| Founded | 1910s |
|---|---|
| Founding location | Detroit /Muskegon,Michigan,United States |
| Years active | 1910s–1932 |
| Territory | Detroit |
| Ethnicity | Ashkenazi Jewish |
| Activities | Murder, extortion, theft, armed robbery, kidnapping, gambling, bootlegging |
| Allies | Chicago Outfit Fred "Killer" Burke |
| Rivals | TheDetroit Partnership Fred "Killer" Burke after 1927 |
ThePurple Gang, also known as theSugar House Gang, was acriminal mob of bootleggers and hijackers composed predominantly ofJewish gangsters. They operated inDetroit, Michigan, during the 1920s of theProhibition era and came to be Detroit's dominant criminal gang. Excessive violence and infighting caused the gang to destroy itself in the 1930s.
TheMichigan Legislature prohibited the sale of liquor in 1917, three years beforenational Prohibition was established by a constitutional amendment.[1][2] Along with temperance supporters, industrialistHenry Ford owned theRiver Rouge plant and desired a sober workforce, so he backed the Damon Act,[2] a state law that, along with theWiley Act, prohibited virtually all possession, manufacture, or sale of alcohol starting in 1918.[3] Detroit is close toOhio, sobootleggers and others would import liquor fromToledo where it was still legal.[2] They also smuggled liquor in from Canada.
Judges took a lenient view of offenders. The Damon Act was declared unconstitutional in 1919 by the state supreme court.[4]
In 1920 theEighteenth Amendment was adopted and prohibition took effect throughout the United States.[2] Canada, particularly the port city ofWindsor, Ontario, directly across theDetroit River from Detroit, became a major point for smuggling alcohol products into the US. The Canadian government had also banned the use of alcoholic beverages but still approved and licensed distilleries and breweries to manufacture and export alcohol.[1][2]
Detroit's immigrant neighborhoods suffered from widespread poverty, as did many in major cities at the beginning of the 20th century. To survive, some residents turned to crime, which they enforced with violence.[5] The Hastings Street neighborhood in Detroit's lower east side was known as "Paradise Valley". Most of the Purple Gang's core members went toBishop School, where many had been placed in the division for "problem" children.[6] The gang members were mostly American-born children of Jewish immigrants, primarily fromRussia andPoland, who had come to the United States in the great immigration wave from 1881 to 1914.[7]
The gang was led by brothersAbe, Joe, Raymond, and Izzy Bernstein,[8] who had moved to Detroit from New York City.[9]
While in Detroit casino operatorLincoln Fitzgerald was a gambler and he became associated with the Detroit Purple Gang.[10] In 1976 Fitzgerald opened a 16 story casino which he named Fitzgeralds Casino & Hotel.[11] At the time of his death he was operating three casinos: Fitzgeralds Casino & Hotel (Reno), the Nevada Club (Reno), and the Nevada Lodge of Lake Tahoe.[12]
The Purple Gang started off as petty thieves and extortionists,[5][6] but they quickly progressed to armed robbery and truck hijacking under the tutelage of older neighborhood gangsters (Charles Leiter andHenry Shorr).[6][8][13] They gained notoriety for their operations and savagery,[5] and they imported gangsters from other cities to work as "muscle" for the gang.[6]
There are various theories as to the origin of the name "Purple Gang". One version says that a member of the gang was a boxer who wore purple shorts during his bouts.[6] Another was that the name came from a conversation between two shop keepers:[1][5]
These boys are not like other children of their age, they're tainted, off color.
"Yes," replied the other shopkeeper. "They're rotten, purple like the color of bad meat, they're a Purple Gang."
