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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:04,320 SEAN BEAN: New York in the early 20th century. 2 00:00:09,520 --> 00:00:11,680 Some of the most notorious criminals in history 3 00:00:11,840 --> 00:00:14,640 would start their lives of crime here. 4 00:00:14,800 --> 00:00:18,200 But few would rise from real poverty to power, 5 00:00:18,360 --> 00:00:22,760 to take on not only the law, but the entire system 6 00:00:22,920 --> 00:00:24,720 and even the Mafia itself. 7 00:00:27,080 --> 00:00:28,240 A ruthless racketeer... 8 00:00:29,080 --> 00:00:30,480 - So, what we got here? 9 00:00:30,640 --> 00:00:33,880 BEAN: ..and one of the most feared and respected bosses... 10 00:00:34,920 --> 00:00:35,960 - (soundless) 11 00:00:36,120 --> 00:00:38,040 BEAN: ..who became a legend... 12 00:00:43,320 --> 00:00:45,160 ..in her own lifetime. 13 00:00:47,160 --> 00:00:48,720 - Who’s next? 14 00:01:14,920 --> 00:01:18,000 BEAN: In the early 1900s, crime was very much a white man's game. 15 00:01:20,120 --> 00:01:25,200 But in her own backyard, the Queen of Harlem didn’t just play it, 16 00:01:25,360 --> 00:01:26,360 she ran it. 17 00:01:26,520 --> 00:01:29,640 Bombings, beatings. 18 00:01:29,800 --> 00:01:32,240 bodies in alleyways. 19 00:01:32,400 --> 00:01:35,920 Harlem bled, but she never bent. 20 00:01:36,840 --> 00:01:38,240 A warlord in pearls. 21 00:01:40,240 --> 00:01:42,200 To her allies, she was a legend. 22 00:01:42,360 --> 00:01:44,400 To her enemies, she was lethal. 23 00:01:48,280 --> 00:01:49,800 Why don't we know her name? 24 00:01:51,280 --> 00:01:53,520 Stephanie St Clair. 25 00:01:53,680 --> 00:01:56,360 - (soft folk song) 26 00:02:00,920 --> 00:02:05,560 - She is from Guadeloupe, and she was born in the 1890s. 27 00:02:05,720 --> 00:02:10,720 She was the daughter of two working-class people. 28 00:02:10,880 --> 00:02:14,160 Her dad died when she was about ten or 11 years old, 29 00:02:14,320 --> 00:02:17,160 and she was raised by a single mother. 30 00:02:17,320 --> 00:02:20,280 - She was relatively well educated for a child growing up 31 00:02:20,440 --> 00:02:21,840 in the French West Indies. 32 00:02:22,000 --> 00:02:23,360 Her mother died at a young age, 33 00:02:23,520 --> 00:02:26,680 meaning that she was left alone at maybe age 12 or 13. 34 00:02:26,840 --> 00:02:31,920 Perhaps that's what pushed her to migrate to the Northern Hemisphere. 35 00:02:32,080 --> 00:02:36,200 BEAN: So much of her early years are shrouded in mystery. 36 00:02:36,360 --> 00:02:40,200 One account has it that after her mother died of TB, 37 00:02:40,360 --> 00:02:43,720 she was forced to become a house girl at a sugar plantation, 38 00:02:43,880 --> 00:02:46,280 but ran away at 13 39 00:02:46,440 --> 00:02:48,960 after having killed the owner's son 40 00:02:49,120 --> 00:02:51,680 who had repeatedly raped her over the years. 41 00:02:53,040 --> 00:02:55,880 Another account has it that she didn't kill him, 42 00:02:56,040 --> 00:02:57,680 but while he was passed out, drunk from rum, 43 00:02:57,840 --> 00:03:01,040 she emptied his pockets, ran to the docks 44 00:03:01,200 --> 00:03:04,480 and jumped on the first boat out, heading anywhere. 45 00:03:09,160 --> 00:03:12,640 - Travelling virtually alone on a steamship for weeks 46 00:03:12,800 --> 00:03:16,200 left women or really a young girl open to theft, 47 00:03:16,360 --> 00:03:18,960 open to kidnapping, open to assault. 48 00:03:19,120 --> 00:03:22,040 It would not have been an easy journey, 49 00:03:22,200 --> 00:03:26,040 and without a clear sense of what's waiting on the other side. 50 00:03:26,200 --> 00:03:31,200 - All we know for sure is that she arrived in North America in 1911. 51 00:03:31,360 --> 00:03:33,720 - (brash brass music) 52 00:03:33,880 --> 00:03:36,720 BEAN: There were few opportunities for immigrants, 53 00:03:36,880 --> 00:03:39,480 much less for a young black woman 54 00:03:40,280 --> 00:03:42,200 from a non-English-speaking island in the Caribbean. 55 00:03:45,040 --> 00:03:50,000 HARRIS: She migrates to New York City to work as a domestic worker. 56 00:03:50,160 --> 00:03:54,520 - You are hired to scrub and clean and feed a white family 57 00:03:54,680 --> 00:03:57,120 and also care for their children. 58 00:03:57,280 --> 00:03:59,960 - No woman wants to do domestic work just because of, you know, 59 00:04:00,120 --> 00:04:03,000 how abusive that job can be. 60 00:04:03,160 --> 00:04:06,240 Stephanie St Clair hardly talks about that early life. 61 00:04:06,400 --> 00:04:09,040 I think that's purposeful. 62 00:04:11,600 --> 00:04:14,840 BEAN: There are differing accounts of how she made her first entry 63 00:04:15,000 --> 00:04:17,000 into New York’s criminal underworld. 64 00:04:18,160 --> 00:04:20,320 One says that she starts dating a drug dealer, 65 00:04:20,480 --> 00:04:24,640 and is working for him, until he gets shot, and she flees. 66 00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:28,560 Another that she shacks up with a man named Duke, 67 00:04:28,720 --> 00:04:32,600 a pimp, who tries to force her into prostitution, 68 00:04:32,760 --> 00:04:35,320 until St Clair buries a fork in his eye... 69 00:04:37,160 --> 00:04:38,960 ..allegedly. 70 00:04:40,400 --> 00:04:41,560 - (cine film whirs) 71 00:04:42,560 --> 00:04:44,920 BEAN: So this is the world where Stephanie St Clair finds herself. 72 00:04:45,880 --> 00:04:50,320 New York is going through one of the biggest changes it’s ever known. 73 00:04:53,800 --> 00:04:55,600 - A lot of Southern African-Americans 74 00:04:55,760 --> 00:04:59,160 had made the decision to go to the north and specifically New York 75 00:04:59,320 --> 00:05:01,280 for better business opportunities, 76 00:05:01,440 --> 00:05:04,880 but also to escape the racist tensions of the Jim Crow era 77 00:05:05,040 --> 00:05:06,440 in the south. 78 00:05:06,600 --> 00:05:10,600 For a lot of these Black Americans, the journey north ended in Harlem. 79 00:05:14,400 --> 00:05:16,680 HARRIS: Harlem was called the Black Mecca. 80 00:05:18,200 --> 00:05:21,280 African-Americans from various parts of the world 81 00:05:21,440 --> 00:05:24,600 are bringing different customs, traditions, 82 00:05:24,760 --> 00:05:26,280 ways of knowing, ways of life, 83 00:05:26,440 --> 00:05:30,080 and bringing those things to Harlem. 84 00:05:31,480 --> 00:05:35,080 - It's difficult to comprehend just how hard life would have been 85 00:05:35,240 --> 00:05:36,640 back then for Stephanie. 86 00:05:36,800 --> 00:05:40,400 We know all too well that Black Americans were being subjected 87 00:05:40,560 --> 00:05:43,280 to appalling racial discrimination. 88 00:05:43,440 --> 00:05:45,960 Slavery is still in living memory 89 00:05:46,120 --> 00:05:48,920 and sadly attitudes hadn't changed all that much. 90 00:05:50,160 --> 00:05:53,720 It was almost impossible for Black people to even open bank accounts 91 00:05:53,880 --> 00:05:55,160 or secure housing. 92 00:05:55,320 --> 00:06:00,840 And even when they were able to, the conditions were so poor, 93 00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:03,400 they were almost unliveable. 