Is Chicagos St. Valentines Day Massacre Crime Scene Haunted or Not?
Animals are supposed to be skittish about going near the small patch of lawn. I visited the area not too long ago. I expected some sensation as I stood on the ground of what is probably Chicago’s most notorious crime and bloodiest mob hit of all times: The St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. On February 14, 1929, in a warehouse that once stood on this ground, seven of mobster Bugs Moran’s men were gunned down in cold blood by a hail of machine gun fire as they were lined up against the garage wall. By five men, who posed as police officers. Although the massacre is long assumed to be the work of rival gang member, Al Capone (who was conveniently vacationing down in Florida at the time), no one was ever charged with the crime. Six men waited in this red brick warehouse for a truck delivery of illegal whiskey. The seventh man, John May, was an auto mechanic who Moran had hired to fix a truck. He had his dog with him and the dog was tied to the truck. As he worked, the other men waited patientl