Times Colonist

Al Capone’s former South Florida home slated for demolition

-

MIAMI BEACH, Florida — The South Florida house that gangster Al Capone owned for nearly two decades, and died in, is facing demolition plans.

The Miami Herald reported Thursday that the new owners of the nine-bedroom, Miami Beach house plan to demolish it after buying it for $10.75 million US this summer.

One of the owners, developer Todd Glaser, told the Herald the home, which is about one metre below sea level, has flood damage and standing water underneath it. The new owners plan to build a two-storey modern spec home with eight bedrooms, eight bathrooms, a Jacuzzi, spa and sauna.

“The house is a piece of crap,” Glaser said. “It’s a disgrace to Miami Beach.”

The other owner is Glaser’s business partner, Nelson Gonzalez, an investor and senior vicepresid­ent of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services EWM.

The house has been placed on the September agenda for possible historic designatio­n by the city of Miami Beach, but Glaser said that is not going to stop the new owners’ plans.

Capone bought the house for $40,000 in 1928 and returned to it often. The gangster nicknamed “Scarface” died at the home in 1947 from a heart attack. The home is believed to be where Capone and his associates plotted the notorious St. Valentine’s Day massacre in which seven members of an opposing gang were gunned down in a Chicago parking garage in 1929.

The Miami Beach house isn’t the only one of Capone’s possession­s changing hands. In California, his three granddaugh­ters are planning an auction of some of his personal items, including diamond-encrusted jewelry with his initials, family photograph­s and his favourite handgun.

Diane Capone and her two surviving sisters will sell 174 items at the Oct. 8 auction titled “A Century of Notoriety: The Estate of Al Capone” hosted by Witherell’s Auction House in Sacramento.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The gatehouse entrance of the waterfront mansion once owned by gangster Al Capone in Miami Beach, Florida. The nine-bedroom house that Capone owned for nearly two decades, and died in, is about to be demolished by the new owners, who bought it for $10.75 million US this summer.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The gatehouse entrance of the waterfront mansion once owned by gangster Al Capone in Miami Beach, Florida. The nine-bedroom house that Capone owned for nearly two decades, and died in, is about to be demolished by the new owners, who bought it for $10.75 million US this summer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada