Frank Shaeffer (also known as Grey) and Dave Bacharach were standing near a Westside
bar at 2:00am on this date back in 1934 when a taxi-cab brimming with
gunmen pulled up and opened fire. Wanting to continue this mortal life, Frank and Dave took off
running.
Bystanders dove to the ground and jumped into doorways as the cab followed Frank and Dave
with the gunmen still blazing away. After
a brief chase some bullets came to rest in Frank and he pitched forward on the sidewalk and lay still while Dave kept running. With Shaeffer down the taxi took off and disappeared into the Broadway traffic.
When
the coast was clear people came out of their hiding spots and crowds
began to pour out of the nearby restaurants, nightclubs and other
buildings. They gathered around Shaeffer
and rolled him over. It appeared to them that he fell down and cut his
head and was unconscious. An ambulance was called and the doctor who
arrived with it informed them that what they thought was a cut was
actually a bullet wound and that the man was in fact dead. Further
examination showed that he had been hit under the left armpit as well.
Meanwhile Dave, who had took a superficial wound to the chest walked to the hospital for treatment. The police were notified and took
the wounded man into custody and at first he said that he was a Bronx
real estate man and he didn't
even know that he’d been shot until he undid his coat to get a nickel
for a newspaper and found blood. After more questioning however, he
broke down, identified himself then clammed up.
What Shaeffer was involved with at the end is unknown but when killed he was
“shabbily dressed” and only had a few dollars on him. He had a record of
fourteen arrests and five convictions and was known to the police as a
forger and mail thief who in 1921 was sentenced to the Atlanta
Penitentiary. In 1923 he gained a bit of notoriety when he managed to
escape from there with the infamous robber Gerald Chapman.
2 comments:
I hope the gunmen gave that cabbie a nice tip. He certainly earned it.
I thinking at least 20%.
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