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Louis Buchalter was born in 1897 and grew up on the Lower East Side of New York, one of 13 children. His doting mother nicknamed him “Lepkele” and he is known in history simply as Lepke. When his father died in 1909, 12-year-old Lepke was sent to live with his older sister in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. There, he began a career that led him to the highest echelons of American organized crime. Born on New York’s Lower East Side, Buchalter derived his nickname from “Lepkeleh” (Yiddish for “Little Louis”). As a youth he was already into shoplifting and burglary and, by the age of 22 in 1919, had served two prison terms. In the 1920s he ganged up with a collection of Jewish, Irish, and Italian mobsters engaged mainly in extortion and labour racketeering, but also murder. Between 1932 and 1934 he allied with Lucky Luciano in founding the national crime syndicate. About 1933 he put together his best killer-enforcers, under the command of such gunmen as Albert Anastasia and Abe “Kid Twist” Reles, and established as a sideline an organization that would kill—or beat or mutilate—anyone (except syndicate members) for a price. As an associate would comment, “Lep loves to hurt people.” The outfit was later popularly dubbed Murder, Inc. In 1937 U.S. federal and New York agencies of justice began closing in on Buchalter, forcing him into hiding; and not until August 24, 1939, did he surface again, tricked into surrendering to the FBI. Within a month he was convicted of narcotics conspiracy and sentenced to 14 years in federal prison. The following year he was tried in New York for murder on the testimony of Abe Reles and another former associate. Convicted, he and two of his lieutenants, Mendy Weiss and Louis Capone, died in the electric chair at Sing Sing State Prison in 1944. By contrast, Thomas E. Dewey was born in 1902 in Ossowo, Michigan, to a comfortable, middle-class family. His grandfather had been one of the founders of the Republican Party. Bright, energetic, and handsome, Dewey went to Columbia University Law School and remained in New York City, where he became a deputy U. S. Attorney, prosecuting the leadership of Tammany Hall, the corrupt Democratic political machine. Starting from such different backgrounds, operating at distant ends of the law, the lives–and fates–of Lepke and Dewey would intersect.