Al Capone Home and Bunker

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out of the world's most notorious gangster really behind his locked gates and closed doors there's a sign of Scarface Al Capone you've never seen before come on it's legged Stark and ugly outrageously extravagant and surprisingly normal inside the private spaces in strange places that Al Capone called home now on home and bunker a quiet neighborhood on Chicago's South Side the last place you'd think to look for the world's greatest gangster think again 7244 self area this is where Al Capone used to live for crime buffs like Mario this house is a must-see stop in the Capone pilgrimage Al Capone bought it 1923 for $5,500 and put the deed in the names of his mother Teresa and wife Mae for safekeeping 24 years old al was a rising star in Johnny Torrio's GAE Capone managed the four deuces a popular Chicago brothel saloon and gambling joint he was pulling down 25 grand a year his new middle-class neighborhood was miles from the sleazy downtown action the Capone's were the first Italians on the block which included three policemen a minister and a druggist but they weren't your typical neighbors the Capone place was a well disguised fortress he had it specially reinforced with one foot cement to make it bulletproof he also embedded iron bars in the basement windows they protected against the drive-by bomb toss a staple of gang warfare at the time yeah that's really solid that's really old stuff like hundreds of other diehard fans we just had to knock on the door to get a look inside hello my name is Mario thank you for letting us into your home so listen the inciting the tenants take the parade of visitors in stride yeah a lot they come to the door but they're uh gangster hats and coats on most of them are from Kansas it's just I say I don't know why but it's a big following down there but you know take a walk on hallowed ground this looks like to me it's the original flooring from when the Capone's were walking here it looks kind of narrow and small but I guess to them in those days this was pretty spacious the ground-floor apartment housed Al his wife Mae their young boys Sonny and Al's mother his brothers and sisters lived upstairs as his income grew al spiffed up the modest digs with some extravagant additions this bathroom have been remodeled the bathroom once sported a massive 7-foot tub and expensive tiles imported from Germany with the start of prohibition in 1920 the poem began earning big money selling bootleg alcohol his bloody and ruthless spike to the top of organized crime made him a notorious public figure so this is the kitchen to soften his image al trotted out his cozy domestic life there used to be a big cast-iron stove here al made the spaghetti here for the famous interview with Time magazine for his debut appearance on the cover in 1930 Capone conducted the interview in a pink apron that I must have been allowed to see all in a pink apron in front of a stove mr. big gangster the family home was a useful PR tool but Al's real loves were his cars out back in the alley he built the neighborhood's first two-car garage two houses Hot Wheels in 1925 a Chevy Coupe cost $600 al was tooling around in a $10,000 Packard limo rival shot up one of his cars al traded it in for something with a better safety record the original pimpmobile a customized Cadillac armored with steel plates it weights seven tons the windows were bulletproof glass the 16 cylinder engine had a top speed of a hundred and twenty miles per hour it even had its own police siren to cut through traffic the price tag for this high-tech ride $20,000 200 grand in today's dollars when he passed by his Cadillac was like a big circus in Chicago everybody had a there goes out in this Cadillac everybody wanted to look please often staked out Capone's house hoping to arrest him on trumped-up vagrancy charges but al was elusive legend has it he had a secret escape route tunnels leading from the basement to the garage so this has been definitely remodeled since seeing that's the original brick it looks like cement this is poured on top on top of the brick there's a few of Al's decorating touches still remain okay yeah original green big keep a paint chip of that for the souvenir okay Jason thanks a lot if there ever were tunnels down here they've stayed well hidden the people living here before then they probably covered it up but I know the tunnels is probably still there sure oh yeah yeah any evidence would be gone my own office if I was to say I would think would be somewhere around here I don't know why but if I made one it will be around here Jason has yet to start digging when Al snuck out the back way he wasn't just eluding the law he was escaping domestic life - he was living like a double life you know family man at when he'd go to the South Prairie home and be nice to his mother and yet he tastes the all kinds of prostitutes and lavish lifestyles and getting drunk and partying al kept a playboy pad 16 miles west in the Chicago suburb of Cicero a working-class city of 60,000 the unassuming building offered lots of privacy and you couldn't beat the location right down the street from his headquarters and near more than a hundred and fifty saloons and gambling joints he owned in town he bought the Austin Road building through a middleman insuring that ownership could never be tracked or if you got past