attorney General Mabel Walker Willebrandt is said to have originated the tactic of charging obviously wealthy crime figures with federal tax evasion on the basis of their luxurious lifestyles 92 In 1927 the Supreme Court ruled in United States v Sullivan that the approach was legally sound illegally earned income was subject to income tax 93 The key to Capone s conviction on tax charges was not his spending but proving his income and the most valuable evidence in that regard originated in his offer to pay tax Ralph his brother and a gangster in his own right was tried for tax evasion in 1930 Ralph spent the next 18 months in prison after being convicted in a two week trial over which Wilkerson presided 94 Seeking to avoid the same fate Al Capone ordered his lawyer to regularize his tax position and although it was not done his lawyer made crucial admissions when stating the income that Capone was willing to pay tax on for various years admitting income of 100 000 for 1928 and 1929 for instance Hence without any investigation the government had been given a letter from a lawyer acting for Capone conceding his large taxable income for certain years he had paid no tax on On March 13 1931 Capone was charged with income tax evasion for 1924 in a secret grand jury On June 5 1931 Capone was indicted by a federal grand jury on 22 counts of income tax evasion from 1925 through 1929 he was released on 50 000 bail 95 Capone was then indicted on 5 000 violations of the Volstead Act Prohibition laws 75 385 421 493 496 96 95 On June 16 1931 at the Chicago Federal Building in the courtroom of Wilkerson Capone pleaded guilty to income tax evasion and the 5 000 Volstead Act violations as part of a 2 1 2 year prison sentence plea bargain However on July 30 1931 Wilkerson refused to honor the plea bargain and Capone s counsel rescinded the guilty pleas 95 On the second day of the trial Wilkerson deemed that the 1930 letter to federal authorities could be admitted into evidence overruling objections that a lawyer could not confess for his client 97 98 99 Wilkerson later tried Capone only on the income tax evasion charges as he determined they took precedence over the Volstead Act charges 95 Much was later made of other evidence such as witnesses and ledgers but these strongly implied Capone s control rather than stating it Capone s lawyers who had relied on the plea bargain Wilkerson refused to honor and therefore had mere hours to prepare for the trial ran a weak defense focused on claiming that essentially all his income was lost to gambling 100 This would have been irrelevant regardless since gambling losses can only be subtracted from gambling winnings but it was further undercut by Capone s expenses which were well beyond what his claimed income could support Wilkerson allowed Capone s spending to be presented at very great length 100 The government charged Capone with evasion of 215 000 in taxes on a total income of 1 038 654 during the five year period 95 Capone was convicted on five counts of income tax evasion on October 17 1931 101 102 103 and was sentenced a week later to 11 years in federal prison fined 50 000 plus 7 692 for court costs and was held liable for 215 000 plus interest due on his back taxes 104 105 106 107 The contempt of court sentence was served concurrently 108 109 110 New lawyers hired to represent Capone were Washington based tax experts They filed a writ of habeas corpus based on a Supreme Court ruling that tax evasion was not fraud which apparently meant that Capone had been convicted on charges relating to years that were actually outside the time limit for prosecution However a judge interpreted the law so that the time that Capone had spent in Miami was subtracted from the age of the offences thereby denying the appeal of both Capone s conviction and sentence 111 Imprisonment nbsp Cell 181 in Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary where Capone was imprisoned nbsp Mug shot of Capone at Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary 1934 Capone was sent to Atlanta U S Penitentiary in May 1932 aged 33 Upon his arrival at Atlanta Capone was officially diagnosed with syphilis and gonorrhea He was also experiencing withdrawal symptoms from cocaine addiction the use of which had perforated his nasal septum Capone was competent at his prison job of stitching soles on shoes for eight hours a day but his letters were barely coherent He was seen as a weak personality and so out of his depth dealing with bullying at the hands of fellow inmates that his cellmate seasoned convict Red Rudensky feared that Capone would have a breakdown Rudensky was formerly a small time criminal associated with the Capone gang and found himself becoming a protector for Capone The conspicuous protection by Rudensky and other prisoners drew accusations from