Page' j&-SefoloH 1 THE CAPITAE JOURNAL! Salem, Oregon, Thursday, January 17, 1957 i-The (JgD Story- CHAPTER 10 Rebellion Against Crime John Herbert Dillinger led kill - crazy gang which (wept through the Midwest from Sep tember, 1933, until July, 1034, leiving a trail of ten men mur dered, (even wounded, four banks robbed, three police ai plundered and three jails from which prisoners were freed But It wasn't the murders or the robberies or the jail deliver ies which first sent the FBI after Dillinger, because none of these crimes was a federal law viola tion. He ran into trouble with the G-Mcn because he drove stolen automobile across a state line. During the twenties most of the country had watched the growth of crime and gangsterism with a so-what attitude. Those (ellows in the gangs, many peo ple felt, were no worse than the thieves in dinner jacKcis wno naa been corrupting federal, state local governments: about the on ly difference was that one group used guns and the other didn't. But this tolerance gave way to angry demands that something be done about the menace of the gangsters and racketeers. t Special Kidnap Line The country and Congress eame to the realization that the federal laws were woefully weak In combating interstate crime. Criminals were operating with high-speed automobiles, armored cars, high-powered rifles, ma chine guns and armaments which were better than those of the law enforcement agencies. Crime wasn't localized. One gang could, and frequently did, operate across the lines of a half-dozen states. By 1933 bank robberies were occurring at the rate of almost two a day. Kidnapings had in creased alarmingly despite the Lindbergh Kidnap Law. The at torney general had urged people to report kidnapings to the FBI by calling the special "kidnap" number NAtional 8-7117, Wash ington, D. C. Wooden Gun? Many of the gang nperalions were not in violation of federal statutea and there were some curious inconsistencies in the laws. For example, a hank offi cial who embezzled $50 from a federal hank in 1933 had violated a federal law. But a gang of ban dits might rob a federal bank of (100,000, machine-gun the bnnk officials and escape into another state without violating a single federal statute. And the bandits could be reasonably sure that pur- lull would end at the slate line. 1 Dillinger, wanted in Indiana for the murder of an East Chica go policeman, was recognized in Tucson, Ariz., and arrested with three members of. his gan. Tuc son police found, among other odds and ends at the Dillinger hide-out, three Thompson sub machine guns, two Winchester rifles mounted as machine guns, five bullet-proof vests and more than $25,000, part of which was identified as loot from an East Chicago bank. Dillinger was returned to In diana and placed in the county jail at Crown Toint to await trial. But he escaped on March 3, 1934. He always claimed he frightened the jail guards with a wooden gun which he had fash ioned with a razor blade as he whiled away the time in his cell The red-faced guards said Dil linger had a real .45 which some one had slipped to him. Traps Sprung Dillinger grabbed two machine guns, locked up the guards, stole the sheriff's automobile and head ed for Chicago. The instant he erossed the Indiana-Illinois stair line, he violated a federal law the National Motor Vehicle Thefl Act, commonly known as the Dy er Act, which prohibits trans portation of a stolen motor ve hicle across a state line. on two ocrasions, agents thought they hart Dillinger trap red. Each time he escaped in a barrage of machine-gun fire. Bui the circle was tightening. in April the Dillinger gang was lound at Little Roheniui Lodge, a summer resort some fit miles north of Ithinelander, Wis Warned by barking dogs of the approach of an Kill raiding par ty, Dillinger and his buddies es caped. A short distance from tlir lodge, Lester t.illis, alias "Baity Face' Nelson, a member of the Dillinger gang, killed Special Agent W. Carter Baum. and wounded another agent and a lo cal officer. On the first day of June, lloov er called Special Asent Samuel P. Cowley into his office to give him a special assignment. ( ow ley was a hefty. 