Howard K. Petschel's latest book, Robbing the Post Office: A Target of Opportunity, is available through Amazon.com.
The book covers such topics as the 1924 Rondout mail train robbery in Illinois and the 1962 Plymouth mail truck hijacking in Massachusetts. (In each of those cases, criminals relieved the U.S. Postal Service of cash and other items worth more than $1 million.)
The author is a former postal inspector who has previously written about stamp counterfeiting and postal service robberies.
Paperback, 190 pages.
ISBN 978-1879628526
Link to this book on Amazon.
25 January 2017
New book: 'Robbing the Post Office'
Labels:
Amazon,
Howard Petschel,
mail robbery,
Plymouth robbery,
postal inspector,
Robbing the Post Office,
Rondout robbery,
USPS

Editor/publisher of crime history journal, Informer; publisher of American Mafia history website Mafiahistory.us; moderator of online forums; author of Wrongly Executed?; coauthor of Deep Water: Joseph P. Macheca and the Birth of the American Mafia and DiCarlo: Buffalo's First Family of Crime; contributor of U.S. Mafia history to Australian-published Mafia: The Necessary Reference to Organized Crime; writer/co-writer of crime history articles for several publications.
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23 January 2017
Tune In to AHC's 'America: Fact vs Fiction' for Secret Societies & American Villains
Hosted by Jamie Kaler, the popular AHC (American Heroes Channel) series 'America:
Fact vs
Fiction' premiered the new season on January 21st. On Saturday
February 4th, Episode number 7 'Secret Societies' is scheduled to air -
one of two episodes that a Writers of Wrongs regular contributor will be
appearing (Yes, it's me, and special thanks to Writers of Wrongs Thomas Hunt for referring me to the studio)Tune in or set your DVR for what should be another interesting examination of history's myths and misunderstandings. Subjects discussed during the filming of my segments included; the Mafia in New Orleans, Al Capone, and some other goodies you'll just have wait and see (I'm there with you, as I have no idea what made the cut or not!)
Check your local listings for updated schedule and channel.
Labels:
Christian Cipollini

21 January 2017
Tried to 'take the money and run'
Early Pittsburgh Mafia boss Gregorio Conti assembled a fortune through fraud and double-dealing. In September 1919, he decided to take the money and run. He didn't run quite fast enough.
On the eve of his planned departure from western Pennsylvania, he was shot to death within his parked automobile. Three associates were in the automobile with him at the time. They claimed to be innocent of the killing. All three said a small, slight-built man jumped up on the car's runningboard, fired the fatal shots and escaped so quickly that they could not act to prevent or to capture him. Police didn't believe the story. They figured it would have taken a giant to reach far enough into the car to fire the shots through the back of Conti's driver's seat, and that giant would have been virtually in the lap of a passenger as he fired. Further, the murder weapon was recovered and turned out to be a pistol that required time-consuming manual cocking between shots.
Read more about Conti and his untimely end in:
The American Mafia history website's Conti biography.
On the eve of his planned departure from western Pennsylvania, he was shot to death within his parked automobile. Three associates were in the automobile with him at the time. They claimed to be innocent of the killing. All three said a small, slight-built man jumped up on the car's runningboard, fired the fatal shots and escaped so quickly that they could not act to prevent or to capture him. Police didn't believe the story. They figured it would have taken a giant to reach far enough into the car to fire the shots through the back of Conti's driver's seat, and that giant would have been virtually in the lap of a passenger as he fired. Further, the murder weapon was recovered and turned out to be a pistol that required time-consuming manual cocking between shots.
Read more about Conti and his untimely end in:
The American Mafia history website's Conti biography.
Labels:
Conti,
Mafia,
Murder,
Pittsburgh,
Thomas Hunt

Editor/publisher of crime history journal, Informer; publisher of American Mafia history website Mafiahistory.us; moderator of online forums; author of Wrongly Executed?; coauthor of Deep Water: Joseph P. Macheca and the Birth of the American Mafia and DiCarlo: Buffalo's First Family of Crime; contributor of U.S. Mafia history to Australian-published Mafia: The Necessary Reference to Organized Crime; writer/co-writer of crime history articles for several publications.
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18 January 2017
Hollywood Homicide
See, what happened was somebody gave Harry the works while Harry was pulling up to his abode, then this somebody, who was in the passenger seat at the time, turned his gun and killed James North who was in the back seat. Or did he give North the works first and then kill Meagher? Either way the result was the same. The car jumped the curbed and crashed into a light post. The killer got away while Meagher and North stayed put.
Why did Harry get dead? Three reasons were offered so you can pick one:
1) Gangsters from Chicago (or other eastern parts) were muscling in on the lucrative L.A. scene and it was just to bad for the local boys.
2) Harry himself was expanding into Arizona and Utah and them local fellas there weren't to keen on the idea.
3) It was an attempted robbery gone wrong.
PS
That third guy in the headline? He was an ex-boxer named Mickey Arno. He was killed about the same time and his body was found under a bridge near Long Beach. Police thought he may have been an associate of Meagher, then, after awhile, they thought that maybe he wasn't an associate of Meagher's. Could of just been one of the coincidences.
Labels:
1933,
Dead gangster,
Harry Meagher,
Hollywood,
James North,
Los Angeles,
Mickey Arno,
on the spot,
Patrick Downey

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