Louis Kravitz (also known asLou Kay orShadows) was a New York laborracketeer during the early 1930s.
On July 12, 1929, Kravitz, along withLouis Buchalter,Jacob Shapiro and two othergangsters, broke into the M. L. Rosenblatt clothing plant and wrecked $25,000 worth of machinery.The New York Times described them as "members of a gang which has been terrorizing nonunion clothing manufacturers".[1]
Kravitz was among the first 9 people to be arrested under New York state law, along with Louis Buchalter, Jacob Shapiro,Bugsy Siegel,Harry Teitelbaum,Harry Greenberg and 3 others, which made "it a crime for men of evil repute to gather together".[2] The arrest was seen as providing atest case for the law. The 9 were arrested in a suite in the Hotel Franconia, where, police charged, they were plotting to terrorize the clothing industry. On December 24, 1931, Magistrate Maurice Gotlieb ruled that the police had failed to prove that the men were meeting with evil intent.[3]
Kravitz disappeared from public view in 1937 after the arrest of Buchalter and 28 others on suspicion of importingnarcotics. By 1939, federal authorities were offering a $1000 reward for Kravitz's capture.[4][5] He was finally apprehended in October 1941 and upon his plea of guilty was given a penitentiary sentence of one year and one day.