the bodyguards at the front door you could head on upstairs hi welcome sooo L Capone's party apartment by 1925 Capone was a multi-millionaire and needed lots of room to fit his super-sized life come on into the living room Capone knock down walls and transformed one entire floor into the perfect party space the ambience is what we liked like this is so wide open and spacious I just had to have this place a flashy dresser Capone needed a huge walk-in closet to fit his wardrobe this goes all the way through to the kitchen al was the big spender he thought nothing buying a hundred suits at a time fine Italian silk underwear diamond studded belt buckles for all his friends parties with the meat bills costing fifty thousand dollars just for barbecues Capone hosted all-night parties here for his gangster pals spending thousands on booze and live music in the bedroom I whipped up a romantic mood he installed floor-to-ceiling mirrors lit from behind in all the corners and behind the bed this hall of mirrors was Al's real funhouse Capone entertained a long line of young girlfriends here after office hours but all that funny business had its price while in his 20s al contracted syphilis that would later ravages brain the phones party-hearty lifestyle went far beyond the privacy of his Cicero pad coming up Capone paints the town red at his favorite nightclub and plots the bloodiest day in the history of organized crime nighttime in Chicago was Al Capone's time to mix business with pleasure there was lots of action in the swingy Uptown neighborhood one of his favorite haunts was the Green Mill where he went each week to catch the live music opened in 1910 it's America's oldest continuously operating jazz club you want to come behind the bar and see some stuff right here is Harold's big bud hey Harold get out of the way William showing these guys some stuff you know we got a full bar liquor whines we used to have Schlitz for years but they don't make it untap anymore which really got me going because it's like one of the greatest beers in the world by the 1980s the place was a hard-luck dive but Dave saw a diamond in the rough I walked in and it was just fabulous I mean it was a dump and then a walk over drunk people there passed out on the florida bar ten or so junkie spoons for five bucks so they could shoot up heroin in a bathroom it was wonderful Dave bought the place for his son under layers of grime he uncovered murals painted on the walls he rebuilt the massive bar and reupholstered the booths the 1934 cash register still works like a charm Dave restored the green mill to the glory of its Capone years a nightclub that serves up stiff drinks and good jazz in the 1920s the joint was hopping every night to get past the bouncers he had to be dressed to the nines and pay a dollar cover as many as 300 people packed the ballroom to dance the night away to live bands imported Canadian whiskey and gin served discreetly and coffee cups cost 75 cents a shot beer from one of Capone's ain't local breweries went for 50 cents of high to own didn't own the green mill but his top lieutenant machine gun Jack McGurn did Jack McGurn was a triggerman for Al Capone he protected his boss he followed about all the ballgames and all that and he was a very top notch killer Jack's specialty was killing the Hitman hired by rivals to assassinate Capone McGurn notched more than 25 kills his signature was a nickel left behind in the victims hand with the money he made working for Capone McGurn bought the green mill in 1927 ow supplied the club with booze and protection Capone was approaching the top of his game he had an army of 700 men he supplied more than 6,000 Chicago saloons and speakeasies with bootleg booze just 28 years old Al's income skyrocketed at the groom mill the boss's well-being was always high-priority a special booth was kept standing by this is out of the booth that Al Capone you would sit in when he came in so you could see both doors mobsters usually don't like to have their backs to the doors cuz they want to see who's coming in in case someone wants a wacom we don't make a big deal out of it but when people want to know where Al Capone said there it is you know when Al Capone walked in everyone took notice the band stopped what it was playing and struck up his favorite song Rhapsody in Blue and when he would come into the Green Mill if you were already in this Club you and leave till al left this was a measure of precaution to make sure that no assassination attempt was made against Al Capone nobody was going in nobody was going out but the good thing was that all always supplied you with booze all night free of charge if you stayed in the club Capone also took care of the waiters and musicians he loved to tip big in those days like $5 is a big deal and used to like to give them out like candy one of our favorite singers was Joe Lewis Jack McGurn hired him to play at the Green Mill his contract was expiring so enjoy Lewis decided to leave Jack McGurn warned him this would not be a good career move Lewis left anyway so McGurn taught him a lesson he goes and gets Joey Lewis at his hotel too common with Hotel Pine Grove and Diversey cuts off part of his punch slashes vocal chords who left him there to die and the guy don't die the poem gave Joe $10,000 to help him get back on his feet but his voice was never the same again like most things Capone there is more to