94 00:06:03,560 --> 00:06:07,080 - We even have evidence of Black folks in the early 1910s 95 00:06:07,240 --> 00:06:09,640 and early 1920s sleeping in shifts. 96 00:06:09,800 --> 00:06:14,400 So, you might all be renting one bed in one room 97 00:06:14,560 --> 00:06:16,800 and, you know, somebody has it for the day shift, 98 00:06:16,960 --> 00:06:18,560 somebody has it for the night shift 99 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:20,840 and you switch back and forth. 100 00:06:21,000 --> 00:06:24,720 Everybody was piled on top of each other, which made for hard times, 101 00:06:24,880 --> 00:06:27,200 but also a lot of community building. 102 00:06:27,360 --> 00:06:31,160 - And then also police brutality is rampant. 103 00:06:31,320 --> 00:06:33,760 FARMER: You would be walking down the street 104 00:06:33,920 --> 00:06:35,760 and you'd be stopped by a police officer. 105 00:06:35,920 --> 00:06:38,320 They would start to search you if you talked back, 106 00:06:38,480 --> 00:06:40,200 if you happen to have anything on you. 107 00:06:40,360 --> 00:06:43,440 You were in for a beating and being put in jail. 108 00:06:45,280 --> 00:06:49,440 BEAN: What’s incredible is that even amongst all this hardship 109 00:06:49,600 --> 00:06:54,240 and discrimination, the brutal police repression and segregation, 110 00:06:54,400 --> 00:06:57,160 creativity found a way. 111 00:06:57,320 --> 00:06:59,520 - (jazzy organ music) 112 00:07:02,600 --> 00:07:04,360 HARRIS: When we think about Harlem in the 1920s, 113 00:07:04,520 --> 00:07:06,640 we tend to think about the Harlem Renaissance, 114 00:07:06,800 --> 00:07:10,320 that cultural expression where artists, musicians, 115 00:07:10,480 --> 00:07:15,240 actors, painters, sculptors are using art as a vehicle 116 00:07:15,400 --> 00:07:18,360 to really challenge race gender and class discrimination, 117 00:07:18,520 --> 00:07:20,840 racist caricatures, racist silent movies 118 00:07:21,000 --> 00:07:24,800 like the film Birth of a Nation, which comes out in 1910s. 119 00:07:24,960 --> 00:07:28,560 BEAN: So, Harlem is this incredibly vibrant cultural epicentre, 120 00:07:28,720 --> 00:07:30,600 a real phenomenon. 121 00:07:30,760 --> 00:07:34,840 It's around this time that St Clair made her mind up 122 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:37,080 that she wants more. 123 00:07:39,760 --> 00:07:45,000 But those economic hardships weren't going anywhere. 124 00:07:45,160 --> 00:07:49,400 How is someone like Stephanie supposed to change her lot? 125 00:07:49,560 --> 00:07:54,120 - For Harlem’s poorer population, there was only really one option 126 00:07:54,280 --> 00:07:55,600 to strike it rich. 127 00:07:58,600 --> 00:08:00,840 The Numbers Game was like a people’s lottery 128 00:08:01,000 --> 00:08:03,920 in a time when Black people weren’t even allowed bank accounts. 129 00:08:04,080 --> 00:08:05,720 - What you want? - Give me 500, will you? 130 00:08:05,880 --> 00:08:06,880 - You want 500? - 309. 131 00:08:08,720 --> 00:08:10,080 78. 591. 132 00:08:11,000 --> 00:08:13,400 BEAN: Players would write their lucky three-digit numbers 133 00:08:13,560 --> 00:08:17,480 on slips of paper, and runners would run these slips 134 00:08:17,640 --> 00:08:20,720 and the bets between the gamblers and the bankers. 135 00:08:20,880 --> 00:08:24,040 The winning numbers were chosen from the last three digits 136 00:08:24,200 --> 00:08:27,360 of the daily trading totals of the New York Stock Exchange, 137 00:08:27,520 --> 00:08:32,560 which, crucially, made the game impossible to tamper with or fix. 138 00:08:33,680 --> 00:08:36,560 - So the New York Clearing House is a financial institution 139 00:08:36,720 --> 00:08:38,200 handling millions of dollars every day. 140 00:08:38,360 --> 00:08:40,760 Then they publish in the paper, 141 00:08:40,920 --> 00:08:46,840 "Yesterday we handled $57,982,431.91.” 142 00:08:47,000 --> 00:08:51,200 And so the 431, those three digits before the decimal point, 143 00:08:51,360 --> 00:08:53,320 that becomes the New York number. 144 00:08:53,480 --> 00:08:55,880 - Hitting the number is huge for anybody 145 00:08:56,040 --> 00:08:58,800 that gives you the opportunity to take care of oneself 146 00:08:58,960 --> 00:09:00,000 and one's family. 147 00:09:00,160 --> 00:09:05,280 So if you hit the number, your rent is paid for months. 148 00:09:05,440 --> 00:09:08,560 - The numbers game was something everyone could get involved with, 149 00:09:08,720 --> 00:09:12,280 and Stephanie St Clair wanted a piece of that pie. 150 00:09:13,560 --> 00:09:15,160 BEAN: But the question is, 151 00:09:15,320 --> 00:09:18,520 how was it going to change Stephanie St Clair the house cleaner... 152 00:09:19,560 --> 00:09:23,320 ..into Stephanie St Clair the mob boss? 153 00:09:27,200 --> 00:09:29,200 - (jazzy piano) 154 00:09:29,360 --> 00:09:31,080 BEAN: Prohibition in 1920 155 00:09:31,960 --> 00:09:34,200 would change the course of the nation's history. 156 00:09:34,360 --> 00:09:35,680 - (blues singing) 157 00:09:35,840 --> 00:09:39,160 BEAN: The entire country would ban the sale and production of alcohol 158 00:09:39,320 --> 00:09:42,800 to try and curb its social ills. 159 00:09:42,960 --> 00:09:46,680 - Prohibition lends itself to the creation of Harlem 160 00:09:46,840 --> 00:09:48,600 as a sort of vice district. 161 00:09:48,760 --> 00:09:52,280 The police funnel illegal alcohol activity 162 00:09:52,440 --> 00:09:55,280 into this particular neighbourhood. 163 00:09:55,440 --> 00:09:59,080 The police are willing to allow illegal activity to go on, 164 00:09:59,240 --> 00:10:01,080 provided that they themselves get a cut. 165 00:10:03,520 --> 00:10:06,240 An association emerges between Harlem and vice activity. 166 00:10:07,840 --> 00:10:11,280 That’s part of why you would see something as common as 167 00:10:11,440 --> 00:10:12,720 people betting on street corners. 168 00:10:12,880 --> 00:10:16,120 BEAN: The Prohibition racket was controlled by the Mafia, 169 00:10:16,280 --> 00:10:18,600 which meant dealing with legendary mob bosses 170 00:10:18,760 --> 00:10:21,160 like Lucky Luciano, Joe Masseria 171 00:10:23,120 --> 00:10:24,280 and Arnold Rothstein, 172 00:10:25,800 --> 00:10:29,240 the gangster who allegedly rigged the 1919 World Series. 173 00:10:30,800 --> 00:10:35,360 The Black community was cut out of Prohibition entirely, 174 00:10:35,520 --> 00:10:37,280 so they created something of their own. 175 00:10:39,560 --> 00:10:41,080 So who was Stephanie St Clair? 176 00:10:42,440 --> 00:10:46,120 Well, at this point in time, she wasn’t really anybody. 177 00:10:46,280 --> 00:10:48,760 But all that was about to change. 178 00:10:53,200 --> 00:10:56,960 The Numbers Game was an illegal game anyone could play. 179 00:10:58,280 --> 00:10:59,920 Which could change your life. 180 00:11:00,080 --> 00:11:02,240 The People’s Lottery, of sorts. 181 00:11:02,400 --> 00:11:05,280 Pretty much anybody can start taking bets 182 00:11:05,440 --> 00:11:08,960 as long as they've got either the cash to pay out winners 183 00:11:09,120 --> 00:11:10,720 or the moxie to chance their arm 184 00:11:10,880 --> 00:11:12,840 until they build up a big enough pot. 185 00:11:14,200 --> 00:11:15,680 With no startup costs and few overheads, 186 00:11:17,720 --> 00:11:22,200 it's easier to see why it's so appealing to the working classes. 