It was known that in 1929, there were 25,000 illegal saloons in the Detroit city, so there was a large business for bootleggers, including the Purple Gang.[14] The gang became hijackers and gained a reputation for stealing the alcohol cargos of older and more established criminal gangs.[5] The Purple Gang also employed gangs for raw labor and transport; for example, the Purple Gang enlisted “The Little Jewish Navy” to carry alcohol over theDetroit River fromCanada before selling it themselves.[15] Chicago gangsterAl Capone was against expanding his rackets in Detroit, so he began a business accommodation with the Purple Gang in order to prevent a bloody war.[6] For several years, the gang managed the prosperous business of supplyingCanadian whisky to theCapone organization in Chicago.[9][16] The Purple Gang was involved in various other criminal actions, such as kidnapping other gangsters for ransom, which became very popular during this era. The FBI suspected that they were involved with theLindbergh baby kidnapping.[6][17]
By the late 1920s, the Purple Gang reigned supreme over the Detroit underworld, controlling the city's vice, gambling, liquor, and drug trade.[18] They also ran the local wire service, providing horse racing information to local horse betting parlors.[1] The gang members consorted with more infamous mobsters, branching into other cities, as well. Abe Bernstein was a friend ofMeyer Lansky andJoe Adonis, with whom he owned severalMiami, Florida gambling casinos in his later years.[19] The gang hijacked prizefight films and forced movie theaters to show them for a high fee. They also defrauded insurance companies by staging fake accidents.[9] Altogether, the Purple Gang is alleged to have been responsible for 500 murders in the city.[20]
As the gang grew in size and influence, they began hiring themselves out ashitmen[19] and took part in the Cleaners and Dyers war. The Purples profited from the Detroit laundry industryunions and associations.[8] They were hired out to keep union members in line and to harass non-union independents.[8]Bombing,arson,theft, andmurder were the usual tactics that the gang employed to enforce union policy.[6][19]
Abe Axler and Eddie Fletcher were reputedly imported fromNew York City to take part in the scheme (although other sources put their origins in Detroit).[6][13] In 1927, nine members of the Purple Gang (Abe Bernstein, Raymond Bernstein, Irving Milberg, Eddie Fletcher, Joe Miller, Irving Shapiro, Abe Kaminsty, Abe Axler, and Simon Axler) were arrested and charged withconspiracy to extort money from Detroit wholesale cleaners and dyers.[19] They were eventually acquitted of all charges.[6]
Harry Rosman (1891–1958) was president and owner of Famous Cleaners & Dyers inDetroit,Michigan. He gained public notoriety for being the key witness testifying against the Purple Gang in a trial that lasted from 1928 to 1929.[21] The prosecution alleged extortion activities against Detroit area businesses during the sometime violent showdown known as the Cleaners & Dyers Wars. Rosman testified that the Purple Gang asked for $1000 per week from his and other area cleaners & dyers' businesses for their "protection" against violence.[22]
A Detroit Mob War soon ensued between theItalian,Irish, andJewish bootleggers over territory. The Purples fought a vicious turf war with the Licavoli Squad led by the brothersTommy andPete Licavoli.[1][4] In March 1927, three men were killed. The deceased men had been brought into Detroit as hired assassins for the Purple Gang and the motive for the murder was believed to be retaliation for a "double cross". The homicides took place in an apartment leased by Purple Gang members Eddie Fletcher and Abe Axler (and reportedlyFred Burke, an associate of the Purples originally connected to theEgan's Rats gang ofSt. Louis), which made them prime suspects in the slaying.[13] The three suspects (Fletcher, Axler, and Burke) were questioned, as were the other Purples and associates.[23] No one was ever convicted of the murders.[6] These murders were reportedly the first use of asubmachine gun in a Detroit underworld slaying.[24]
The Purple Gang was suspected of taking part in theSt. Valentine's Day Massacre in Chicago.[9] On February 13, 1929, Abe Bernstein reputedly calledBugs Moran to tell him that a hijacked load of booze was on its way to Chicago. Moran, who was in the middle of a turf war with Capone, had only recently begun to trust Bernstein, who had previously been Capone's chief supplier of Canadian liquor.[19] The next day, instead of delivering a load of liquor, four men, two in police uniforms, went to S.M.C. Cartage on North Clark Street (Moran'sNorth Side hangout) and opened fire withThompson submachine guns, killing seven men in what has become known as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre.[19] Several witnesses and some items of physical evidence implicated Burke in the slayings; he was never charged.
