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John William Tuohy lives in Washington DC

Relatives to dig up Gangster John Dillinger’s body


Relatives to dig up Gangster John Dillinger’s body



Gangster John Dillinger's relatives have been granted a permit dig up the bad guy's corpse and have a coroner conduct a DNA exam on the remains of the corpse from a cemetery in Indianapolis where he was buried there almost 70 years ago. The family and many others believe that an imposter was buried in Dillinger’s grave and that Dillinger escaped captured and lived for decades under another name.
It won’t be an easy dig. The body was is buried under five feet of concrete and steel on orders of Dillinger’s father who was certain that someone would steal his body to sell for a hefty profit. Old man Dillinger himself had been offered $10,000 to place John Dillinger’s body on display. (Roughly $200,000 today)

The conspiracy theory

According to the conspiracy theorists, a petty thug named Jimmy Lawrence, who was said to have a resemblance to Dillinger, was set up to take Dillinger’s place and that it Lawrence who was shot in killed in an alley just to the right of the Biograph theater. Of course the problem with that theory is that once Lawrence was closed in on by the FBI, it would take the agents only seconds to realize that Lawrence wasn’t Dillinger…..unless, of course, the entire plot involved having the FBI knowingly murder Lawrence instead of Dillinger because the Bureau had a deal that would allow Dillinger to escape and disappear forever. Although Melvin Purvis, the special agent in charge was a flawed fellow in many ways, it’s extremely unlikely Purvis would have opened himself to charge of premeditated murder. Besides, Purvis wasn’t really in charge at that point. After a spectacular and bloody goofed up raid to get Dillinger and the Little Bohemia Lodge, FBI Director Hoover virtually lost all faith in Purvis and a hard-nosed FBI Special Agent named Sam Crowley to oversee Dillinger’s capture. Crowley worked alone on the case and only brought Purvis, who was in deep trouble with Washington and on his way out of the agency when needed.
The prolific Chicago author Jay Robert Nash has been the primary advocate of the “Dillinger’s not dead” school of thought. Nash and others contend that Dillinger escaped being arrested at the Biograph Theater where the FBI, led by the diminutive legendary agent Melvin Purvis, was waiting for him.
According to Nash, he has or had fingerprints and photos of Dillinger as he would appear in 1960 that were allegedly sent to Melvin Purvis just prior to his 1960 alleged suicide at his home in South Carolina. According to Nash (more probably an accident). Nash alleged Dillinger was living and working in California as a machinist, under what would have been an early form of the witness protection program
(Purvis was reported to be depressed just before his death, which was the result of the misfiring of a gun he was cleaning. His death is not officially listed as suicide. If he did kill himself, it was more certainly over the unsubstantiated story that he was being blackmailed for certain behaviors more than being confronted with yet more allegations of Dillinger not being dead.)

The actual events in Dillinger’s death

The facts are that on July 21, 1934, the madam of a brothel in Gary, Indiana, who called herself Anna Sage (Ana Cumpanas) called a local cop she knew ad asked him to contact the FBI on her behalf because she had information they wanted on Dillinger. Her terms for handing over the information were simple. She wanted a cash reward as well as the Bureau’s help in keeping her from being deported back to her native Rumania. Deportation proceedings had started against her at that point.
A meeting was arranged between Sage and Special Agent Cowley. Crowley said that if her information led to Dillinger’s arrest, she would certainly get the reward money ($5,000 cash, in or about $100,000 today) and as for her deportation, he said that all he could do was to inform the Department of Labor (which at that time handled deportation matters) about her help in capturing Dillinger.

Image result for john dillinger, Sam Crowley, Melvin Purvis
                                                                          Agent Crowley

Image result for john dillinger, Sam Crowley, Melvin Purvis
                                                                        Agent Purvis 

Sage agreed and told Crowley that a girlfriend of hers, Polly Hamilton, a waitress, had dropped by a for a visit with Dillinger, whom she recognized from a newspaper photograph and then she offered this plan; she had arranged to take in a film with Polly Hamilton, and Dillinger, but the theater wasn’t settled. They would either attend the Biograph or the Marbro Theaters. Sage said she would be wearing an orange skirt and white blouse, so that she would be easy to recognize. (In poplar legend that later morphed into a red dress)
On Sunday, July 22, Anna Sage called Agent Crowley to confirm plans about going to the theater, but she still did not know which theater they would attend so Crowley sent full teams to both the Biograph or the Marbro Theaters. On a gamble, Crowley went with the team that was covering the Biograph.

Polly Hamilton and Anna Sage

At 8:30 p.m., Anna Sage, John Dillinger, and Polly Hamilton walked into the Biograph Theater to see Clark Gable in "Manhattan Melodrama."
Cowley ordered the squad sent to the Marbro to rush over the Biograph and then phoned Hoover for instructions. Since the theater was crowded, it was agreed that the agent would wait
(Theaters offered air condition which very few homes had at that time and as a result, they were almost always filled to capacity in the warmer months.)until Dillinger was outside on the street to take him. Hoover also gave a specific order that if Dillinger, a cop killer, offered any resistance, the agent would do whatever they had to do to save themselves.

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At 10:30 p.m., Dillinger, with his two female companions on either side, walked out of the theater and turned to his left. As they walked past the doorway in which Purvis was standing, Purvis lit a cigar as a signal for the other men to close in.

