On February 14, 1929, four men dressed as police
officers enter gangster Bugs Moran's headquarters on North Clark Street in Chicago,
line seven of Moran's henchmen against a wall, and shoot them to death. The St.
Valentine’s Day Massacre, as it is now called, was the culmination of a gang
war between arch rivals Al Capone and Bugs Moran.
George "Bugs" Moran was a career criminal who
ran the North Side gang in Chicago during the bootlegging era of the 1920s. He
fought bitterly with "Scarface" Al Capone for control of smuggling
and trafficking operations in the Windy City. Throughout the 1920s, both
survived several attempted murders. On one notorious occasion, Moran and his
associates drove six cars past a hotel in Cicero, Illinois, where Capone
and his associates were having lunch and showered the building with more than
1,000 bullets. A $50,000 bounty on Capone's head was the final straw for the
gangster. He ordered that Moran's gang be destroyed. On February 14, a delivery
of bootleg whiskey was expected at Moran's headquarters. But Moran was late and
happened to see police officers entering his establishment. Moran waited
outside, thinking that his gunmen inside were being arrested in a raid.
However, the disguised assassins were actually killing the seven men inside. The
murdered men included Moran's best killers, Frank and Pete Gusenberg. Reportedly
Frank was still alive when real officers appeared on the scene. When asked who
had shot him, the mortally wounded Gusenberg kept his code of silence,
responding, "No one, nobody shot me." The St. Valentine's Day
Massacre actually proved to be the last confrontation for both Capone and
Moran. Capone was jailed in 1931 and Moran lost so many important men that he
could no longer control his territory. On the seventh anniversary of the
massacre, Jack McGurn, one of the Valentine’s Day hit men, was killed in a
crowded bowling alley with a burst of machine-gun fire. McGurn's killer remains
unidentified, but it was most likely Moran, though he was never charged
with the murder. Moran was relegated to small-time robberies until he was sent
to jail in 1946. He died in Leavenworth Federal Prison in 1957 of lung cancer.
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