Hyman Abrams |
No image
available |
|
1920s1960s |
Lieutenant of Boston Mobster Charles
Solomon during Prohibition. Later financed
syndicate Las Vegas casinos with Meyer Lansky, Carl Cohen and Jack Entratter during the 1950s and
60s. |
[1][2] |
Evsei Agron |
No image
available |
d. 1985 |
1970s1980s |
Russian-born mobster who established and ran the Russian
Mafia in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn
until his murder in 1985. |
|
Israel "Ice pick Willie" Alderman |
No image
available |
1902-1970 |
|
From North Minneapolis; associate with David Berman In
Minneapolis and Las Vegas. 1965 Convicted in Denver
Colorado of conspiring of using telephone lines to
threaten death to a disbarred attorney; 1969
reported under indictment for grand larceny. |
[3] |
Hyman Amberg |
No image
available |
19021926 |
19191926 |
New York mobster and chief enforcer for his
brothers Joseph and Louis "Pretty" Amberg. Hyman and
another convict committed suicide following an
unsuccessful escape attempt from Tombs
Prison. |
[4][5] |
Joseph Amberg |
No image
available |
18921935 |
19191935 |
New York mobster who led one of the top gangs in
Brooklyn during the 1920s and 30s with brothers
Hyman and Louis Amberg. Amberg and an associate, Morris Kessler, were
executed by Murder Inc. in his Brownsville
auto
garage. |
[4][5] |
Louis "Pretty" Amberg |
No image
available |
18971935 |
19191935 |
He and brothers Hyman and Joseph Amberg led one of
the top criminal gangs in Brooklyn during the 1920s
and 30s. The last surviving brother, he was murdered
a month after his brother Joseph by members of
Murder Inc. |
[4][6] |
Moses Annenberg |
No image
available |
18771942 |
19041936 |
Newspaperman and organized crime figure. Hired and
directed criminal gangs on behalf of the Hearst Corporation
during Chicago's "circulation wars" of 19101911,
and later became owner of the National Racing Wire
during the 1920s and 30s. Later used his wealth to
purchase The Philadelphia
Inquirer and found the Annenberg Foundation.
Jailed for tax evasion in 1939. |
[1][2][6][7][8][9] |
Marat Balagula |
No image
available |
b. 1943 |
19771986 |
Associate of the Lucchese crime
family during the 1970s and 80s. Succeeded Evsei Agron as head of the
Russian
Mafia in 1985 but fled the country to avoid
criminal charges a year later. He was extradited
back to the US in 1989 and received an 18-year
sentence in federal prison. |
|
David Berman |
No image
available |
19031957 |
19161957 |
Associate member of the Genovese crime
family who ran syndicate operations in Iowa
and Minnesota from the 1920s to the 40s. Involve in
syndicate casinos in Las Vegas during the 1940s and
50s, he and Moe Sedway took over The
Flamingo after Bugsy Siegel's murder in 1947. |
[2] |
Otto "Abbadabba" Berman |
No image
available |
18891935 |
1920s1930s |
Mob accountant and financial advisor for New York
mobster Dutch Schultz. |
[1][2][5][6][9][10] |
Abe Bernstein |
No image
available |
18921968 |
1910s1960s |
Detroit mobster and leader of The Purple Gang. After
the end of Prohibition, he ran syndicate gambling
operations in Miami up until his death in 1968. |
[2][7] |
William Morris Bioff |
No image
available |
19001955 |
1920s1930s |
Chicago labor racketeer who extorted millions of
dollars from Hollywood studios on behalf of the Chicago Outfit during
the 1930s. |
[1][2][6][9] |
Charles Birger |
No image
available |
18811928 |
19191928 |
Illinois bootlegger who feuded with the Shelton Brothers
Gang throughout Prohibition. |
|
Alex "Shondor" Birns |
No image
available |
19071975 |
|
A major gangland figure in Cleveland throughout
the 20th century. At one time considered Public
Enemy No. 1, he controlled the city's
underworld until his murder by Danny Greene in 1975. |
[2] |
Herbert Blitzstein |
No image
available |
19341997 |
|
Loanshark and bookmaker for the Chicago Outfit
during the 1950s and 60s. He was the top lieutenant
of Anthony Spilotro when
he and his crew were sent to Las Vagas. |
[11] |
Ike Bloom |
|
18651930 |
|
An early organized crime figure in Chicago
associated with "Big Jim"
Colosimo. Owned some of the city's most
popular nightclubs, such as Midnight Forlics and
Kreiberg's, during Prohibition. |
[7] |
