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| Monk Eastman |
The shooting happened outside the Blue
Bird Restaurant at the corner of Fourteenth Street and Fourth Avenue. Sunset
was still a few hours away, but that didn’t matter to the boys. They’d come
over from Brooklyn to visit Bradley, a waiter at the Blue Bird.
Monk Eastman (aka William Delaney) and
Jeremiah W. Bohan left the restaurant together at about 4 a.m.
They talked as they walked. Monk felt
Bohan out, trying to see if the rumors were true.
“Jerry,” said the Monk, “you have become a
rat since you got that Prohibition job.” He was working for the Feds, enforcing
the Volstead Act, and Monk supposedly was running booze.
A minute later, Monk Eastman lay dead on
the ground with five bullets in his body. Two slugs struck his right forearm,
and another the left forearm, just above the wrist. The fourth bullet ripped a
path through his hand, and the fifth one smashed through Monk’s chest and into
his heart. Bohan insisted it was self-defense—Monk was getting ready to shoot
him. But the evidence was against him. Monk didn’t have a gun. They found him
with his arms up as if he were trying to shield himself.




