Crime of the Century: Brink's Robbery

$24.95
Stephanie Schorow

On January 17, 1950, seven robbers in Halloween masks walked into a counting room of the Brink’s armored car garage on Prince Street in Boston and walked out with $2.5 million in cash, checks, and securities. It was the largest robbery in U.S. history to date. Yet not a shot was fired, not a drop of blood shed. The robbers simply said, “This is a stick-up,” before gagging and tying up the guards Within minutes they escaped into the night with bags stuffed with money, leaving almost no clues behind.

For six years authorities worked to crack the case. Just before the statute of limitations ran out, one of the robbers, who believed he was cheated out of his share, ratted out his comrades. The subsequent trial captivated a city, as details of the caper finally came to light.

Yet most of the loot was never found, and over the years Bostonians have speculated on where it went. Even after the case was solved and the culprits were jailed, the Brink’s robbery continued to fascinate the public. How did a ragtag group of petty criminals— Irish, Italian, and one Jew—somehow pull off a nearly perfect crime? MP> Hollywood made two movies that portrayed the robbers as working-class heroes. A closer examination of the robbery, however, reveals a darker side.

What first appeared to be a daring, bloodless caper turned deadly when the lure of the cash and the fear of imprisonment turned friend against friend. Soon the criminal code of silence was being enforced with the blast of a machine gun. To this day mystery and intrigue surround the Brink’s robbery even as it continues to grip the imagination of Boston.

The Crime of the Century is a fascinating caper and a portrait of Boston in the postwar era.

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About the Author: Stephanie Schorow is a Boston-based freelance writer focusing on topics of regional and national interest. A former reporter for the Boston Herald and the Associated Press, she is the author of Boston On Fire and The Cocoanut Grove Fire (also available from FSP). Her articles appear regularly in the Boston Globe and other New England publications. She lives in Medford, Massachusetts.
SpecificationsApplewood Books, 2008
6" x 9" hardcover
242 pages, B&W photos and illustrations
ISBN: 978-1-933212-54-8

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