FROM Crime Story The saga of gangster John Dillinger's associate Sam Goldstein. I Elizabeth Applebaum Contributing Editor Q: Did John Dillinger have any Jewish members in his gangs? A: Yes. In his early years, Dillinger worked with two Jewish criminals, Fred Brenman and Sam Goldstein (aka Sam Goldstine). Dillinger, born in Indiana in 1903, was the country's first famous gang- Sam Goldstein ster. He got an early start in petty crime, then made a name for himself as a John bank robber. Dillinger Unlike other criminals, such as his sometime partner, the vio- lence-loving "Baby Face" Nelson, Dillinger was usually a calm and restrained man. He loved cars and women, and he was extraordinarily clever. Dillinger was as famous for his escapes as he was for his robberies; he managed to get out of the Crown Point, Ind., jail using nothing but a piece of wood, carved and colored black with shoe polish, to resemble a gun. According to Dary Matera, author of Dillinger, the famous gangster was friendly early on with Sam Goldstein, whom he met at Indiana State Prison. Goldstein was born Nov. 16, 1891, in Ft. Wayne, Ind. His first arrest was in 1909, after which he spent plenty of time in prison, usually for robbery. In early 1933, he was released from prison and again entered the world of crime. Working with Harry Copeland and John Dillinger, he helped rob the Citizens National Bank of Bluffton, Ohio, (taking $2,100) and the First National Bank of Montpelier, Ind., (stealing $10,000) in August 1933. On Sept. 6, 1933, the three . struck again, taking $25,000 from the State Bank of Massachusetts Avenue in Indianapolis. Goldstein was in prison for much of the 1940s and 1950s before being paroled, for the last time, in 1961. He settled in Ft. Wayne, the city where he was born and died there in 1975. Dillinger also worked briefly with Fred Brenman, a Jewish immigrant from Poland who became a bootlegger in the United States. He joined the Dillinger Gang in the 1930s, working alongside Goldstein and the fiery Whitey Mohler, among others, says author Matera. Dillinger has a few interesting connections to Michigan as well. Before being shot down on July 22 1934, out- side the Biograph Theater in Chicago, Dillinger spent a few days hiding out in Sault Ste. Marie in April 1934. (Dillinger did not, however, do any jobs in Michigan because this state was one of the few at the time to boast police radios, which Dillinger wanted to avoid.) Danger's longtime sweetheart, Mary "Billie" Frechette, was briefly impris- oned in Milan, at the Federal Detention Home, while Dillinger gang member Russell Clark spent his last years in Madison Heights, where he died in 1968. Additionally, Mary Butcher, the ex- wife of Dillinger gang member John Hamilton, is buried in Livonia. Hamilton was one of Dillinger's closest friends, a longtime criminal who died in 1934, most likely at a hideout belonging to Ma Barker. Mary Butcher is buried at the Parkview Cemetery. We're reintroducing this monthly feature filled with fascinating facts about Judaism and Jewish history. THE WIRE Federation Adds Staff Local Skaters Earn Silver Daniel Greenberg of Franklin has joined the staff of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit as senior endow- ment development manager. Greenberg will be responsible for boosting fund-rais- ing efforts in the area of major gifts and endowments, part of a compre- hensive plan to Greenberg develop a focused and tactical approach to building awareness and donor response to the Jewish communi- ty's needs. Greenberg most recently co-chaired the capital campaign "Design for Dignity" as vice president at Jewish Home and Aging Services. Prior to join- ing Federation, he was the vice president of DataNet Quality Systems. Turin/JTA — U.S. Jewish ice skater Ben Agosto and his partner, who trained at Arctic Edge in Canton, earned a silver medal in ice dancing at the 2006 Olympics. Agosto and Tanith Belbin finished second to Russians Tatiana Navka and Roman Kostomarov in the ice dancing competition. Jewish ice dancer Jamie Silverstein and partner Ryan O'Meara, who also trained at Arctic Edge, finished in 16th place. Israelis Galit Chait and Sergei Sakhnovski finished eighth. Beth El Hosts Reverend The Rev. Kenneth James Flowers, pastor of Greater New Moriah Missionary Baptist Church, will be the guest speaker at Shabbat services at Temple Beth El, 7:30 p.m. Friday, March 3. The Reverend Flowers began his pas- toral career as director of the Ecumenical Black Campus Ministry at UCLA and associate minister for evan- gelism and pastoral care at Wilshire United Church before becoming pastor at Messiah Baptist Church in Los Angeles. The New Zimriyah On Sunday, March 19, 200 children will sing in concert at the Federation's Alliance for Jewish Education New Zimriyah! 2006. The program features Jewish youth choirs from several metro congregations as well as the Kidz Klez . Band of Michigan. The event will be held at 2 p.m. at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield. Admission is free and light refreshments will be served; dietary laws will be observed. Congregations participating include: Adat Shalom , Beth Shalom, B'nai Moshe, Chaye Olam, Shaarey Zedek and Shir Tikvah, Beth El, Emanu-El, Temple Israel, Kol Ami and Shir Shalom. Sponsors include the Michigan Board of Cantors, Elaine and Michael Serling and the late Muriel Jacknow. For information, call Judy Lewis, (248) 642-4260, ext. 374 or lewis@jfmd.org . France Probes Murder Paris/JTA — The French government is considering the recent murder of a Jewish man to be an anti-Semitic act. French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin said Monday night that the minister of justice had ordered that last week's torture and murder of 23- year-old Ilan Halimi be considered premeditated murder motivated by religious affiliation. Villepin spoke at the annual dinner of the Representative Council of Jewish Institutions in France, or CRIF, the umbrella organization of secular French Jewish groups. The dinner has increasingly become an occasion to solidify the relationship between the Jewish community and the French government. Terror T-shirts Rapped Copenhagan/JTA — Denmark cracked down on a clothing company that sold T-shirts with the logo of a Palestinian terrorist group. Danish police said Tuesday that four people connected with the firm Fighters and Lovers, which offers shirts with the insignias. of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, have been charged with supporting terrorist groups. Authorities also confiscated almost $4,000 from the company and shut down its Web site. The European Union considers the PFLP and FARC to be terrorist groups. Magazine Profiles Jews Vienna/JTA — One of Austria's lead- ing magazines ran a cover story on Vienna's young Jews. The headline for the story in Profil provides insights into young Jews from Reform to fer- vently Orthodox and how they balance their commitment to Judaism with their participation in Austrian society. Vienna is home to 10,000 Jews. February 23 • 2006 11