Alvin Karpis "Public Enemy No. 1"

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  • Опубликовано: 31 авг 2011
  • theboydgang.ca
    More info: anthonycarrpsychic.com/index.p...
    Notorious 1930's bank robber Alvin Karpis ("Old Creepy") was designated the FBI's "Public Enemy No. 1" right after the death of his good friend, John Dillinger. But did you know he was also a Canadian? Which is why he wasn't executed, but spent 36 years on "The Rock" aka, dreaded Alcatraz.
    Anthony Carr states: "...Karpis reminded me of someone's grandfather in his dotage. It was difficult to imagine that this gentle-looking elderly man was once America's Public Enemy No. 1, what with his suspenders over a clean white shirt, gray hair cut short on top -- crew cut style -- and sporting wire-framed granny glasses over which he would peer as he talked, he looked the picture of docility -- that is, until he began telling me stories..."
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Комментарии • 208

  • @leedummett4412
    @leedummett4412 5 лет назад +30

    wow, alvin in a interview. this is awesome. he lived until 1979. the last of the 1930s public enemies.

  • @43jaygee
    @43jaygee 7 лет назад +33

    Nobody would ever think that this man was one of the biggest criminals back in the 20's & 30's. He did all of that time and yet came out and continued his life. Intelligent, articulate and surprisingly did not sound bitter or regretful of his life of crime.

    • @tomitstube
      @tomitstube Год назад +2

      karpis would say alcatraz was unnecessarily harsh, that it was full of mental cases, full of people other prisons couldn't handle, he also said (he knew) the odds of escaping were very low, but never stopped thinking about how to bust out, that he knew of, and about other attempts. he said the thing that kept him going was the constant talk that alcatraz would be shut down, the cost was extremely high and many thought alcatraz wasn't practical.

  • @tooeybrown700
    @tooeybrown700 9 лет назад +40

    He is so relaxed and calm as he talks about his life as a kidnapper, bank robber and murderer. This is a valuable historical film interview but at the same time, you can see why they called him creepy. He shows no remorse for his crimes. I wouldn't turn my back on him.

  • @jasonwilliams1705
    @jasonwilliams1705 8 месяцев назад +2

    Not as a interviewer..." I could give a damn less , what you thought..."😂😅😂 Alvin told him like it is.

  • @tommykankare6775
    @tommykankare6775 2 года назад +8

    Alvin Karpis has been described as the leader or "brains" of the Barker-Karpis gang.
    “My profession was robbing banks, knocking off payrolls, and kidnapping rich men. I was good at it. Maybe the best in North America for five years front 1931 to 1936. In another set of circumstances, I might have turned out to be a top lawyer or maybe a big-time businessman. I might have made it to any high position that demanded brains and style and a cool, hard way of handling yourself. Certainly I could have held the highest job there was in any line of police detection work." These are the opening lines of Alvin “Old Creepy” Karpis' unique auto-biography; The Alvin Karpis Story (1972). In its nostalgic pages, one of the 1930's most notorious and colorful underworld figures - Public Enemy Number One in an era that saw such contenders for the title as John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, Bonnie and Clyde, and Pretty Boy Floyd-tells all and tells it like it was. "The book," Karpis writes, "is basically the story of what went on among us better known thieves of the Depression era and also what seemed to make us tick." And tick it does, like a time bomb set against a safe. From his early days as a petty thief, his meeting with Freddie Barker and the Karpis - Ma Barker gang's personal crime wave that swept the Midwest and carried them into the headlines, to his enduring duel of nerve and wits with his nemeses, J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI, Alvin Karpis recalls a remarkable life in crime. At the same time, he re-creates the full flavor of a unique chapter in American history: the desperado-ridden years of the Depression, when payroll heists and bank robberies, and gunpoint confrontations between cops and robbers filled the front pages and the daring escapades and high living of the Karpis-Barker gang provided a colorful contrast to the severity of those very hard times. Completely candid and startling in its revelations, The Alvin Karpis Story brings to dimensional life all the legendary and infamous characters who peopled that extraordinary world. 👍

    • @charlylucky7508
      @charlylucky7508 7 месяцев назад

      Damn dude! Are you a writer or something? Sounds like something you would hear on the radio back in those days. 👍

  • @johnwright291
    @johnwright291 2 года назад +5

    I had no idea this much footage of karpis interview existed. He seemed to have described himself as a sociopath.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 8 лет назад +11

    BTW: if you can find a copy of "On the Rock", the book about Karpis' time at Alcatraz, buy it! He was involved with an amazing number of famous hoods, like Al Capone, the Birdman, Machine Gun Kelly, even Charles Manson (at McNeil Island)! He was also there during the famous escape attempts.