Isadore "Kid Cann" Blumenfeld |
No image
available |
19001981 |
1900s1980s |
Minneapolis mobster who ran the city's underworld
from the 1920s until his conviction for violating
the Mann Act in 1957. Later
retired to Miami Beach where he and Meyer Lansky
operated a real estate empire and were involved in
syndicate operations in Miami and Havana up until
his death in 1981. |
[1][2][12] |
Louis "Lepke" Buchalter |
|
18971944 |
1910s1940s |
New York labor racketeer who dominated the Lower
East Side with Jacob Shapiro during the 1920s and
30s. Later headed Murder
Inc. and was eventually sent to the electric
chair at Sing Sing for his role in
the organization. He is the only major mobster to be
executed by the state. |
[1][2][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][13][14] |
Mickey Cohen |
|
19141976 |
19231961 |
Major underworld figure in Los Angeles during the
1930s and 40s. Later helped Bugsy Siegel set up The
Flamingo in Las Vegas and ran its sports book
operation. |
[1][2][6][9][10][11][12][14] |
Louis Cohen |
|
19041939 |
1910s1930s |
New York mobster who killed Nathan Kaplan on
behalf of rival labor racketeers Jacob Orgen and
Louis Buchalter in 1923. |
[5] |
Moe Dalitz |
No image
available |
18991989 |
1920s1960s |
Leader of the Mayfield Road Gang during
Prohibition. He was later involved the development
of syndicate gaming in Las Vegas during the 1940s
and 50s. |
[1][2][6][7][8][9][10][11] |
Stanley Diamond |
No image
available |
19221991 |
1960s1970s |
Associate member of the Lucchese crime
family associated with Henry Hill and Jimmy Burke
during the 1970s. |
[14] |
Monk Eastman |
|
18731920 |
18981920 |
Founder of the Eastman Gang, one of the
last of New York's major street gangs, and dominated
the city's underworld around the start of the 20th
century. |
[1][4][9][10] |
Monya Elson |
No image
available |
b. 1951 |
1970s1990s |
Russian-born mobster who feuded with Boris Nayfeld over
control of Brighton Beach, Brooklyn during the
1990s. One of Ukrainian mobster Semion Mogilevich's
closest associates, he at one time controlled a
criminal empire stretching from Russia to New York
and Los Angeles. |
[15][16] |
Maxie Eisen |
No image
available |
|
1910s1920s |
Chicago labor racketeer allied with Dion
O'Banion and the North Side Gang, and
later for the Joe Saltis-Frank McErlane Gang
during the 1920s. |
[6][7][8][12] |
John Factor |
No image
available |
18921984 |
1920s1960s |
British-born Chicago gangster and con artist
associated with the Chicago Outfit whose
staged 1933 kidnapping resulted in the wrongful
conviction of Roger Touhy. He later
became a prominent businessman and casino owner in
Las Vegas 1950s and 60s. |
[2][7] |
Ludwig "Tarzan" Fainberg |
No image
available |
b. 1958 |
19801999 |
Ukrainian-born New York mobster associated with
the Russian
Mafia in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn and South
Florida during the 1990s. He was convicted on Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act charges for his
involvement in arraigning the sale a Russian
submarine to a group of Colombian drug dealers in
1999. |
|
Benjamin "Dopey Benny" Fein |
|
18891977? |
19001941 |
New York mobster who dominated labor racketeering
with Joseph Rosenzweig in
the Lower East Side during the 1910s. |
[1][5][8][10] |
Irving Feinstein |
No image
available |
19101939 |
1930s |
New York mobster involved in illegal gambling and
labor racketeering with Louis "Lepke" Buchalter
during the 1930s. |
|
Abraham Friedman |
No image
available |
18971939 |
1920s1930s |
New York mobster and enforcer for labor racketeer
Nathan Kaplan, and later
Louis Buchalter and Jacob Shapiro during the
1920s and 30s. |
[5] |
Isadore Friedman |
No image
available |
d. 1939 |
1920s1930s |
New York mobster associated with labor racketeer
Louis Buchalter during the 1920s and 30s. |
|
Martin Goldstein |
No image
available |
19051941 |
1920s1930s |
Hitman and member of Murder
Incorporated. Involved in the 1939 murder of Irving Feinstein and later executed
with other members of Murder Inc. in 1941. |
[4][5] |
Waxey Gordon |
|
18891952 |
1900s1950s |
New York mobster who oversaw bootlegging
operations for Arnold Rothstein
during Prohibition. He was eventually imprisoned for
