Public Enemies (94 page)

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Authors: Bryan Burrough

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
For forty years much of the new material uncovered on the War on Crime period has been unearthed by a dedicated band of amateur historians, many of whom provided tremendous help to me during my four years of research. Probably no one person has amassed more information on Depression-era outlaws than Rick Mattix of Bussey, Iowa, who opened his files to me and was always there to answer a thorny question. Thomas Smusyn, who knows more about John Dillinger than any man alive, was an expert guide through Dillinger’s old Chicago haunts.
I am deeply indebted to Paul Maccabee, whose history of the St. Paul underworld,
John Dillinger Slept Here,
is one of the finest books produced on the War on Crime period; to Robert Unger, who knows more about the Kansas City Massacre than anyone; to Bill Helmer, the dean of Dillinger historians; to Bob Bates in Oregon; to Curt Gentry, whose J. Edgar Hoover biography remains the finest in or out of print; and to Richard Jones in Oklahoma City, who allowed me to borrow from his great trove of 1930s-era detective magazines.
Dawn Trent, the widow of Bill Trent, Alvin Karpis’s ghostwriter, kindly lent me thousands of pages of interview transcripts that her husband made with Karpis in the late 1960s; these transcripts are a source of much new information on the period. A former FBI archivist, Susan Rosenthal, provided files on former FBI agents. Thanks as well to historians Glenn Jordan in Monroe, Louisiana; Arch McKinney in East Chicago; Robert Beresford in Wellesville, Ohio; Clyde Woolridge in McAlester, Oklahoma; and Orville Albritton and Bobbie McClain in Hot Springs, Arkansas.
A huge thank-you to the staff at
The Grapevine
in Quantico, Virginia, who allowed me to spend three days wading through back issues, and to the wonderful archivists at FBI headquarters in Washington. Thanks, too, to the children and extended families of the many FBI men and prosecutors who fought the War on Crime, including Alston Purvis, Melvin Purvis’s son; Samuel Cowley, Jr.; Doris Lockerman; Jared McDade in Ossining, New York; John Davis Rorer; Kristina Metcalfe, daughter of James Metcalfe; Werner Hanni, Jr.; Frazier Reams, Jr.; and the families of John Welles, Jay Newman, John Madala, and Hugh Clegg.
Thanks to the staff at the Chicago Public Library; the Chicago Historical Society; the Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul; the Oklahoma Historical Society; the Missouri Historical Society; the J. Evetts Haley Museum in Midland, Texas; the Red River Historical Museum in Sherman, Texas; and the Hot Springs Historical Society in Hot Springs, Arkansas; the federal archives in College Park, Maryland, and Chicago, and Kansas City; as well as the Ohio public libraries in Cleveland, Akron, Toledo, Bluffton, Lima, and Dayton; the Indiana public libraries in Muncie, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Crown Point, East Chicago, Gary, Peru, Hammond, and Terre Haute; the Texas public libraries in Dallas, Fort Worth, Coleman, Waco, Austin, Houston, San Marcos, and San Antonio; the Iowa public libraries in Des Moines and Mason City; the Missouri public libraries in Kansas City, Joplin, and Springfield; the New Jersey public libraries in Summit, Maplewood, Newark, and Atlantic City; the Florida public libraries in Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Ocala, Orlando, and Daytona Beach; the Arkansas public libraries in Little Rock and Hot Springs; the public library in Memphis; the Georgia public library in Albany; and the Wisconsin public libraries in Lake Geneva and Elkhorn.
I could not have attempted this book were it not for the patience of
Vanity Fair
’s editor, Graydon Carter, who looked the other way when I should have been writing stories for him. Anna Bakolas was a terrific researcher in the early months of this project. Marla Burrough, Doug Stumpf, Steve Swartz, and Jordan Glatt gave invaluable reviews of the manuscript. An-drew Wylie and Jeffrey Posternak at the Wylie Agency remain the best literary agents in the business. This project began as a television miniseries for the Home Box Office network; only after research began did I realize I loved it all too much not to write a book. Thanks to Brian Siberell for guiding me through Hollywood.