Dillinger quickly realized what was happening and a pistol from his right pant pocket as he ran toward a nearby alley. Five shots were fired from the guns of three FBI agents. Three of the shots hit Dillinger, and he fell face down on the pavement. 


He was taken to the Alexian Brothers Hospital and pronounced dead at 10:50 p.m. on July 22, 1934. ( 14 years later gangster Roger Touhy was pronounced dead in the same room, murdered by the mafia)
Exactly who killed Dillinger isn’t known. What is known is that FBI agent Charles B. Winstead, Clarence O. Hurt, and Herman E. Hollis fired their weapons, on command from Crowley, at Dillinger.

Agent Crowley was later murdered by gangster Baby Face Nelson in a wild shootout on November 27, 1934. Also killed was agent Herman Hollis, one of the sharpshooters who stationed on the roof of the Biograph Theater and the man who more than probably killed Dillinger.

Anna Sage (Above) returned to her apartment after the shooting and dumped Dillinger’s ample supply of ammunition left at her house into a nearby canal. The girlfriend, Polly Hamilton, ran away from the theater after the shooting started. She fled Chicago, but returned a short time later, married and lived as a housewife on the North Side until her death in 1969. Anna was paid the $5,000 reward money as promised (She said Crowley offered her double that amount but that appears to be an out and out lie) and Crowley did address the court on her deportation as promised but to no avail. She was deported back to Rumania before the end of the year. She died there, of liver disease in 1947.


Back to the conspiracy.
The fingerprints





The fingerprints on the corpse supposedly didn't match Dillinger’s. Would someone in the Chicago Coroner’s office make off with Dillinger’s prints? Sure they would. The coroner himself admitted to stealing large parts of Dillinger’s brain to study as specimens. Adding to this, the story was that, reportedly, while he was on the run, Dillinger was said to have had a Doctor burn off his fingerprints with acid in May of 1934. There is absolutely no evidence to back that story up. However, the legend grew that the acid had little effect and Dillinger’s prints were basically unchanged.

The reality is that Special Agents M. Chaffetz and Earle Richmond took two sets of fingerprints from Dillinger’s body minutes after he was gunned down outside the Biograph. Both sets of prints matched Dillinger’s. A third set of prints was taken during the autopsy and those prints matched Dillinger as well.

The eye coloring


A story spread that the corpse had brown eyes and Dillinger probably had blue eyes.
The main source of all of this mix up falls back on the coroner’s autopsy report which went missing for 50 years until it was found by an Administrative assistant in a brown paper shopping bag in a room adjoining the office of Dr. Robert Stein, the Cook County Medical Examiner. The autopsy report says Dillinger's eyes were brown. Author Jay Robert Nash said a 1923 Navy physical exam described Dillinger's eyes as blue and the wanted poster issued by J. Edgar Hoover in March 1934 said his eyes were gray. Adding to this is the fact that after death, there can be some clouding of the cornea which would make identifying the actual eye color difficult. brown. Author Jay Robert Nash said a 1923 Navy physical exam described Dillinger's eyes as blue and the wanted poster issued by J. Edgar Hoover in March 1934 said his eyes were gray. Adding to this is the fact that after death, there can be some clouding of the cornea which would make identifying the actual eye color difficult.

Heart problems

The conspiracy crown also points out that the corpse was too tall to be Dillinger and the eye color was wrong and the corpse possessed a rheumatic heart. and that Dillinger didn’t have any history of heart troubles. But in fact, he did.
A Dr. Patrick H. Weeks, a physician and psychiatrist at the Indiana State Prison in Michigan City during the time of Dillinger's incarceration at the facility in 1938 wrote that "During his term at the Indiana prison I was well acquainted with Dillinger but came rarely into contact with him in my professional capacity. The lad from Mooresville was not a hospital pest; that is, he was not one of those prisoners who need medical treatment upon the slightest provocation whatsoever. I examined him two or three times, however, and discovered something about his physical condition, which is quite surprising and which, incidentally, was never revealed in the press. John Dillinger suffered from heart disease. He had a distinct heart lesion. The disease was organic. I told Dillinger that he should never subject himself to great mental or physical strain because it might hasten his death. I was confident that he would follow my advice."

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Much was made out of the fact that neither Dillinger’s long-suffering father nor Dillinger’s sister Audrey believed the corpse was John Dillinger. In fact, the newspapers made a lot of hay out of Dillinger's father's only words upon identifying the body "That's not my boy."
There were three reasons he may not have been able to identify his son. One was that the corpse was bloated because it had been exposed to severe summer temperatures and rough handling inside the overcrowded morgue. Secondly, when Dillinger ran for it down an alley when the FBI closed in, two FBI agents who were stationed on the roof of the theater and a nearby garage (Since town down and replaced) fired downward, piercing Dillinger’s face causing the blood clotted open wounds on this face that the press (Without a trace of truth) described as "scars resulting from inept plastic surgery".
Audrey changed her mind when she and E.F. Harvey of the Harvey Funeral Home located the scar on the back of Dillinger's thigh which he suffered jumping over a barbed-wire fence as a boy.
The disinterment of whoever the hell is in the grave is planned for December 31, 2019.
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