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15

Since no one knew the difference between cattle guts and human remains, there are those who mostly received a large amount of money to leave their homes at the same time, when each of the places of residences and muquifos were his property, then they were rented and there would be no need, it was where the secret passages passed.

Like the many underground ones, after all he was a collector and the tenant of the property was no suspect, Vincent was a faithful man to Schultz, he would do anything for him, but above all loyalty to them is measured with monetary value, it seemed to boil down to how much he could earn.

You know how it is, it's getting dangerous, the cops are giving trouble, life is getting harder, and things have started to escalate a lot, in which case you know life is harder, you could die at any moment, the worse you he can stay in bed and not be able to support himself, which is why..., soon after in 1930, one of Schultz's enforcers, Vincent Coll, demanded to be made an equal partner.

That's because the Schultz gang members were paid a fixed salary rather than the usual take percentage, and it was a unique arrangement compared to other large organized crime gangs, but as they saw him as a lawyer and his visits were normal.

It was because he rented those properties and didn't ask any questions, even though he was secretly a customer, since he also rented the trucks, which always occurred before disagreements and charges, and the idea came... why not?

He works more he gets paid more, why should it be, as stated fixed?

In which you say, yes there are internal disagreements, intrigues, as anywhere, especially in criminal groups.

When Schultz refused, Coll formed his own crew with the ultimate goal of assassinating Schultz and taking over his turf, in what the synonym, divide and conquer, gang wars would make him pay no heed to true values.

In the ensuing bloody gang war, Coll lost his older brother Pete, in which he earned the nickname "Mad Dog" from the press after a child was killed during an assassination attempt by his gang.

In February 1932, Coll was lured into a trap by other disaffected allies in an internal crisis of an internal conspiracy, while he was receiving a call in a drugstore phone booth, gunmen entered the store and shot him dead.

The killers may have included Edward 'Fats' McCarthy and the brothers Bo and George Weinberg, and if there were no problems inside and out, in which he just used the dissatisfaction and envy of each of the men who worked for each of them, enough to create an internal conflict in each of the factions.

With the end of Prohibition, Dutch Schultz needed to find new sources of income, even if the only things that didn't stop were real estate for rent, where people needed places to live and work, in addition to food and drink, and nobody stopped drinking and eating, and he and his bakeries, which he had in that place, far from Gotham.

His answer came with Otto "Abbadabba" Berman and the Harlem numbers racket with numbers racket, a precursor to the Pick 3 lotteries, and which required players to pick three numbers, which were then derived from the last number.

What before the decimal on the handle, and the total amount wagered, and was done daily at Belmont Park, where Berman was a middle-aged accountant and math genius who helped Schultz, where anything to fix this racket, but who he was easily bribed, if he said the right number, he knew where to find it, as he worked for him too.

In a matter of seconds, Berman could mentally calculate the minimum amount of money Schultz needed to bet on the track in order to change the odds at the last minute, but he never knew the exact amount of how much he received and how much he spent.

What there was no way to count how much he had, if he was stolen along the way in the transport, in which he only knew the expenses, and as for the real values, only how much he needed, he didn't say the rest.

This strategy ensured that Schultz always controlled which numbers he won, guaranteeing a greater number of losers in Harlem and a multi-million tax-free monthly income for Schultz.

Berman was reportedly paid $10,000 a week (equivalent to $143,000 in 2016) for his valuable vision, and the carrier was intercepted as they drove by truck and made their way through ghost towns, along with political rackets, Schultz began. to extort New York restaurateurs and workers, and with that it grew again.

In which the fat eye and envy grew, and there were always those who wanted a bigger slice of the pie, it was enough to massage the ego, in which they didn't have a building of their own, they rented from it, everyone did it.

Schultz, working through a gangster named Jules Modgilewsky, aka Julie Martin, made deals with the leaders of Waiters Local, in which there were 16 Workers Local 302 coffee shops, and all to extort money by forcing restaurant owners to join the Metropolitan Restaurant & Cafeteria Owners Association, and each of those establishments belonged to him.

If they continued to extort each of those landlords, they would soon have no money for rent, and money doesn't grow on trees, in which there was an employers' association that Schultz had founded.

Those who refused to join the Association faced exorbitant wage demands from the unions, followed by strikes and stink bomb attacks, but there was no union of elderly women who worked for it, so apart from the housewives association, which didn't mean much at that point, and he as a supposed homeowner, didn't have that problem.

Where exactly it was that made it difficult to be blackmailed, and as far as he knew the housewives and supposed virtuous wives were also those of the gangsters who worked for him sewing, with the Metropolitan Association then intervened to arrange a strike agreement with a contract of love for low wages, everyone wanted to demand better wages.

Little enough to strike, and the seed was in the suggestion, and the employer contingent joining the Association, Martin managed to extract thousands of dollars of tribute and debt from terrified restaurateurs for Schultz.

The amounts of all the bribes themselves were intercepted in the middle of transport between the roads and were never seen again, in which some people were denounced and a certain judge did not accept a bribe from a mobster, and they went to trial.

During Schultz's tax trial (see below) he began to suspect that Martin was stealing from the Shake Down operation, in which Schultz had recently discovered a $70,000 disparity on the books, others disappeared.

Since they didn't know the true values, in which so much that there was a missing amount, and that no one had ever heard of, even for an accountant, but blamed other people, the exact values would be enough to kill.

On the night of March 2, 1935, Schultz invited Martin to a meeting at the Harmony Hotel in Cohoes, New York, at the meeting, at which chief enforcement officer Bo Weinberg and mob lawyer Dixie Davis were also present, Martin belligerently denied Schultz's accusations and began to argue with him.

Both men were drinking heavily as the argument and amidst the accusations of each other, and baptized drinks and as there was no forensic examination of toxins, in which the fight that continued to evolve, and even the fights, the emotions were the flower of the skin and the tempers were exalted, since one really accused or the other.