Murder Inc., The Deadly Crime Syndicate Of 1930s New York

In 1930s New York City, murder was big business. And the best killers in the industry were Murder Inc., a ring of murderers-for-hire working as mob enforcers who, in less than 10 years, killed an estimated 1,000 people.

Throughout the 1930s, Louis "Lepke" Buchalter and Albert Anastasia led a vicious gang of hitmen who killed their rivals in gruesome ways — but one of Murder Inc.'s own members turned informer and led to the organization's downfall in the early '40s.

In 1930s New York City, murder was big business. And the best killers in the industry were Murder Inc., a ring of murderers-for-hire working as mob enforcers who, in less than 10 years, killed an estimated 1,000 people.

Despite the name, though, Murder Inc. wasn’t just about killing. They would also threaten or maim people, depending on what their employer wanted. It was an “anything goes” business model — one that made them very, very wealthy.

Of course, all it took back in those days was for one domino to fall, and the rest would follow suit. If just one member talked to the authorities, the whole business could come crashing down. And that’s exactly what happened when Abe “Kid Twist” Reles became a police informant.

And while Reles may have prevented hundreds of murders as a result, his testimony also guaranteed at least one more: his own.

Louis "Lepke" Buchalter flashes a smile as he's dragged, handcuffed, into a police van.

New York City. 1939.

Wikimedia Commons The burnt body of Irving Feinstein.

Feinstein was set on fire by Murder Inc. killers Harry Strauss and Martin Goldstein and left exposed in a lot.

New York City. October 5, 1938.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) Nine of the most important men in Murder Inc. stand side-by-side in a police line-up.

While this photo was being taken, mobster Jacob "Gurrah" Shapiro was snarling at the police, "You can't do nuttin' to us."

New York City. 1942.

Los Angeles Public Library The dead body of Joseph Rosen, a candy shop owner who was killed in his own store.

Rosen's death would ultimately lead to the downfall of Murder Inc. Their leader, Louis "Lepke" Buchalter would be convicted for this murder and sentenced to death.

Brooklyn. September 13, 1936.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) F.B.I. Director J. Edgar Hoover (left) drags Buchalter (center) to the courthouse, the pair handcuffed together.

New York City. Circa 1939-1940.

Wikimedia Commons The dead body of Walter Sage.

Sage was a New York racketeer who ran afoul of the mob. He was hacked to death with an ice pick, tied up to a slot machine, and left out in public as a warning.

New York City. 1937.

Bettmann/Getty Images Infamous Jewish-American gangster Dutch Schultz sits outside the courtroom, waiting for the verdict in his tax evasion trial.

Schultz upset Murder Inc. and the rest of the New York underworld by attempting to order a hit on his prosecutor. They were afraid that his actions would turn the police against organized crime figures and thus had Schultz killed not long after this photo was taken.

Malone, New York. 1935.

Library of Congress The crime scene after Dutch Schultz was shot by a Murder Inc. hitman.

Newark, New Jersey. 1935.

Bettmann/Getty Images Dutch Schultz lies dying in his hospital bed.

Though Schultz looks relaxed, he would be dead within a matter of hours.

Newark, New Jersey. 1935.

Library of Congress Members of Murder Inc. enjoy a cake while celebrating a wedding.

New York City. Circa 1940.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) The body of George Rudnick lies in the back of a car.

Rudnick was accused of being a police informant. Whether he was or not, the accusation won him a visit from Harry Maione and Frank Abbandando of Murder Inc.

New York City. May 25, 1937.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) George Rudnick's body is pulled out of the car.

Rudnick's death was particularly brutal. He was hacked apart with meat cleavers and ice picks.

New York City. May 25, 1937.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) Mugshot of notorious Jewish-American gangster and Murder Inc. co-founder Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel.

New York City. April 12, 1928.

Wikimedia Commons Killer Vincent "Mad Dog" Coll steps out of the courtroom, on trial for homicide.

New York City. 1931.

Wikimedia Commons Harry Millman, a former big shot mobster in Detroit, lies dead on the ground after a visit from Murder Inc.

Chicago. 1937.

Bettmann/Getty Images Louis Capone and Emanuel "Mendy" Weiss, two killers-for-hire, share a carefree laugh.

New York City. December 3, 1941.

Wikimedia Commons Jewish-American gangster and Murder Inc. co-founder Meyer Lansky sits down at a gathering with notorious Mafioso Charles "Lucky" Luciano.

New York City. Circa 1930-1940.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) Candy store owner Joseph Rosen lies dead on his store's cold floors.

Brooklyn. September 13, 1936.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) Abraham "Kid Twist" Reles, the assassin-turned-informant who would ultimately bring down Murder Inc.