The Purple Gang began terrorizing Detroiters with the street executions of their enemies.[1] Among their victims was city police officer Vivian Welsh, killed on February 1, 1927; he was later revealed to be adirty cop who was reputedly trying to extort money from the Purple Gang. In 1930 the gang was accused of murderingJerry Buckley, a well-known radio figure, in the lobby of a downtown hotel.[1][25] Whether the Purples were involved with Buckley's death is disputed, as the police suspected the local Sicilian mob.[26] No one was charged in either case, and both of the murders remain officially unsolved.[26]
In 1931, an intra-gang dispute ended in the murder of three Purples by Chicago gangsters who had been imported to Detroit to help out the Purple Gang.[6] The three men had violated an underworld code by operating outside the territory allotted to them by the Purple Gang leadership.[8] Herman "Hymie" Paul, Isadore Sutker a.k.a. "Joe Sutker", and Joseph "Nigger Joe" Lebowitz were lured to an apartment on Collingwood Avenue on September 16, 1931.[27] They believed they were going to a peace conference with the Purple leaders.[8] After a brief discussion, the three men were gunned down.[27] Authorities caught up with the gang when they burst into Fletcher's apartment and found the suspects (Abe Axler, Irving Milberg, and Eddie Fletcher) playing cards. Ray Bernstein andHarry Keywell were also arrested.[27]
Irving Milberg, Harry Keywell, and Raymond Bernstein, three high-ranking Purples, were convicted of first-degree murder in the Collingwood Manor Massacre and were sentenced to life in prison.[8] Bernstein, Milberg, and Keywell were accompanied by police officers on a special Pullman train bound forMichigan's Upper Peninsula to begin serving their sentences in the state's maximum security prison inMarquette, Michigan.[28] Harry Fleisher, another suspect, remained on the run until 1932, but he was never convicted in connection with the massacre. Later on, he served time inJackson Prison, the world's largest walled prison, in the early 1950s for armed robbery of an Oakland County gambling house.[28] According to Detroit Police Chief of Detectives, James E. McCarty, the convictions in the Collingwood Massacre "broke the back of the once powerful Purple Gang, writing finis to more than five years of arrogance and terrorism".[28]
For many years, the Purples enjoyed seemingly complete immunity from police interference as witnesses to crimes were terrified of testifying against any criminal identified as a Purple gangster.[8] The Purple Gang reputedly became more arrogant and sloppy as time progressed. They dressed flamboyantly, frequented the city's night spots, and were well known to the public. They lived in fine houses and soon a romantic aura surrounded the Purples that distinguished them from the other gangs in Detroit.[9] Jealousies, egos, and intra-gang quarrels would eventually cause the Purple Gang to collapse.[8][13] The police eventually moved against them as gang members began leaving behind too much evidence of their crimes.
Phillip Keywell had already been convicted of murder, and Joe Bernstein and Abe Bernstein both were given lengthy prison sentences after previously escaping significant jail time through intimidation and corrupt officials. Different waves of bloodier-than-previous infighting ensued, with the aggressive and high-ranking members Abe Axler and Eddie Fletcher getting shot dead. Then one-time partial-boss (there wasn't a strict hierarchy) Henry Shorr was killed in further infighting. Some gangsters drifted away, a few fleeing Detroit,[29] others were executed by fellow members or rival gangsters,[8] and several members were subsequently imprisoned.[28] A rival Sicilian gang, tired of competing with the Purples, eventually decided to eliminate them.[9]
The gang continued in a diminished capacity, but the predecessors of Detroit's modern-dayMafia stepped in and filled the void as The Purple Gang ultimately self-destructed.[1][8][13]
Although heavily fictionalized, the 1935 filmPublic Hero No. 1 deals with the hunting down and capture of the Purple Gang.
The 1959 filmThe Purple Gang, also heavily fictionalized, includes details of the gang's rise to prominence.
"Jailhouse Rock" byLeiber & Stoller, recorded byElvis Presley, has the lyric "The whole rhythm section was the Purple Gang". The song was reprised, lyric intact, in the 1980 filmThe Blues Brothers.
A 1960 second-season episode ofThe Untouchables simply titled "The Purple Gang", provides a fictional account of the Purple Gang's kidnapping of a mob courier.
Raymond Chandler mentions the Purple Gang in the novel,Farewell, My Lovely:
We curved through the bright mile or two of the Strip, past the Antique shops with famous screen names on them, past the windows full of point lace and ancient pewter, past the gleaming new nightclubs with famous chefs and equally famous gambling rooms, run by polished graduates of the Purple Gang ...[30]
Ian Fleming refers to the Purple Gang in hisJames Bond novelsDiamonds Are Forever,Goldfinger,Thunderball andThe Man with the Golden Gun.
The Purple Gang was also referenced byRoss Macdonald in his 1952 novelThe Ivory Grin.
Although he was gunned down in the first scene,Max Allan Collins identified "The Rodent" as a Purple Gang torpedo in his novelization of the 1990 filmDick Tracy.
An episode ofDetroit 1-8-7 featured a man whose grandfather was a member of the gang.
Detroit rapperProof has a song on his debut albumSearching for Jerry Garcia titled "Purple Gang".
The Table-Top Roleplaying gameChampions has a gang in it named "The New Purple Gang".