the Green Mill than meets the eye well this is how you get down to the basement there's a trapdoor behind the bar right down here when Al and his friends really wanted to have a good time this is where they had it below the Green Mill where rooms reserved for special private parties use your imagination what could have been going on bathroom the boys could also take care of business if they need it to the urinals are pretty cool cuz look how big they are it's like they must say had really big days coming in here and here's some blood from when a guy got his brains blew out but actually it was just a movie they filmed a movie of excessive force down here now they didn't really kill the guy it was fake so come on this way let me get this open a fancy security system I hope motifs are watching this an extensive tunnel system runs under the Green Mill with passages leading in all directions there's a light there come on this way come I watch your head I don't want to get sued come on this way now we're going under the street and these things kept going and going and going here's another trapdoor that goes out onto the street if they got raided or something they could always go through the tunnels and go out on the street and then no one ever gets caught there's other ways to get now - this was the gangster version of an emergency accident Capone could never be caught with his back against the wall but that was exactly the fate he was plotting for his enemies when archrival bugs Moran and his North Side gang horned in on Capone's bootlegging operation al struck back dirty green mill owner Jack McGurn the job of eliminating the problem trigger-happy jack ambushed the North Side gang On February 14 1929 killing 7 the st. Valentine's Day Massacre was very bad press for Big Al even the Green Mills cavernous tunnels couldn't hide Capone from the wrath of Moran and other rival mobsters a marked man I went looking for a place to lie low until things cooled down when we returned Capone finds safe haven in the most unlikely of places a Pennsylvania prison cell when Al Capone needed to get away from it all in 1929 this is where he checked in America's most exclusive and oldest gated community we are in the front of these from State Penitentiary add its only entrance into or out of the prison complex there's an implied physical threat to the front of the building that says if you commit a crime and you get sent inside of this dungeon they'll be treated the way you would expect to be treated in a medieval castle dungeons and torture chambers and all those things but these imposing walls look very inviting to Al Capone in Chicago his men had botched the st. Valentine's Day Massacre afraid of retaliation al managed to find an unusual safe haven in Philadelphia he and his bodyguard were arrested carrying concealed weapons and in just 24 hours Capone had been convicted and sent packing to his new prison bad there was a fix in so that Capone could be put away somewhere for a short period of time to let things cool down in Chicago without having to look like he's a coward and looked like he's running and hiding Eastern State served Al's immediate need not getting whacked a stone wall six feet thick and thirty feet high stretched half a mile around the 11 acre compound guard towers at the four corners provided perimeter security 24/7 I'll walk you back into the center of the building which is the surveillance point for the entire prison a unique design made it easy to keep an eye on all the prisoners you went to a prison today you might expect to see a guard looking at a whole wall of video monitors but with this floor plan one guard could stand in the center and look down and see all seven cell blocks hoping to score some preferential treatment I went to work on the warden Herbert Smith on the surface Smith was no soft touch Ram the prison like a military compound the inmates were allowed very few rights very few creature comforts inside of their cells and he ruled with a very hard fist if your name wasn't Al Capone he would have been a pretty tough man to live under I'll manage to charm his way into the prisons nicest accommodations cell block 8 beyond is of course where most of the inmates would be living so come on over and here was Capone on what they used to call Park Avenue they always reserved this space for the inmates who they consider their pet inmates gated off from the rest of the cells this was the Penn's most exclusive address Park Avenue had two double sized cells one for Al one for his bodyguard so here we are this is Capone's cell it's a relatively large cell that's got two skylights al was even allowed to furnish the place himself oriental carpets just the thing to take the chill off those cold concrete floors fine oil paintings hung on the wall when other inmates got a bare light bulb al sports um floor and desk lamps to give his place a warm homey glow instead of the regulation footstool Capone had a comfy armchair to curl up in he also squeezed in a desk where he could keep up with paperwork and correspondence his prized possession a high-end radio console that cost five hundred dollars but no amount of interior decorating could hide the harsh reality of life behind bars outside Capone's Park Avenue digs eastern state pen was a crowded small city 1,700 inmates were crammed into a space designed for 260 there were barber shops a full-service laundromat