New York City. Circa 1930-1940.

Wikimedia Commons Abraham Reles (left) poses for a mugshot.

New York City. Circa 1930-1941.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) Abraham Reles (center) talks to prosecutors, telling them everything they want to know about Buchalter.

New York City. Circa 1940-1941.

Los Angeles Public Library "Bugsy" Siegel hears the news that he's been acquitted of murder. He is one of the few members of Murder Inc. who will not be convicted for his crimes.

New York City. December 13, 1940.

Los Angeles Public Library Buchalter stands in court, waiting to hear his sentence.

Brooklyn. December 2, 1941.

Wikimedia Commons Buchalter, Emanuel "Mendy" Weiss, Phillip "Little Farvel" Cohen, and Louis Capone during their trial.

Brooklyn. August 1941.

Library of Congress Buchalter is informed that he will get the death sentence.

The man with the gun next to him is a police officer, there to make sure he doesn't try to run.

New York City. July 20, 1943.

Library of Congress The mugshot of Abraham "Pretty "Levine, a contract killer for Murder Inc.

New York City. August 14, 1935.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) Meyer Lansky.

1958.

Wikimedia Commons Mugshot of mobster John Locascio.

New York City. September 24, 1935.

Burton B. Turkus Papers/Lloyd Sealy Library Special Collections/John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) The ruined house of Virginia Hill, "Bugsy" Siegel's mistress, after a mob assassin broke in looking for Siegel.

Though Lepke was executed thanks to Reles' testimony, the other two big figures in the organization — Albert Anastasia and Bugsy Siegel — managed to avoid the electric chair. Their times would come, though, when they were eventually killed by mob assassins much like the ones they'd employed.

Beverly Hills, California. 1947.

Los Angeles Public Library "Bugsy" Siegel lies dead, shot through the window by an assassin with an M1 carbine.

Beverly Hills, California. 1947.

Bettmann/Getty Images The body of "Bugsy" Siegel sits in the morgue.

Beverly Hills, California. June 25, 1947.

Los Angeles Public Library "Bugsy" Siegel's body lies in the morgue — the very place he and his men had sent some 1,000 people.

Beverly Hills, California. June 25, 1947.

Los Angeles Public Library Albert Anastasia lies dead in a Manhattan barbershop.

With Anastasia's death, the last traces of Murder Inc.'s upper echelon were wiped off the face of the Earth.

1957.

George Silk/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJoseph Rosen In Candy Store 33 Photos Of Lepke’s Murder Inc., The Mob’s Most Brutal Hit Squad View Gallery

The Formation Of Murder Inc.

Murder Inc. was formed by notorious Jewish-American gangsters Meyer Lansky and Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel and run by Louis "Lepke" Buchalter, a New York racketeer who figured out that he could make even more money contracting out killers to Sicilian mobsters.

Lepke set up shop inside of Rosie Gold's Candy Store, a Brooklyn-based storefront that catered to children through the front door and killers through the back.

Of course, this all came out of the formation of the National Crime Commission, a multiethnic group led by some of the most infamous mobsters of the era, including Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Lansky, Siegel, Frank Costello, Vincent Mangano, Joe "Adonis" Doto, Lepke, and Jacob "Gurrah" Shapiro.

The Commission had been set up in the aftermath of the Castellammarese War as a way of dividing the power and attempting to keep the peace.

Still, on occasion, the dirty work still had to be done — and that's where Murder Inc. came in.

Lepke was put in charge of running the murder-for-hire group, with
infamous killer Albert Anastasia, the "Lord High Executioner," acting as Lepke's right-hand man.

Albert Anastasia Lord High Executioner

Everett Collection Historical / Alamy Stock PhotoAlbert Anastasia, the "Lord High Executioner" of Murder Inc.

A killer working for Lepke and Anastasia could count on $1,000 to $5,000 per job (as much as $70,000 today), depending on the target. Some made a small fortune off it.

The hit squad's most prolific killer, Harry "Pittsburgh Phil" Strauss, signed on for at least 100 jobs on his own, making enough to live comfortably for the rest of his life and single-handedly putting a minor dent in the population of New York City.

From Strauss on down, these killers were brutal. They didn't just shoot their targets — they aimed to leave a message. They hacked up the bodies of their victims with meat cleavers and ice picks. One man was set on fire and left in a lot. Another was strapped to a slot machine and left in public view.

Murder Inc.'s reign of terror ran on like this throughout New York City until 1940. By then, they were so bold that they'd pull off their killings in broad daylight, sure that no one would even try to stop them.