187 00:11:22,360 --> 00:11:25,080 - Eventually these central figures come to be called bankers, 188 00:11:25,240 --> 00:11:27,360 people with a large enough pool of money 189 00:11:27,520 --> 00:11:30,360 that they could pay out multiple wins on a given bet. 190 00:11:30,520 --> 00:11:34,160 - It was a way for Black people to enter the banking system, 191 00:11:34,320 --> 00:11:36,320 a way for money to be generated. 192 00:11:36,480 --> 00:11:39,720 The Numbers Game was something that everybody could get involved with, 193 00:11:39,880 --> 00:11:41,360 everyone could play, 194 00:11:41,520 --> 00:11:43,440 and there was the potential of winning. 195 00:11:43,600 --> 00:11:47,480 And Stephanie St Clair wanted a piece of that pie. 196 00:11:50,600 --> 00:11:54,120 In 1922, Stephanie St Clair’s fortunes took a dramatic turn. 197 00:11:56,160 --> 00:11:59,640 She managed to accumulate $30,000, 198 00:11:59,800 --> 00:12:01,000 a huge sum for the era 199 00:12:01,160 --> 00:12:05,600 and more than enough to launch her own numbers operation. 200 00:12:05,760 --> 00:12:10,080 - Ted Poston, a journalist at the time, did offer one theory. 201 00:12:10,240 --> 00:12:13,280 Stephanie herself was a numbers player. 202 00:12:13,440 --> 00:12:17,440 According to Poston's research, St Clair hit the number 203 00:12:17,600 --> 00:12:21,160 and used her winnings to set up her own policy shop. 204 00:12:22,320 --> 00:12:26,640 HARRIS: It's very unique for a woman and a Black person 205 00:12:26,800 --> 00:12:28,960 to run an illegal operation, 206 00:12:29,120 --> 00:12:32,360 because African-Americans at this particular time 207 00:12:32,520 --> 00:12:36,280 are supposed to be confined to certain stations in life. 208 00:12:36,440 --> 00:12:40,640 She's really stepping out of the boundaries of race. 209 00:12:40,800 --> 00:12:44,280 She's entering a male-dominated space. 210 00:12:44,440 --> 00:12:48,680 - No-one is doubting that men, historically outnumber women 211 00:12:48,840 --> 00:12:50,640 in nearly all types of crime. 212 00:12:50,800 --> 00:12:54,640 So people like Stephanie St Clair, who climbed the ranks, were rare. 213 00:12:57,360 --> 00:12:58,680 LLOYD: In the numbers racket, 214 00:12:58,840 --> 00:13:02,160 the collection enforcement were essential in dangerous jobs. 215 00:13:03,120 --> 00:13:06,440 Runners carried large amounts of cash through city streets, 216 00:13:06,600 --> 00:13:08,880 making them prime targets for thieves. 217 00:13:09,040 --> 00:13:12,400 If you were a collector, this meant knocking on doors, 218 00:13:12,560 --> 00:13:15,240 where you might not walk away. 219 00:13:15,400 --> 00:13:19,280 There were no courts to turn to, only street justice. 220 00:13:21,680 --> 00:13:23,360 - One of the things that's really interesting 221 00:13:23,520 --> 00:13:28,120 is that it seems like she used other people, particularly men, 222 00:13:28,280 --> 00:13:30,320 to keep her hands clean. 223 00:13:30,480 --> 00:13:33,720 She is meting out punishment, she's putting down and making sure 224 00:13:33,880 --> 00:13:35,120 that you don't defy her, 225 00:13:35,280 --> 00:13:37,800 but she's not doing these acts themselves. 226 00:13:38,800 --> 00:13:41,960 BEAN: One of the most significant people who would work with Stephanie 227 00:13:42,120 --> 00:13:43,520 was Bumpy Johnson. 228 00:13:45,520 --> 00:13:48,280 He would later become the godfather of Harlem, 229 00:13:48,440 --> 00:13:51,520 but right now, he's her toughest enforcer. 230 00:13:51,680 --> 00:13:54,560 We can see here from civil records 231 00:13:54,720 --> 00:13:59,360 that he was born Ellsworth Johnson in Charleston, South Carolina 232 00:14:00,280 --> 00:14:01,280 in October 1905. 233 00:14:02,800 --> 00:14:06,440 He'd eventually become Stephanie's right-hand man. 234 00:14:06,600 --> 00:14:08,240 - (doorbell tinkles) 235 00:14:10,520 --> 00:14:11,720 - You know not to cross her, 236 00:14:11,880 --> 00:14:14,840 because you hear stories of what happens when you take her money. 237 00:14:15,000 --> 00:14:16,840 You hear stories of what happens 238 00:14:17,000 --> 00:14:20,920 when you try to scam her or fudge the numbers 239 00:14:21,080 --> 00:14:23,040 or not pay up when it’s your turn. 240 00:14:23,200 --> 00:14:26,280 And that includes her using her right-hand man, Bumpy, 241 00:14:26,440 --> 00:14:28,720 in order to be an enforcer. 242 00:14:28,880 --> 00:14:33,400 - Men didn’t work for women, but here you had Stephanie St Clair, 243 00:14:33,560 --> 00:14:37,120 who had men working for her, men answering to her. 244 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:42,080 Bumpy apparently said Stephanie was one woman he would never cross. 245 00:14:46,320 --> 00:14:49,880 FARMER: Bumpy met out punishment in the form of beatings, 246 00:14:50,040 --> 00:14:52,240 taking people’s lives. 247 00:14:52,400 --> 00:14:56,120 LLOYD: Without Stephanie St Clair, there'd be no Bumpy Johnson. 248 00:14:56,280 --> 00:14:58,440 And without Bumpy Johnson, 249 00:14:58,600 --> 00:15:01,720 you wouldn’t get legendary gangster Frank Lucas. 250 00:15:01,880 --> 00:15:07,880 And so the Queen of Harlem gave birth to these demi-gods, 251 00:15:09,400 --> 00:15:11,760 these secular gangster gods. 252 00:15:14,280 --> 00:15:17,760 BEAN: By 1928, Stephanie’s reputation 253 00:15:17,920 --> 00:15:21,440 as a woman not to be crossed had spread through New York. 254 00:15:21,600 --> 00:15:27,600 HARRIS: Stephanie St Clair, in the late 1920s, lived at 409 Edgecombe, 255 00:15:29,480 --> 00:15:31,560 which is in Sugar Hill in Harlem. 256 00:15:31,720 --> 00:15:33,520 And this is a neighbourhood and a building 257 00:15:33,680 --> 00:15:39,120 where some of the most prominent Black elite folks lived. 258 00:15:39,280 --> 00:15:42,560 - On the one hand, she is respected in her community, 259 00:15:42,720 --> 00:15:46,320 but a lot of people don't think that she's a respectable person 260 00:15:46,480 --> 00:15:49,080 because she was engaged in illicit trade. 261 00:15:49,240 --> 00:15:52,720 She certainly was a lady in a lot of ways, 262 00:15:52,880 --> 00:15:55,280 but she also was a criminal. 263 00:15:56,960 --> 00:16:00,480 LLOYD: Stephanie decided to get her own voice out there, 264 00:16:00,640 --> 00:16:04,000 to let the people of Harlem know who she really was 265 00:16:04,160 --> 00:16:06,840 and for whom she was fighting. 266 00:16:07,000 --> 00:16:11,160 - Black newspapers become this sort of venue 267 00:16:11,320 --> 00:16:15,240 for Black people to learn about various things happening 268 00:16:15,400 --> 00:16:17,320 across the country. 269 00:16:17,480 --> 00:16:20,160 And in New York City, The New York Amsterdam News 270 00:16:20,320 --> 00:16:23,520 is a paper that St Clair turns 271 00:16:23,680 --> 00:16:26,960 to kind of air out her grievances about the state of Harlem, 272 00:16:27,120 --> 00:16:30,800 the state of Black New Yorkers, and also about the police. 273 00:16:30,960 --> 00:16:34,120 And her ad is particularly stunning because on this ad 274 00:16:34,280 --> 00:16:36,760 Stephanie St Clair always has an image of herself. 275 00:16:39,720 --> 00:16:42,120 - Although very few photos of her survive, 276 00:16:42,280 --> 00:16:46,080 we can see that image was incredibly important to Stephanie. 277 00:16:46,240 --> 00:16:49,280 She never allowed herself to be photographed 278 00:16:49,440 --> 00:16:55,000 without her hair, her makeup, her clothes all perfectly styled. 279 00:16:55,160 --> 00:16:57,240 - Stephanie St Clair loves the media. 280 00:16:57,400 --> 00:17:00,120 She's a really flamboyant person. 281 00:17:00,280 --> 00:17:03,680 It's not a mystery who she is. She wants people to know. 282 00:17:03,840 --> 00:17:06,960 She is dressed to the nines. Her hair is done. 283 00:17:07,120 --> 00:17:09,080 She always has a fur coat. 284 00:17:09,240 --> 00:17:10,760 She has on, you know, jewellery. 285 00:17:10,920 --> 00:17:13,440 She's just looking like, you know, a ten. 286 00:17:13,600 --> 00:17:16,120 - She liked to be seen. 287 00:17:16,280 --> 00:17:17,960 And seen looking well. 288 00:17:18,120 --> 00:17:21,160 She commanded space, she was a queen. 289 00:17:22,680 --> 00:17:24,040 - When she stepped out in Harlem, 290 00:17:24,200 --> 00:17:26,840 every picture that you see of her in the newspaper, 291 00:17:27,000 --> 00:17:30,240 she’s dressed from head to toe. She’s got fine jewels on, 292 00:17:30,400 --> 00:17:34,440 she’s walking slowly to make sure that you know who she is. 293 00:17:35,960 --> 00:17:39,640 - It certainly is something that all people who do what she does, 294 00:17:39,800 --> 00:17:42,560 typically engage in, which is this costume. 295 00:17:42,720 --> 00:17:44,480 I think that shows status and power. 296 00:17:44,640 --> 00:17:47,440 And she needed to show that to people to maintain her position. 297 00:17:47,600 --> 00:17:50,800 She wanted to wear nice clothes and she enjoyed that. 298 00:17:50,960 --> 00:17:53,080 It also is very much a part of that uniform, 299 00:17:53,240 --> 00:17:56,160 that sense of power and control. 300 00:17:56,320 --> 00:17:58,600 "I’m in control, take me seriously. 301 00:17:58,760 --> 00:18:01,680 I’m playing the same game that you guys are playing." 302 00:18:01,840 --> 00:18:05,160 So whereas it was mostly men playing that game, 303 00:18:05,320 --> 00:18:09,360 I think her costume was needed to help her have that armour 304 00:18:09,520 --> 00:18:11,840 to step into the arena and do what they were doing 305 00:18:12,000 --> 00:18:13,160 and kind of match them as well. 306 00:18:13,320 --> 00:18:17,120 BEAN: A few miles north of Harlem, in the backstreets of the Bronx, 307 00:18:17,280 --> 00:18:20,520 an ambitious young gangster was casting an envious eye 308 00:18:20,680 --> 00:18:24,000 towards Stephanie’s grip on the Harlem numbers racket. 309 00:18:25,240 --> 00:18:27,760 And his name... was Dutch Schultz. 310 00:18:29,080 --> 00:18:32,880 LLOYD: He was described by Edgar Hoover as public enemy number one. 311 00:18:33,040 --> 00:18:36,320 The Mob couldn’t even handle him. He was a loose cannon. 312 00:18:36,480 --> 00:18:39,480 BEAN: In time, their rivalry would become one of the fiercest 313 00:18:39,640 --> 00:18:42,360 and bloodiest in New York gangland history. 314 00:18:42,520 --> 00:18:45,480 LLOYD: Stephanie wasn’t just fighting for herself. 315 00:18:45,640 --> 00:18:49,640 She was fighting for her whole community. 316 00:18:49,800 --> 00:18:52,280 She was a boss who made a fortune, but gave back. 317 00:18:52,440 --> 00:18:53,800 Gave back to the community. 318 00:18:53,960 --> 00:18:56,920 If someone needed a hospital bill paid, she would do it. 319 00:18:57,080 --> 00:19:01,160 She wanted to keep the money within Harlem. 320 00:19:01,320 --> 00:19:03,280 GREEN: The public viewed Stephanie St Clair 321 00:19:03,440 --> 00:19:06,240 as a very shrewd woman who had a very nasty temper. 322 00:19:06,400 --> 00:19:07,960 But she also had a nurturing side. 323 00:19:08,120 --> 00:19:11,000 She was a huge champion of her community, 324 00:19:11,160 --> 00:19:15,640 which is shown by the number of people she employed in the business. 325 00:19:15,800 --> 00:19:18,080 She was an activist for Black Advancement. 326 00:19:18,240 --> 00:19:20,400 She educated her community about their rights. 327 00:19:20,560 --> 00:19:22,880 She would speak out about discrimination. 328 00:19:23,040 --> 00:19:26,360 The fact that she was so loyal to her community 329 00:19:26,520 --> 00:19:27,920 meant that this was returned to her. 330 00:19:28,080 --> 00:19:32,360 So, it was a sound strategy that paid dividends to her business. 331 00:19:32,520 --> 00:19:34,280 I think that’s largely the reason 332 00:19:34,440 --> 00:19:38,320 that she was able to run such a successful operation 333 00:19:38,480 --> 00:19:42,560 that was, at the height, able to bring in $200,000 a year. 334 00:19:42,720 --> 00:19:47,120 BEAN: $200,000 a year in 1928 335 00:19:47,280 --> 00:19:49,800 would be worth over three million today. 336 00:19:51,280 --> 00:19:55,440 As the money starts rolling in, so too do the corrupt cops, 337 00:19:55,600 --> 00:19:57,040 who all want a cut. 338 00:19:59,000 --> 00:20:02,640 - At this particular time, the NYPD is very corrupt. 339 00:20:02,800 --> 00:20:07,440 You have officers who are involved in various vice rackets, 340 00:20:07,600 --> 00:20:12,000 the numbers racket, the paid enforcement racket. 341 00:20:12,160 --> 00:20:16,080 Police officers are involved in the sex trade. 342 00:20:16,240 --> 00:20:22,040 Some officers are known to assault, harass, physically, sexually, 343 00:20:22,200 --> 00:20:25,800 Black New Yorkers especially, you know, African-American women. 344 00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:29,520 - Anyone who wanted to be a criminal and had any sense, 345 00:20:30,840 --> 00:20:33,960 was gonna pay off the police so that they could go about their business 346 00:20:34,120 --> 00:20:37,040 in a relatively inconspicuous fashion. 347 00:20:37,200 --> 00:20:42,120 St Clair did this. However, she also spoke out about the police 348 00:20:42,280 --> 00:20:45,800 and especially how much they were harassing her employees and herself. 349 00:20:45,960 --> 00:20:50,920 And so her actions were very closely followed all throughout her reign. 350 00:20:52,200 --> 00:20:55,560 In 1929, she was arrested for possessing policy slips, 351 00:20:55,720 --> 00:20:59,480 which is considered to be a very trumped-up charge. 352 00:21:02,240 --> 00:21:04,240 - She does not hide that she is a banker. 353 00:21:04,400 --> 00:21:07,160 She actually testifies that she's a banker. 354 00:21:07,320 --> 00:21:09,840 And she only does that because she wants to expose the police. 355 00:21:10,000 --> 00:21:14,760 So, as early as 1929, she's talking about, “I'm a banker, 356 00:21:14,920 --> 00:21:17,800 but at the same time I was not supposed to be arrested 357 00:21:17,960 --> 00:21:21,680 because I paid for protection from the NYPD." 358 00:21:21,840 --> 00:21:25,520 - She wrote these open letters, saying, "I’ve paid my ice." 359 00:21:25,680 --> 00:21:30,640 Ice was the kickbacks which you gave to the police. 360 00:21:30,800 --> 00:21:33,040 HARRIS: So, for her, it's exposing herself, 361 00:21:33,200 --> 00:21:35,520 but she's definitely gonna put it on the record 362 00:21:35,680 --> 00:21:37,760 that the NYPD is corrupt. 363 00:21:42,120 --> 00:21:46,800 LLOYD: In 1930, police corruption in New York was so widespread 364 00:21:46,960 --> 00:21:50,280 that President Roosevelt ordered Judge Samuel Seabury 365 00:21:50,440 --> 00:21:53,640 to lead a public investigation. 366 00:21:56,320 --> 00:22:00,120 - During that investigation, I proved that corruption existed 367 00:22:00,280 --> 00:22:02,880 in many of the departments of the city government, 368 00:22:03,040 --> 00:22:06,440 and all of those departments were honeycombed 369 00:22:06,600 --> 00:22:08,560 with political appointees. 370 00:22:10,800 --> 00:22:13,720 - Stephanie St Clair will go before the Seabury Commission 371 00:22:13,880 --> 00:22:17,000 to testify about vice rackets 372 00:22:17,160 --> 00:22:19,480 and the participation of the NYPD in them. 373 00:22:23,000 --> 00:22:25,920 - Due to her testimony, over a dozen police officers, 374 00:22:26,080 --> 00:22:28,800 including a lieutenant, were then suspended from the NYPD. 375 00:22:30,160 --> 00:22:32,720 LLOYD: She was definitely fearless. 376 00:22:32,880 --> 00:22:35,240 She stood up to corrupt NYPD blue. 377 00:22:35,400 --> 00:22:39,840 For anyone, let alone a Black woman at that time, 378 00:22:40,000 --> 00:22:44,040 to literally be pointing out corrupt police officers in court, 379 00:22:44,200 --> 00:22:46,160 naming and shaming them! 380 00:22:46,320 --> 00:22:52,320 - In a lifetime of bold moves, that one might have been the boldest. 381 00:22:56,360 --> 00:23:00,280 LLOYD: Although St Clair managed to get the NYPD off her back, 382 00:23:00,440 --> 00:23:03,520 she still had the problem of an ambitious, aggressive gang 383 00:23:03,680 --> 00:23:09,040 from the Bronx trying to muscle in on her turf. 384 00:23:10,000 --> 00:23:13,080 - Prohibition is repealed, 385 00:23:13,240 --> 00:23:17,160 leaving bootleggers like Dutch Shultz looking for new ways 386 00:23:17,320 --> 00:23:18,560 to make money. 387 00:23:18,720 --> 00:23:22,120 And what could be more appealing than muscling in 388 00:23:22,280 --> 00:23:23,800 on the lucrative Numbers Game? 389 00:23:23,960 --> 00:23:28,000 GREEN: Dutch Shultz especially was known for making bold moves 390 00:23:28,160 --> 00:23:31,280 to take over the bootlegging game in the Bronx. 391 00:23:31,440 --> 00:23:34,920 He was using those same tactics to take over Numbers Game operations 392 00:23:35,080 --> 00:23:36,080 in Harlem. 393 00:23:36,240 --> 00:23:39,120 BEAN: But Stephanie St Clair said no. 394 00:23:40,400 --> 00:23:42,200 Harlem was about to become a war zone. 395 00:23:51,360 --> 00:23:52,480 New York, 1933. 396 00:23:55,440 --> 00:23:58,440 Prohibition is repealed and America celebrates. 397 00:23:58,600 --> 00:24:02,880 But as the liquor flowed, so too did the blood. 398 00:24:03,040 --> 00:24:06,480 Among the many gangsters Stephanie had to deal with, 399 00:24:06,640 --> 00:24:08,720 none were more vicious, more ruthless 400 00:24:08,880 --> 00:24:11,040 than one of the city's biggest bootleggers, 401 00:24:11,200 --> 00:24:13,960 notorious for torture and murder... 402 00:24:14,120 --> 00:24:15,560 Dutch Shultz. 403 00:24:19,800 --> 00:24:21,720 REPORTER: Shultz was not known for his gentle ways 404 00:24:21,880 --> 00:24:23,080 with the opposition. 405 00:24:23,240 --> 00:24:25,760 He and his mob kept New York City in a constant state 406 00:24:25,920 --> 00:24:27,960 of violence and bloody gunplay. 407 00:24:28,120 --> 00:24:31,840 This was the face that struck terror in rival mobsters. 408 00:24:33,600 --> 00:24:37,600 - Real name, Arthur Flegenheimer. He was born in the Bronx. 409 00:24:37,760 --> 00:24:40,680 Eventually becomes a bootlegger for several crime families 410 00:24:40,840 --> 00:24:42,040 in New York City. 411 00:24:42,200 --> 00:24:44,960 He was so successful at that, that he was known as 412 00:24:45,120 --> 00:24:47,080 the Beer Baron of the Bronx. 413 00:24:47,240 --> 00:24:50,800 And he also made money through paid protection. 414 00:24:52,640 --> 00:24:57,160 - Dutch Shultz was a notorious, ruthless mobster, 415 00:24:57,320 --> 00:25:01,600 who made his fortune during Prohibition. 416 00:25:01,760 --> 00:25:07,400 Shultz had made a name for himself by removing obstacles in his way. 417 00:25:07,560 --> 00:25:09,800 And those obstacles were people. 418 00:25:09,960 --> 00:25:14,200 He would torture people, he had people killed. 419 00:25:14,360 --> 00:25:18,680 Dutch Shultz, it's estimated that at the height of his success 420 00:25:18,840 --> 00:25:21,720 was bringing in about 20 million dollars a year, 421 00:25:21,880 --> 00:25:25,000 which for that time is a huge, huge sum of money. 422 00:25:25,160 --> 00:25:30,720 So when Prohibition ended, obviously gangsters then 423 00:25:30,880 --> 00:25:34,000 were looking at other ventures to make up for these lost profits, 424 00:25:34,160 --> 00:25:35,160 which were ginormous. 425 00:25:37,400 --> 00:25:41,400 HARRIS: During the early 1930s, we see many white racketeers 426 00:25:41,560 --> 00:25:44,920 whose funds have dried up because Prohibition is over 427 00:25:45,080 --> 00:25:47,360 look for new avenues of income. 428 00:25:47,520 --> 00:25:53,280 The Numbers Game was seen as the welfare clients' Wall Street, 429 00:25:53,440 --> 00:25:55,600 it was called the ‘N’ word pool. 430 00:25:56,720 --> 00:25:58,920 This is a game that only Blacks play. 431 00:25:59,080 --> 00:26:01,040 This is a game that’s not profitable. 432 00:26:01,200 --> 00:26:04,440 But once many of the Black racketeers started getting arrested 433 00:26:04,600 --> 00:26:07,760 and some of their revenue was printed in the newspapers, 434 00:26:07,920 --> 00:26:12,240 white racketeers like Shultz wanted to get into that game. 435 00:26:12,400 --> 00:26:15,320 And many of them started to force people out of the business. 436 00:26:15,480 --> 00:26:18,440 GREEN: Dutch Shultz had power, 437 00:26:18,600 --> 00:26:21,120 and he had the support of people like Jimmy Hines, 438 00:26:21,280 --> 00:26:25,720 who was a Tammany Hall political machine, Democratic boss. 439 00:26:25,880 --> 00:26:28,880 He was a huge, huge threat, and that’s why so many people, 440 00:26:29,040 --> 00:26:33,080 rather than try and fight him, just succumbed to his wishes, 441 00:26:33,240 --> 00:26:36,240 whether that be paying him a portion of their business 442 00:26:36,400 --> 00:26:38,160 or handing it over entirely. 443 00:26:39,640 --> 00:26:42,920 HARRIS: And Stephanie St Clair was one of his targets. 444 00:26:43,080 --> 00:26:44,320 - And she was like, “No!” 445 00:26:48,200 --> 00:26:50,480 And with that, all hell broke loose. 446 00:26:50,640 --> 00:26:52,720 Harlem was at war. 447 00:26:54,080 --> 00:26:58,000 You can go anywhere in America. But you’re not coming into Harlem. 448 00:26:58,160 --> 00:27:00,280 Harlem is ours, Harlem is for Black people. 449 00:27:00,440 --> 00:27:04,440 Stephanie said she’d resist any attempt by Shultz 450 00:27:04,600 --> 00:27:05,960 to breach her borders. 