Eliot Ness

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Eliot P. Ness

Bureau of Prohibition


Eliot Ness
April 19, 1903May 16, 1957 (aged 54)
Place of birth Flag of the United States - Chicago, USA
Rank Chief Investigator of the Prohibition Bureau for Chicago in 1934
Director for Public Safety for Cleveland Ohio

Eliot P. Ness (April 19, 1903May 16, 1957) was an American Prohibition agent, famous for his efforts to enforce Prohibition in Chicago, Illinois, as the leader of a legendary team nicknamed The Untouchables.

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Ness was born in Chicago, the youngest of five, to Norwegian bakers Peter and Emma Ness. As a boy, Ness was interested in reading, especially Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes. He was educated at the University of Chicago, graduating in 1925 with a degree in business and law. Ness was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. He began his career as an investigator for the Retail Credit Co. of Atlanta. He was assigned to the Chicago territory, where he conducted background investigations for the purpose of credit information. He returned to the University to take a course in criminology, eventually earning a masters degree in the field.

In 1926, his sister's husband, Alexander Jamie, a Bureau of Investigation agent (this became the FBI in 1935), influenced him to enter law enforcement. He joined the Treasury Department in 1927, working with the 300-strong Bureau of Prohibition in Chicago.

Following the election of President Herbert Hoover, Andrew Mellon was specifically charged with bringing down Al Capone. The federal government approached the problem from two directions: income tax evasion and the Volstead Act. Ness was chosen to head the operations under the Volstead Act, targeting the illegal breweries and supply routes of Capone.

Seeing the endemic corruption in Chicago law-enforcement, Ness went through the records of all the treasury agents to create a reliable team, initially of fifty, later reduced to fifteen and finally to just ten men. Raids against stills and breweries began immediately; within six months Ness claimed to have seized breweries collectively worth over one million dollars. The main source of information for the raids was an extensive wire-tapping operation.

An attempt by Capone to bribe Ness's agents was seized on by Ness for publicity, leading to the media nickname "The Untouchables." There were a number of assassination attempts on Ness, and one close friend of his was killed.

The efforts of Ness and his team had a serious impact on Capone's operations, but it was the income tax evasion which was the key weapon. In a number of federal grand jury cases in 1931, Capone was charged with 22 counts of tax evasion and also 5,000 violations of the Volstead Act. On October 17, 1931, Capone was sentenced to eleven years, and following a failed appeal, he began his sentence in 1932.

Ness was promoted to Chief Investigator of the Prohibition Bureau for Chicago and in 1934 for Ohio. Following the end of Prohibition in 1933, he took a job with the local government of Cleveland, as Director of Public Safety. He headed up a campaign to clean out the corrupt police and fire departments, and also tackle illegal gambling and other entertainments. Ness's inability to capture the Cleveland Torso Murderer, a vicious serial killer operating in the Cleveland area during the mid-1930s, may have also contributed to his exit from what was otherwise a reasonably successful career in Cleveland.

Ness then moved to Washington, D.C., and worked for the federal government. In 1944, he left to become chairman of the Diebold Corporation, a security safe company based in Ohio. He ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Cleveland in 1947 and was forced from his job at Diebold in April 1951.[1] He eventually came to work for North Ridge Industrial in Coudersport, Pennsylvania. His book, The Untouchables, was published in 1957 shortly after his death at the age of 54 following a heart attack. According to Author Howie Carr, Ness was involved in a late night drunk driving accident and that Ness's heavy alcoholism contributed to his early death.

He was married three times, divorced twice, and had only one child (by adoption). He was married to illustrator Evaline Ness from 1938 to 1946. His ashes were scattered in one of the small ponds on the grounds of Lakeview Cemetery in Cleveland.

  • Great Lakes Brewing Company makes a beer in his honor, "The Eliot Ness", because Ness allegedly "frequented the Brewpub's bar during his tenure from 1935-1941 and, according to popular legend, was responsible for the bullet holes in the bar still evident today."[3]
  • Ness also appeared in an episode of The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles, "Mystery of the Blues" as Indy's roommate at the University of Chicago. They, along with a young Ernest Hemingway, attempt to solve a mystery surrounding the murder of Indy's boss. Al Capone is found to be responsible, but he cannot be brought to justice, as police corruption has started to take hold. While this is theoretically written to be part of Eliot's motivations later in life, all accounts of him, Hemingway, and Capone here are obviously fictional.
  • Eliot Ness has been mentioned many times in music, including but not limited to the following songs:
    • In the 1999 song performed by Dog Eat Dog titled "Gangbusters".
      Gangbusters... Guys like Al Capone who loved being unknown. Made themselves at home and still got away... The law couldn't catch him or none of his hit men. So he died in prison for taxes unpaid... Screw prohibition. Crimes go unsolved, Elliot Ness, Couldn't wrap up the mob...
    • In the 1992 song performed by Eric B. & Rakim titled "Know The Ledge" which is the theme to Juice starring Tupac Shakur:
      Bulletproof down in case brothers try to bomb me,
      Putting brothers to rest like Eliot Ness
      Cause I don't like stress
    • In the opening of the 1996 Tupac Shakur and Dr. Dre song "California Love":
      Now let me welcome everybody to the wild, wild west
      A state that's untouchable like Eliot Ness
    • In the 1996 Fugees song "Ready or Not" in Lauryn Hill's verse:
      Rap orgies with Porgy and Bess
      Capture your bounty like Eliot Ness
    • In the 1999 Prince Paul song featuring Everlast titled "The Men in Blue":
      I got spics sellin' nicks in the LES
      I stay untouchable like my name's Eliot Ness
    • In the second verse of the 2005 Proof song "Clap Wit Me":
      Eliot Ness to these fucking gangstas and killas,
      bankin they millions they all wankstas and squealas
    • In the 2005 Phatal song "Outlaws":
      So picture that, me and Chin resemble the best,
      We outlaws, while y'all kids is Eliot Ness
    • In the 2006 song "Untouchables" by DMX:
      U-N-T-O-U-C-H, A-B-L-E-S,
      Sheek the new Eliot Ness
    • In the 2006 Styles P song featuring Snype Life, Straw and Bully titled "Discipline":
      Knockin' A Tribe Called Quest
      I'm comin for you bad guys like I'm Eliot Ness
    • In the Plan B song "Kidz", featured on the soundtrack of Kidulthood:
      I'm untouchable like Eliot Ness

  1. ^ NY Times April 14, 1951 "Executive Changes"
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ [2]
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