| George "Bugs" Moran |
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Bugs eventually became the leader of the North Siders after the demise of O'Banion and Hymie Weiss, who both fell to Capone hit men, stepping up to the top spot after his predecessor Schemer Drucci was shot by police in 1927. With Bugs Moran leading the gang, Capone realized that the war with the North Siders would continue and more than likely become more bloody- such was Moran's way. It was hard to find a mob shoot-out in the 1920s in which Moran was not a leading player. Moran was the gunman who tried to finish off John Torrio after an ambush where Torrio was hit four times but, fortunately for Johnny, Moran's gun misfired. Moran was also in the lead car in the famous car cavalcade that drove past Al Capone's Cicero headquarters, The Hawthorne Inn, firing over 1000 shots into the building. Moran had a pathological hatred for Capone, often referring to him as 'the Beast.' To annoy Capone more, Moran would frequently make truces with the Capone mob only to beak the peace within hours of coming to an agreement. To Moran, Capone was a lowlife especially since the Capone gang dealt in prostitution- a racket that the North Siders, being good wholesome Catholic churchgoers, refused to sanction. The war between the gangs ended in a draw. Capone came closest to Moran in the St. Valentine's Day Massacre caper but Moran was later arriving that day and lucked out. Through the 1930s, Moran's power began to wane even though his nemesis Capone, was now in jail. There may have been one high point in his life in 1936 when 'Machine Gun' Jack McGurn, the brains behind the SVDM, was shot dead. The press speculation was that Moran had a hand in the killing but McGurn probably fell foul of his own gang since his popularity by that time was at an all time low. Moran's exploits thereafter never amounted to much. His crimes turned petty compared to what they had been in the 20s. He eventually moved to Ohio where he was arrested in July 1946, for robbing a bank messenger of a paltry $10,000- an amount that would have been loose change for him in his Prohibition days. He was convicted and sentenced to ten years. After his release, he was again arrested for an earlier bank raid and sent down for another ten year stretch at Leavenworth, where he eventually died of cancer in 1957. George 'Bugs' Moran was given a paupers burial in a wooden casket in a potters field just outside the prison.
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