451 00:27:06,120 --> 00:27:09,840 - And she did. Shultz sent in his soldiers, 452 00:27:12,360 --> 00:27:14,240 armed in forces who used intimidation, 453 00:27:14,400 --> 00:27:15,480 beatings... 454 00:27:18,040 --> 00:27:20,640 ..bombings and murder 455 00:27:20,800 --> 00:27:22,640 to muscle in on St Clair’s territory. 456 00:27:24,280 --> 00:27:27,840 But as well as fighting back with her own network of gangsters, 457 00:27:28,000 --> 00:27:29,840 she was well ahead of her time 458 00:27:30,000 --> 00:27:34,000 when it came to the weaponisation of public opinion. 459 00:27:34,160 --> 00:27:39,480 - The beef between those two really on St Clair’s part is a public beef. 460 00:27:39,640 --> 00:27:44,080 Both of them make this about saying things about one another 461 00:27:44,240 --> 00:27:46,320 in the newspaper. 462 00:27:46,480 --> 00:27:50,320 St Clair is quick to go to the New York Amsterdam News, 463 00:27:50,480 --> 00:27:51,760 which is a Black newspaper 464 00:27:51,920 --> 00:27:54,840 and talk about Schultz and other white racketeers 465 00:27:55,000 --> 00:27:57,680 coming into Harlem and taking over this game. 466 00:27:57,840 --> 00:28:01,280 And of course, wanting to project a sense of toughness 467 00:28:01,440 --> 00:28:06,160 and wanting to really keep what she's grown. She's like, "No!" 468 00:28:07,160 --> 00:28:09,440 FARMER: Stephanie said, “I’m not afraid of Dutch Shultz 469 00:28:10,640 --> 00:28:12,440 or any other man living, he’ll never touch me. 470 00:28:12,600 --> 00:28:15,640 I am sane and smart and fearless.” 471 00:28:15,800 --> 00:28:19,640 LLOYD: She went to the newspapers and wrote articles, 472 00:28:19,800 --> 00:28:23,880 calling on anyone who was buying a ticket, to buy Black. 473 00:28:24,920 --> 00:28:28,680 HARRIS: This is many ways is a form of economic nationalism. 474 00:28:28,840 --> 00:28:31,600 If whites are treating you in particular types of ways, 475 00:28:31,760 --> 00:28:33,640 you should not do business with these people. 476 00:28:33,800 --> 00:28:37,760 So, challenging Shultz in a newspaper 477 00:28:37,920 --> 00:28:40,360 is just one of a variety of ways that St Clair speaks out 478 00:28:40,520 --> 00:28:43,840 against white encroachment. 479 00:28:46,800 --> 00:28:49,880 LLOYD: The rivalry between Dutch and Stephanie would escalate. 480 00:28:51,200 --> 00:28:54,680 Dutch once sent an underling to intimidate her. 481 00:28:54,840 --> 00:28:56,440 St Clair pushed him in a closet 482 00:28:56,600 --> 00:29:01,080 and told her bodyguards to, quote, “Get rid of him." 483 00:29:01,240 --> 00:29:05,640 - She dramatically walks through Harlem 484 00:29:05,800 --> 00:29:08,160 and goes to white businesses, 485 00:29:08,320 --> 00:29:11,800 which serve as numbers drops for white racketeers, 486 00:29:11,960 --> 00:29:15,720 and she goes into those businesses, she trashes the place, 487 00:29:15,880 --> 00:29:17,520 and tells the white business owners 488 00:29:17,680 --> 00:29:21,720 to get out of Harlem, you know, this is Black game. 489 00:29:21,880 --> 00:29:24,480 Just really causes a spectacle at some of these stores. 490 00:29:25,640 --> 00:29:27,360 FARMER: Legend has it that at some point 491 00:29:27,520 --> 00:29:31,280 she even had to go into hiding because he had put a hit out on her, 492 00:29:31,440 --> 00:29:36,720 and she retaliated in kind, both in print and on the streets. 493 00:29:36,880 --> 00:29:40,080 - She refused to let this man walk over her 494 00:29:40,240 --> 00:29:43,120 and take her business that she'd worked so hard for 495 00:29:43,280 --> 00:29:46,360 and that was so successful for her. 496 00:29:46,520 --> 00:29:48,640 She waged an all-out war. 497 00:29:49,880 --> 00:29:54,160 It’s estimated that it was responsible for about 40 murders. 498 00:29:54,320 --> 00:29:58,480 She fed information to the police about Schultz's operations, 499 00:29:58,640 --> 00:30:02,600 and due to this, they were able to infiltrate his house 500 00:30:02,760 --> 00:30:05,560 and seize 12 million dollars of his money 501 00:30:05,720 --> 00:30:08,920 and arrest a lot of his employees. 502 00:30:09,080 --> 00:30:10,600 LLOYD: She went toe to toe. 503 00:30:10,760 --> 00:30:13,600 I know so much of the violence is vilified. 504 00:30:14,520 --> 00:30:18,200 But I think we’ve got to remember that we’re talking gangsters. 505 00:30:18,360 --> 00:30:22,640 You couldn’t go to small claims court. This isn’t a civil matter. 506 00:30:22,800 --> 00:30:27,080 People had to work out their grievances on the street, 507 00:30:27,240 --> 00:30:28,800 and we’re talking millions of dollars. 508 00:30:28,960 --> 00:30:31,560 I think it’s great that she stood up to him. 509 00:30:31,720 --> 00:30:35,040 BEAN: But Dutch Shultz was soon get his comeuppance 510 00:30:35,200 --> 00:30:36,800 for defying the Commission, 511 00:30:36,960 --> 00:30:40,320 the governing body of organised crime in New York. 512 00:30:40,480 --> 00:30:44,240 LLOYD: Dutch Shultz was being prosecuted for tax evasion 513 00:30:44,400 --> 00:30:46,720 by District Attorney Thomas Dewey. 514 00:30:46,880 --> 00:30:51,080 - Racketeers succeed only so long as they can prey upon 515 00:30:51,240 --> 00:30:56,520 the fear or weakness of disorganised or timid victims. 516 00:30:56,680 --> 00:31:01,120 LLOYD: He asked the Organised Crime Commission if he could kill Dewey, 517 00:31:01,280 --> 00:31:04,200 but they unanimously denied the request 518 00:31:04,360 --> 00:31:06,920 for fear of bringing the full weight of the government 519 00:31:07,080 --> 00:31:08,720 down on all of them. 520 00:31:08,880 --> 00:31:13,680 But Shultz put the hit out on Dewey regardless. 521 00:31:13,840 --> 00:31:18,360 Here was the loose cannon of Dutch, doing what he wanted again. 522 00:31:19,160 --> 00:31:23,000 So the Commission hired Murder Inc 523 00:31:23,160 --> 00:31:25,680 to take Shultz out. 524 00:31:28,360 --> 00:31:32,040 Murder Inc, or the Syndicate, was an organised crime group 525 00:31:32,200 --> 00:31:35,520 that acted as the enforcement arm of the Commission, 526 00:31:35,680 --> 00:31:37,920 led by Charles Lucky Luciano... 527 00:31:39,120 --> 00:31:40,960 ..Meyer Lansky... 528 00:31:41,120 --> 00:31:44,000 ..and Bugsy Siegel. 529 00:31:44,160 --> 00:31:47,520 Incredibly, they were responsible for between 400 and 1,000 530 00:31:48,840 --> 00:31:50,720 contract killings in that period alone. 531 00:31:55,600 --> 00:31:57,520 BEAN: It’s 10:15pm on October 23rd, 1935. 532 00:32:00,560 --> 00:32:04,560 Dutch Shultz is in the restroom of one of his favourite restaurants, 533 00:32:04,720 --> 00:32:08,320 the Palace Chop House in Newark, New Jersey. 534 00:32:08,480 --> 00:32:13,200 Two gunmen - Charles Workmen and Mendy Weiss - 535 00:32:13,360 --> 00:32:15,280 burst through the door and opened fire. 536 00:32:17,840 --> 00:32:21,600 LLOYD: The Commission took no chances. They needed Dutch dead. 537 00:32:22,480 --> 00:32:25,840 The gunmen intentionally used rusty bullets 538 00:32:26,000 --> 00:32:29,800 to increase the chances of sepsis and infection 539 00:32:29,960 --> 00:32:33,280 in case the gunshots themselves were not fatal. 