  • @MA-wq2ih
    @MA-wq2ih 9 лет назад +20

    The man who wrote Karpis' biography stated on his blog that he didn't believe Karpis killed himself...he just wasn't the sort to do that. He said that Karpis drank and had picked up a pill addiction from a girlfriend while living in Spain, and he thought Karpis' death in 1979 was more likely an accident.

  • @balerjohnson3099
    @balerjohnson3099 9 лет назад +44

    Alvin Karpis was subdued by numerous FBI agents and then Hoover and Tolsen appeared when the danger was over....Little known fact...Hoover and Tolsen were wearing matching bra and panties and they felt so special.

    • @martytruelove5026
      @martytruelove5026 6 лет назад +4

      To each other

    • @rememberthealamo2003
      @rememberthealamo2003 3 года назад +3

      BULL-this is what this generation does-they make believe the old generation is degenerate like this one,makes them feel better..

  • @martytruelove5026
    @martytruelove5026 6 лет назад +11

    Hoover was a jealous man,wanted the limelight.Karpis was shipped back to Canada,his birth place, after he served 33 years.He had done his time, and was welcomed in Montreal with open arms.

  • @melissapenrod
    @melissapenrod 9 лет назад +21

    Karpis was a very smart man. He is one of the very few of that era in his line of work to live to make it to old age. Although it kind of made me laugh when I read the comment that he was such a cute old man how could he hurt somebody. He calmly recalled murdering people like other people would a trip to the supermarket. I think most people have a hard time underrstanding that some people really have no conscience.

    • @JAZZHOBO
      @JAZZHOBO 7 лет назад +6

      A Fellow cut from the same cloth as my Father and William S. Burroughs, I met many old men like Alvin, not criminals, but polite and educated natty dressers, not bragger or easily baited, as the interviewer does several times.

    • @foxhound9285
      @foxhound9285 3 года назад +3

      Looks like we'll be entering another depression 2.0.

  • @dpr1515
    @dpr1515 6 лет назад +8

    I love old docs about old gangsters and the mob.... Some cold dude's.....

  • @wheelinthesky300
    @wheelinthesky300 6 лет назад +11

    Brighter than my college professors.

    • @vestibulate
      @vestibulate 3 года назад +1

      wheelinthesky300 Where the hell did you go to school?

  • @ksmccaw
    @ksmccaw 12 лет назад +12

    So cool to see the man who lived through it all, the man who laid eyes on Dillinger!

    • @truthlifefishing1730
      @truthlifefishing1730 Год назад

      plus, Capone and at McNeal Island in Washington State he met and taught Charles Manson to pay the guitar.

  • @brokenarrow1689
    @brokenarrow1689 4 года назад +3

    wow an interview with Akvin Karpis!

  • @bowietip2782
    @bowietip2782 9 лет назад +62

    Karpis. The man who taught Charles Manson to play guitar.

    • @donkeyslayer677
      @donkeyslayer677 4 года назад +5

      Chords, at any rate. Loony Charlie could play in limited fashion before they met.

    • @juanamigo
      @juanamigo 3 года назад +1

      Might he have taught Charlie more than that?
      Seems like Charlie was a real learner while he was inside.

    • @somersfamily
      @somersfamily 2 года назад

      I like that band

  • @rubydawn1
    @rubydawn1 4 года назад +1

    the interview when he was older was from Montreal Canada. Lived there when he was walking our streets who would have thought.

  • @shawngilliland243
    @shawngilliland243 4 года назад +4

    I like the song about Alvin Karpis.

  • @clockerification
    @clockerification 11 лет назад +6

    No remorse for being credited with killing people he didn't kill ? This guy isn't going to be guilty of something he did not do . I like this man , he's telling how things were .

  • @mackenshaw8169
    @mackenshaw8169 2 года назад +9

    He mellowed into a softly spoken (if socio-pathic) old man. Still justice was denied when he avoided the death penalty. His Hoover story is great though. Also it's interesting to see that as a sociopath he doesn't pretend to feel remorse that he just doesn't have but also genuinely dosn't carry any grudges.

  • @dkupke
    @dkupke 7 лет назад +8

    Amusing to hear wealthy people talk about how hard they have it today-when in those days a gang like the Barker/Karpis bunch were able to kidnap the son of a wealthy businessman (a friend of FDR no less) without much trouble. Then again that was also in the days before prominent people worried about stalkers trying to kill them.