there were workshops owned and operated by the inmates a bakery turned out hundreds of loaves of bread a day the dining choices were limited but scoring a table was never a problem for all those aches and pains that come with life behind bars a medical center this is cellblock 3 they turned the entire cellblock into a hospital block Pharmacy psychiatric department here the very creepy room 666 this is the operating room come on in Capone was brought here for surgery when his tonsils acted up one of the prison's Board of Trustees dr. Goddard personally came in and took out Capone's tonsils I like to think they were probably pretty nervous that day trying to keep track of this very very famous inmate as he was under general anesthesia after a few days in the recovery board al was back in circulation wherever he went in the prison Capone added a healthy dose of glamour to the drab surroundings he's a real celebrity in this city and he spends his money freely he spent thousands of dollars buying inmate handicrafts which he's sent home to friends as Christmas presents so he bought lots of goodwill the prison in Philadelphia went all starry-eyed for the big guy if you read the newspapers from the year that Capone was here it's just one article after another and the prison must have itself been using him for PR for themselves and yeah we're falling all over themselves trying to protect this guy Capone's special treatment went far beyond his cushy cell and then around the corner the assistant warden's office was right over here it was just a short walk from Al's cell to his temporary office the assistant warden's phone was at his disposal in 1929 inmates don't use phones period today they can but back then they couldn't Capone was able to and consequently was allowed to to run his mob and with unlimited visiting privileges Capone could host business meetings with his cronies in March 1930 after 10 months behind bars it was moving day again the exact hour of Capone's release was public information and so everybody knew that one afternoon that door was gonna swing open and I was gonna walk Al Capone and so there were rumors that there would be an assassination attempt on the big day the Capone arrazi were out in force hundreds of fans lined the street boom did not show finally Herbert Smith Wharton walked out and he said boys I stuck one in your eye who transferred Capone in secret and he was released on schedule it essentially helped him escape from prison by the time the ruse was announced al was halfway to Chicago Capone's sojourn at Eastern State Penitentiary was a success he had dodged a bullet and kept his business running uninterrupted the prison closed its doors in 1970 after 140 years in business it's now a historic site open to the public coming up next Capone trades in life in the Windy City for Fun in the Sun that is Miami Beach mansion Miami Beach Florida year-round playground of the rich and famous it's home to stars such as Shaquille O'Neal and Sean P Diddy Combs but it was Al Capone he kicked off the celebrity home buying spree back in 1928 when he bought an estate an exclusive Palm Island welcome took a bones place in the Sun a Mediterranean Revival mansion Al Capone purchased this waterfront property for $40,000 paid in cash of course I'm Hank marcin and this is the ol Al Capone house I bought it back in 1978 fell in love with all the Spanish details although he didn't find out it belonged to Al Capone until after buying it and quickly got into the gangster spirit I had to pretty much do a renovation on the house and I was hoping that I'd find maybe some fake $100 bills but no such luck Capone was one of the wealthiest men in the nation in 1927 his Chicago syndicate grossed over 100 million dollars from bootlegging gambling and prostitution Aled grabbed power by waging a bloody war on rival gangs killing more than 300 he was looking to distance himself from the violence and enjoy his hard-earned riches when business brought him to Florida he found the perfect opportunity well Capone came down here initially to oversee the importation of illicit alcohol for his alcohol Empire and at the islands of the Bahamas especially been many rich sources for it and then he just still loved the area reminded him in his words of these sunny shores of Italy it was the ideal getaway for the ultimate nouveau riche even the land was brand new from 1919 to 1921 steam-powered pipeline dredges scooped up the bay bottom to create Palm Island 65 acres built on top of this Phil Capone's house was just six years old when he moved in but al had big plans for a major home makeover top on the to-do list security in Chicago Scarface had barely escaped numerous attempts on his life as many enemies would stop at nothing to see him dead so al took no chances he built a two-foot thick wall around the Miami property at the front entrance a 2-story gate house and garage housed his many bodyguards psycho and iron gates kept potential assassins from barging in searchlight scan the shores for intruders approaching from the water a contingent of armed guards patrol the perimeter around the clock al spent a million in today's dollars on additions and renovations and moved in with his wife Mae and their twelve-year-old boy Sonny inside the house were 15 spacious rooms the upstairs posted three full baths and four bedrooms this was the master bedroom that he and his wife enjoyed