"Keep away from bootleg hooch when you're on a spree,
Take good care of yourself, you belong to me..."
-- Button Up Your Overcoat
Temperatures had dipped to zero that Thursday morning, February
14, 1929. A snow blanketed Chicago and, on the tail of gusty winds
whipped tiny, invisible icicle-bullets through the streets, which
made walking even a block miserable. Vehicle traffic jammed in many
places throughout the city; morning rush hour stood still.
Streetcars meandered, nervous at slipping off icy tracks, groaning
underneath. By mid-morning, the sky was as gray as it had been at
dawn. More snow was predicted on top of the mess that had already
fallen. Bleak for what should have been a postcard day. It was the
feast of St. Valentine.
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Frank Gusenberg (POLICE) |
One at a time, the men began to show up at the one-story
gray-stoned S-M-C Cartage Company garage at 2122 North Clark Street.
John May was the first on the scene, opening up at about 8:30 a.m.,
wanting to get an early start on a flatbed requiring a new oil pan.
He brought with him his beloved Alastatian named Highball, who, from
where he was leashed to the truck's gate, watched his master's work
with interest. The Gusenberg brothers rolled in about an hour later,
grunting a "Mornin'" to May and tickling Highball's
pointed ears. Pete Gusenberg felt a draught slipping through the
garage's large double doors off the alley and tried to snuff the
breeze with an oil rag. "Nevermind that," Frank barked,
"help me get the coffee on. |
In constant rhythm over the next half hour, James Clark, Adam
Heyer and Albert Weinshank, in that order, arrived. Somewhere in
between this parade of mobsters walked Reinhardt Schwimmer, an
eyeglass fitter who, to impress, called himself an optometrist. Not
a gangster, he thrilled to be in their company and had been so since
the days of his old friend, O'Banion.
By 10:30 a.m., there were seven men gathered in the garage.
Warming themselves over a small iron space heater in the corner
and with a cup of Chase & Sanborn from a pot brewing on a burner
plate, they waited for their boss, George Moran. He had called them
last night and asked them to be present this morning to help unload
a truckload of Old Log Cabin whisky being delivered around eleven
o'clock. Plus, he had some gang business he wanted to go over before
the start of the weekend.
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Pete Gusenberg (POLICE) |
Three of the waiting men were forty Clark, Heyer and
Weinshank; Frank Gusenberg was 41 and his brother Pete, 36; May was
a tired-looking 35 (he had seven children at home to support); the
youngest was Schwimmer at 29. Except for the latter, all had been,
at least once, in trouble with the law some had done time
but they found that since working for Moran life had been
comparatively a cinch. The hours were bad, but the boss was a
thankful one who paid them handsomely. Toughest of the tribe were
the Gusenbergs; they had little sympathy for anything Italian, and
no sympathy for anything Italian belonging to Capone. Twice they had
opened up their Thompson machine guns on the Behemoth's top
triggerman, Jack McGurn (an achievement they were proud of), but
missed (a screw-up for which they weren't). The most docile of
Moran's regulars was probably May, the mechanic. Promising a
grieving wife he would stay out of trouble, he didn't see any harm
in earning a few bucks now and then, money sorely needed, by helping
his old friend Moran deliver a truckload of alky or by replacing a
cracked cylinder. |
All were married, and each had promised their wives to see them
later in the afternoon; Frank Gusenberg, secretly wed to two women
at once, really didn't want to see either.
*****
Across the street, from the third floor of Mrs. Doody's boarding
house, a pair of watchful eyes had been surveying Clark Street
below, watching who entered the small, nondescript building. After
the seventh and last man to arrive, the spy who had rented the room
only a couple of days before, ambled to the house phone down the
hall, and, when the other party answered spoke two anticipated
words, "He's here," and hung up, smiling. The
easiest money he had made in years. Simply look out a window and
wait for Bugs Moran to appear.
The only trouble is he had mistaken Albert Weinshank for the
Bugs. In appearance, they resembled each other, even dressed alike
with similar beige overcoats and brown Stetsons.
*****
At the Parkway Hotel, several blocks away, Moran kissed Alice
goodbye and took the elevator down to the lobby where he met Ted
Newberry waiting. As a pair, they pulled up their coat collars and
the brims of their hats low, and headed on foot, careful not to slip
on the icy sidewalk, west towards Clark Street. The gangleader
glanced at his wristwatch, saw it was already 10:30, the time he
told his boys he'd be there, but figured if the truck arrived they'd
start without him. He told Newberry he hoped they'd get the coffee
on; after traipsing in this godawful weather, they'd need it.
*****
The words He's here had set into motion the final step of
Capone's long-dreamed-of plan to eliminate Bugs Moran and his motley
crew forever. The plan's author, "Machine Gun" Jack McGurn
real name Vincenzo Gibaldi, a prizefighter gone foul had
orchestrated the brilliant ruse that began to develop weeks ago.
Although to this day, many specifics of the plan remain untold,
scholars have been able to piece together elements of the overall
scheme.
First, a low-ranking member of Capone's gang someone whom
Moran would not recognize -- breached the Bugs' trust by posing as
an independent hijacker with a load of Old Log Cabin to sell at a
competitive price. Since hijacking was a common practice among the
fringe of gangdom pirating each other's shipments at random
Moran accepted without question. After all, he had purchased many
such shipments in the past and saved a wad. The deal done, the load
was delivered to the S-M-C Cartage garage in January. Pleased with
the price-per-barrel, Moran told the "hijacker" to keep
him in mind for future deliveries. The fellow promised that he would
get back to him, soon.
