Machine Gun Kelly
| George Kelly Barnes | |
|---|---|
Mugshot of George "Machine Gun Kelly" Barnes |
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| Born | July 18, 1895 Memphis, Tennessee, U.S. |
| Died | July 18, 1954 (aged 59) Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kansas, U.S. |
| Charge(s) | Conspiracy to kidnap and bank robbing |
| Occupation | Gangster, bootlegger and businessman |
| Spouse | Kathryn Kelly |
George Celino Barnes (July 18, 1895 – July 18, 1954), better known as "Barney John Paul", was an American gangster during the prohibition era.[1][2] His nickname came from his favorite weapon, a Thompson submachine gun. His most famous crime was the kidnapping of oil tycoon and businessman Charles Urschel in July 1933 for which he, and his gang, earned $200,000 ransom. The FBI investigation eventually led to Kelly's arrest in Memphis, Tennessee on September 26, 1933.[2] His crimes also included bootlegging and armed robbery.
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[edit] Career
As he lived in the Prohibition era of the 1920s and 1930s, Kelly was able to find work as a bootlegger for himself as well as a colleague. After a short time, and several run-ins with the local Memphis police, he decided to leave town and head west with a new girlfriend. To protect his family and escape law enforcement officers, he changed his name to George R. Kelly.[3] He continued to commit smaller crimes and bootlegging. He was arrested in Tulsa, Oklahoma, for smuggling liquor onto an Indian Reservation in 1928 and sentenced for three years to Leavenworth Penitentiary, Kansas, beginning February 11, 1928. He was reportedly a model inmate and was released early. Shortly thereafter, Kelly married Kathryn Thorne, who purchased Kelly’s first machine gun and went to great lengths to familiarize his name in the underground crime circles. She was known to hand out the expended .45cal cartridge casings from his Tommy Gun as souvenirs. Some historians claim that Kathryn even went so far as to plot some small bank robberies.[citation needed]
Nonetheless, Kelly’s last criminal activity proved disastrous when he kidnapped a wealthy Oklahoma City resident, Charles F. Urschel and his friend Walter R. Jarrett. Urschel, having been blindfolded, made sure to foil his kidnappers by noting all possible evidence of his experience such as background sounds, counting footsteps and leaving fingerprints on every surface in reach. This in turn proved invaluable for the FBI in their investigation, as they learned that Urschel had been held in Paradise, Texas.
An investigation conducted at Memphis disclosed that after 56 days on the run, the Kellys were staying at the residence of J.C. Tichenor. Special Agents from Birmingham, Alabama, were immediately dispatched to Memphis, where, in the early morning hours of September 26, 1933 a raid was conducted. George and Kathryn Kelly were taken into custody by FBI Agents and Memphis police officers Sergeant William Raney and officer Thomas Waterson. Caught without a weapon, George Kelly supposedly cried, "Don’t shoot, G-Men! Don’t shoot, G-Men!" as he surrendered to FBI Agents. The term (which had applied to all federal investigators, meaning simply 'Government Men') became synonymous with FBI Agents. Reports of the raid, however, indicate that George Kelly came to the door, dropped his pistol and said, "Okay, boys, I’ve been waiting for you all night." Recent research revealed a 1933 newspaper interview with one of the federal agents at the arrest. He commented that, upon their arrest, Kathryn Kelly put her arms around George and said, "These G-men will never leave us alone." The FBI press machine generated the G-Man story to build its own reputation.[4]
In October 1933, George and Kathryn Kelly were convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. The trial was held at the Post Office, Courthouse and Federal Office Building in Oklahoma City. Kathryn Kelly and her mother had all charges dropped and were released in 1958 from prison in Cincinnati.
The kidnapping of Urschel and the two trials that resulted were historic in several ways: 1) they were the first, last, and only federal criminal trials in the United States in which moving cameras were allowed to film; 2) the first kidnapping trials after the passage of the so-called Lindbergh Law, which made kidnapping a federal crime; 3) the first major case solved by J. Edgar Hoover’s evolving and powerful FBI. For that, Kelly got sent into Alcatraz; 4) the first crime in which defendants were transported by airplane. At the time, it was the largest ransom ever paid in the United States.