540 00:32:33,440 --> 00:32:36,080 - Wanting to have the final word, 541 00:32:36,240 --> 00:32:40,360 Stephanie immediately sends a telegram to her enemy 542 00:32:40,520 --> 00:32:45,400 on his deathbed, signed "Madam Queen of Policy." 543 00:32:45,560 --> 00:32:49,240 It read, "As you sow, so shall you reap." 544 00:32:51,240 --> 00:32:54,280 HARRIS: This is Galatians 6:7. 545 00:32:54,440 --> 00:32:59,160 "All the evil that you have sown and placed upon myself and others, 546 00:32:59,320 --> 00:33:01,600 you’re reaping that now." 547 00:33:02,600 --> 00:33:05,320 - I think when Stephanie sent the telegram, 548 00:33:05,480 --> 00:33:10,880 it shows really that she’s going back to her true values. 549 00:33:11,040 --> 00:33:13,960 This is someone who is always fighting for the underdog. 550 00:33:14,120 --> 00:33:17,240 This is someone who has that strong moral sense 551 00:33:17,400 --> 00:33:19,120 of what is right and what is wrong. 552 00:33:19,280 --> 00:33:22,680 And she’s just reminding that person of his wrongdoing 553 00:33:22,840 --> 00:33:24,880 as her final word to him 554 00:33:25,040 --> 00:33:28,760 so that he is reminded of really where he’s going to go 555 00:33:30,320 --> 00:33:33,120 after the moment he takes his last breath. 556 00:33:34,200 --> 00:33:37,360 LLOYD: "As you sow, so shall you reap." 557 00:33:39,200 --> 00:33:40,200 It’s poetic justice. 558 00:33:42,120 --> 00:33:45,640 BEAN: And with no more battles left to fight, 559 00:33:45,800 --> 00:33:48,200 Stephanie St Clair got out the game, 560 00:33:48,360 --> 00:33:52,560 passing her empire on to her trusted enforcer Bumpy Johnson. 561 00:33:54,680 --> 00:33:57,840 And you might think her story ended there, 562 00:33:58,000 --> 00:34:01,760 but she would soon cross paths with a man known on the streets 563 00:34:01,920 --> 00:34:03,080 as Black Hitler. 564 00:34:03,240 --> 00:34:07,280 And this time, things would get personal. 565 00:34:11,920 --> 00:34:16,520 It’s 1935 and Stephanie St Clair’s main rival, Dutch Shultz, 566 00:34:16,680 --> 00:34:18,840 is six feet under. 567 00:34:19,000 --> 00:34:23,240 With the turf wars over, Stephanie steps back from the Numbers Game, 568 00:34:23,400 --> 00:34:27,080 ready to enjoy her fortune and live a quiet life. 569 00:34:27,240 --> 00:34:29,560 But her peace wouldn’t last long. 570 00:34:29,720 --> 00:34:33,640 She would fall straight into the arms of Sufi Abdul Hamid, 571 00:34:33,800 --> 00:34:38,160 a man the press would later call Black Hitler. 572 00:34:38,320 --> 00:34:42,000 - Sufi Hamed, whose real name is Eugene Brown, 573 00:34:42,160 --> 00:34:45,440 and Eugene Brown was a Chicago political activist 574 00:34:45,600 --> 00:34:48,240 who migrates to New York City. 575 00:34:48,400 --> 00:34:51,480 - He was a religious leader and a union leader 576 00:34:51,640 --> 00:34:55,640 and he had a preference for Nazi-style military dress. 577 00:34:55,800 --> 00:34:58,400 And also he was very anti-Semitic. 578 00:34:58,560 --> 00:35:00,880 And thus he earned the nickname Black Hitler. 579 00:35:03,840 --> 00:35:07,400 Like St Clair, he was trying to advocate 580 00:35:07,560 --> 00:35:10,000 for Black advancement. 581 00:35:10,160 --> 00:35:13,520 So he organised a lot of boycotts of white shops, 582 00:35:13,680 --> 00:35:15,520 a lot of white Jewish shops. 583 00:35:15,680 --> 00:35:18,720 He was a very flamboyant and a very controversial figure. 584 00:35:18,880 --> 00:35:20,960 HARRIS: His persona is very larger than life. 585 00:35:21,120 --> 00:35:26,880 This is someone who preaches from the corner of 135th and Lennox Ave, 586 00:35:27,040 --> 00:35:30,800 with black riding boots, you know, colourful pants, 587 00:35:30,960 --> 00:35:35,000 a white shirt, a really long cape, 588 00:35:35,160 --> 00:35:38,120 a really big turban. He has a really massive beard. 589 00:35:38,280 --> 00:35:41,960 This would be a person that you would stop and actually listen to. 590 00:35:42,120 --> 00:35:45,320 Just not based upon necessarily what he's saying, 591 00:35:45,480 --> 00:35:47,720 but just based upon the way he looks. 592 00:35:47,880 --> 00:35:49,560 LLOYD: They were a power couple. 593 00:35:49,720 --> 00:35:52,520 They were a power couple stomping around Harlem. 594 00:35:52,680 --> 00:35:57,280 I think this is really good for her mythology and her brand. 595 00:35:57,440 --> 00:36:02,160 Here was someone else speaking out as vociferously as she did. 596 00:36:02,320 --> 00:36:05,560 But it seems like Sufi was only with her for the money. 597 00:36:06,960 --> 00:36:10,240 And whilst he may have been flamboyant and eye-catching, 598 00:36:10,400 --> 00:36:13,600 his antisemitism was toxic 599 00:36:13,760 --> 00:36:15,440 and stirred up ill-feeling and tensions 600 00:36:15,600 --> 00:36:17,720 with nearby Jewish districts. 601 00:36:19,480 --> 00:36:22,520 - The marriage lasts for about two to three years. 602 00:36:22,680 --> 00:36:27,240 There's an alleged affair between Stephanie St Clair’s friend, 603 00:36:27,400 --> 00:36:32,120 Dorothy Matthews, who is a famous Harlem occult leader. 604 00:36:33,440 --> 00:36:36,320 So, Stephanie St Clair wants to confront him. 605 00:36:38,440 --> 00:36:41,760 - She waited for him when he was going to meet his lawyer one day, 606 00:36:41,920 --> 00:36:46,840 stood in the hallway, and shot him three times. 607 00:36:47,000 --> 00:36:51,480 - The first shot, he's hit in the mouth, 608 00:36:51,640 --> 00:36:54,920 cracks a tooth. The second shot goes through his coat jacket. 609 00:36:55,080 --> 00:36:57,280 And the third shot goes over his head. 610 00:36:57,440 --> 00:37:02,600 - In the trial, St Clair said he had been treating her very poorly, 611 00:37:02,760 --> 00:37:04,880 and that he'd been having the affair. 612 00:37:05,040 --> 00:37:08,280 But that also, her handling the gun, which she claimed was his, 613 00:37:08,440 --> 00:37:11,880 was only meant to scare him rather than actually meant to shoot him. 614 00:37:12,040 --> 00:37:16,080 HARRIS: She's arrested, she's indicted and she's prosecuted 615 00:37:16,240 --> 00:37:20,440 and she's given two to ten years at the Westfield State Farm 616 00:37:20,600 --> 00:37:21,840 in upstate New York. 617 00:37:23,360 --> 00:37:27,440 LLOYD: Stephanie starts her second stint behind bars. 618 00:37:28,440 --> 00:37:31,880 Hamed, who survives the shooting, tries to make a comeback. 619 00:37:32,040 --> 00:37:36,840 But news of the affair did major damage to his messianic image. 620 00:37:38,560 --> 00:37:40,240 BEAN: What a character Hamed was. 621 00:37:40,400 --> 00:37:42,480 He ends up trying to prove to his followers 622 00:37:42,640 --> 00:37:45,240 that he's not leading a life of excess, 623 00:37:45,400 --> 00:37:50,040 and the way he chooses to do that is to publicly fill up the fuel 624 00:37:50,200 --> 00:37:52,520 for his private airplane himself. 625 00:37:54,480 --> 00:37:56,120 He ends up crashing the plane and dying, 626 00:37:56,280 --> 00:37:59,120 cos he hadn’t put enough fuel in it. 627 00:38:01,680 --> 00:38:05,400 - After Stephanie St Clair comes out of prison 628 00:38:05,560 --> 00:38:07,800 in the early 1940s, 629 00:38:07,960 --> 00:38:10,880 we really don't know a lot about her. 630 00:38:11,040 --> 00:38:14,760 The New York Amsterdam News suggests 631 00:38:14,920 --> 00:38:19,400 that she lived in seclusion and travelled to the Caribbean. 