less friendly inmates and fueled suspicion that Capone was receiving special treatment No solid evidence ever emerged but it formed part of the rationale for moving Capone to the recently opened Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary off the coast of San Francisco in August 1934 112 On June 23 1936 Capone was stabbed and superficially wounded by fellow Alcatraz inmate James C Lucas 113 Due to his good behavior Capone was permitted to play banjo in the Alcatraz prison band the Rock Islanders which gave regular Sunday concerts for other inmates 114 Capone also transcribed the song Madonna Mia creating his own arrangement as a tribute to his wife Mae 115 nbsp Al Capone s inmate file from Alcatraz Prison At Alcatraz Capone s decline became increasingly evident as neurosyphilis progressively eroded his mental faculties his formal diagnosis of syphilis of the brain was made in February 1938 116 He spent the last year of his Alcatraz sentence in the hospital section confused and disoriented 117 Capone completed his term in Alcatraz on January 6 1939 and was transferred to the Federal Correctional Institution at Terminal Island in California to serve out his sentence for contempt of court 118 He was paroled on November 16 1939 after his wife Mae appealed to the court based on his reduced mental capabilities 119 120 Chicago aftermathThe main effect of Capone s conviction was that he ceased to be boss immediately on his imprisonment but those involved in the jailing of Capone portrayed it as a considerable undermining of the city s organized crime syndicate Capone s underboss Frank Nitti took over as boss of the Outfit after he was released from prison in March 1932 having also been convicted of tax evasion charges 121 Far from being smashed the Outfit continued without being troubled by the Chicago police but at a lower level and without the open violence that had marked Capone s rule Organized crime in the city had a lower profile once Prohibition was repealed already wary of attention after seeing Capone s notoriety bring him down to the extent that there is a lack of consensus among writers about who was actually in control and who was a figurehead front boss 71 75 468 469 517 518 524 527 538 541 Prostitution labor union racketeering and gambling became moneymakers for organized crime in the city without incurring serious investigation In the late 1950s FBI agents discovered an organization led by Capone s former lieutenants reigning supreme over the Chicago underworld 122 Some historians have speculated that Capone ordered the 1939 murder of Edward J O Hare a week before his release for helping federal prosecutors convict Capone of tax evasion though there are other theories for O Hare s death 123 Illness and deathDue to his failing health Capone was released from prison on November 16 1939 124 and referred to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore for the treatment of syphilitic paresis Because of his unsavory reputation Johns Hopkins refused to treat him but Baltimore s Union Memorial Hospital did Capone was grateful for the compassionate care that he received and donated two Japanese weeping cherry trees to Union Memorial Hospital in 1939 After a few weeks of inpatient and outpatient care on March 20 1940 a very sickly Capone left Baltimore and travelled to his mansion in Palm Island Florida 125 126 127 In 1942 after mass production of penicillin was started in the United States Capone was one of the first American patients treated by the new drug 128 Though it was too late for him to reverse the damage to his brain it did slow down the progression of the disease 119 In 1946 his physician and a Baltimore psychiatrist examined him and concluded that Capone had the mentality of a 12 year old child 83 He spent the last years of his life at his Palm Island mansion spending time with his wife and grandchildren 129 On January 21 1947 Capone had a stroke He regained consciousness and started to improve but contracted bronchopneumonia He suffered a cardiac arrest on January 22 and on January 25 surrounded by his family in his home died after his heart failed as a result of apoplexy 130 131 His body was transported back to Chicago a week later and a private funeral was held 132 He was originally buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Chicago In 1950 Capone s remains along with those of his father Gabriele and brother Frank were moved to Mount Carmel Cemetery in Hillside Illinois 133 134 nbsp Capone s death certificate January 25 1947 nbsp Capone s grave in Mount Carmel Cemetery Hillside IllinoisIn popular cultureMain article Al Capone in popular culture Capone is one of the most notorious American gangsters of the 20th century and has been the major subject of numerous articles books and films Particularly from 1925 to 1929 