tax evasion in 1933 and, again in 1951, for selling
heroin. |
[1][2][5][6][7][9][10] |
Gus Greenbaum |
No image
available |
18941958 |
1910s1950s |
Member of the Chicago Outfit and ran syndicate
casinos in Las Vegas during the 1940s and 50s. |
[1][2][6] |
Harry Greenberg |
No image
available |
d. 1939 |
1920s1930s |
An associate and childhood friend of Bugsy Siegel, he later
worked for Charlie "Lucky" Luciano and Meyer Lansky. |
|
Max "Big Maxie" Greenberg |
No image
available |
18831933 |
|
Detroit mobster and a member of Egan's Rats. |
[1][5][10][14] |
Jake "Greasy Thumb" Guzik |
No image
available |
18861956 |
1910s1950s |
Financial and legal advisor to the Chicago Outfit. |
[1][2][6][7][8][9][10] |
Hyman Holtz |
No image
available |
18961939 |
1920s1930s |
New York labor racketeer associated with Jacob Orgen and a later
protege of Louis Buchalter. |
[4] |
Harry Horowitz aka Gyp the Blood |
|
18891914 |
1900s1910s |
Leader of the Lenox Avenue Gang. |
[1][5] |
"Kid Dropper" Nathan Kaplan |
No image
available |
18951923 |
1910s1920s |
A former member of the Five Points Gang, he
and Johnny Spanish fought
over control of labor racketeering during the labor
slugger war. |
[1][6][10] |
Phillip Kastel |
No image
available |
18931962 |
1900s1950s |
New York gambler associated with Arnold Rothstein and
Frank Costello. He
later ran gambling operations for the Genovese crime
family in New Orleans. |
[2] |
Andrei Katz |
No image
available |
19521975 |
1960s1970s |
Romanian-born mobster associated with the Gambino crime family.
Killed by the DeMeo crew in 1975 after
agreeing to become a government informant. |
|
Jacob Katzenberg |
No image
available |
1888-? |
1920s1930s |
New York organized crime figure who supplied
narcotics to mobsters throughout the United States
during the 1920s and 30s. |
|
Irving Kaye |
No image
available |
?-1977 |
1950s1970s |
New York crew member of Longy Zwillman[17]
and coin-op business partner of Gerardo Catena.[18] |
|
Harry Keywell |
No image
available |
19101997 |
1920s1930s |
Detroit mobster and member of the Purple
Gang. A suspect in the St. Valentine's Day Massacre
and later convicted of Collingwood Manor Massacre in
1931. |
[2][12] |
Philip Kovolick |
No image
available |
19081971 |
1920s1970s |
New York mobster associated with labor racketeer
Louis "Lepke" Buchalter during the 1920s and 30s. He
was a member of Murder Inc. until his conviction on
narcotics charges in 1941. |
|
Whitey Krakow |
No image
available |
d. 1941 |
1920s1930s |
Hitman and member of Murder
Incorporated. He was a suspect in the 1939
gangland slaying of Harry "Big Greenie"
Greenberg. |
|
Louis
Kravits |
No image
available |
fl. 19331939 |
1930s |
New York labor racketeer and drug trafficker
involved in a major heroin operation with Jack
Lvovsky and Yasha
Katzenberg during the early 1930s. Later
testified against Lepke Buchalter at his trial. |
[1][5] |
Martin
Krugman |
No image
available |
19191979 |
1970s |
Bookmaker and associate of the Lucchese crime
family during the 1970s. Disappeared and
presumably killed following the Lufthansa heist in
1978. |
|
Hyman
Lamer |
No image
available |
fl. 19591974 |
1950s1970s |
A close associate of Sam Giancana, he headed
gambling and smuggling operations for the Chicago Outfit during
the 1960s and 70s. |
|
Abe Landau |
No image
available |
18981935 |
1920s1930s |
Lieutenant of New York mobster Dutch Schultz. |
[1][2][5][9][10] |
Meyer Lansky |
|
19021983 |
1910s1970s |
One of the major underworld figures of the 20th
century. He was involved in the formation of the National Crime
Syndicate and helped organize syndicate
gambling operations in Cuba and Las Vegas. |
[1][2][5][6][8][9][10][11][12][13][14] |
Samuel "Red"
Levine |
|
19031972 |
1920s1930s |
Hitman and member of Murder
Incorporated. Involved in the 1931 murders of
Abraham
"Bo" Weinberg, Joe Masseria and Salvatore Maranzano. |
[1][10] |
John "Spanish Louie" Lewis |
No image
available |
d. 1910 |
1900s |
Gunman/stick up artist at turn of century. |
Wikipedia article |
Vach "Cyclone Louie" Lewis |
No image
available |
d. 1908 |
1900s |
A former circus strongman and bodyguard of New
York gang leader Max "Kid Twist" Zwerbach.
