Was this the forerunner of sealing someone in the concrete of a new construction site? That is what I heard had happened to the famous Union Boss played by Jack Nicholson in “Hoffa”.
Here’s a link to the column in question. Based on Cecil’s conclusions I have to say the construction site thing also sounds like a myth, but if anyone knows of a case where this happened…
There are some cases of bodies turning up in concrete,
http://www.sandiego6.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=a75b357c-2219-4b3f-b59c-817902e76b72
But most weren’t mob-related.
And I found a few examples like this:
“Cement Tomb Reveals Remains of Gangster Killed During Fight,” The Kokomo Tribune, February 25, 1930 (fresh concrete in a washtub led investigators to tear up a newly poured concrete floor; they found the body, which had been treated with lime)
The most common disposal method that’s well documented was the lime-filled tomb described in this last article. Most of those weren’t part of structures.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/06/nyregion/06mob.html
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/serial_killers/weird/roy_demeo/3.html
Gladwin Hill, “Liquidation of ‘Murder, Inc.’ Bares Gang Ruthlessness,” Oakland Tribune, October 3, 1940L:
Hill is probably being a bit aggessive with the facts here. For example, Burton Turkus, one of the Murder, Inc. prosecutors reports the Bo Weinberg story as something “better gangland society, has always maintained, over its teacups.” http://books.google.com/books?id=VJqvuYpYsi8C&printsec=frontcover&dq=murder+inc&client=firefox-a#PPA132,M1
Cecil, just a note. Concrete doesn’t “dry”. Its a chemical reaction, and normal concrete becomes stiff in about 4 - 5 hours. It has about 15% of its design strength at this time, 30% after a day, 50% after 3 days, 70 % after a week and 100 % at 28 days. It continues to harden forever (in theory).
You would have to use a quick curing concrete to encase someone’s feet in it, and would likely be looking at a few hours. Even then it is very weak concrete, and concrete doesn’t do all that well in saltwater. It makes a lot more sense to wire a cinder block to someone. Thats the method I usually use.
How many do you use? I’ve heard of cheapskates who used only one or two and when the body bloated it floated, despite its accoutrements.
On the practical side, fast-setting concretes used for fence poles and repairs will set in 15 minutes. Repair concretes would be ideal for overcoats, they contain materials that reduce shrinkage and can be applied in relatively thin layers. Repair concretes are somewhat expensive, but if you’re sleeping with the fish, you want the best.
We, who are interested in the practical, thank youse.
All the geeks on this board and no mention of this?
Kracko: I got rights!
Scotty: You got nothing. You mind your place, or you’ll be wearin’ concrete galoshes.
Kracko: You mean cement overshoes?
Scotty: Aye.
A writer friend of mine told me that the reason bodies don’t stay sunken is that the gases in the belly build up over time and make it buoyant. The trick, he said, would be to cut open the belly before dumping it in the water, allowing the gases to escape as they’re produced.
Over here in the Netjherlands we had the affair of former kickboxer and bodyguard Andre Brilman, who was killed, dropped in an oildrum filled with concrete, and driopped in the river Waal after a disagreement with his boss, gangleader Klaas Bruinsma, who was subsequentially killed himself in an ongoing gang war. This happened in the 80s I think. I couldn’t find any confirmatyion of the date on the web, but it’s a well documented case. I’d hazard a guess that these Dutch gangsters were inspired by the concrete shoes myths that they’d heard of from over in America. Another example of cultural imperialism. like the Big Mac?
“Dat’s a life a buoy!”
Not being a mobster myself, I’ve read in a novel* that the more knowledgeable killers would use chickenwire to cover the body, to prevent the problem that decomposing/ being eaten by the fishes lead to detachment of the body and the feet, and thus the body would float up and cause trouble despite the overshoes/cement blocks on the feet.
Though, couldn’t the guys at the body farm who investigate decomposition test how effective different methods of dumping bodies into a river /ocean are?
*Hogfather by Terry Pratchett, now that I think about it.
You mean cement overshoes?
(Said Krako to Scotty)
Are you talking about “A Piece of the Action” ?
**jimigorilla ** said:
Possibly, but not necessarily. It doesn’t take a genius to think of dumping a body in a river, and think of weighing it down so it doesn’t float. And it doesn’t take exceptional powers of deduction to derive that concrete is heavy.
I’ve found the concrete keeps them from coming back as a vengeful zombie.
At least , so far…
Well, if they’d had any intelligence they’d have just weighed him down, instead of this rather cumbersome and logistically inefficient manner. As Cecil pointed out also, I believe. I think on the whole criminawl intelligence resembles miltary intelligence quite a lot in that both are virtually non-existent.
I saw an episode of Bones where someone’s feet were encased in cement (or concrete or mortar) and dumped in water.
I found it interesting that although all 6 sides of the concrete shoes were smooth, the toes and a few inches of the feet stuck out the front of the concrete.
In order to mold a perfect cube of concrete around your HEELS with the front half of your feet hanging out, what kind of contraption do you put the person in?
Do you see what I mean? I can understand how the ankles and legs are sticking out - that’s the part that’s “up” during the pouring and setting of the hard stuff, but the feet and toes?