  • @joshmn651
    @joshmn651 7 лет назад +12

    I could watch this all day...

  • @stephentedesco9790
    @stephentedesco9790 7 месяцев назад

    I want to hear back from the guy who said Alvin Karpis was his bus driver when he was in grammar school on McNeil island. I read it in the back of one of the interviews, and I have not been able to find it again. If somebody can find it and re-post it here, I would appreciate that.

  • @GrooveDoctor77Musician
    @GrooveDoctor77Musician 11 лет назад +10

    Its not that any of the old time gangsters were really bad people ,some were , but even those guys couldn't hold a candlestick to the biggest crooks of all.... the banks and debt enslavement masters , Alvin was just like many starving people of the depression , a man of the times

    • @aidenpearce2709
      @aidenpearce2709 9 месяцев назад

      Drilled it. Nicely played and these are facts.

  • @JackWebb713
    @JackWebb713 20 дней назад

    He is very well spoken. I read both of his books. Fascinating.

  • @movinghome
    @movinghome 10 лет назад +6

    Died in Malaga Spain where he went to retire with the English gangsters in the 70s

  • @deanarupe73
    @deanarupe73 4 года назад +3

    I read that The cops called him "Creepy" Karpis because they thought he had a Creepy smile.

  • @gwag8410
    @gwag8410 3 года назад +5

    Hoover should have been locked up....

  • @missmyriamsenglishclass6975
    @missmyriamsenglishclass6975 6 лет назад +3

    what's the tittle of that song?? I can't find it anywhere!

  • @zyxmyk
    @zyxmyk 7 лет назад +37

    this is the most interesting of the classic gangsters. he's more intelligent and he comes across as so mild-mannered. if you know his exploits you can hardly believe this is him. On top of that he had a sense of humor. he was a sociopath and when he describes his sociopathic mind from the inside it's really fascinating. it's also interesting he doesn't try to lie about it--he just has no remorse. "maybe my makeup is just different," or whatever he said. a charming sociopath for sure.

    • @kentallard8852
      @kentallard8852 5 лет назад +3

      If you watch interviews with Chopper Read a 'standover man' from Australia he was clearly very intelligent, but a total sociopath. And had a strong sense of humour.

    • @christianorr1059
      @christianorr1059 3 года назад +1

      Yep, so nonchalant when describing his crimes.

  • @Provemewrongwithfacts
    @Provemewrongwithfacts 9 лет назад +1

    Fascinating!

  • @milesedgeworth132
    @milesedgeworth132 5 лет назад +7

    Its so interesting. The guy looks and speaks like an old man reminiscing about the times he'd play ball as a child, when in reality he ran a large Depression-era gang, killed two men, kidnapped two millionaires for ransoms, and even robbed a train. His theft totaled 327,000 dollars which in todays economy comes up to 6.3 million dollars.

    • @davidmellish3295
      @davidmellish3295 2 года назад +1

      He killed at least 5 men that they know of (was accused of 14 )and he made $300 000 from 2 different kidnappings alone. Him and his gang robbed over a million dollars including the kidnappings and bank bonds and jewellery

    • @reddevilxmaverick5677
      @reddevilxmaverick5677 Год назад

      It was way more than that m8.

    • @aidenpearce2709
      @aidenpearce2709 9 месяцев назад

      Did Karpis himself kill 2 or 2 died during jobs he was on?

  • @kasasesu666
    @kasasesu666 12 лет назад +4

    Hundereds of lithuanians live abroad, it doesn't matter where you born, the blood is lithuanian. As well as surname.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 11 лет назад +9

    Karpis did an extended interview with Elwy Yost on Ontario TV that was far better than this. He talked about Alcatraz and the various escapes, Capone, Baby Face Nalson, etc. It was AMAZING!

    • @ChopperLaboratory
      @ChopperLaboratory 3 года назад +1

      This sounds so awesome, Please tell me you can get a copy of the elwy clip!

    • @PointyTailofSatan
      @PointyTailofSatan 3 года назад +3

      @@ChopperLaboratory I have actually messaged TV Ontario. Fingers crossed.

    • @ChopperLaboratory
      @ChopperLaboratory 3 года назад +2

      Just checking in! any word from the tv station?

    • @PointyTailofSatan
      @PointyTailofSatan 3 года назад +1

      @@ChopperLaboratory THey can't search for it because of COVID. No staff.

