The shocking true story of Mine No. 5, Al Capone's largest still.
They thought Prohibition would bring order. It brought an empire of blood and bootleg whiskey.
When federal law outlawed alcohol in 1920, Benld, Illinois was already a powder keg. A rough mining town filled with Italian immigrants, labor strikes, and simmering violence, it had the perfect ingredients for something far more dangerous than moonshine. Positioned between Chicago and St. Louis with rail connections and hard roads, this small Midwest town became the unlikely heart of one of the largest bootlegging operations in American history.
Industrial stills pumped out thousands of gallons daily as criminal networks infiltrated every business in town. Saloons became gambling dens, restaurants fronted prostitution rings, and even major corporations quietly supplied the ingredients for illegal operations. But when Al Capone's men arrived to coordinate activities and collect their share, the stakes turned deadly.
As federal agents struggled to contain the chaos, bodies began appearing throughout the county. Dominic Tarro and other key players who knew too much became liabilities to both gangsters and corporate conspirators. In a town where survival meant defying the law and prosperity flowed from criminal enterprise, loyalty was just another commodity to be bought or
buried.
This true historical crime story reveals how one mining town became a Criminal empire during America's most lawless era. Get your copy today before the price changes.