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The verdict caused an eruption in the courtroom.
Friends and relatives of the killers screamed hysterically and court officers climbed on
tables to restore order.
A week later, Judge Donald E. Van Zile sentenced the
three to the mandatory life in prison without parole. Shortly afterward
with little fanfare, Ray Bernstein, Irving Milberg and Harry Keywell
boarded a special Pullman train bound for Michigan’s Upper Peninsula
to begin serving their sentences in the state’s maximum security
prison in Marquette.
Harry Fleisher remained on the lam until 1932, but he was never
convicted in connection with the massacre. He did serve time in Alcatraz in the early
1950s for armed robbery of an Oakland County gambling house. Milberg
died in prison after serving seven years.
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| Standing Room only at the Purple
Gang trial |
Harry Keywell had a spotless prison record
for 34 years before his life sentence was commuted. He walked
out of prison on October 21, 1965 and later married, obtained a
job and faded into obscurity.
Ray Bernstein suffered a stroke in 1963 and was transferred to the
state prison in Jackson. He was paralyzed in the left side and his
speech was impaired when, wrapped in a blanket and in a wheelchair,
he was brought before the parole board.
Bernstein, still denying his role in the massacre, was a model
prisoner. He had no misconduct during his term and taught school to inmates after he
received his own high school diploma. He also was known for giving financial assistance to
other inmates.
The board gave him mercy parole in 1964 and he died two years later.
Solly Levine got a life sentence of another sort.
Fleeing the vengeance of the remaining Purple Gang
members, Levine was put on a boat to France by police. However, when he
landed in Le Havre, the government wouldn’t take him and sent him back. He
then tried to go to Ireland, but couldn’t get a passport.
He then disappeared.
"It would be hard to tell whether or not Solly escaped
successfully," Judge Van Zile said in 1940.
Other members of the Purple Gang died as they had lived. Abe Axler and
Eddie Fletcher were taken for a ride when Lucky Lucianos East Coast Syndicate moved
into the city. As the national crime syndicate began to consolidate the underworld in the
mid 1930s, the remnants of the Purple Gang were absorbed.
The convictions in the Collingwood Massacre "broke the back of the once powerful
Purple Gang, writing finis to more than five years of arrogance and terrorism.," said
Detroit Police Chief of Detectives James E. McCarty. "The effect of Bernsteins
conviction should be a great influence. He reached the top of the underworld and all it
got him was a life sentence."
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