Organized Crime

Organized crime has been strong in this country for well over a hundred years. “An individualistic predatory philosophy of success, indifference to public affairs, general disregard for law, the profit motive, decentralized government, laissez faire economics, and political practice which is often as openly predatory as the rackets, have produced in our great cities a fertile breeding place for organized crime.”(Lindesmith, 120) Organized crime has always been linked to politics. "In some places and at certain times the organization against the government is stronger than the organization of the government itself, and in some ways the underworld is better prepared for protection than is the state for defence of persons and property in society."(Merriam, 115) Bribery was considered a daily affair. Both crime bosses and many politicians enter their chosen profession in the search of power and wealth, so a natural relationship has been built between them.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Al Capone

Al Capone came to Chicago in 1919 where he got his start in the bootlegging business. His mentor, John Torrio, saw potential and within a few years Capone became a full partner in Torrio’s saloons, gambling establishments and brothels, and when Torrio left Chicago, Capone inherited the business. “Capone controlled speakeasies, bookie joints, gambling house, brothels, horse and race tracks, nightclubs, distilleries and breweries at a reported income of $100,000,000 a year.”(Chicago Historical Society) Capone “was skillful at isolating and killing his enemies when they became too powerful … (and) operations were quick and complete and Capone always had an alibi” (Chicago Historical Society). His most famous (alleged) murders were the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre on February 14, 1929. The scene was “the main liquor headquarters of bootlegger George ‘Bugs’ Moran’s North Side gang” (Chicago Historical Society). “It was ‘Bugs’ Moran whom the gangsters were seeking … when they lined up seven gangsters in the shipping headquarters of the gang and blew them to death with a thousand bullets – a massacre which shocked the nation” was the fear felt just months after the shooting (Sullivan, 262). Moran’s men were tricked. “Capone’s crew had arranged for a large delivery of bootleg whiskey to the garage that day.”(Bousquet, 298) The booze never came. “Masquerading as police officers, wearing uniforms borrowed from cops on the take, Capone’s men lined seven of Moran’s men against one wall of the garage and riddled them with bullets.”(Bousquet, 298) Capone was never connected to the murders and therefore never charged with anything relating to the murders. Capone had an alibi, he was in Florida, but everyone knew who was behind the attack. “So brazen was the attack that came to be known as the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre that Capone’s ironfisted control of the Chicago mob was never again seriously challenged.” (Bousquet, 299) Instead, Capone went to jail for income tax evasion.

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