Detroit's Infamous Purple Gang
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About this ebook
Beginning as a group of delinquents committing petty crimes, they became Detroit's infamous Purple Gang, of one of the most notorious organized crime groups of the 20th century.
The photographs in this fascinating collection chronologically follow the evolution of the Purples from their days as a juvenile street gang through their rise to power and eventual self-destruction. Detroit had a gold rush atmosphere and a thriving black market during the 1920s that attracted gangsters and unsavory characters from all over the country. The gang's reputation for hijacking and terror spread far, and they became associates with Al Capone, their location a perfect midway point to smuggle Canadian whisky across the border and down into Chicago. Their reputation was such that they were even suspected by the FBI for being involved with the Lindbergh baby kidnapping. Using rare police department mug shots and group photographs, the book transports readers through the dark side of Prohibition-era Detroit history.
Paul R. Kavieff
Paul R. Kavieff received his undergraduate degree from Oakland University in Rochester. He holds a master's degree in modern U.S. history from Wayne State University. Kavieff is a foremost authority on the Prohibition-era Detroit underworld. He is also a nationally recognized organized crime historian and the author of The Life and Times of Lepke Buchalter: America's Most Ruthless Labor Racketeer. The photographs in this book represent the personal collection of the author obtained through archives and relatives of Purple Gangsters.
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Detroit's Infamous Purple Gang - Paul R. Kavieff
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INTRODUCTION
At the age of six, my father sold newspapers on the corner of Beaubien and Monroe Streets, or, as it is better known, the heart of Detroit’s Greektown. It was the early 1930s when this young paperboy shouted out some of the most horrific headlines of gangland activity the city had ever experienced. Six decades later, he shared his memories, and I was completely captivated. What did not occur to me at the time was how large of an impact these stories would eventually have. During my first year of college, I embarked on a historical crusade that in many ways changed my life. Not only was I beginning to uncover the inner workings of one of America’s most significant and ruthless underworld organizations, I was also cultivating a partnership with a crime historian by the name of Paul R. Kavieff.
I first met Kavieff in the early 1990s when he was authoring his book The Purple Gang. At the same time, I was developing a feature-length screenplay on Detroit’s most notorious gang. I remember feeling overwhelmed and somewhat intimidated with his incredible wealth of knowledge in both the fields of social deviance and organized crime. There was no question that he was the foremost authority on the Purple Gang, and I needed to bring him on board in order to write and produce the most accurate depiction possible. My challenge was to persuade this expert to take a chance on an unproven screenwriter. Well, much to my surprise, he saw in me the same passion he had for this incredible story. He agreed to join the project, and for that I will always be grateful.
Detroit’s Infamous Purple Gang is Kavieff’s latest work on the Purple Gang and will no doubt visually preserve a part of American history that will be discussed and debated by scholars and novices alike for years to come. Now, for the first time ever, a book chronicles the most complete photographic collection of these predominantly Jewish gangsters. The Purple Gang, led by the four Burnstein brothers, Abraham, Joseph, Raymond, and Isadore, was responsible for over 500 unsolved murders. Their brutal methods of persuasion established the gang’s unsavory reputation as hijackers, extortionists, and bloodletters.
The story began at the dawn of the 20th century, when the core group of Purple Gangsters spent their formative years on the chaotic streets of Detroit’s lower-east side. This impoverished area filled with immigrants looking to walk down the country’s golden-paved streets found the American dream to be nothing more than a fallacy. What they found was a lifestyle of hard work and little pay. The young Purple Gangsters did not seem to subscribe to the notion of honest work. As juveniles, they robbed local merchants, victimized street peddlers, and rolled drunks for easy pocket change. Their petty crimes escalated to more violent and erratic behavior, bringing nearby residents to live in a constant state of fear.
On May 1, 1918, Michigan’s statewide Prohibition law went into effect. It became illegal to commercially sell, manufacture, transport, or consume alcohol. Detroit became the first city in the country with a population of over a quarter of a million to go dry. Prohibition gave birth to the modern-day bootlegger, gangster, and gunman.
Charlie Leiter and Henry Shorr, two larger-than-life racketeers who owned and operated the Oakland Sugar House, took advantage of the state’s newly passed dry law. The Oakland Sugar House was an operation that sold corn sugar and brewing supplies to bootleggers and alley brewers. Leiter and Shorr recruited Joseph, who had become the street leader of the young Purple Gangsters, to assemble as a group of strong arms to muscle in on the larger alley brewing operations. The objective was to hijack the ready-made liquor, then dilute, rebottle, and sell it for enormous profits.
While the Sugar House Gang was controlling the Detroit streets, Abraham, the oldest of the Burnstein brothers, was making a name for himself in Detroit’s flourishing gambling industry. It was in the Detroit casinos where Abraham, who ran many of the table games, developed important underworld and upperworld contacts. These relationships proved to be instrumental in implementing a plan that he put into action. He was going to set up a system that supplied alcohol throughout the United States once the 18th Amendment to the constitution was ratified. Abraham needed enforcement for the plan to work and partnered with the Oakland Sugar House to establish an organization for that purpose.
This newly formed underworld unity soon seized control of the city’s alley breweries and hijacked booze being smuggled across the Detroit River from other gangs. They also developed large credit lines with Canadian distillers. It was illegal to sell or consume liquor in Ontario, Canada, in the 1920s but not to export it. Abraham’s Purple Gang was ready and so, too, was the rest of the country when national Prohibition went into effect on January 16, 1920.
As the Purple Gang’s dominance grew, so did its operations, stemming into prostitution, narcotics, and betting parlors. During the late 1920s the gang controlled the wire service that provided horseracing information to the 700 betting parlors throughout the city. These handbooks had to pay protection money to the gang and a monthly fee in order to have access to the wire service. The Purple Gang had reached the pinnacle of power by 1930 and appeared to be invincible. Witnesses to crimes were terrified to testify against anyone reputed to be a Purple Gangster. In September 1931, however, everything seemed to unravel. An intergang dispute resulted in the murder of three Purple Gangsters by members of their own gang. The three victims had violated the underworld code by operating outside the territory allotted them by the Burnstein brothers. This incident came to be known as the Collingwood massacre.
Although the Purple Gang remained in power until 1935, jealousies, egos, and intergang conflicts eventually caused them to