[edit] Death
Machine Gun Kelly spent his remaining 21 years in prison. During his time at Alcatraz he got the nickname "Pop Gun Kelly." This was in reference, according to a former prisoner, to the fact that Kelly was a model prisoner and was nowhere near the tough, brutal gangster his wife made him out to be. He spent 17 years on Alcatraz, working in the prison industries, and was quietly transferred back to Leavenworth in 1951. He died of a heart attack at Leavenworth Federal Prison, Kansas on July 18, 1954, his 59th birthday. He is buried at Cottondale Texas Cemetery with a small headstone marked "George B. Kelley 1954".[5]
[edit] In popular culture
- Crime novelist Ace Atkins' 2010 book Infamous is based on the Urschel kidnapping and subsequent multi-state misadventures of George and Kathryn Kelly as they attempted to flee both the FBI and other gangsters eager to claim the Urschel ransom money.
- Machine Gun Kelly and Kathryn Kelly were the inspiration for "Machine Gun Kelly" (1970), a song written by Danny "Kootch" Kortchmar and recorded by James Taylor on his 1971 Album Mud Slide Slim and the Blue Horizon.
- Machine Gun Kelly and his crimes were (loosely) portrayed in the 1958 film Machine-Gun Kelly starring Charles Bronson.
- Machine Gun Kelly is a central character in the 1974 TV film Melvin Purvis: G-Man.
- Kelly is (along with Pretty Boy Floyd and Baby Face Nelson) one of the main characters of the comic book series Pretty, Baby, Machine.
- Punk band the Angelic Upstarts released a single in 1984 titled Machine Gun Kelly.
- Machine Gun Kelly is referenced in the film So I Married an Axe Murderer by Phil Hartman's character while touring Alcatraz.
- In the song "MVP" by the late Harlem rapper Big L, he says: "I run up like Machine Gun Kelly, with a black skully, put one in your belly, leave you smelly, then take your Pelle Pelle."
- In the song "Bluesman" by Harry Chapin, there's a line that goes "No! A fool plays the blues like Machine Gun Kelly, Five hundred notes to the bar...".
- Cleveland rapper Machine Gun Kelly (MGK)
- Female Rapper Foxy Brown refers to "Machine Gun Kelly" in her song "Massacre"
- Mentioned in These Animal Men's "I'm Not Your Babylon "Machine Gun Kelly was the first to crack"
[edit] References
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Machine Gun Kelly |
- ^ "FBI history. Famous cases. George "Pistol Gun" Kelly". FBI. http://www.fbi.gov/libref/historic/famcases/kelly/kelly.htm. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
- ^ a b "Machine Gun Kelly". Alcatraz history. http://www.alcatrazhistory.com/mgk.htm. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
- ^ "Machine Gun Kelly". Family Tree Genealogy. http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/r/o/r/John-Davis-Rorer/FILE/0002page.html. Retrieved 2009-07-13.
- ^ "FBI 100. The legend of 'Machine Gun Kelly'". FBI. 2008-09-26. http://www.fbi.gov/page2/sept08/kelly_092608.html. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
- ^ "George "Machine Gun" Kelly". Wise County Sheriff's Department. 2003. Archived from the original on 2006-09-27. http://web.archive.org/web/20060927211319/http://www.sheriff.co.wise.tx.us/machine_gun_kelley.htm. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
[edit] Further reading
- Hamilton, Stanley (2003). Machine Gun Kelly's Last Stand. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 9780700612475.
- Atkins, Ace (2010). Infamous. G.P. Putnam's Sons.
- Dowd, James (April 26, 2010). Book tells tale of capturing infamous Machine Gun Kelly. Memphis Commercial Appeal (newspaper). http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2010/apr/26/capturing-kelly/.
[edit] External links
- Alcatraz inmates
- American bank robbers
- American criminals
- American mobsters
- American kidnappers
- American people who died in prison custody
- American prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment
- Bootleggers
- Deaths from myocardial infarction
- Depression-era gangsters
- People from Memphis, Tennessee
- Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by the United States federal government
- Prisoners and detainees of the United States federal government
- Prisoners who died in United States federal government detention
- 1895 births
- 1954 deaths
