During a steaming hot
day on July 27, 1935 the human traffic along our sidewalks had slowed down a
bit. Every spot where a bit of shade was
offered was taken, and only the auto traffic was normal. Over at the infamous Empire Cigar Store at 139 Jefferson Street ,
two men were exiting the rear door when all hell broke lose. The Empire was
owned by Bill Urban and one of the McCluggage Brothers and the place was a legitimate
business. This place like most taverns
and saloons in town also had different forms of gambling. A guy could buy a
‘Pea’ there every day and have a slim chance of winning the ‘Numbers Game’ in Peoria . Bill was a nice man, a professional business
man and he made a ton of money in whatever he did. He was kidnapped once and disappeared. His son was with him but the bad guys let him
go and Bill was the talk of the town for quite awhile. In a few days he was
back in town and that is when the rumors and the legend rally began for him.
Truth is he never told anyone what had happened to him, but that never stopped
the gangster fans in Peoria
from filling in the blank spaces, even down to how much ransom he had paid. I have written a lot about gambling and
so-called gangsters so you will just have to go on line and find those
stories. But on this day in July some
bandits, hoodlums, gangsters, bad guys or whatever else you want to call them
decided to rob the messengers that hauled money back and forth to the downtown
banks for Bill Urban. Without much fuss three men quietly watched and waited
for the messenger and the ‘special policeman’ to come out of the cigar store to
begin the delivery of the money. Actually
they had two bundles of money: One with
two thousand one dollar bills in it and the other containing eight thousand
dollars. The bad guys admitted that they
expected to get more like eighty-thousand dollars, but that never happened.
Joseph Backes was a
well-known guy in town and he worked for Urban as a body guard and money watcher. He liked to refer to himself as a ‘special
police officer’ but I can tell you the local cops never condoned that title. He of course carried a gun and he knew how to
use it. I will also tell you that the
police did not interfere in Urban’s business…enough said. The two men were accosted as they stepped out
of the building as one of the bandits said,“ Stick ‘em up.” Another man named Richard
‘Dick’ Day, alias Al Mace backed him up and before Backes could react he was
shot. The money was then ripped out of
the hands of the courier and the eight thousand dollar bundle was torn from
beneath Backes’ shirt. Backes stumbled
but pulled out his gun and began firing.
He was severely wounded and ended up in the hospital with at least 60 bb
s from a shotgun in his chest, arm and shoulder.
Now all this took
place within a very few seconds and police found at least a dozen eye witnesses
and got about that many versions of the robbery. During the string of gun shots
two of the bandits were shot and quickly in custody. The get-away driver, who
was the only guy from Peoria, apparently saw things were out of hand and never
showed up to take the bandits to a car they had stashed away for their long
trip back to Chicago. Superintendant of Police, Fred Nussbaum was
soon at the scene and that is when he and his men discovered that the $2,000
package was missing. Now how could that
have happened?
Over at the hospital
where three of the participants were in different stages of critical care,
Nussbaum began his investigation. Dick
Day was obviously the leader but he had little to say to the chief detective.
“Chief…I do not know the names of the men that were with me. I met them in Chicago where we planned all this and a guy from Peoria had come up to set
it up. He told us that he was certain
that Mr. Urban would have over eighty-thousand on hand and we agreed to spit it
up evenly. Them guys did not know me and
I did not know them. That is the way I
do business.”
Backes was eager to
talk to the detectives and the press and showed the bruised and bloody holes in
his upper body and arm and smiled as the cameramen did their jobs. He wanted to
make sure they wrote that he did not drop the money it was jerked away from
him. He also stated that he felt that he
had hit one of the guys that got away, and that the bandits slipped up on them
and ‘just started blastin’ away.”
Detectives worked
most of the day talking to witnesses who gave them some pretty wild tales. One person had the sense to write down the
license number of a car because the man looked suspicious. That was the Peoria
man and he was later identified as Joseph Roach and the car license was a California plate number
54-9-141. Police stated that the man
probably ditched the car and was long gone by now. However, they put out an all points bulletin
but never apprehended Roach. With the help of Backes the robbery had been
thwarted and eight thousand of the money was returned to Bill Urban. What happened to the $2,000 package? Of
course the police suspected that one of the witnesses had taken it and the
witnesses suspected the police. Typical
attitudes back in old Peoria
I can assure you of that.
Editor’s
Note: Norm is a Peoria Historian, author and a monthly
contributor to Adventure Sports Outdoors. norman.kelly@sbcglobal.net
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