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How Successful Was The Prohibition Movement In The 1920s

461 Words2 Pages

Cole Sandbrook
Mr. Thompson
English 11
12 November 2014
Prohibition Research Paper The United States enforced the prohibition movement in 1920 to reduce the drinking of alcohol by eliminating businesses that produced and sold alcohol. When alcohol was made illegal it increased organized crime because of an increase of bootleggers. People who produced, sold, and transported alcohol illegally were known as bootleggers. Once authorities caught on to the bootleggers, they had to come up with better ways to transport the alcohol unseen. To be able to transport the alcohol unseen by authorities bootleggers had to find ways to modify their cars. The prohibition movement increased organized crime, bootleggers, and the modification of cars. Organized crime is any group that has some kind of formalised structure with the objective to obtain money through illegal activities. Since alcohol was illegal during the prohibition movement people had to find ways to get alcohol. Prohibition increased organized crime because of bootleggers, which were a group of people that illegally made, sold, and transported alcohol. Bootleggers made alcohol illegally with the goal of making lots of money because at the time there were people that were willing to pay great amounts of …show more content…

It was easy for authorities to find and obtain the alcohol since it was just in the open. Bootleggers then had to find ways to hide the alcohol in their vehicles so it was not in the open when they transported it. To do this bootleggers began modifying their vehicles, they found ways to the hide the alcohol in the bumpers of their vehicles. They also modified their cars to have secret compartments in the trunks, seats, and many other places. As time passed bootleggers modified their cars more and were not caught transporting the alcohol as much

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