At Penguin Press, Scott Moyers always believed in this project and gave terrific advice in winnowing the final manuscript. His trusty assistant, Sophie Fels, kept the trains running on time. Melissa Goldstein ransacked archives across the country to gather the photographs. Thanks as well to my parents, Mac and Mary Burrough, in Temple, Texas, who are never too busy to listen. And as always, my greatest thanks goes to my family, Marla, Griffin, and Dane, who never complain about all the long hours Daddy spends alone in his office.
INDEX
Adams, Joe
Akers, Herbert “Dutch”
Akers, Mrs. Walter
Akers, Walter Lynne
Akron Beacon-Journal
Alcorn, Bob
in Bonnie and Clyde ambush
Bonnie and Clyde pursued by
Alderton, Harold
Aldredge, W. J.
Allison, Leo J.
Al Spencer Gang
Alt, Rudolph
Ambush
(Hinton)
American Agent
(Purvis)
American Bank and Trust robbery
American Express Company
American Legion
American Magazine
American National Bank robbery
“American National Police, The: The Dangers of Federal Crime Control” (
Harper’s
)
Anderson, Esther
Anderson, Harold
Anderson, Joe
Angus, Bert
Angus, Ted
Argosy
Arkansas
Gazette
Arnold, Flossie Mae
Arnold, Geralene
Arnold, Luther
Artery, John
Assignment Huntsville
(Simmons) 22
n
Associated Press
Atlantic City shoot-out
Auerbach, Joseph
Backman, Sally
Baczo, George
Bagley, Willis
Bailey, Harvey
Baird, Beulah
Baird, Juanita
Baker, Anne
Baker, Irene
Baker, Lewis
Barber, Al
Barber, Frank
Barce, Edward
Barclay, Tom
Barker, Arthur “Dock”
arrest of
background of
Bremer kidnapping and
death of
in Federal Reserve robbery
Hamm kidnapping and
manhunt for
Moran killed by
Barker, Fred
background of
Bremer kidnapping and
cosmetic surgery of
death of
description of
in Federal Reserve robbery
grave of
Hamm kidnapping and
in Lake Weir shoot-out
manhunt for
Moran killed by
Barker, George
Barker, Herman
Barker, Kate “Ma”
background of
death of
FBI and myth of
Karpis and
in popular culture
Barker, Lloyd
Barker-Karpis Gang map
Barnes, Bruce
Barnes, George,
see
Kelly, George “Machine Gun”
Barnes, John
Barr, W. E.
Barr, Mrs. W. E.
Barrow, Blanche
Barrow, Clyde
attempted ambush of
Bienville Parish sojourn of
Bonnie’s meeting with
Bonnie’s relationship with
in Commerce, Okla., shoot-out
death of
description of
in Dexfield Park shoot-out
Dillinger as model for
film on
gang of
grave of
Hamer’s ambush of
Hamer’s pursuit of
Hamilton breakout plot and
map
notoriety of
personality of
in Platte City shoot-out
in popular culture
in Reeds Spring shoot-out
see also
Parker, Bonnie
Barrow, Cumie
Barrow, Ivan “Buck”
Barrow, Nell
Barry, Edith
Bates, Albert
Batista, Fulgencio
Baum, Carter
Baum, James H.
Benedict, John
Benedict, William
Bentz, Eddie -31
n
Beresford, Bob “Brassy”
Berg, Harry
Berg, Izzy
Berg, Ollie
Birch, Tyler M.
