Essay About Al Capone

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“You can go much farther with a word and a gun than you can go with a kind word alone” (Shaprio). Alphonse Capone was in the business to help people. He knew these people were willing to pay him under the table for alcohol. He wanted the money more than anything, which made him a greedy man. Even during Capone’s jail time, it was rare to ever find him without a smile on his face because he was a businessman who never disappointed his clients. The three main historical events of Capone’s life that are essential to know about his past is his childhood, his progress in business, and his jail time incorporated with his death. These lead up to explain the choices he made to satisfy customers to make not only himself, but his business successful …show more content…

Nearly a decade later, he reached his teen years. This was the start of his rebellious life. He started off as an excellent student, but after 6th grade, he began falling behind. Capone then became a nuisance. He assaulted his teacher, which subsequently ended his education. Resulting from that, he never showed up another day for school and instead, spent his days down at the Brooklyn docs known as a “hooky.” While no longer pursuing on with school, Capone met a gangster on the streets, who changed his direction of life. Capone then had the chance to make all the money he wanted. This is the guy who welcomed greed into Capone’s life; it was Johnny Torrio. Torrio introduced Capone to Frankie Yale, who hired Capone for his first job as a bouncer and bartender at the Harvard Inn, where he got his nickname scarface from. He then entered “the coming of the gangsterhood into Chicago in the age of prohibition” (Hales & Kazmers, …show more content…

He was finally arrested in 1931. “In response to the public outcry over the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre, President Herbert Hoover ordered the federal government to step up its efforts to get Capone on income-tax evasion” (“Al Capone,” 2009). He was then put in jail for the rest of his life for being convicted for tax evasion and prohibition charges. During his trial, he pled guilty and was sentenced to 11 years in federal prison and could not be released on bail. At the federal prison, he tried many different ways of bribery to convince jurors to release him or shorten his time, so he was then moved to the prison Alcatraz. During his time spent in jail, prohibition was ended in 1933. “After six-and-a-half years, Capone was released in 1939 to a mental hospital in Baltimore, where he remained for 3 years” (“Al Capone,” 2009). He completed his sentence in 1939 and was released. He decided to go live in his Palm Island Mansion where he lived up until January of 1947 and passed away from having a stroke and pneumonia due to syphilis. Capone suffered from syphilis his whole life, but of course, it got worse the older he got because his disease was incurable. After his death, the Chicago Outfit was still

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