Alcatraz_ A Definitive History of the Penitentiary Years - Michael Esslinger [76]
Before his transfer to Alcatraz, Capone had already become a master at controlling his environment at the federal penitentiary in Atlanta. Despite strict rulings from the courts, Capone was always able to persuade his guards to bend rules and accommodate his unique requests, often setting his own terms of confinement. It was rumored that he had convinced many of the guards to be on his payroll and his cell boasted expensive furnishings including personal bedding, and many other amenities that were not extended to other inmates serving lesser sentences. His cell was carpeted and he had a radio around which many of the guards would sit with him, conversing and listening to their favorite serials. His friends and family maintained residence in a nearby hotel, and each day he was flooded with visitors who were personally escorted to his cell.
In 1934, Attorney General Homer Cummings, and Sanford Bates, the Director of Federal Prisons, made arrangements to send Capone to a facility where he would be unable to leverage the system. Alcatraz was the perfect answer to a problem that no one seemed able to manage. On August 19, 1934, without any formal notice, Capone was placed in a secure prison railroad car and was taken on a journey along with fifty-one other inmates to America’s “Devil Island”. In keeping with the heightened level of security, Capone would remain handcuffed and shackled and would be personally accompanied to California by Atlanta’s Warden, A.C. Aderhold.
Capone’s transfer order to Alcatraz signed by Bureau of Prisons Director Sanford Bates.
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Al Capone arrived at Alcatraz on August 22, 1934, as inmate AZ-85, and from the first moment of his arrival, Capone worked to manipulate the system. Warden Johnston had a custom of meeting the “new fish” when they first arrived at Alcatraz, and he usually participated in their brief orientation. Johnston wrote in his personal memoir that he had little trouble recognizing Capone as he stood in the lineup. Capone was grinning and making quiet, smug comments from the side of his mouth to other inmates. When his turn came to approach Warden Johnston, it appeared that he wanted to show off to the other inmates by asking questions on their behalf, as if he were already their leader. Johnston quickly assigned him his prison number, and made him get back in line with the other convicts. During Capone’s time on Alcatraz, the famous prisoner would make several attempts to con Johnston into allowing him special privileges, but all were denied. Johnston maintained that Capone would not be given any special rights and would have to follow every rule without exception or privilege.
The cellblock corridor known by inmates as Michigan Avenue. Capone’s cell B-181 was located on the second tier in the right of this photograph.
A present day photograph of Al Capone’s cell B-181.
Like every other inmate at Alcatraz in the early 1930’s, Capone was to do hard time. He was among the first group that arrived from Atlanta Federal Penitentiary during what was considered the toughest era at Alcatraz. The mandatory rule of silence was in full implementation and strictly enforced by the correctional staff. Capone would occupy a standard cell located on the second tier of B Block (B-181), coined Michigan Avenue by fellow inmates. Almost overnight, Capone had been completely stripped of his persona as a crime czar. The great Capone was now little more than a common inmate. He received favorable reports at his work assignments which included a detail in the prison laundry and a stint as a cellhouse orderly delivering books and magazines to other inmates, as well as performing menial tasks such as sweeping and mopping. It is documented that Capone’s favorite pastimes at Alcatraz were reading celebrity magazines and playing the tenor banjo.
During his years on The Rock, Capone did receive discipline for misconduct on occasion. On February 20, 1935, Capone was placed in solitary confinement for starting a fight with inmate William Colyer, and it was noted by