Bitzer, Ernest
Blake, Frank
Bloody Mama
(Corman)
Blunk, Ernest
Boetscher, Charles II
Bogue, Meyer
Boisneau, Eugene
Bolton, Bryan
Bonnie and Clyde
(film)
Borcia, John
Boyard, Chester
Boyd, Percy
Brady, “Big” Bob
Brantley, Dwight
Bremer, Adolph
Bremer, Edward
Bremer kidnapping
Bremer’s release in
evidence discovered in
FBI and
Karpis and
police corruption and
ransom money laundering in
ransom negotiations in
ransom paid in
underworld connections in
Brenner, Lottie
Brining, Mary
Brock, John
Brooks (bank customer)
Brown, Elgar
Brown, Ralph
Brown, Tom
Bryant, Win
Bryce. A. “Jelly,”
Buchalter, Betty
Buchalter, Louis “Lepke”
Buchanan, Buck
Buchanan, James
Burdette, Wynona
Bureau of Investigation:
powers of
see also
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Burke, Fred “Killer”
Bush, George H. W.
Bush, Harold
Bybee, Hilton
Caffrey, Ray
Cagney, Jimmy
Cahoon, Sam
Campanas, Ana,
see
Sage, Ana
Campbell, Cal
Campbell, Charles
Campbell, Harry
Campbell, Jerry
Capone, Al
Carroll, Tommy
death of
description of
in First National Bank robberies
in Fostoria robbery
in Little Bohemia episode
in Security National Bank robbery
Carter, James Earl
Cartwright, Gladys
Cartwright, Lonzo
Casey, Will
Cassidy, Butch
Cassidy, Harold
Catfish, Maggie
Catfish, Ole “Ollie”
Catlett, John
Central National Bank robbery
Central Park Gang
Cernocky, Louis
Chaffetz, Max
Chase, John Paul
Cherrington, Arthur
Cherrington, Patricia
Cheyne, Herbert
Chicago American
Chicago Daily News
Chicago Daily Times
Chicago Herald
Chicago shoot-out
Chicago Times
Chicago Tribune
Chiolek, Mike
Chiolek, Steve
Christiansen, Carl C.
Christiansen, Carl J.
Clark, Bernice,
see
Long, Opal
Clark, Russell
Clegg, Hugh
Beth Green interrogated by
in Little Bohemia debacle
Cleveland
Plain Dealer
Cochran, Frank
Coffey, Daisy
Coffey, Holt
Cohen, Delos
Coker, Sam Cole, John
Cole, Otis
Coleman, Cass
Collier, Rex
Collier’s
Colvin, Ralph
Commerce, Okla., shoot-out
Comstock, A. W.
Conforti, Mickey
Congress, U.S.
Conkle, Ellen
Connelley, Earl
Barker manhunt and
Cowley replaced by
Dillinger manhunt and
fate of
Gibson shooting and
Karpis manhunt and
in Lake Weir shoot-out
in Little Rock raid
Conroy, E. J.
Conroy, Ted
Cooney, Dennis
Cooper, Courtney Ryley
Copeland, Harry
Copeland, Royal
Corman, Roger
Corry, George
Coughlin, Philip
Coulter, Rufus
Cowley, Lavon Chipman
Cowley, Mathias
Cowley, Samuel P.
death of
Dillinger ambush and
Dillinger manhunt and
eulogy for
Hoover’s promotion of
in Nelson manhunt
Purvis’s demotion and
Cox, J. W.
“crime corridor”
Crime Doesn’t Pay
(vaudeville show)
Crosby, Lydia
Cross, Gilbert
Crown Point jail break
Crowson, M. H.
Cuba,
S.S.
Cullen, Frank
Cullen, Thomas
Culp, Frank
Cummings, Henry
Cummings, Homer S.
Cunningham, Miles
Dahill, Thomas
Daily Argus-Leader
Daily Oklahoman
Dallas Times-Herald
Dalton Brothers
Damron, B. L.
Davis, Ed
Davis, Volney
Deaderick, Kelly
Deandre, Phil
Deere, Father
Delaney, Delores
Delaney, Jean
Detective
Devereaux, W. J.
Dewey, Thomas
Dexfield Park shoot-out
Dickman, Lillian
Dillinger, Audrey
Dillinger, Hubert
Dillinger, John

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