Just announced -
Murder & Mayhem 52 Crimes that Shocked Early California 1849-1949 was awarded an "honorable mention" in the 2012 Halloween Book Festival in the general non-fiction category.
www.halloweenbookfestival.com
On this date in 1931, gangster Al Capone is sentenced to
11 years in prison for tax evasion.
Alphonse Gabriel Capone was born in Brooklyn, New York in
1899 to Italian immigrants. He was expelled from school at 14, joined a gang
and earned his nickname "Scarface" after being sliced across the
cheek during a fight. By 1920, Capone had moved to Chicago, where he was soon
helping to run crime boss Johnny Torrio's illegal enterprises, which included
alcohol-smuggling, gambling and prostitution. In 1925 Torrio retired and Capone
was put in charge of the organization. Prohibition, which outlawed the brewing
and distribution of alcohol and lasted from 1920 to 1933, proved extremely
lucrative for bootleggers and gangsters like Capone, who raked in millions from
his underworld activities. Capone was at the top of the F.B.I.'s "Most
Wanted" list by 1930, but he avoided long stints in jail until 1931 by
bribing city officials, intimidating witnesses and maintaining various
hideouts. He became Chicago's crime kingpin by wiping out his competitors
through a series of gangland battles and slayings, including the infamous St.
Valentine’s Day Massacre in 1929, when Capone's men gunned down seven rivals.
This event helped raise Capone's notoriety to a national level. Among Capone's
enemies was federal agent Elliot Ness, who led a team of officers known as
"The Untouchables" because they couldn't be corrupted. Ness and his
men routinely broke up Capone's bootlegging businesses, but it was tax-evasion
charges that finally stuck and landed Capone in prison in 1931. Capone began
serving his time at the U.S. Penitentiary in Atlanta, but amid accusations that
he was manipulating the system and receiving cushy treatment, he was transferred
to the maximum-security lockup at Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay. He got
out early in 1939 for good behavior, after spending his final year in prison in
a hospital, suffering from syphilis. Plagued by health problems for the rest of
his life, Capone died in 1947 at age 48 at his home in Palm Island, Florida.
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