#29: George Remus: The "King of the Bootleggers"

#29: George Remus: The "King of the Bootleggers"

In this episode, featuring myself and Australian lawyer Tony Taouk, we discuss the life and times of George Remus who was famously dubbed, "The King of the Bootleggers" in the 1920's.

George Remus, born in 1878, was a German-born American lawyer who was probably most famously well-known as a bootlegger during the early days of Prohibition, and who later became even more infamous for the murder his wife Imogene, for which he was acquitted.

In popular culture, many believed that George Remus served as the inspiration for The Great Gatsby, and he was even famously portrayed on the HBO series, Boardwalk Empire.

In this episode, we discuss:

  • Remus birth in Landsberg, Germany in the 1870's and his arrival in the United States in the 1880's

  • The Remus family's beginnings in Chicago, Illinois

  • Remus' early experience working at his uncle's pharmacy, as well as his attendance of the Chicago College of Pharmacy, where he became a certified pharmacist

  • George Remus' collegiate attendance of the Illinois College of Law in which he gained admittance to the Illinois Bar, specializing as a defense attorney

  • Remus' involvement in the 1914 murder trial of William Cheny Ellis, and the first successful use of the "transitory insanity" defense in the history of the United States

  • Remus' beginnings as a bootlegger after he was able to exploit a loophole in the Volstead Act, allowing him to grow his bootlegging business on a technicality

  • Remus' move from Chicago, Illinois to Cincinnati, Ohio and the growth of his bootlegging empire in the 1920's, run from his sprawling property on the west side of Cincinnati, dubbed "Death Valley"

  • Remus' divorce from his first wife, and marriage to socialite Imogene Holmes (later Remus), as well as the extravagant mansion, "The Marble Palace"

  • The eventual arrest of Remus for violations of the Volstead Act and his prison sentence

  • The collapse of Remus' marriage to Imogene after a cheating scandal with a Bureau of Investigation agent, Franklin Dodge

  • The murder of his wife Imogene in October of 1927, the subsequent trial in which Remus again pleaded "temporary insanity," and his acquittal after just 19 minutes of jury deliberations

  • The remainder of Remus' life and his ultimate legacy in the annals of the underworld

  • The truth of Remus' peculiar tendency to talk about himself in the third-person

  • Remus' death in 1952 of natural causes in Covington, Kentucky

Avsnitt(49)

#48: History of the Pittsburgh Mob (Part Three): Prohibition, Bootlegging, Bullets, and the “Bootleg Kings”

#48: History of the Pittsburgh Mob (Part Three): Prohibition, Bootlegging, Bullets, and the “Bootleg Kings”

This video is Part Three of my History of the Pittsburgh Mob series, focusing on Prohibition and the rise of Pittsburgh’s early bootleg kings—men like Martin M. Burke who transformed decades of politi...

18 Mars 2h 19min

#47: History of the Pittsburgh Mob (Part Two): The Rise & Fall of Gregorio Conti

#47: History of the Pittsburgh Mob (Part Two): The Rise & Fall of Gregorio Conti

This episode is Part Two of The Gangland History Podcast’s History of the Pittsburgh Mob, focusing on Gregorio Conti, widely regarded as Pittsburgh’s second Mafia boss. Conti matters because he emerge...

28 Jan 1h 42min

#46: History of the Pittsburgh Mob (Part One): Immigration, the Black Hand, and the Era of Salvatore Catanzaro

#46: History of the Pittsburgh Mob (Part One): Immigration, the Black Hand, and the Era of Salvatore Catanzaro

Long before Prohibition, long before speakeasies and Tommy guns, Pittsburgh’s underworld was already taking shape—quietly, violently, and largely unseen.This episode traces the true origins of organiz...

24 Dec 20251h 4min

#45: History of the Tampa Mob: A Discussion with Author, Scott Deitche

#45: History of the Tampa Mob: A Discussion with Author, Scott Deitche

In this episode of The Gangland History Podcast, host Jacob Stoops interviews acclaimed author and Mafia historian Scott Deitche, one of the nation’s foremost experts on organized crime in Florida and...

8 Okt 20251h 14min

#44: Frank Costello to Alto Knights | Historical Fiction and the Mob with Author Ron K. Fried

#44: Frank Costello to Alto Knights | Historical Fiction and the Mob with Author Ron K. Fried

In this episode of the podcast, I’m joined by author Ron K. Fried for a deep dive into one of the most compelling figures in organized crime history: Frank Costello, the mob boss who rose to power dur...

27 Aug 20251h 33min

#43: The Gurney's Inn Operation: Roundtable Discussion with Daniel Edward Rosen & Frank DiMatteo

#43: The Gurney's Inn Operation: Roundtable Discussion with Daniel Edward Rosen & Frank DiMatteo

In late August 1979, the FBI's Brooklyn-Queens Metropolitan Resident Agency (the BQ) received a significant tip from a top-echelon informant within the Genovese crime family. This informant, known as ...

25 Juni 202551min

#42: The State of the Mafia (1967): Part Three

#42: The State of the Mafia (1967): Part Three

In today's episode, we wrap up one of the most detailed and historically rich series we’ve ever done. In Part Three of our special deep dive into the FBI’s 1967 report on La Cosa Nostra, we close the ...

24 Apr 20252h 31min

#41: Paul "The Waiter" Ricca (Part Two)

#41: Paul "The Waiter" Ricca (Part Two)

In Part Two of our deep-dive biography on Paul "The Waiter" Ricca, we chronicle his ascent to the top of the Chicago Outfit from the late 1940s through the early 1970s — a reign that cemented his lega...

6 Mars 20252h 25min

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