In the era where the production of liquor was affecting the households of everyday American citizens, the House Of Representatives presented a new law that would prohibit the producing, purchasing, and selling of alcohol. The National Prohibition act more commonly known as the Volstead Act enforced the prohibition of alcohol in the United …show more content…
This is where mobsters formed and the rise of gangsters then happened. One of the most iconic figures,Al Capone born in 1899 in Brooklyn, New York, to poor immigrant parents, Al Capone went on to become the most infamous gangster in American history. This is 1920 during the height of Prohibition, Capone’s multi-million dollar Chicago operation in bootlegging, prostitution and gambling dominated the organized crime scene. Al Capone was involved in multiple amounts of shooting based crimes as his rise to dominance over other bootleggers occurred because of the assassination of his competitors. Another notorious mobster was Charles Luciano, nicknamed “Lucky” throughout his criminal actions, Luciano facilitated the killings of the city’s top two Mafia bosses, setting up the Five Families to rule New York and establishing a National Crime Syndicate. Luciano at one point was the top leader of the New York Mafia. A new National Crime Syndicate was created by Luciano to maintain peace between criminal organizations nationwide. Its board of directors included leaders of both Jewish and Italian criminal groups. The National Crime Syndicate moved to coordinate control of narcotics, prostitution, bootlegging, loan sharking and labor union rackets.Another hoodlum in the 1920s was Dutch Schultz who was heavily associated with Charles Luciano became one of the most vicious