34-year-old I'tah lawyer who had served as lionaiy in the Mormon Church before he joined the FBI. He was to take charge of the Dillinger search. Cowley's search led him to Chi eago. Dillinger was reported ir hiding, recovering from a dnc tor's attempt to disguise the Dil linger features by plastic surgery Cowley and Melvin Purvis, spe cial agent in charge of the Chi cago office, worked closely with two Last Chicago policemen. (.apt. Timothy O Neill and Sgt Martin larkovich, in running down the scores of rumors and tips from people who thought they had recognized Dillinger. Woman in Red The break In the case came on July 21. O'Neill and Zarkovirh brought a dark-haired, middle aged woman to the FBI. She was Alfa Cumnanas, and she was in frrtVble, The Immigration and Na 9vw wanted her prearrangement Purvia lit a ci gar. Dillinger must have sensed that something was wrong. He glanced over his shoulder and saw an agent moving toward him. He darted toward an alley, claw ing a pistol from his pants pock et. But before he could get his gun into action, three FBI agents fired five shots. Slugs tore into Dillinger's body and he pitched on his face. The chase was over. Cowley paid Ana Cumpanas $5,000 from the $10,000 reward money which the federal govern ment had posted. The two East Chicago policemen each received $2,500. But a federal judge or dered her deported, and she died in 1947 in the little Romanian town of Timisoara. (Tomorrow: The FBI Laboratory. X 3 Men Killed In Kansas Gas Plant Blowup Fuel Supply Thrcalened As Far as Detroit by Service Cutoff LIBERAL, Kan. Ifl An explo sion flashed through a big pipe line compressor station here in the southwest corner of Kansas yesterday, killing three workmen and threatening natural gas sup plies as far east as Detroit. Officials of Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co. said they hoped to restore deliveries to 70 per cent of normal today. They indicated this would mean no curtailment of gas for house hold use along Panhandle East ern's system in Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and Michi gan. Industrial users In the six states were cut off immediately. Mrs. Ana Cumpanas, also known as Anna Suge, was the "Woman In Red" who finally led FBI agents and police to John Dillinger, gang chief of '30s, The bnwdyhouse opernter luler was deported. deported as an undesirable alien because she was the madam of bawdyhousc in Gary, Ind. Her proposition was this. She would lead John Dillinger to the FBI but she wanted a promise that she would receive a reward and also that something would be done to permit her to remain in The reward was promised. Pur vis said he would do what he could to help her. and he would call her co-operation to the at tention of Ihe Labor Department, which handled deportation mat ters. Ana Cumpanas said that John Dillinger was planning to take her and his girl friend. Tolly Hamilton, to a movie theater the The whole area presently is In the grip of a cold wave. The were about 25 men In the plant. Fourteen were burned and battered by the explosion. Three were reported in critical condi tion. Four were released from a hospital after treatment. The blast blew the metal roof and sides off the main compressor building. 364 by 68 feet. It wrecked the engines and compressors. An adjoining machine hop was heav ily damaged. Fivt other buildings and eight houses on the 80-acre plot 15 miles northeast of Liberal had lesser damage. One company official said the loss might run several million dollars. "Everything just went off In my face," said J. D. Armstrong, one of the workmen Injured. "Pieces of metal and glass were flying all over the place and everything was on fire." , , The fire burned two hours, fed by gas from broken lines, before valves could be closed. Those killed were Melvin Swaf ford, 35, who lived on the station; James Hanes, about 30, Paul s Valley, Okla.; and Ivan Hill, about 40, Liberal. A company spokesman said failure of a piece of equipment on a compressor engine caused the blast. Workmen said they heard a hissing noise just belora the explosion. The Liberal station collects gas through small pipelines from fields In southwest Kansas and the Oklahoma and Texas Panhandles, compressing it and - boosting it along 24 and 26-inch mains to tha East. It once was the largest compressor station in the world. ilOii IROi. TOl "' 1 wS& 1 Reductions rf f " "" ' l Made1 Xjr VfZjJ J fjSafM next evening. How would other , Help VOUrself fO iOmt I Qf AvT lKX4Mgi ZlTSl real Bargains while M , I .iMwi herLAna said she would be 1 you help UI char 0r 4 W; - 1 8X1 SDFinff SfSS The FBI men and the police-1 1 W. Give) Wf 1 IP I ft, T I VW men recognized Dillinger when'f Grn Stamp, I f T p ,f . S2t VTSfcwV CltD he entered the theater with his 1 f ' ft If Si 1 YC T Q f MZ&S!&ft ?WJ iSSj. girl friend and "the Woman in m 1 II V lily L 'CvVY v. n Ited." Despite the plastic surgcrv. M Ji L . p. 9 I , M W liJ-VV the outlaw was identified beyond C JClhAjiAMLK VX'' Iff ?Ti A' viH 'St t4ffr doubt. Cowley called Hoover, who 1 f I VX 1 - a) 'liLSt V llV was pacing the library of his J ,W M W l U 1 VI a-J 0 ffMW''SL 4 ,t.?W MX home in Washington. The decis- 1 iMSWEAR i 1 Ylf, 111 T1 fl I AU7f ) 'N: ' PbV ion was made to take Dillinger as V Jk . ff " I JakF V J.J.JL J.J.VJL At ''jt L UL sJuK "TV'ViLr he came out of the theater, rath- J m Sales f 'oif'!, Q,? lVt. uVwS,ho,wmhore inS'"Ci CP'' ShoPPlnfl Cnter J7 Final JMWa:Z .SlHj I When the trio emerged, b,WMMIMMMMMIM fY' '$'K2'.iTJ "H-F -ww m iMTiTnuuIW s ! .'"' 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