He and Zwerbach were gunned down by Louie the Lump at Coney
Island in 1908. |
[1] |
Joseph Linsey |
No image
available |
18991994 |
1920s1970s |
Lieutenant of Boston mobster Charles
Solomon during Prohibition. After Solomon's
death in 1933, he and other associates split
Solomon's territory between themselves. |
|
William Lipshitz |
No image
available |
|
1910s1920s |
Newsboy turned gangster, he murdered labor
racketeer Benjamin Levinsky on
behalf of Nathan Kaplan in 1922. |
[19] |
Seymour Magoon |
No image
available |
d. 1940 |
1920s1930s |
Hitman and member of Murder
Incorporated. Later became a state witness and
corroborated Reles' testimony. |
[5][10] |
Harry Maione |
No image
available |
19081942 |
1920s1930s |
Hitman and member of Murder
Incorporated. Participated in the murders of
the Shapiro Brothers and
George Rudnick. |
[5] |
Hyman "Pittsburgh Hymie"
Martin |
No image
available |
19031987 |
1920s1930s |
Pittsburgh mobster associated with Moe Davis and
Lou Rothkopf. Acquitted for the 1931 murder of
Cleveland city councilman William E. Potter. |
[2] |
Samuel "Nails" Morton |
No image
available |
18941923 |
1910s1920s |
A former World War I war hero, Weiss was among Dion O'Bannion's
top enforcers in the North Side Gang during
the early 1920s. |
[1][6][7][9] |
Max Mermelstein |
No image
available |
1942-2008 |
1970s-1980s |
A drug smuggler for the Medellνn Cartel in the
late 70s and early 80s, who later became a key
informant against the organization. |
|
Boris Nayfeld |
No image
available |
|
1970s1990s |
Russian-born mobster and heroin smuggler in
Brighton Beach, Brooklyn during the 1970s and 80s.
He and Monya Elson later waged a gang war
over Brighton Beach. |
|
Jacob "Little Augie" Orgen |
|
19011927 |
1900s1920s |
New York gangster involved in bootlegging and
labor racketeering during Prohibition. He took
control of the garment district from Nathan Kaplan at the end
of the end of the third labor sluggers
war. Killed by his former associates Lepke
Buchalter and Jacob Shapiro in 1927. |
[1][5][6][10] |
Philip "Pinchy" Paul |
No image
available |
d. 1914 |
1900s1910s |
New York labor racketeer who headed a coalition of
independent gangs against Joseph Rosenzweig
and Benjamin Fein during the
first labor sluggers
war. |
|
Leonard Patrick |
No image
available |
19132006 |
1920s1990s |
One-time member of the Chicago Outfit involved
in bookmaking and extortion with Gus Alex. Agreed to become a
government witness in 1992. |
|
Joseph Reinfeld |
No image
available |
|
|
Early, major bootlegger in the northeast US;
Established connections with the Bronfmans in Canada
and brought Longy Zwillman into the bootlegging
empire that Zwillman eventually took over. After
Prohibition, went legitimate, establishing the
largest wholesale liquor distributorship in NJ. |
|
Abe "Kid Twist" Reles |
|
19061941 |
19211940 |
One of the most feared hitmen of Murder
Incorporated during the 1930s, he later became
a government witness and was responsible for sending
many of his former partners to the electric chair.
