John Dillinger was known to be a notorious criminal and a bank robber during the time of the Great Depression. John Dillinger was born on June 22 1903 in Indianapolis Indiana. When John was three years old his mother, Mary Ellen died of a stroke. His older sister Audrey who raised him until she got married a year later and his father, John Wilson Dillinger got remarried in 1912. As a kid growing up in the neighborhood, he always went by the name Johnnie and he wasn't your typical kid that you wouldn't your child to associate with because he was known for trouble and doing numerous crimes. For Example he committed negligible pranks and thefts with his gang around the neighborhood. John Dillinger did suffer the consequences in …show more content…
Pierpont and Van Meter had longer sentences than John Dillinger, but they weren’t planning on serving their full terms, and had already planning to rob a bank for when they were out of prison. Seizing the moment, Dillinger joined a few of Pierpont's men and began a string of robberies. The jail was about 100 miles away from Pierpont's hideout, and he soon realized that with some cash and a few guns, he would be able to spring Dillinger. Pierpont knocked on the door and announced that they were officials from the state penitentiary and needed to see Dillinger. Mrs. Sarber then gave the men the jail keys and they sprang Dillinger. To pull many of the big jobs they had planned, Pierpont and Dillinger knew they needed heavy firepower, ammunition and bullet-proof …show more content…
When the movie was finished, Dillinger walked out of the theater between Sage and Hamilton. Dillinger's family gave him a Christian burial on July 25, 1934. One story about Dillinger long outlasted the famous outlaw: the claim that his male organ was unusually large, and that he possessed extraordinary sexual prowess. A morgue photograph of Dillinger under a sheet helped promote this story; his arm, under the sheet, created a bulge that some viewers misinterpreted as his genitalia. Enflamed in part by the highly publicized morgue photo touched up by more prudish newspaper editors to remove the shocking bulge the posthumous legends of Dillingers manhood appear to have started, says Gorn, in the gangsters home state of Indiana, where the buzz on the street was that the famed escape artist would lose consciousness when aroused because of the massive blood flow required to support his amorous encounters. By the 1960s, these and other rumors had morphed into an urban legend one known to every American adolescent and held that the outlaws epic Johnson had been severed, preserved in a jar of formaldehyde and stored at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History or atop J. Edgar Hoover's desk at the FBI. A belief in Dillinger's mythic member was so common among the American public, however, that both the FBI and the Smithsonian have been forced to address