McGurn let two weeks pass before he had the actor call again:
"Another load of Old Log Cabin, Mister Moran, at the same
price. Interested?" Moran was. It would be delivered on
February 14, Valentine's Day, at 11 a.m. The Irisher promised to be
there along with some of his crew to help unload.
In the meantime, McGurn assembled four of the Midwest's top
hitmen and put them on hold for what he promised would be a big-time
hit. With a date finally established, the mechanics of the rub-out
went into gear. At the next scheduled delivery (that would never
come), the assassins, posed as harassing policemen, would enter the
garage, line Moran and whomever was with him hell, numbers
didn't matter against the wall and blow them to kingdom come.
|
Scalise & Anselmi |
Two of the fake policemen were almost certainly John Scalise and
Albert Anselmi, who had been employed in almost every major Capone
hit during the Twenties. Other candidates, among a league of
suspects, are Fred Burke, a member of Egan's Rats from St. Louis,
Missouri; "Little Louis" Campagna, who had threatened Joey
Aiello in his cell; Claude "Screwy" Maddox, a member of
the Circus Gang, so-called because they made their headquarters in
the nearby Circus Cafι; and Joseph Lolordo, younger brother of the
murdered Pasquelino. Recent additions to the list are Tony Accardo
and Sam Giancana. |
Capone loved the plan for its simplicity and its fatality.
Wishing McGurn good luck, he took his family on a winter's holiday
to a mansion he had purchased in West Palm Beach, Florida. Realizing
he would be immediately blamed for the hit -- "For crying out
loud, I've been blamed for everything since the Chicago Fire!"
he once told snickering reporters he made sure he was many, many
miles away when Moran went down. And to ensure his innocence, he
made a date to entertain a county commissioner at the very time that
McGurn was dispatching the North Siders.
The He's here comment sent a relay running to a rented
garage at 1722 North Wood where he knuckled its alley door, just
once, then walked away. Inside, McGurn's team of four had been
waiting for the signal. One of the gunmen opened the door and the
others climbed into the black 1927 Cadillac doctored to look like a
police car.
"Two of the assassins were dressed as police officers,"
reports Richard Lindberg's Return to the Scene of the Crime
Chicago. "The other three wore long trench coats and
fedoras. Tucked inside their coats were sawed-off shotguns and
Thompson submachine guns, the newest and deadliest weapons of
choice. The Cadillac eased alongside the curb (outside the S-M-C
Cartage Company) a few minutes past 10:30.
*****
Moran and Newberry were a block north of the garage when they
spotted Willie Marks alighting from the downtown streetcar on Clark.
Waiting to greet him, the three men then turned their heels to their
destination,
"Damn it, would ya' look at that!" muttered Newberry,
nodding his head toward the police squad edging the curb outside the
place. They paused in their tracks, watching the five cops saunter
through the front door. "What a time to show up!"
"Let's hope the booze isn't out back," Moran answered.
"Come on," he led them into a coffee shop whose door
handle was within hand's reach. "Lets grab a cup of coffee
'till this blows over." Taking a table out of the waitress'
earshot, he grumbled, "Willie, if they're arrested, get our
attorneys to get my boys outta jail this afternoon, OK?"
"Outta jail and all charges dropped," winked Marks.
"They'll be home for dinner."
*****
The seven men in the garage heard the tinkle of the transom bell
out front and figured it was Moran. They gawked when, instead, five
policemen passed from the foyer into the shop. "Hands up and
face the wall!" one of the plainclothesman blurted. And when
the Morans didn't move fast enough, screamed, "Move!"
The cops fanned out behind them as the seven grouchy, mumbling men
leaned palms-flat against a side wall, shoulder to shoulder, staring
at brick and mortar, waiting to be frisked.
"Lay a hand on us and there'll be hell to pay in City Hall
this afternoon, coppers," Frank Gusenberg threatened. He was
surprised none of the bulls answered him back.
The men facing the wall listened. In fact, the silence seemed an
omen. There was only minor rustling, someone whispering something,
and someone's sole scraping along the oily cement floor.
Then, a boom broke the silence, to be picked up by a staccato of
something exploding behind their backs. Their instincts shouted the
reality of this as they realized what was happening, but they
couldn't move because their bodies were too busy being ripped apart.
For seconds there was pain but that faded when they saw the blood
from their own heads splatter the wall before them.
Had any of them lived even seconds after the shooting stopped,
they would have heard the dog, Highball, whimpering for its master.
*****
Moran noticed that Clark Street, the little he could see through
the steaming coffee shop window, had suddenly congested. Vehicles
were backed up and passersby seemed to be pausing, despite the cold,
to gawk. He figured he knew what was going on: "Something's
wrong," he declared. "A dime to a donut they're arresting
the guys." Dropping a tip on the table, he left, his associates
behind him.
The Cadillac that had been at the curb earlier was gone, but it
had been replaced by a small convoy of squads. Two uniformed
policemen stood guard at the doorway, while others were scurrying in
and out between the garage and the sidewalk talking to obvious
plainclothesmen outside. One seemed to be taking notes in a tablet.
"Sonny," Moran stopped a snot-nosed kid tearing by.
"Why all the police?"
"Some cops just had a gunfight with some hoods in that
building."
Moran's boys knew better than to open up to cops. "You
sure?" he asked.
"Ya' bet, mister. Bunches of guys dead inside. It's Bugs
Moran and his gang."
Moran didn't believe it until the morgue attendants arrived and
they started carrying out his boys, one after another.
Ted Newberry noticed his boss swivel. He took an elbow. "You
OK, George?"
But, all Moran said, almost inaudibly, was "Capone...it's
Capone..."
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Inside the S-M-C garage
(POLICE) |
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