Died under suspicious circumstances while in
protective custody in 1941. |
[1][2][4][5][6][9][10][13] |
Harry Rosen |
No image
available |
|
1920s1950s |
Major bootlegger in Philadelphia during
Prohibition. He was a member of the Big Seven
and later involved in drug trafficking with Meyer Lansky during the
1930s. |
[2][7] |
Chris Rosenberg |
|
19501979 |
1970s |
A member of the Gambino crime family's
DeMeo crew during the 1970s.
He was later killed by DeMeo to cover up the murder
of Colombian drug cartel members. |
|
Bernard Rosencrantz |
No image
available |
19021935 |
1920s1930s |
Bodyguard and chauffeur of New York mobster Dutch Schultz. |
[2][5] |
Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal |
|
19292008 |
1960s1980s |
One of the top sports handicappers in the United
States during his lifetime. Secretly ran several
syndicate casinos for the Chicago Outfit, most
notably the Stardust, throughout the
1960s and 70s. |
[2][11] |
Joseph "Joe the Greaser"
Rosenzweig |
No image
available |
1891-? |
1910s |
New York labor racketeer allied with "Dopey"
Benny Fein during the first labor slugger war. |
[1] |
Lou Rothkopf |
No image
available |
|
1920s1930s |
Longtime associate of Meyer Lansky, he was a
member of the Bug
and Meyer Mob during Prohibition. Later ran
syndicate gambling operations in Cleveland with Moe Dalitz, Jack
Licavoli, Maurice Kleinman and Thomas Joseph
McGinty (aka T.J. McGinty). |
[2][6][7][8] |
Arnold "The Brain"
Rothstein |
|
18821928 |
1900s1920s |
One of the first major underworld figures in New
York during the early 20th century. Widely reputed
to have been behind the Black Sox scandal of
1919. |
[1][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][13] |
Morris Rudensky |
No image
available |
18981988 |
1920s |
Prominent cat burglar and safe-cracker |
|
Harry "Doc Jasper" Sagansky |
No image
available |
18981997 |
1920s1990s |
Ran one of the largest bookmaking operations in
Boston during the 1950s. At the time of his
imprisonment in 1988, at age 91, he was the oldest
organized crime figure to serve a federal prison
sentence. |
|
Arthur "Dutch Schultz"
Flegenheimer |
|
19021935 |
1910s1930s |
Headed bootlegging and policy rackets in New York
during the 1920s and 30s. |
[1][2][4][5][6][7][9][10][12][13] |
Moe Sedway |
|
18941952 |
1920s1950s |
Lieutenant of New York mobster Meyer Lansky. Later
involved in running syndicate casinos in Las Vegas
during the 1940s and 50s. |
[2] |
Irving, Meyer and William
Shapiro |
|
19041931 (Irving)
19081931 (Meyer)
19111934 (William) |
1920s1930s |
Rivals of Louis Buchalter and Jacob Shapiro during the
late 1920s and 1930s. Irving and Meyer Shapiro were
killed after initiating a gang war with Buchalter
and Shapiro in 1931. William Shapiro was eventually
murdered by Murder Inc. in 1934. |
[2][5] |
Jacob "Gurrah" Shapiro |
|
18991947 |
1910s1940s |
He and Louis Buchalter
controlled industrial labor racketeering in New York
during the 1920s and 30s. Shapiro also helped
establish Murder
Incorporated. Died in prison in 1947. |
[1][2][5][6][8][9][10] |
Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel |
|
19061947 |
1910s1940s |
New York mobster associated with Meyer Lansky, Frank Costello and Charles "Lucky" Luciano
during Prohibition. Credited for the creation of
syndicate casinos in Las Vegas during the 1940s. |
[1][2][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][13][14] |
Charles "King"
Solomon |
No image
available |
18841933 |
1900s1930s |
He and Irish gangster Dan Carroll controlled bootlegging,
narcotics and illegal gambling in Boston during
Prohibition. Killed at the Cotton Club by rival
mobsters in 1933. |
[1][6][7][9][20] |
John "Johnny Spanish" Wheiler |
No image
available |
18911919 |
1900s1910s |
A former member of the Five Points Gang, he
and "Kid Dropper" Nathan Kaplan
battled over New York's garment district during the
