The progressives and the police, 1973, p. 326 |
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i prsgns forced McAfee to sccept him in partnership, dthough ths neva- papers made no mention of the merger. Aalda from Dragna, "Bugs" Mo ran joined McAfee in the eyndcete. Mo ran hed gained control of ths fake bottle snd label Industry, most important to bootleg operations, snd attended meetings vlth Gene, McAfee, end others to eeek solutions to the 94 deteriorating business situation. Tha red fi cations of Crawford'a death epperently reached tha Federd Prohibition Bureeu. Without significant changes in personnd, the previously moribund bureeu auddenly became the only effective anti- vice agency in the county. The federd organization spared neither Bob Golds in the county nor Guy McAfee in the dty. Clubs were reided that had never been hit before, even aa part of a protection "program." The haler Brewery, owned by e reapectable locd family, had its doors broken in and its employees errested. Many observers believed thet lllegd 95 beer hed Issued from the premises since the start of prohibition. The number and Importance of the federd rdds suggests thst rlvd gangs informed the agency of one another's breweries, dthough proof la unavdlable. Protection dd not entirely daappear. Clubs opened in competition with the syndcate and were closed the same day by police action. By the end of Porter's term, the underworld began once again to exhibit a surface unity sidlar to the old days. Police Captain J. A. McCdeb charged that the underworld supported Porter, and the mayor'a opponents tried very hard to get a grand jury investigation of 96 hia finances. In response to continued crltldsm, the vice squad mounted a campdgn agdnst petty gambling by ordinary dtlzena in their own homes. 312
Object Description
Title | The progressives and the police, 1973 |
Description | Joseph Gerald Woods. The progressives and the police: urban reformers and the professionalization of the Los Angeles police. University of California, Los Angeles (Ph.D., history), 1973. Published by University Microfilms International (Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA), 1982. PART OF A SERIES: A critical component of the Commission's investigation centered on the idea that governance of the LAPD was shared between the Office of the Chief of Police, an administrative body, and the Board of Police Commissioners, a citizen body. To better understand the dynamic between these two entities, the staff of Heller, Ehrman, White, & McAuliffe researched the history of the Los Angeles City Charter, focusing primarily on its provisions regarding the distribution of power and the structure and organization of the LAPD. Included in the series are reproductions of reports, dissertations, article clippings, excerpts from city documents, and charter amendments related to the charter's conception and development over time. The series also includes several summaries of expert witness interviews regarding the effectiveness of this structure. |
Creator | Woods, Joseph Gerald, 1930- |
Publisher (of the original version) | University of California, Los Angeles; University Microfilms |
Place of publication (of the original version) | Los Angeles, California, USA; Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA |
Publisher (of the digital version) | University of Southern California |
Date issued | 1973; 1982 |
Type | texts |
Format | 669 p. |
Format (aat) |
doctoral dissertations catalog cards |
Format (imt) | application/pdf |
Language | English |
Contributing entity | University of Southern California |
Part of collection | Independent Commission on the Los Angeles Police Department, 1991 |
Series | Heller, Ehrman, White & McAuliffe |
File | The progressives and the police: urban reformers and the professionalization of the Los Angeles police, by Joseph Gerard Woods, 1973 |
Box and folder | box 20, folder 24; box 21, folders 1-3 |
Provenance | The collection was given to the University of Southern California on July 31, 1991. |
Rights | This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Manuscripts Librarian. Permission for publication is given on behalf of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained. |
Physical access | Contact: Special Collections, Doheny Memorial Library, Libraries, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189; specol@dots.usc.edu |
Repository name | USC Libraries Special Collections |
Repository address | Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189 |
Repository email | specol@dots.usc.edu |
Filename | indep-box20-24 |
Description
Title | The progressives and the police, 1973, p. 326 |
Format (imt) | image/tiff |
Physical access | Contact: Special Collections, Doheny Memorial Library, Libraries, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189; specol@dots.usc.edu |
Full text | i prsgns forced McAfee to sccept him in partnership, dthough ths neva- papers made no mention of the merger. Aalda from Dragna, "Bugs" Mo ran joined McAfee in the eyndcete. Mo ran hed gained control of ths fake bottle snd label Industry, most important to bootleg operations, snd attended meetings vlth Gene, McAfee, end others to eeek solutions to the 94 deteriorating business situation. Tha red fi cations of Crawford'a death epperently reached tha Federd Prohibition Bureeu. Without significant changes in personnd, the previously moribund bureeu auddenly became the only effective anti- vice agency in the county. The federd organization spared neither Bob Golds in the county nor Guy McAfee in the dty. Clubs were reided that had never been hit before, even aa part of a protection "program." The haler Brewery, owned by e reapectable locd family, had its doors broken in and its employees errested. Many observers believed thet lllegd 95 beer hed Issued from the premises since the start of prohibition. The number and Importance of the federd rdds suggests thst rlvd gangs informed the agency of one another's breweries, dthough proof la unavdlable. Protection dd not entirely daappear. Clubs opened in competition with the syndcate and were closed the same day by police action. By the end of Porter's term, the underworld began once again to exhibit a surface unity sidlar to the old days. Police Captain J. A. McCdeb charged that the underworld supported Porter, and the mayor'a opponents tried very hard to get a grand jury investigation of 96 hia finances. In response to continued crltldsm, the vice squad mounted a campdgn agdnst petty gambling by ordinary dtlzena in their own homes. 312 |
Filename | indep-box21-01-01~151.tif |
Archival file | Volume64/indep-box21-01-01~151.tif |