The Mercury News

Al Capone’s favorite gun, personal items up for auction

- By Olga R. Rodriguez

Al Capone is infamous for having been a ruthless mob boss, but one of his granddaugh­ters says his softer side will shine through when the family auctions the Prohibitio­n-era gangster’s personal items — including diamond-encrusted jewelry with his initials, family photograph­s and his favorite handgun.

Capone’s three granddaugh­ters will also auction a letter he wrote to their father and his only child, Albert “Sonny” Capone, from Alcatraz, where the mobster served an 11-year sentence following his 1934 tax evasion conviction. In the letter written in pencil, Al Capone refers to Sonny as “son of my heart.”

He was called Public Enemy No. 1 after the 1929 “Valentine’s Day Massacre” of seven members of a rival bootlegger gang in Chicago by his associates.

But his granddaugh­ter Diane Capone describes him differentl­y.

“He was very loving, very devoted to family, very generous, and the letter that we have is such a poignant, beautiful letter from a father to his son. These are things that the public doesn’t know about,” said Diane Capone, 77.

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.

Among the pieces are gold-rimmed porcelain fine china, ornate furniture, artwork and Dresden figurines that once decorated the Palm Island, Florida, villa where the Chicago mobster lived after his release from prison and until his death in 1947.

Also up for sale is the Colt .45-caliber pistol Capone always carried with him and used several times to protect himself, Diane Capone said.

“That particular .45 was used in self-defense, and it probably saved his life on a few occasions and so, he referred to it as his favorite,” she said.

Diane Capone said she didn’t know if the gun was used to commit any crimes and said her grandfathe­r, who she called Papa, was never charged with killing anyone.

“He was accused of doing that, but he was never found guilty of shooting anyone,” she said.

The pistol with elaborate etchings and a wooden grip will be the centerpiec­e of the auction and is valued at up to $150,000, said Brian Witherell, founder of Witherell’s Auction House.

“When you think about Al Capone, you don’t think ‘Gosh, I wonder what his German porcelain figurine looks like,’ you wonder what his cigar humidor looks like, what his Colt .45 looks like,” he said.

The sisters are also selling a diamond-encrusted pocket watch, an 18k gold and platinum belt buckle and a gold initialed “AC” money clip and home movies featuring Al Capone and his associates.

Witherell said he had no reservatio­ns about helping the Capone sisters and that he expects the auction to draw internatio­nal attention because of the items’ historical significan­ce.

“We want to handle things that aren’t objectiona­ble to a lot of people, but we still can’t rewrite history,” he said. “He was a legendary figure. I think his judgment comes from somebody other than me.”

Sonny Capone’s daughters lived quietly for decades in Northern California after moving here from Florida in 1961 following their parents’ breakup. That changed in 2019 when Diane Capone published a book titled “Al Capone: Stories My Grandmothe­r Told Me” using her maiden name.

She said her father faced constant challenges because of his last name, including men picking fights with him for no reason and not being able to find a job. In the mid-1960s, he dropped Capone as a last name and went by Albert Francis. He died in obscurity in 2004 in Northern California, where he had lived for decades, his daughter said.

The sisters decided to sell their grandfathe­r’s personal belongings because they are all in their 70s, they are the only people who know the stories behind the memorabili­a, and they are worried about a wildfire destroying the collection, Diane Capone said.

“We were very fortunate that even after my grandfathe­r died, we were very close to my grandmothe­r and so, for years we’ve heard her talk about my grandfathe­r and about their lives, and about a lot of these items that are going to be auctioned off,” she said.

Nina Salarno, president of the advocacy group Crime Victims United of California, said it is undisputed that Brooklyn, New York-born Capone headed Chicago’s mob during Prohibitio­n and orchestrat­ed the deaths of many people. She called the sale of his personal belongings an insult to his victims.

“Those victims also have surviving family members, and now we’re glorifying what he did to them by selling his memorabili­a,” Salarno said.

She added: “They say it was part of history, I would agree with that so, donate (his belongings) to a museum, but don’t profit off of the back of victims.”

Diane Capone acknowledg­es her grandfathe­r led a criminal life but says that was not the person she knew. What she remembers is a doting grandfathe­r.

“My grandfathe­r certainly did some bad things during his life. That was part of his public life,” she said. “He went to jail, he served his time, he paid his debt to society and after he was released, in the last years of his life, he did everything to make peace with God and with his family, and with everybody,” she said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Diane Capone holds a copy of a photograph of her father, Albert “Sonny” Capone, as a young boy and her grandfathe­r Al Capone on Wednesday in Sacramento.
PHOTOS BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Diane Capone holds a copy of a photograph of her father, Albert “Sonny” Capone, as a young boy and her grandfathe­r Al Capone on Wednesday in Sacramento.
 ??  ?? A Colt .45-caliber pistol that once belonged to mob boss Al Capone at Witherell’s Auction House in Sacramento.
A Colt .45-caliber pistol that once belonged to mob boss Al Capone at Witherell’s Auction House in Sacramento.
 ??  ?? A platinum and diamond Patek Philippe pocket watch with the initials AC, that once belonged to Al Capone.
A platinum and diamond Patek Philippe pocket watch with the initials AC, that once belonged to Al Capone.

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