Unfortunately, they made one critical error early on that came back to bite them, an error named Abraham Reles.

The Brownsville Boys — Murder Inc.'s Most Notorious Hit Squad

Abe "Kid Twist" Reles came to be a part of Murder Inc. thanks to the recommendation of Louis Capone, an associate of Anastasia's. He had already made quite a name for himself, having taken over nearly all criminal operations in the Brownsville section of Brooklyn with the help of his crew — which included Harry Strauss, Harry "Happy" Maione, and Martin "Buggsy" Goldstein.

Together, they came to be known as the Brownsville Boys, and when Lepke and Anastasia were looking to assemble their hit squad, Capone gave them his full endorsement.

Louis Capone In Police Questioning

Everett Collection Historical / Alamy Stock PhotoLouis Capone being questioned by Detective John Osnato.

And despite the fact that Reles and Maione — considered to be the top brass of the operation — didn't get along, they proved to be highly efficient.

Even better, the methods they employed made it incredibly difficult to trace anything back to them, and especially Lepke and Anastasia. They hired several men for each hit, providing each one with a limited set of information so that they only knew as much as they needed to get their part of the job done.

A getaway driver, for instance, wouldn't know who purchased the guns used in a shooting. Nor would the "finger-man" — the person who pointed out the target — know who the getaway driver was, or who had purchased the guns. That way, if any of the people involved were to get caught, he wouldn't be able to paint a full picture for the police.

And while the Brownsville Boys weren't the only men employed by Murder Inc., they were certainly the most lethal. Harry Strauss alone committed more than 100 murders (though some estimate the number could be as high as 500), and Reles was himself responsible for at least 70.

Unfortunately, Reles also proved to be a problem. He was one of the most feared killers in Murder Inc., but he was also notorious — and he was arrested 42 times, six of which were for murder. He managed to avoid being convicted for any of his hits, but that changed suddenly in 1940 — and then he started talking.

Abe Reles' Confession And The Downfall Of Murder Inc.

Reles proved to be exactly what investigators needed. He was a high-ranking member of Murder Inc., knew the other players well, and, to top it off, he had a photographic memory. This latter fact enabled Reles to point police to the locations of dozens of bodies and other pieces of incriminating evidence.

Understandably, Reles' accomplices didn't receive any mercy when it came to their punishments. Many of them were sent straight to the electric chair, and it was all thanks to Reles' testimony.

Among those implicated by Reles' cooperation with authorities was none other than Albert Anastasia himself, a blow which brought Murder Inc. to its knees. After 10 years of tyranny and 1,000 body bags, Murder Inc. was coming to an end.

It was clear that Reles now had a target on his back. 18 guards were assigned to watch over him in 24-hour shifts at the Half-Moon Hotel on Coney Island. It didn't matter.

On the morning of November 12, 1941, Reles' dead body was found six stories down, crushed and his bedsheets twisted around him with a wire. More wire was tied to the hotel room's radiator, with news reports and police saying Reles had died during an escape attempt while, for some reason, the guards were all asleep.

The Fates Of Murder Inc.'s Remaining Members

Of course, some people think Reles' death was one last message from Murder Inc. — any canary who wanted to sing had better learn to fly. After all, November 12, 1941, was the day the trial against Buchalter was to begin.

What's more, without Reles, Kings County district attorney William O'Dwyer no longer had a case against Anastasia, who had always made sure to keep himself at a distance from the hits he put out. With Reles gone, Anastasia walked free.

Buchalter, Weiss, and Capone, on the other hand, weren't quite so lucky. The evidence had stacked up against them, even without Reles, and all three were put to death on March 4, 1944.

They were the last members of Murder Inc. to be put to death, marking the end of the infamous mob hit squad.

As for Anastasia, he managed to make it another decade before karma caught up to him. His legal troubles piled up. He was under investigation for lying in his naturalization application and tax evasion, and behind closed doors, members of the Genovese crime family started plotting against him.

Albert Anastasia Leaving Court

Everett Collection Historical / Alamy Stock PhotoAlbert Anastasia (left) and his attorney Anthony Colendra leaving Federal District Court.

Anastasia's reign of terror came to an end on October 25, 1957, when he sat down in the barber's chair at the Park Sheraton Hotel in Manhattan. Two masked assassins burst into the room, fired ten shots at Anastasia, and fled before he had time to react.

The assassins were never identified, and Anastasia's body collapsed into a bloody heap on the barbershop floor.

Murder Inc. was officially over.

After this look at "Lepke" and Murder Inc., check out these brutal photos of the Sicilian Mafia by Letizia Battaglia. Then, see inside the violent, flamboyant world of the 1980s Mafia.

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