Al Capone Research Paper

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The year 2018 is the 88th anniversary of the greatest gangster mass murder in history. It was not just a murder it was a massacre of 7 men. An alleged police raid turned into a pivotal event in history that takes place Valentine's Day February 14th, 1929.
The supposed killer of the massacre was Al Capone, also known as Scarface. He was one of the most famous gangsters during the 1920’s. His rise to infamy started when he became affiliated with the leader of the Chicago Mafia. Once this happened, he grew in fame and became the best bootlegger and Gangster In the 1920-1930s. Capone earned $60 million annually selling illegal liquor” (“History.com staff,” 2018). This increased his ego which leads to murders and kidnappings of many other gangsters …show more content…

Nobody knew what Al Capone had planned. The climax of the feud happened on February, 14th 1929. Al Capone sent his men to the north side garage of Chicago where Morgan ran his bootlegging business. He had two of his four men dress like police and raid the garage. Capone's men lined up seven of Morgan’s men. “ Some 70 rounds of ammunition were fired. When police officers from Chicago’s 36th District arrived, they found one gang member, Frank Gusenberg, barely alive. In the few minutes before he died, they pressed him to reveal what had happened, but Gusenberg wouldn’t talk” (History.com staff, 2018). The mean was nearly cut in half by the machine guns. They had no idea an attack was coming. The men who died in the shooting included Frank Gusenberg morgan’s enforcer and peter Guensburg morgan's brother and 5 other members of his gang. Buggs Morgan was on his way to his parking garage when he heard shots, Morgan had ended up sleeping in later an arriving at the garage late. Missing the shooting by minutes, Capone had missed his target. Capone's men were able to escape before the police arrived. Meanwhile “ Capone missed the excitement too. Vacationing at his retreat at Palm Island, Fla., he had an alibi for his whereabouts and disclaimed knowledge of the cold-blooded killings. Few believed him.” (O'Brien, J. 2014, February 14). Even though Capone sent his men to Chicago for the killing, he was never charged