so much Al's bedroom doubles as a bank fall he kept a chest filled with cash and put up the bed for everyday expenses the seven rooms downstairs were built for the steaming Florida summers the whole intent of the design of this house is to open it up to the sunlight and especially the breezes which made this very comfortable for Capone and his family the large rooms were perfect for the non-stop house party of gangsters - visited from Chicago in 1929 althrough a blowout party on the eve of a boxing match in Miami Beach between heavyweights Jack Sharkey and Jung Stribling al promised tickets to all his palace but he stiffed one associate a local pilot named Eddie near Meyer so Eddie sent al a friendly reminder during the party near Meyer had what he called some firecracker or firework bombs he's flying this light plane over the estate here and he drops these firecracker bombs and they exploded in midair two bodyguards everybody else came out of the house with their pistols drawn it was going on near Meyer also dropped a note at that time the note said I'm waiting for my two tickets well he landed his plane nearby and by the time he landed his plane Capone's chauffeur was there with two tickets of the fight that night it was the only time the well-defended compound was ever attacked on the grounds of the estate al created his own personal shangri-la stonemasons built an elaborate Rock grotto inlaid with coal Capone put in the largest private swimming pool in Florida lined with marble the pool featured a high Tec filter system that circulated 80 thousand gallons of water from the bay it's actually about four times as big as your average swimming pool and being so big it takes tremendous amount of chemicals just to keep it going now also built a grand to bed with his and hers changing rooms thrill-seekers headed for the second floor balcony in that middle portion there was a diving well you can imagine diving off of that thing and hitting the sidewalk I don't think the pond was too worried about lawsuits if you fell off the diving board and hit the concrete that was your tough luck you go watch it coming down here now out here Capone had a big boathouse and he had a nice yacht his prized vessel was a 36-foot Robinson seagull the cabin cruiser was decked in mahogany and slept for owl of taking his criminal friends out on fishing trips rumor has it he also used the boat for trips to the Bahamas a major source of his rum running operations located just 65 miles off his dock equipped with a 300 horsepower inboard engine The Seagull to outrun all but the fastest Coast Guard vessels all this conspicuous consumption attracted lots of unwelcome attention the authorities raided the mansion twice looking for the money trail behind his lavish lifestyle even illegal income was subject to taxes and how hadn't paid up in years in November 1931 Capone was convicted of income tax evasion and sentenced to 11 years behind bars may Capone sold the Miami Beach estate fully furnished in 1952 the selling price was just $50,000 a fraction of what al had spent on it coming up next Al Capone fights for survival at San Francisco's most feared address Alcatraz Island in 1934 Al Capone's new home was the most notorious piece of real estate in San Francisco Alcatraz Island two decades earlier the US military had chosen the right to build a fully enclosed prison that could house 600 inmates located one and a half miles from shore the superstructure was the world's largest concrete building of its kind the prison was surrounded by high cliffs frigid water and dangerous currents it was deemed escape-proof in 1933 the Justice Department took over Alcatraz and spent millions to convert it into a maximum-security super prison reserved for the hardest criminal cases convicted of income tax evasion Al Capone was one of the first prisoners to arrive here at the docks of the new federal pen he was joined by an all-star cast for the premiere of the real world Alcatraz Al's new housemates included some of the biggest names in crime Machine Gun Kelly Alvin creepy Karpis a gang leader dark Parker warden James johnston went right to work dismantling two pawns lifestyle and identity when al capone first arrived here at alcatraz warden johnston was here to welcome the new fish as they were called I asked him for his name and Al Capone was surprised you don't know who I am he goes I don't care who you are you're just another prisoner here he was called a cat5 just a number a cat5 s new home was a one-person cell located on the eastern side of the main cell house along what inmates called Michigan Avenue South bone was up on the second floor and had a great view of the East Bay I was the fourth cell down cell number 181 Capone's big world was reduced to a very small room the interior decorating touches focused on security not comfort the bars that you see here these are case hardened steel bars tool proof very tough to cut your way through the bars either end of the cell block has a gun gallery where the officer would patrol and he would back up the officer on the ground floor they had a 45 and a 30-yard six rifle an automated remote control lock system was installed to keep the inmates behind bars you can operate any door that you want 14 cells can be opened from this one box this was the original slammer talking with other inmates was prohibited the isolation was severe rack no 14 job if you weren't