Abstracts
The Alcatraz prison, with its picturesque surroundings and fascinating life stories of its inmates, has been the subject of a number of films and publications. The authors take a closer look at the biographies of “Al Capone”, Robert “Birdman” Stroud and “Mickey” Cohen. These legendary American mobsters shared not only a history at “The Rock”, but also a history of neuropsychiatric diseases, ranging from neurosyphilis to anti-social, borderline and obsessive-compulsive personality disorders.
neurosyphilis; personality disorder; obsessive compulsive disorder; criminal behavior
A prisão de Alcatraz, com sua atmosfera pitoresca e as fascinantes histórias de seus prisioneiros, foi objeto de vários filmes e publicações. Os autores focam nas biografias de “Al Capone”, Robert “Birdman” Stroud and “Mickey” Cohen. Estes legendários gangsteres americanos tem em comum não apenas suas penas cumpridas no “Rochedo”, mas também uma história de doenças neuropsiquiátricas, de neurosífilis a personalidades anti-sociais, “borderline” e obsessivo-compulsivas.
neurosífilis; transtorno de personalidade; distúrbio obsessivo-compulsivo; comportamento criminal
Criminal behavior and violence are considered as worldwide public health problems11 .Glenn AL, Raine A. The neurobiology of psychopathy. Psychatr Clin North Am.
2008;31(3):463-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.004
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.00...
. Criminal behavior has neurobiological basis.
Recent studies have focused in this issue, emphasizing biological and psycho social
deficits11 .Glenn AL, Raine A. The neurobiology of psychopathy. Psychatr Clin North Am.
2008;31(3):463-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.004
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.00...
,22 .Yang Y, Raine A. Prefrontal structural and functional brain imaging
findings in antisocial, violent, and psychopathic individuals: a metanalysis. Psychiatry
Res. 2009;174:81-8.http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2009.03.012
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.20...
. Different types of personality disorders, as borderline and
antisocial personality disorder, have been related to violence and criminal behavior11 .Glenn AL, Raine A. The neurobiology of psychopathy. Psychatr Clin North Am.
2008;31(3):463-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.004
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.00...
,22 .Yang Y, Raine A. Prefrontal structural and functional brain imaging
findings in antisocial, violent, and psychopathic individuals: a metanalysis. Psychiatry
Res. 2009;174:81-8.http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2009.03.012
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.20...
,33 .Louzã Neto MR, Cordás TA. Transtornos de personalidade. Porto Alegre:
Artmed; 2011.,44 .American Psychiatric Association. Manual diagnóstico e estatístico de
transtornos mentais. DSM-5. 5@ Edição, Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2014.,55 .Raine A. Features of borderline personality and violence. J Clin Psychol.
1993;49(2):277-81.. More
recently, neuroscience principles and functional brain imaging were applied to better
understand the neurobiology of psychopathy11 .Glenn AL, Raine A. The neurobiology of psychopathy. Psychatr Clin North Am.
2008;31(3):463-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.004
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.00...
,22 .Yang Y, Raine A. Prefrontal structural and functional brain imaging
findings in antisocial, violent, and psychopathic individuals: a metanalysis. Psychiatry
Res. 2009;174:81-8.http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2009.03.012
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.20...
. The aim
of this historical review is to address these aspects using the Alcatraz island as background
and revisiting the life histories and neuropsychiatric profiles of three of its most famous
inmates.
ALCATRAZ PRISON
The Alcatraz prison was an important U.S. Federal Penitentiary, located in the Alcatraz island, at San Francisco bay, California66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.. In 1934, “The Rock”, as popularly known, was ranked as a maximum-security facility66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.. By the year of 1963, when officially closed, Alcatraz had housed famous prisoners including the very notorious American gangsters Alphonse “Scarface” Capone, Robert “Birdman” Stroud, and Meyer H. M. “Mickey” Cohen66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004..
ALPHONSE “AL” CAPONE
Alphonse Gabriel Capone (1899-1947) (Figure 1) was born in Brooklyn, New York, USA, to an immigrant Italian family66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.. He left school at age of 14, had different illegal jobs at the time and joined several teenagers’ street gangs, being introduced to the crime scenario66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.. In 1919, Capone and his family moved to Chicago and “Al” started his illegal “businesses”, including bootlegging (in the period known as “Prohibition”), gambling, prostitution and extortion66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.. He built a fortune and became “The big fellow in American crime”, the “America’s most famous gangster” and ultimately a “Mafia crime boss” 66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.. After the Supreme Court ruling that illegal money was taxable, he was trialed guilty (for income tax evasion) and in 1931, was sentenced ten years in a federal prison. During his time in Alcatraz, Capone developed a clinical picture characterized by mood swings (sometimes “magnanimous and jovial and then deflated and childish”), cognitive dysfunction (memory disorder, temporo-spatial disorientation), behavioral problems (irrational behavior and, sometimes, aggression), shuffling gait, dysarthria, and bradykinesia77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.. A neuro-psychiatric examination suggested that Capone had a previous psychopathic condition, without psychosis (probable antisocial personality disorder) and then neurosyphilis77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.. His personal health history suggested that he had endured a genital lesion in 1919 that eventually disappeared few days later, followed within two months by the development of a transient cutaneous rash all over the body, including hand and feet. A blood Wasserman reaction was positive77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.. He was treated with arsenic and bismuth injections. Back in Alcatraz, he refused both, a spinal tap and further treatment. However, he received courses of heavy metal injections, as well as, malarial therapy, all proved ineffective leading Capone to a route of progressive dementia associated with parkinsonism. In 1938, “typical Argyll-Robertson’s pupils” were reported (general paresis of the insane) 77 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.. Capone evolved to present generalized tonic-clonic seizures, as his neurological condition continued to deteriorate.He was released to a hospital and finally to his family’s Florida mansion. He died due to a stroke and pneumonia, in 1947, at the age of 4877 .Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.,88 .Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992..