Second
Labor Sluggers War. |
[1][6] |
Joseph "Doc" Stacher |
No image
available |
19021977 |
1920s1960s |
An associate of Abner Zwillman and Meyer Lansky. Assisted
Lansky in organizing the Atlantic City
Conference and later in financing syndicate
casinos in Las Vegas. Deported from the US in 1964
and later emigrated to Israel where he died years
later. |
[1][2][6][10] |
Harry "Pittsburgh Phil"
Strauss |
No image
available |
19091941 |
19271941 |
Hitman and member of Murder
Inc. credited with the murder of Irving Feinstein and
at least five other gangland slayings. Sent to the electric chair at Sing Sing in 1941. |
[1][4][5][6][10] |
Albert "Ticktock"
Tannenbaum |
No image
available |
19061976 |
1920s1950s |
Enforcer and hitman for Lepke Buchalter during the
1920s and 30s. A member of Murder
Inc., he was responsible for the 1939 murder
of Harry Greenberg. |
[1][4][5][10] |
Benjamin Tannenbaum |
No image
available |
19061941 |
1920s1930s |
Mob accountant for New York labor racketeers Louis Buchalter and Jacob Shapiro during the
1920s and 30s. Murdered by members of Murder Inc. in
1941 while babysitting for a friend. |
[5] |
Abraham
Telvi |
|
19341956 |
1950s |
Hitman for New York labor racketeer Johnny Dio. Responsible for
blinding crusading New York journalist Victor Riesel
with acid in 1956. |
|
Harry Tietlebaum |
No image
available |
1889-? |
1920s1930s |
An associate of the Bug
and Meyer Mob during Prohibition. Later part
of a major heroin smuggling operation with Meyer Lansky and Harry "Nig" Rosen
during the early 1930s. |
|
Joseph
Toplinsky |
No image
available |
1879-? |
1900s1930s |
He, along with Jacob Levinsky and Charles
Vitoffsky, led a criminal organization in New York's
Lower East Side known as the Yiddish Black Hand
around the start of the 20th century. |
|
Joseph Weil |
No image
available |
1875-1976 |
18921940 |
Confidence man. aka "The Yellow Kidd". Served a
Jail sentence in Atlanta Prison 1940-1942. |
|
Abraham Weinberg |
|
18971935? |
1920s1930s |
Hitman and chief lieutenant for New York mobster Dutch Schultz during
Prohibition. Disappeared in 1935 and long presumed
to have been killed by the mob. |
[5] |
George Weinberg |
No image
available |
19011939 |
1920s1930s |
Younger brother of Schultz' gunman Abraham Weinberg.
After his brother's disappearance in 1935, he agreed
to become a government witness but committed suicide
while in police custody in 1939. |
[5] |
Emanuel Weiss |
|
19061944 |
1920s1930s |
An enforcer for New York labor racketeer Louis "Lepke" Buchalter
during the 1920s. He was also a member of Murder
Inc. up until his arrest in 1940. |
[4][5] |
Samuel Weiss |
No image
available |
1904-? |
1920s1930s |
Hired gunman associated with New York labor
racketeer Jacob Orgen during the third Labor Slugger War.
Investigated for extortion by District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey during the late-1930s. |
|
Jack "Big Jack" Zelig |
|
18821912 |
1890s1910s |
Start of the 20th century gangster and one-time
leader of the Eastman Gang. Killed by Phil
Davidson shortly before his testimony in the Charles Becker murder trial
in 1912. |
[1][10] |
Jack Zuta |
|
18881930 |
1910s1920s |
Mob accountant and political "fixer" for the Chicago Outfit during
Prohibition. |
[7] |
Max "Kid Twist" Zwerbach |
|
d. 1908 |
1890s1900s |
New York gangster and head of the Eastman Gang after the
arrest of Monk Eastman in 1904.
Engaging in a feud with the Five Points Gang, he
and his bodyguard were gunned down by Louie the Lump at Coney
Island in 1908. |
[1] |
Abner "Longy" Zwillman |
|
18911959 |
1910s1950s |
Prohibition gangster. Popularly known as the "Al
Capone of New Jersey", he was a founding member of
the "Big
Seven" Ruling Commission. He was also
associated with Murder
Inc. |
[1][2][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][14] |