Frank Gusenberg
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Frank "Tight Lips" Gusenberg (1893 - 14 February 1929) was a gangster and a victim of the Saint Valentine's Day Massacre in Chicago, Illinois.
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[edit] Early life
Frank Gusenberg and his older brother Pete grew up tough on the North Side of Chicago. After graduating from petty crime into more serious offenses, they teamed up with Dion O'Banion, Hymie Weiss, and other members of the local mob scene. After the 1924 murder of O'Banion, Gusenberg joined his friends, led by Hymie Weiss, in getting revenge on the Capone mob.
[edit] The Gusenberg Brothers and the Chicago gang wars
Frank Gusenberg participated in the garguantous drive-by shooting the North Side performed on Capone's Cicero, Illinois headquarters, the Hawthorne Hotel, riddling it with thousands of bullets on September 20, 1926. According to many accounts, the second to last car stopped in front of the hotel restaurant where Capone was cowering and Frank's brother Pete emerged, clad in a khaki Army shirt, brown overalls, and carrying a Thompson submachine gun fitted with a 100-round capacity drum. Kneeling in front of the doorway, Gusenberg emptied the entire drum into the restaurant, and then casually strolled back to his car, which then sped off to safety.
Despite the adaucity of the attack, Capone was only more infuriated. Hymie Weiss was murdered three weeks later, and over the next couple years, the North Side Gang continued to weaken. The North Siders especially wished to kill Jack McGurn, as he was rumored to have been the machine-gunner who killed Weiss. On at least two occasions, the Gusenberg brothers tried to kill McGurn. Despite wounding him several times, Jack survived the attempts on his life.
By late 1928, the leader of the North Side Gang, Bugs Moran, struck an alliance with Al Capone's rival Joe Aiello. The latter, assisted by the Gusenberg brothers, killed Pasqualino Lolordo, president of the Unione Siciliane. It was from this murder that the plot to get rid of Bugs Moran sprang.
[edit] Final days
On February 14, 1929, the upper echelon of the North Side gang gathered in their favourite speakeasy Inside were Pete and Frank Gusenberg, Albert Weinshank, Adam Heyer, James Clark, John May, and Reinhardt Schwimmer. 5 men entered the speakeasy (not a warehouse as some people believe) 3 of the men were in police uniform. After lining Moran's associates up against the wall, the "cops" cut loose with submachine guns and shotguns, pounding 150 bullets into the gangsters killing all seven men, in what would become known as the St. Valentine's Day Massacre.
When police arrived at the scene Frank Gusenberg was still alive despite having 22 bullet wounds. He was taken to the Alexian Brothers hospital. When asked "Who shot you?" he replied, "Nobody shot me" denying any justice to the murderers. Although the killers (widely believed to have been members of Al Capone's Gang), wiped out Bugs Moran's mob, they missed the man himself, who upon seeing the police car drove on by believing it was a raid of the saloon he was planning on entering.
[edit] In popular culture
- Frank Gusenberg would be portrayed in two movies about the era; *In Roger Corman's The St. Valentine's Day Massacre (1967), Gusenberg was played by David Canary and in Capone (1975) by Ben Marino.
- Gusenburg was inspiration for the Simpsons character Johnny Tightlips who doesn't give any information away and answers very vaguely.