"It's a can't-miss story...And I'll warn you against reading Tommy Gun Winter in bed, because as each chapter ends, it pulls you into the next - not the best prescription for a full night's sleep." The Philadelphia Inquirer
A tale of love, murder, insanity and the law. Plus two zealous newspaper reporters and a couple of clever detectives.
The story is told by a veteran journalist who tracks down a family secret and rediscovers the story of Jewish gangsters run amok in 1930s Boston.
Tommy Gun Winter" is the improbable but true account of four Bostonians who once shared the front pages with John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd and Bonnie and Clyde. One was a beautiful minister's daughter, another was a graduate of MIT, and their leader was Murt Millen - smart, persuasive and unbalanced.
Millen was the son of a successful immigrant Jewish contractor. He dreamed of becoming a race car driver, but instead chose crime. He ensnared his brother, Irv, and then aeronautical engineer and ROTC officer Abe Faber. In Murt Millen the brilliant Faber found the only person he ever loved.
Norma Brighton was the 18-year-old who fled her father's home two weeks after meeting Murt in a beachfront dance hall.
Murt and Norma married, and three weeks later the first person died. Then another. And then came a fatal bank robbery.
In an era before surveillance cameras, cell phones or computers the gang escaped clean away after Murt cut down two police officers--Francis Haddock and Forbes McLeod. There was little evidence at the scene, eyewitnesses were unreliable, the license plate number was fake. Police were stymied. But working the crime were a couple of clever detectives and two zealous newspaper reporters. What followed was a remarkable investigation and record-setting trial where testimony from friends, family, physicians and seventeen psychiatrists unveiled an emotional triangle gone very bad.
Millen was the son of a successful immigrant Jewish contractor. He dreamed of becoming a race car driver, but instead chose crime. He ensnared his brother, Irv, and then aeronautical engineer and ROTC officer Abe Faber. In Murt Millen the brilliant Faber found the only person he ever loved.
Norma Brighton was the 18-year-old who fled her father's home two weeks after meeting Murt in a beachfront dance hall.
Murt and Norma married, and three weeks later the first person died. Then another. And then came a fatal bank robbery.
In an era before surveillance cameras, cell phones or computers the gang escaped clean away after Murt cut down two police officers--Francis Haddock and Forbes McLeod. There was little evidence at the scene, eyewitnesses were unreliable, the license plate number was fake. Police were stymied. But working the crime were a couple of clever detectives and two zealous newspaper reporters. What followed was a remarkable investigation and record-setting trial where testimony from friends, family, physicians and seventeen psychiatrists unveiled an emotional triangle gone very bad.