    • @goosebumps2555
      @goosebumps2555 3 года назад +1

      Yep.. i watch it on tv

  • @bubblegum2996
    @bubblegum2996 4 года назад +2

    Makes you wonder.. What grandma and grandpa were up to back when they were young

  • @angelafulton8567
    @angelafulton8567 5 лет назад +4

    Interviewer nervous and annoying,won't let him finish a sentence.geese!

  • @davefuller9087
    @davefuller9087 Год назад +1

    That song was 🔥

  • @dakotahart5676
    @dakotahart5676 9 лет назад +1

    Anyone know the name of the song in this video?

  • @jjnouse8812
    @jjnouse8812 Год назад +1

    He's like the gangster version of Obi Wan Kenobi

  • @PiranhaJaw22
    @PiranhaJaw22 7 лет назад +2

    nice song

  • @scentlessapprentice88
    @scentlessapprentice88 11 месяцев назад +1

    Taught Mason chord progression while in the can together. Ma Barker gang. Manson busted...barker ranch. 😂

  • @Chrisp_az
    @Chrisp_az 10 месяцев назад

    The intro song is hilariously awesome!! For real.

  • @muddbosss
    @muddbosss 12 лет назад +1

    Very, Very Good !

  • @michealbanks2009
    @michealbanks2009 5 лет назад +2

    Wow..... Interesting story

  • @darylcumming7119
    @darylcumming7119 2 года назад +1

    A lack of empathy?

  • @janetduncan87
    @janetduncan87 Месяц назад

    I've never heard of this guy. All of the others I've heard of. My parents were young in the 20s and 30s while this was going on.
    He said, " I've counted em up, but I'm not going to tell you." His response to how many ppl he's murdered.

  • @shawngilliland243
    @shawngilliland243 4 года назад +4

    No remorse or really any acceptance of the crimes he committed. No wonder they called him "Creepy".
    "Gold Dust Twins" - well now that is amusing!

  • @1339LARS
    @1339LARS 11 лет назад +2

    Amazing vid !!!!!!

  • @lokismig
    @lokismig 6 лет назад +3

    Please, does anyone know who sings the song that sounds at the beginning?

  • @lakecrab
    @lakecrab 11 лет назад +6

    My dad witnessed AK's arrest on Canal and Jeff Davis in New Orleans in 1936. Dad was was 19 or 20 years old. Ironically, I share AK's birthday.

  • @levisomna
    @levisomna 10 лет назад +6

    he looks a bit like Willie Tanner from ALF O_o

  • @peteratwa
    @peteratwa 11 лет назад +5

    No I dont think that about him. As I see his game was fair as he put his life also in the line he could have been killed too any of these actions!
    If this guy would be in the army probably he would be a hero there too.
    Some people fear for their life while some not.

  • @louietrap149
    @louietrap149 4 года назад +2

    What's that song

  • @rickycrenshaw7763
    @rickycrenshaw7763 2 месяца назад

    AWESOME

  • @BIGDOG3361
    @BIGDOG3361 12 лет назад +3

    Karpis !!!! Is the man !!!!!!!

  • @nowleta
    @nowleta 3 года назад +2

    Legend

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 3 года назад +1

    How did he escape the chair.

  • @poopooman38111
    @poopooman38111 12 лет назад +1

    When was this filmed???

  • @scott1357
    @scott1357 Год назад +2

    A true gangster

  • @wikitiki10
    @wikitiki10 11 лет назад +10

    "He wasn't Lithuanian. His parents were" -That has got to be the dumbest thing I have read in a long time.

    • @onutas
      @onutas 4 года назад +1

      If chinese born in Jamaica he is not jamaican, he is chinese.

  • @fw5995
    @fw5995 Год назад +1

    Is it just me or is the interviewer trying way too hard to sound like a prosecutor whenever he tries to corner Karpis into saying something incriminating?

  • @Hdcook123
    @Hdcook123 12 лет назад +4

    He's such a cute old man. How could he have been a big named gangster.

  • @talentedmrdyer
    @talentedmrdyer 7 лет назад +1

    from Topeka,Kansas

  • @gedasleparskas6484
    @gedasleparskas6484 3 года назад +5

    Were you tough?
    -: No I wasn't tough, but I held my own :)))

  • @noonan40004
    @noonan40004 11 лет назад +5

    Textbook sociopath. Obviously no remorse for murders and able to justify any action.

