Your daily dose of old world gangsters who were rubbed out doing what they loved most. Plus some other fun stuff.
 
"He must have done something. They don't kill you for nothing." - Chicago Gangster Ted Newberry. Rubbed out January 7, 1933
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Elmer's tune
Called a "card sharp and petty racketeer" by police, Forty-three year 
old Elmer Johnson was also a bandit and it was his part in a speakeasy 
robbery that cost him his life on this date in 1933.  Johnson was rushed
 to the hospital at 2:00am with five bullet wounds in his back after 
being shot down on the street. Since he was just a petty racketeer, 
Elmer did not feel bound by the unwritten rules of the underworld and 
broke the first gangster commandment, Though shall not squeal and named 
his attackers. They were Ernest Snyder and Carl Christianson. A squad 
car was sent out and the two men were quickly apprehended and brought to
 the hospital where Johnson identified Snyder as the actual shooter 
before dying. Snyder of course remained mum on the issue but 
Christianson admitted seeing Snyder do the shooting and reported that it
 was the result of Johnson's participation in a speakeasy job.
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