632 00:38:20,760 --> 00:38:23,960 Another ad suggests that Stephanie St Clair was hospitalised 633 00:38:24,120 --> 00:38:29,800 at a mental institution in Central Islip, Long Island. 634 00:38:31,640 --> 00:38:34,600 - She also appears in the late '60s 635 00:38:34,760 --> 00:38:36,880 when she would have been about 77, 636 00:38:37,040 --> 00:38:41,840 in a court document where she accuses a van driver 637 00:38:42,000 --> 00:38:44,360 of knocking her down. 638 00:38:44,520 --> 00:38:49,880 She got $2,000, which is the equivalent to $15,000 today. 639 00:38:50,040 --> 00:38:52,760 I think why I like that story 640 00:38:52,920 --> 00:38:55,560 is because she had also bought a house, 641 00:38:56,480 --> 00:39:02,280 but in terms of the records, she wasn’t able to keep up payments. 642 00:39:02,440 --> 00:39:07,200 And so it seems like even at 77, 643 00:39:07,360 --> 00:39:09,680 she’d do what it takes to get that money. 644 00:39:09,840 --> 00:39:12,160 HARRIS: When the money is issued to her lawyer, 645 00:39:12,320 --> 00:39:15,120 all of these creditors come after the money. 646 00:39:15,280 --> 00:39:20,040 This is a person who has a rags-to-riches story 647 00:39:20,200 --> 00:39:25,480 and seemingly towards the end of her life has a riches-to-rags story. 648 00:39:26,640 --> 00:39:30,480 - Stephanie St Clair is an extraordinary story. 649 00:39:32,080 --> 00:39:37,000 From being a maid to a crime boss to an activist. 650 00:39:37,160 --> 00:39:41,680 - Stephanie was someone who really fought to see change happen, 651 00:39:41,840 --> 00:39:46,320 and not only that, but she fought for that at a time 652 00:39:46,480 --> 00:39:50,520 where she would be bearing the brunt of a lot of force against her 653 00:39:51,680 --> 00:39:52,840 to stop her from doing that. 654 00:39:53,800 --> 00:39:56,720 So it wasn’t something that she was able to speak really openly about. 655 00:39:56,880 --> 00:40:00,080 - She was never one to resist writing an editorial 656 00:40:00,240 --> 00:40:03,720 and placing it in a magazine or in the local newspaper, 657 00:40:03,880 --> 00:40:07,000 where she decried the police ignoring the civil rights 658 00:40:07,160 --> 00:40:09,600 and the legal rights of Black people in the community. 659 00:40:09,760 --> 00:40:13,280 She talked openly and often about the ways in which Black women 660 00:40:13,440 --> 00:40:15,400 endured assault at the hands of the police. 661 00:40:15,560 --> 00:40:17,160 LLOYD: She rallied Black people. 662 00:40:17,320 --> 00:40:21,120 They were talking about what it meant to be Black in America 663 00:40:21,280 --> 00:40:24,120 at a time when Black people were finding their voice. 664 00:40:24,280 --> 00:40:28,320 And not only did she find her voice, she lived her voice. 665 00:40:28,480 --> 00:40:32,600 - What started as a desire to grow her own empire 666 00:40:33,600 --> 00:40:36,520 became a way to give back. 667 00:40:36,680 --> 00:40:40,640 A genuine desire to see Black Americans lifted up. 668 00:40:40,800 --> 00:40:44,000 That to me, that says something fascinating 669 00:40:44,160 --> 00:40:48,320 about human nature, about solidarity. 670 00:40:48,480 --> 00:40:52,200 You practice it enough, no matter what the reason, 671 00:40:52,360 --> 00:40:53,600 it becomes who you are. 672 00:40:53,760 --> 00:40:59,640 - I think one of the reasons that Stephanie St Clair is not remembered 673 00:40:59,800 --> 00:41:02,520 and ensconced in history the way others are, 674 00:41:02,680 --> 00:41:04,720 is first and foremost because she was a woman. 675 00:41:04,880 --> 00:41:08,040 We often don't preserve the histories and contributions 676 00:41:08,200 --> 00:41:12,040 of women in general at the same rate that we do with men, 677 00:41:12,200 --> 00:41:13,800 and certainly not Black women. 678 00:41:15,280 --> 00:41:20,080 - Folks like Stephanie St Clair have been marginalised or excluded 679 00:41:20,240 --> 00:41:24,240 from history books, because there's a tendency to kind of spotlight 680 00:41:24,400 --> 00:41:29,800 and become really preoccupied with those who were doing the striving, 681 00:41:29,960 --> 00:41:33,120 like those who were what we would call a credit to the race. 682 00:41:33,280 --> 00:41:36,920 But within that, more scholars are looking at the complex lives 683 00:41:37,080 --> 00:41:39,600 of working-class, ordinary Black people. 684 00:41:40,760 --> 00:41:44,760 I think there's a tendency now to explore those people 685 00:41:44,920 --> 00:41:49,640 who lived more complicated and more layered lives. 686 00:41:51,360 --> 00:41:53,880 - Perhaps the legacy that Stephanie leaves behind 687 00:41:54,720 --> 00:41:59,960 is that despite all of the discrimination, 688 00:42:00,120 --> 00:42:03,480 there's something unyielding in the human spirit, 689 00:42:03,640 --> 00:42:07,840 a refusal to accept the hand you've been dealt. 690 00:42:08,000 --> 00:42:13,920 - A part of her legacy is persevering over tough obstacles, 691 00:42:14,080 --> 00:42:17,120 especially when you're kind of born into a world 692 00:42:17,280 --> 00:42:22,080 where you're not supposed to thrive, let alone survive. 693 00:42:23,120 --> 00:42:27,800 - Why isn't Stephanie St Clair better known today? 694 00:42:27,960 --> 00:42:33,240 Would she be more widely remembered if she'd been white or a man? 695 00:42:34,920 --> 00:42:38,280 Or is it because she knew when to quit? 696 00:42:39,120 --> 00:42:40,600 We'll never know for sure, 697 00:42:40,760 --> 00:42:44,640 but perhaps we should let HER have the last word. 698 00:42:46,080 --> 00:42:48,960 ST CLAIR: "Many persons have said that they’re afraid for me 699 00:42:49,120 --> 00:42:51,160 and that I should be careful. 700 00:42:51,320 --> 00:42:54,480 I'm not going to be any more careful than I have been. 701 00:42:54,640 --> 00:42:56,120 Please have no fear for me. 702 00:42:56,280 --> 00:42:59,040 I have no fear of anybody. 703 00:42:59,200 --> 00:43:02,320 I'm going to continue to fight until the members of the race 704 00:43:02,480 --> 00:43:05,280 get their just and legal rights." 705 00:43:05,440 --> 00:43:09,960 - She was the OG, the Original Gangster. 706 00:43:10,120 --> 00:43:14,640 Black, Queen, Badass. 707 00:43:14,800 --> 00:43:16,480 # LAURYN HILL: So Much Things To Say 708 00:43:19,400 --> 00:43:20,400 # Yeah 709 00:43:21,960 --> 00:43:23,440 # Yeah, yeah 710 00:43:25,080 --> 00:43:26,760 # Yeah, yeah, yeah 711 00:43:28,800 --> 00:43:31,960 # Why, why, why, why, why, why 712 00:43:34,560 --> 00:43:36,000 # Why, why 713 00:43:37,440 --> 00:43:41,080 # They've got so much things to say right now 714 00:43:43,240 --> 00:43:45,600 # They've got so much things to say 715 00:43:48,600 --> 00:43:52,080 # They've got so much things to say right now 716 00:43:53,680 --> 00:43:56,800 # They've got so much things to say 717 00:43:59,440 --> 00:44:02,240 # I'll never forget, no way 718 00:44:04,440 --> 00:44:06,880 # How they crucified Jesus Christ... # 719 00:44:07,040 --> 00:44:09,080 Subtitles by Sky Access Services 61197

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