ROBERT F. “BIRDMAN” STROUD
Robert Stroud (1890-1963) (Figure 2), the famous “birdman of Alcatraz”, was born in Seatlle, USA, in 189066 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,99 .Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013.. In 1909, at the age of 19, he brutally murdered a man who got involved with a prostitute, who happened to be Stroud’s girlfriend. He was arrested and convicted of manslaughter, being sent to McNeil island, a federal penitentiary in Washington State66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,99 .Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013.. Due to his violent behavior, impossible to manage conduct and threats toward other inmates, he was sent to the Leavenworth Federal penitentiary in Kansas66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,99 .Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013.. In 1916 he stabbed a guard to death in front of 1,100 prisoners. His behavior was defined as “without remorse and lacked of conscience”. He was clinically diagnosed as a psychopath, with probable borderline or antisocial personality disorder, with high IQ66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,99 .Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013.. During his time at Leavenworth, he started to study birds, particularly canaries, from 1920 until 1942. He was allowed to breed birds and maintain a lab inside the cell house. He managed to publish two books the topic, entitled “Diseases of Canaries” and “Stroud digest on the diseases of birds” and function as a real ornithologist66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,99 .Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013.. Nonetheless, his behavior remained a major issue and in 1942 he was finally moved to Alcatraz, where he published two other books, entitled “Bobbie” and “Looking outward: a history of U.S prison system from colonial times to the formation of the bureau of Prisons”. He died at the Springfield federal medical prison, in Missouri of heart failure on November 21, 1963, after 54 years of incarceration66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,99 .Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013..
“MICKEY” COHEN
Meyer Harris Michael “Mickey” Cohen (1913-1976) (Figure 3) was born in New York City (Brooklyn) and debuted in the crime scene early in his childhood years66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,1010 .Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007.. He was sent to a “special school for delinquents and mentally retarded kids”. At the age of 26, he went to Los Angeles to became “the Underworld Czar”, “The Mini Mobster” and “Hollywood’s celebrity gangster” 66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,1010 .Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007.. His “businesses” included gambling, prostitution, illegal drugs, and sexual extortion. “Mickey” Cohen was arrested several times, and finally sentenced to prison due to income tax evasion66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,1010 .Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007.. His psychiatric evaluation defined him as an “uneducated man, with low IQ, with a severe obsessive-compulsive personality disorder”. Cohen’s biographical data demonstrated that pursued a collection of socks (more than 1,500), and hundreds of silk pajamas and neck ties. He also washed his hands every two or three minutes66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,1010 .Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007.. During his time in Alcatraz he took showers every hour and half, and used up to six rolls of toilet paper a day66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,1010 .Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007.. In prison “Mickey” Cohen had experienced a severe cranial trauma requiring neurosurgical approach, and developed a left hemiplegia. “Mickey” Cohen died in 1976, due to a stomach cancer66 .Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.,1010 .Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007..
CONCLUSION
If the concept of a maximum security contemporary prison island just across the bay from one of the most beautiful cities in the world was not already a teaser, understanding the minds of some of the “America’s most wanted” housed in there certainly sharpens one’s curiosity. We presented a neurobehavioral perspective of Alcatraz, reviewing the life of three famous inmates, emphasizing their different neuro-psychiatric diseases and hopefully adding to an already fascinating plot.
References
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1Glenn AL, Raine A. The neurobiology of psychopathy. Psychatr Clin North Am. 2008;31(3):463-75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.004
» https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psc.2008.03.004 -
2Yang Y, Raine A. Prefrontal structural and functional brain imaging findings in antisocial, violent, and psychopathic individuals: a metanalysis. Psychiatry Res. 2009;174:81-8.http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2009.03.012
» https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2009.03.012 -
3Louzã Neto MR, Cordás TA. Transtornos de personalidade. Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2011.
-
4American Psychiatric Association. Manual diagnóstico e estatístico de transtornos mentais. DSM-5. 5@ Edição, Porto Alegre: Artmed; 2014.
-
5Raine A. Features of borderline personality and violence. J Clin Psychol. 1993;49(2):277-81.
-
6Kincade C. Alcatraz most wanted: profiles of the most famous prisoners on the rock. Berkeley: Ariel Vamp; 2008.
-
7Brown MD. Capone: life behind bars at Alcatraz. San Francisco: Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy; 2004.
-
8Schoenberg RJ. Mr. Capone. New York: HarperCollins; 1992.
-
9Stroud RF. Looking outward. A voice from the grave. The Federal prison system from the inside. Springfield: Looking Outward; 2013.
-
10Lewis B. Hollywood´s celebrity gangster: the incredible life and times of Mickey Cohen. Los Angeles: BBL Books; 2007.
Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
Aug 2015
History
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Received
08 Feb 2015 -
Reviewed
29 Mar 2015 -
Accepted
22 Apr 2015