Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Fri Jul 14, 2017 8:55 am
Villain wrote: ↑Fri Jul 14, 2017 3:13 am
Dwalin2014 to tell you the truth I dont know much regarding the Moran gang but as Antiliar pointed out maybe you should check out that Binder book. Also my personal belief is that at the time Capone's main problem wasnt the Moran gang, but instead i believe it was the Mafia. The massacre was just one big, violent, stupid and completely unnecesary move made by the Capones which i personally believe that it might've been backed by many forces, including political, police and underworld. But on the other hand, it made the Capone mob quite scary in the eyes of their cohorts and enemies. On top of that, there were also other and similar massacres which occurred before or after the St.V. attack in different cities and so I highly doubt that someone from the criminal higher ups ever felt really depressed because of the situation. It was a "normal" thing during the bootlegging and machinegun days
Remember though that plan was for Moran himself to be in the group that was killed. He lucked out by being late and the gunmen mistaking one of his guys for him. If Moran would have been killed in the massacre in that would have pretty much been the end of the Northside gang.
Pogo
According to some records of an Evanston hospital showed that Moran had been In that institution from February 14( the day of the massacre) to February 18, although according to many eyewitnesses he was seen outside the hospital on February 15, which means that the hospital thing was just a weak alibi. Not like Claude Maddox's alibi who in turn had a judge vouching for him that he was in court during the killings.
Most of the info on the massacre comes from Byron Bolton, couple of big time bootleggers at the time such as Alvin Karpis and also many other eyewitnesses. Sometime ago I made my own timeline regarding the situation...
Frank Capone - killed in 1924 by the cops
Dean O'Banion – killed in 1924, five months after Frank Capone
When Al Capone took over in 1926/27, suddenly the so-called “wheel” began turning
Vincent Drucci – killed in 1927 by the cops while being taken for a ride
In 1928, Joe Aiello, while being one of the main racketeers on the North Side, he also had his own territory on the West Side after the extermination of the Gennas two years earlier. So I believe that was too much for Al, especially his own West Side faction, which was established after the murder of Joe Esposito that same year. So I personally believe that it was a battle for the West Side and Capone’s stronghold against the Northsiders was the so-called Circus Café which was located on the Northwest Side.
In 1929 St. Valentines Day Massacre occurred, allegedly executed by two cops and two men in civil clothes who came out from two cars, one being a police car. Not even one Italian Mafia member was killed in the event, but still every Capone enemy went hiding.
Investigators later learned that Circus Café associates William Louis (Chicago), Harry Burton (Philadelphia), Frank Carlson (Detroit) and James O’Brien (Detroit), who were previously arrested in a house near Crystal Lake for the kidnapping of wealthy automobile dealer Thomas Gaynor, were also suspects in a similar massacre which previously occurred in Ohio, when three hit men dressed as policemen entered a garage and killed five members of a beer gang. But no one really turned their attention to the situation.
Eight days later after the massacre, one of the getaway cars was found dynamited in west suburban Maywood, the area where Capone member Claude Maddox and his family lived at the time. Also they found the other car at the garage at 1723 North Wood St., possible failed operation executed by another Capone member Tony Capezio.
The police checked out the so-called lookout apartments and found a letter and a prescription bottle with the name of Circus Café associate Byron Bolton but “somehow” they didn’t thought about the significance of this clue until years later. I guess they played stupid?!
Few days later, during another raid on a roadhouse in Forest Park, which was owned by the Capone gang, the cops also found a police star with no. 65. The strangest thing was that one policeman had lost his star the day before the massacre and recovered it the day after.
Also the cops raided another Capone liquor depot on the North Side and on the wall of the garage the cops noticed a paper with the names, home addresses, telephone numbers of two police officers and also information where they might be reached in any hour of the day. But again, out of “unknown” reasons the police decided to ignore these cases.
That same year, the so-called “bad blood” John Scalise and Albert Anselmi, and also Aiello associate Joseph Giunta were killed by the Capone Mob. So my personal belief is that by now Capone might’ve been the scariest gangster in the country. Proof for that is…
In 1930, Capone was brought into Cosa Nostra by one of the New York Mafia clans as captain or city boss for that same crime family.
Fred Burke (possible logistician or even executioner) (when he entered prison in 1931, he was visited by Capone member Phil D’Andrea at Marquette prison in Michigan. According to the prison’s Warden James Corgan, D’Andrea exchanged just few words with Burke and than left)
Ray Nugent (possible logistician or even executioner) (disappeared in 1931 and presumed dead)
Bob Carey (possible logistician or even executioner) (suspicious suicide in 1932, together with his wife)
Rocco Belcastro (alleged driver of one of the getaway cars but killed in 1932)
Al Capone (sent to prison in 1932)
Fred Goetz (possible logistician or even executioner) (killed in 1933)
Gus Winkler (possible logistician or even executioner) (killed in 1933)
Byron Bolton (possible main connection between the Circus Café gang and various gangsters from around the country) (arrested in 1935 and gave his own alleged testimony regarding the massacre by naming Burke, Goetz, Winkler, and Nugent as the main people involved, but he also added up names such as Claude Maddox. When the cops raided Bolton’s home they found numerous pictures of him together with Al Capone and other gangsters such as Fred Burke and Fred Goetz. Later the director of the FBI J. Edgar Hoover immediately dismissed Bolton’s testimony by saying “There’s not a word of truth in it” but the agent in charge of Chicago’s Division of Investigation D. M. Ladd said that “The Federal Agents haven’t even questioned Bolton regarding the massacre”)
Jack McGurn (alleged logistician who in 1936 was killed on the evening before Saint Valentine’s Day)