on a job working or in the mess hall eating he was locked in these cells the average guy they were 16 to 18 hours a day in their cell on weekdays 20 hours a day on the weekends the phone had to adjust to a strict daily regime each day started at 6:30 a.m. with a march to the mess hall this was one of the danger spots because all the inmates were in here at one time a lot of Omri mad bitter individuals here you had to really protect yourself at all times to quell any violence 14 teargas canisters were mounted on the ceiling and could be remotely activated the inmates dubbed it the gas chamber the food was the best in the federal prison system there was pot roast with vegetables fresh bread and butter and pie for dessert the cons were forced to eat everything on their plate when Capone didn't finish his cake one day his next meal was taken away in the kitchen security was tight the knives were counted and kept under lock and key whenever you went anywhere you moved in this institution he went through a metal detector and if a lot of times when you came out of the mess hall they would have custodial officers here who would Pat you down to see you weren't bringing any food out of the mess hall after breakfast it was time for work al was assigned to the laundry at the far end of the island stripped of his money and bodyguards the bone was on his own Al's job was to feed the wet clothes into a wringer he soon ran into trouble when his workmate began critique his technique he wasn't green right or sodium the other inmate was telling him so he threw back the clothes and Al Capone's face and a fight broke out between them to the punishment for fighting your severe this staircase leads us down to solitary confinement the cell house was built directly on top of the old army Citadel's barracks and storage rooms and this is what the cons referred to as the dungeon space was was kind of the end of the line if you were a convict that got into a fight like Al Capone they would send you down into this basement Capone served a week in the dungeon alone and in total darkness when he emerged al was reassigned to work in the prison library where he earned high marks for his job filling out library cards Capone indulged his bookworm tendencies devouring such classics as practical flower gardening sailing alone around the world and life begins at 40 in the library Capone was relatively safe but other places were downright dangerous this is the interest to the shower room they've taken the shower heads out but the main pipe that run down through here with downspouts all the way down on both sides they would bring about 40 men at a time in June 1936 the phone was here mopping the floor when he was attacked from behind without warning Jim Lucas an inmate trying to extort money viciously stabbed him with scissors taken from the barber shop bleeding and in shock Capone was carried upstairs to the hospital where he had surgery to remove the scissor tip embedded in his thumb it took Capone a week to recover Jim Lucas got six months in the dungeon the stress was taking a toll on al South bullied and in fear Capone began to lose his mind in February 1938 al broke down in front of the guards at breakfast and they noticed that he was disoriented and he was drooling at the sight of his mouth they sent him back to a cell and he was throwing up and sitting on the toilet seat right here Capone was rushed to the hospital the diagnosis was syphilis so advanced it was eaten away at his brain there was no cure for the disease in 1938 so al agreed to get some experimental therapies doctors injected him with malaria to induce high fever and kill the syphilis it didn't help for the next year al was confined to the hospital wing his condition grew worse skin sores broke out all over his body he talked incoherently and paced incessantly for months al was kept isolated in the bug cage a special cell for the mentally unstable unable to care for prison officials voted alkapone off the island it was released in January 1939 the rock continued to serve up its brutally effective punishment until 1963 when it was closed due to high maintenance costs Alcatraz Island is now a national park cell number 181 Al's place is the most popular destination on the public tour after leaving Alcatraz Capone returned to his Miami Villa broken in mind and spirit his crime Lord days were over a very sick man Capone seldom left the walled compound for the next seven years he died in this bedroom On January 25th 1947 a week after turning 48 the cause was cardiac arrest his body was brought back to Chicago for burial at the modest funeral only a few criminal bigwigs came to pay their last respects the only lavish touch was $30,000 of orchids and gardenias that blanketed his custom oversized bronze coffin Al Capone the most notorious gangster of all time had reached his final crib section 35 of the Mount Carmel cemetery
Info
Channel: Myalcaponemuseum
Views: 1,044,768
Rating: 4.6286716 out of 5
Keywords: Al Capone, Chicago (City/Town/Village), Gangster (Profession), Florida, Florida (US State), 7244 South Prairie, 93 Palm Avenue, Alcatraz, Eastern State penitentiary, Crime Fiction (TV Genre), Documentary, True Crime, The Outfit, Hardcore History
Id: 7IVCBBHNYrs
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 47min 38sec (2858 seconds)
Published: Sat Nov 08 2014
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