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建立人际资源圈Al_Capone
2013-11-13 来源: 类别: 更多范文
Al Capone
Al Capone was possibly the largest and most feared mofia boss America has ever seen. This 1920s gangster made his mark on the world through organized crime during the Prohibition era. He is solely attributed with Chicagos reputation as a lawless city.
Alphonsus Capone was born on January 17, 1899 in Brooklyn, New York. As a child he was a member of the Brooklyn Rippers and the Forty Thieves Juniors kid gangs. Capone quit school at age fourteen in the sixth grade. He worked a few odd jobs in Manhattan in a bowling alley and a candy store. Then Capone took a position as a bouncer in Frankie Yales Brooklyn dive and the Harvard Inn. While working at the Inn he was attacked by a man and received the facial scars that would give him the byname Scarface.
Capone met Anne Mae Coughlin at a dance in 1918. Later that year on December 4, 1918 she gave birth to their son, Albert Sonny Francis. Less than a month later they were married. Capone became a member of the Five Points gang in Manhattan. During this time he hospitalized a rival gang member in a fight. Feeling the heat from the conflicting group, he moved his family to Chicago. He began to work for John Torrio, an old partner and mentor of Yale. Capone was soon helping to manage Torrios bootlegging business. He quickly gained the respect of Torrio and became his number two man. After being shot by an opposing gang member, Torrio left Chicago. Capone became boss of the outfit. Torrios men respected Capone and trusted his business decisions. They referred to Capone as the big man. In the next five years he expanded his industry of crime. Capone controlled speakeasies, nightclubs, brothels, gambling houses, and much more. His bootlegging provided the city of Chicago with alcohol during prohibition. Capone had a reported income of $100,000,000 a year.
Capone had an intricate spy network throughout Chicago. Crooked police men let him prepare for liquor raids and some of his other men made him aware of assassination plots. He would use hotels as his headquarters and front businesses for a hideout. Capone was always good at successfully knocking off his enemies when they became too powerful. Although he killed men himself, it was much safer for his henchmen to do his dirty work. Capones men would rent an apartment across the street from their target and gun him down when he stepped outside. These operations were quick and precise, and Capone always had an alibi.
On St. Valentines Day, 1929, four of Capones cohorts entered the liquor headquarters of George Bugs Moran. Two of these men were dressed as police. Morans men, thinking this was a police raid, dropped their guns and put their hands against a wall. Using two Thompson machine guns and two shotguns, Capones men killed six gang members and an unlucky friend. More than 150 rounds were fired into the gangsters. Moran, who was most likely the real target, was across the street. Capone, as always, had an alibi; he was in Florida.
Eliot Ness was assigned to shut down Capones illegal industry. Ness and his men found ways to beat Capones spy network. They received the name Untouchables, because they never took a bribe. The Untouchables were made up of young, brave officers fresh out of police training school. Ness used these officers because he didnt know which of the men already on the police force were moles for Capone. Soon they were shutting down breweries and intercepting bootlegged products regularly. Frank Wilson of the IRS, who was assigned to focus on Capone, found a record of Capones income. Wilson also discovered that Capone never filed an income tax return or made a declaration of income. Capone owed $215,080.48 in taxes. Now the government had sufficient evidence to indict him of the felony of income tax evasion and other various assessment misdemeanors.
Capone thought he could plea bargain with the judge, but The Honorable Judge James A. Wilkerson made no deals. Although Capone tried to bribe the jury, Wilkerson changed the jury panel at the last minute. Capone was convicted of only five of the twenty-three charges brought against him. Capone was sentenced to eleven years in prison. He was first sent to Atlanta federal prison where he quickly took over. A typewriter, mirror, and desk furnished the luxury cell from which he ran his outfit on the outside. After word of Capones easy life in prison got out, he was moved to Alcatraz. Here he would receive no special treatment.
While in jail he showed signs of syphilitic dementia. After his release he stayed in a hospital for a short period of time. His mind and body deteriorated to the point where he could no longer run the outfit. Capone later had an apoplectic stroke which was presumably unrelated to the syphilitic dementia. Although Capone appeared to be recovering from the stroke, the weakened man fell victim to pneumonia. On January 25, 1947, Alphonsus Capone died of a cardiac arrest. He was laid to rest in the Mount Olivet Cemetery in Chicago between his father and brother.
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