shortly after he moved to Chicago he enjoyed his status as the most notorious mobster in the country He cultivated a certain image of himself in the media that made him a subject of fascination 135 136 See also nbsp Biography portal List of Depression era 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1936 The Hoover Administration A Documented Narrative New York Charles H Scribner p 376 Hoover Herbert 1952 The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover The Cabinet and the Presidency 1920 1933 New York The MacMillen Company p 276 Calder James D 1993 The Origins and Development of Federal Crime Control Policy Herbert Hoover s Initiatives Westport CT Praeger a b Al Capone Federal Bureau of Investigation Archived from the original on March 3 2020 Retrieved April 3 2020 Schoenberg Robert J 1992 Mr Capone New York William Morrow and Company Inc p 238 ISBN 0688089410 Defending Al Capone The Marshall Project Archived from the original on August 27 2018 Retrieved June 1 2018 Luisa Yanez The Miami Herald September 27 2010 Gangster Al Capone s 1930 trial to return to Miami court Sun Sentinel Articles sun sentinel com Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved August 16 2014 Reading Eagle September 17 1930 Gang leaders face arrest Al Capone A Biography By Luciano J Iorizzo pp 62 63 The Pittsburgh Press February 27 1931 Bergreen 1994 p 419 Informer is Slain by Chicago Gunmen Julius Rosenheim in Police Pay 20 Years Is Shot Down Near His Home Revenge Believed Motive Two Members of the Capone Gang Are Arrested and Bullets Will Be Compared Men Kill Him and Flee The New York Times February 2 1930 Archived from the original on January 28 2021 Retrieved January 23 2021 Bryson Bill 2013 One Summer America 1927 New York Random House pp 116 117 ISBN 978 0375434327 Bergreen 1994 p 224 Al Capone Chicago s King of Crime by Nate Hendley p 108 a b c d e Hoffman Dennis 2010 Scarface Al and the Crime Crusaders Chicago s Private War Against Capone Chicago Southern Illinois University Press pp 159 164 ISBN 978 0809330041 Okrent Daniel 2010 Last Call The Rise and Fall of Prohibition New York Scribner pp 136 345 ISBN 978 0743277044 Al Capone s tax trial and downfall Myalcaponemuseum com Archived from the original on August 11 2014 Retrieved August 16 2014 Al Capone Trial 1931 An Account by Douglas O Linder 2011 Law2 umkc edu Archived from the original on August 19 2014 Retrieved August 16 2014 Al Capone Trial A Chronology Daniel M Porazzo Retrieved June 30 2014 Archived October 31 2014 at the Wayback Machine a b Iorizzo Luciano J 2003 Al Capone A Biography Greenwood Publishing Group pp 81 82 ISBN 978 0313323171 via Internet Archive Al Capone American criminal Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on June 5 2019 Retrieved January 11 2020 Kinsley Philip October 19 1931 U S jury convicts Capone Chicago Sunday Tribune p 1 Archived from the original on October 29 2017 Retrieved October 28 2017 Capone convicted of tax evasion Spokesman Review Washington Associated Press October 18 1931 p 1 Archived from the original on January 4 2021 Retrieved September 19 2020 Hackler Victor October 24 1931 Capone sentenced 11 years fined 50 000 Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press p 1 Archived from the original on January 4 2021 Retrieved September 19 2020 Capone in jail prison next Chicago Sunday Tribune October 25 1931 p 1 Archived from the original on October 29 2017 Retrieved October 28 2017 Brennan Ray October 25 1931 Capone kept until Monday for appeal Eugene Register Guard Oregon Associated Press p 1 Archived from the original on January 4 2021 Retrieved September 19 2020 Visitors to the Court Historic Trials US District Court Northern District of Illinois Archived from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved February 10 2011 Linder Douglas O Selected Documents Jury Verdict Form October 17 1931 Al Capone Trial University of Missouri Kansas City Archived from the original on August 27 2011 Retrieved October 16 2011 Bergreen 1994 p 484 Bergreen 1994 pp 486 487 Bergreen 1994 p 516 Bergreen 1994 pp 511 514 519 521 Al Capone Knifed in Prison Tussle The Free Lance Star June 24 1936 Archived from the original on January 4 2021 Retrieved June 28 2018 Wellman Gregory L 2008 A History of Alcatraz Island 1853 2008 Arcadia Publishing p 1 ISBN 978 0738558158 Al Capone s secret song The Straits Times Associated Press April 17 2009 Archived from the original on April 21 2009 Retrieved April 17 2009 Markel Howard January 25 2017 The infectious disease that sprung Al Capone from Alcatraz PBS News Archived from the original on August 1 2018 Retrieved November 22 2019 Al Capone The Final Chapter Archived May 31 2008 at the Wayback Machine J Campbell Bruce 2005 Escape from Alcatraz Random House Digital Inc p 32 a b Smee Taryn August 27 2018 