DiscoverHistory That Doesn't Suck159: Scofflaws, Moonshiners, Bootleggers, and Crime Lords
159: Scofflaws, Moonshiners, Bootleggers, and Crime Lords

159: Scofflaws, Moonshiners, Bootleggers, and Crime Lords

Update: 2024-07-011
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“Don’t ask me nothin’! You hear me? Don’t ask! And don’t bring anybody in here for me to identify. I won’t identify them even if I know they did it!”


This is the story of the nation’s up-and-coming criminal underground. 


By 1920, with few exceptions, producing, buying, and selling alcohol is outlawed, but that doesn’t stop enterprising Americans. Many feel perfectly comfortable flouting the law and continuing to drink at their leisure, albeit with the added thrill that comes with evading halfhearted lawmen. Some cops are even in on it!


But even as law enforcement steps up their game with undercover agent extraordinaire, Izzy Einstein, criminals get organized and start doing serious business—serious as in murderous. Home-brewers like Maude Vogan can be found in rural America, but in the big cities, Prohibition provides a marketplace for organized crime to flourish. There is money to be had, if one can ignore that the likelihood of getting killed just shot up dramatically. Notorious gangsters George Remus, Legs Diamond, and Lucky Luciano run this underworld, double-crossing each other, planning takeovers, and making millions off of booze-loving Americans. But can law and order triumph over these mafiosos? For now, fuhgeddaboudit.

____


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159: Scofflaws, Moonshiners, Bootleggers, and Crime Lords

159: Scofflaws, Moonshiners, Bootleggers, and Crime Lords

Prof. Greg Jackson