Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. This is part one of the story of Dutch Schultz , the beer baron of the Bronx. He went from Beer truck driver to the biggest bootlegger in the Bronx and Harle...

    • 23 min
    • 22.4K
    • A Few Bad Men.
  2. 20 de jul. de 2021 · Mobster Dutch Schultz, shown here in a 1935 mugshot, had a big reputation as a bootlegger and racketeer in the 1920s and 1930s. But it was his last incoherent ramblings about buried millions that ...

  3. Dutch Schultz, nato Arthur Simon Flegenheimer (New York, 6 agosto 1902 – New York, 24 ottobre 1935), è stato un mafioso statunitense, legato al cosiddetto "Sindacato ebraico Indice 1 Biografia

  4. My name is Arthur B. “Dutch” Schultz. I was with the 82nd Airborne 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment and in “C” Company. I got the nickname “Dutch” shortly after I entered the army. I went through basic training, Coast Artillery, and I ultimately was transferred to a Coast Artillery Battalion in Fort Bliss Texas.

  5. 21 de nov. de 2007 · Existe el mito del mafioso listo y el del mafioso tonto, el del chico con suerte y el del desgraciado. Y existe, cómo no, el mito del mafioso brutal, echado para adelante. De entre este tipo de mafiosos, probablemente Arthur Flegenheimer, más conocido como Dutch Shultz, es el más famoso. Schultz era sanguíneo, impulsivo y falto de escrúpulos.

  6. Dutch Schultz (Arthur Flegenheimer) mobster Born: 8/6/1902 Birthplace: Bronx, New York Dutch Schultz is one of the best known New York mobsters of the prohibition era. After dropping out of school in the fourth grade and turning to a life of crime, Schultz started with pickpocketing and petty theft, moved up to bootlegging and smuggling, and eventually left his mark in bloody gang wars.

  7. When St. Clair caught the ire of bootlegging boss Dutch Schultz, Bumpy didn’t hesitate to murder people for his boss. As the Prohibition was about to end, Schultz was looking at expanding his illegal activities and focused his attention on the numbers racket that St. Clair dominated. The St. Clair-Schultz rivalry was a bloody one in Harlem.