Legendary Gangster Al Capone was one of the First Recipients of Penicillin in History The Vintage News Archived from the original on May 26 2020 Retrieved November 22 2019 Webley Kayla April 28 2010 Top 10 Parolees Time com Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Retrieved July 23 2014 Eghigian 2005 The Chicago Outfit John J Binder chapter four Cancino Alejandra January 13 2010 Edward J O Hare slaying Chicago police to revisit 1939 shooting of ace pilot s father Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune Co Archived from the original on January 30 2010 Retrieved June 12 2020 Scarface Al Capone Released by Government Wausau Daily Herald November 16 1939 Archived from the original on January 11 2020 Retrieved April 3 2020 Sandler Gilbert August 30 1994 Al Capone s hide out The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on December 8 2014 Retrieved July 23 2014 Perl Larry March 26 2012 For Union Memorial Al Capone s tree keeps on giving The Baltimore Sun Archived from the original on August 1 2013 Retrieved July 23 2014 Slade Fred April 10 2014 Medstar Union Memorial celebrates Capone Cherry Tree blooming Abc2News Archived from the original on July 27 2014 Retrieved July 23 2014 The first use of penicillin in the United States was on March 14 1942 for a patient with streptococcal sepsis John J Binder The Chicago Outfit Arcadia Publishing 2003 pp 41 42 Al Capone dies in Florida villa Chicago Sunday Tribune Associated Press January 26 1947 p 1 Archived from the original on October 29 2017 Retrieved October 28 2017 Capone Dead At 48 Dry Era Gang Chief The New York Times Associated Press April 2 2009 Archived from the original on January 28 2010 Retrieved March 12 2010 Al Capone ex Chicago gangster and prohibition era crime leader died in his home here tonight Al Capone s body is returned to Chicago in secrecy for burial 1947 Leader Telegram February 1 1947 p 1 Archived from the original on January 11 2020 Retrieved January 11 2020 Mount Carmel Oldghosthome com Archived from the original on September 3 2004 Wilson Scott 2016 Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3rd ed McFarland pp 114 115 ISBN 978 1476625997 Archived from the original on January 4 2021 Retrieved October 15 2020 Al Capone The story behind his rise and fall The Mob Museum The Mob Museum July 6 2016 Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 1 2018 The 17 most notorious mobsters from Chicago Time Out Chicago Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved June 1 2018 Cited sources Eghigian Mars Jr 2005 After Capone The Life and World of Chicago Mob Boss Frank The Enforcer Nitti Naperville Ill Cumberland House Publishing ISBN 1581824548 Keefe Rose 2005 The Man Who Got Away The Bugs Moran Story A Biography Nashville Tennessee Cumberland House Publishing ISBN 1581824432 Further readingBair Deirdre 2016 Al Capone His Life Legacy and Legend New York Nan A Talese ISBN 978 0385537155 Binder John J 2017 Al Capone s Beer Wars A Complete History of Organized Crime in Chicago During Prohibition Amherst NY Prometheus Books ISBN 978 1633882850 Capeci Dominic J Al Capone Symbol of a Ballyhoo Society Journal of Ethnic Studies 2 4 1975 33 46 Capone Deirdre Marie 2010 Uncle Al Capone The Untold Story from Inside His Family Recap Publishing LLC ISBN 978 0982845103 Collins Max Allan and A Brad Schwartz 2018 Scarface and the Untouchable Al Capone Eliot Ness and the Battle for Chicago New York William Morrow ISBN 978 0062441942 Helmer William J 2011 Al Capone and His American Boys Memoirs of a Mobster s Wife Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253356062 Hoffman Dennis E 1993 Scarface Al and the Crime Crusaders Chicago s Private War Against Capone Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0809319251 Kobler John 2003 Capone The Life and Times of Al Capone New York Da Capo Press ISBN 0306812851 MacDonald Alan Dead Famous Al Capone and His Gang Scholastic ISBN missing Michaels Will 2016 Al Capone in St Petersburg Florida in Hidden History of St Petersburg Charleston SC The History Press ISBN 978 1625858207 Pasley Fred D 2004 Al Capone The Biography of a Self Made Man Garden City New York Garden City Publishing Co ISBN 1417908785 Schoenberg Robert J 1992 Mr Capone New York HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 0688128386 External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Al Capone nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Al Capone South Beach Magazine The Un Welcomed Visitor Al Capone in Miami with photos FBI files on Al Capone Little Chicago Capone in Johnson City Tennessee Al Capone at the Crime Library Al Capone at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Capone amp oldid 1217116452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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