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Gangland Wire

The Trial of Al Capone Part 1

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6623 Ratings

🗓️ 26 March 2017

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Al Capone Juror I found a detailed newspaper  account written by a juror shortly after the October 5, 1931 trail of Al Capone for income tax evasion at the federal courthouse in downtown Chicago. For several weeks before the scheduled start of the Capone trial, informant Eddie O’Hare notified the prosecutor and the lead Treasury Agent investigator, Frank Wilson, that Capone’s organization had a complete list of prospective jurors and was already “passing out $1,000 bills,” promising political jobs, giving away tickets to prize fights, and “using muscle too.”  Wilson and the U.S. Attorney Johnson got a list of 10 names from O’Hare, names 30 to 39 on the jury list. Wilson and U. S. Attorney Johnson related O’Hare’s story to Judge Wilkerson in his chambers.  Wilkerson told the men that he hadn’t yet received his jury list for the Capone trial, but when he did, he would call them.  When the names on Wilkerson’s list turned out to match exactly with the names on O’Hare’s list, the judge met once again with Wilson and prosecutors.  The judge seemed curiously unconcerned and said  “Bring your case into court as planned, gentlemen.” Frank Wilson Treasury Agent He told the government’s attorneys.  “Leave the rest to me.”  On the first day of trial, Capone and his attorney smiled at jurors as they sat at the defendant’s table. Judge Wilkerson took his seat at the bench and looked out over the packed courtroom.  He called the bailiff to the bench.  “Judge Edwards has another trial commencing today,” he told the bailiff.  “Go to his courtroom and bring me his entire panel of jurors; take my entire panel to Judge Edwards.” Al Capone’s smile sank when he saw the jury was switched. The prosecutor outlined the 23 charges of tax evasion against Capone in the government’s opening statement. The first witness, Charles W. Arndt, a tax collector for the United States, told jurors that Al Capone failed to file any tax return at all during for the years 1924 through 1929. Thus begins the famous trial of Al Capone. In this two part story, I will recount the trial from the perspective of a juror. To go to the store click here To rent Gangland Wire, the documentary, click here To subscribe on iTunes click here, give me a review and I will send you a link to see the film for free.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Former Kansas City Police Department Intelligence Detective and now attorney Gary Jenkins

0:12.0

produced four documentary films, most recently Gangland Wire, creator of smartphone app entitled Kansas City Mob Tours.

0:21.6

Download it now.

0:23.6

If you like what you hear, go to ganglandwire.com.

0:27.6

Navigate to the shop page.

0:29.6

We need you to put a hit out on our donate button.

0:34.6

Gangland Wire True Crime Stories is produced at the Big Dumb Fun Show Studio 4.

0:42.5

And now here's Gary Jenkins.

0:48.5

Well, good evening, folks. It's good to be back here in the Studio 4, the Big Dumb Fun Show.

0:54.3

I'm here with my good friend and co-host, Aaron. Say hello, Aaron.

0:58.4

Hello, Aaron.

0:59.8

We're here in Midtown, Kansas City.

1:02.4

Just, as I said one other time, just a few blocks away from the scenes of several different mob hits from the 1930s to the 1970s.

1:11.7

Aaron, I just got an email and a phone call from a lady wants me to donate a Kansas City mob tour.

1:20.9

Not donate the app, I'd be happy to give them the app for $1.99, but to take some group of people

1:27.2

that will auction my services off and they'll

1:29.7

provide a limo and will do a Kansas City mob tour as a fundraiser for a local high school,

1:38.1

a private school. So that'll be kind of nice. I told, sure, I'd do that. I donate a couple

1:43.7

copies of that movie, yeah.

1:45.4

As long as the kids stay out of trouble.

1:47.0

Well, it won't be for the kids.

1:48.6

It will be for the don't. It will be for the donator.

...

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