  • @anotherpluss1adventure905
    @anotherpluss1adventure905 5 месяцев назад +1

    Anyone that survived Alcatraz I don’t care who he is. Deserves respect

  • @robertblevins4076
    @robertblevins4076 Год назад +1

    That interviewer was rude! I mean yeah the guy was a mobster! But the man decided to tell you his story! The man sometimes didnt even finish his sentence before! Hey i heard this and I heard that. When u want information sit back and listen thats all u got to do.

  • @YourTypicalHispanic
    @YourTypicalHispanic 7 лет назад +3

    Big fan here alvin!!!!!!! 😄😄😄😃😃😃

    • @davidlamotta1994
      @davidlamotta1994 6 лет назад

      Leslie Aviles You should read his book THE ROCK 📚

  • @dogeical3733
    @dogeical3733 4 года назад +2

    0:42

  • @OscarOffTheCuff
    @OscarOffTheCuff 11 лет назад +5

    He's a real OG

  • @kentkearney6623
    @kentkearney6623 2 месяца назад

    LANDMARK CENTER is worth a trip. I've been in the court house. Basement display.

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 5 лет назад +3

    You people give no information about where these interviews were conducted or when? Why?

    • @ians5597
      @ians5597 4 года назад +3

      It was a documentary for CBC in Canada from 1976. I guess for the 40th anniversary of Karpis's arrest as it was between his two books, "Public Enemy #1" and "On The Rock". He dictated the latter to Professor Robert Livesey, who sent me this entire documentary on VHS back in the day. I'm sure he still welcomes orders for it if his website is still going. It was
      www.littlebrickschoolhouse.com I think. Look it or the Prof up if you're interested anyway, you won't regret it!

    • @melissapenrod
      @melissapenrod 3 года назад +2

      It's Alvin Karpis. The why should be pretty obvious and he was only out of prison for ten years before he died so between 1969-79. Canada or Spain. He was deported immediately upon release

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 3 года назад +1

      Melissa Penrod I guess everyone in the USA should have known this. lol since over 300 million have never heard of him.

    • @ronniebishop2496
      @ronniebishop2496 3 года назад +2

      Melissa Penrod I just looked at it again and even Karpis said nobody knew who he was or who Ma Barker was until Hoover built up the story. But we all know around Tulsa who they all were, because they lived here. But the interview had bar cells at times and then in the back of a car, so it’s not so unusual for someone to ask where the interview was held.

    • @davidmellish3295
      @davidmellish3295 2 года назад +1

      @@ronniebishop2496 EVERYONE knew who Karpis was but nobody had heard of Ma Barker until they killed her. He was public enemy no 1,was front page headlines, if you went to the pictures they would show his pictures before the film started with large rewards being offered for his capture. They didn't say nobody knew who he was until they killed ma ,only that they hadn't heard of Ma until the FBI 'slaughtered ' (his words ) her

  • @benderbendingrofriguez3300
    @benderbendingrofriguez3300 4 года назад +2

    Alvin and the Chipmunks.

  • @marcnews75
    @marcnews75 6 лет назад +2

    He looks like an older garth from wayne's world

  • @bc9651
    @bc9651 Год назад

    If he was sentenced ''life'' why is he out?

  • @BIGDOG3361
    @BIGDOG3361 9 лет назад +4

    One of the most clever of the 30"s gangsters ,

    • @derekkase7884
      @derekkase7884 9 лет назад +1

      And Canadian too

    • @gediminascizauskas5517
      @gediminascizauskas5517 9 лет назад +2

      Derek Kase Actually his parents was Lithuanian emigrants

    • @derekkase7884
      @derekkase7884 9 лет назад +1

      Gediminas Čižauskas yea but he was born in Canada that makes him Canadian. 1907
      Montreal, Quebec, Canada

  • @SuperStormyNormy
    @SuperStormyNormy 7 лет назад +5

    Very interesting, amazing he lived a long life.

  • @vincentmcconnell809
    @vincentmcconnell809 10 лет назад +3

    Yeah. A Karp was the man.

  • @tadasblindavicius8889
    @tadasblindavicius8889 6 лет назад +3

    He was Lithuanian descent.

    • @rocistone6570
      @rocistone6570 5 лет назад +1

      How can you be descended from a Faith?

    • @Luca-ob7tg
      @Luca-ob7tg 5 лет назад +1

      Roci Stone what do you mean by that lol

  • @Studdblog
    @Studdblog 11 лет назад +1

    He's been dead since 1979

  • @domochoa
    @domochoa 2 месяца назад

    He taught Charles Manson how to play guitar 😂😂

  • @barneyporter6138
    @barneyporter6138 2 года назад +1

    I didn't find them creepy at all I found him interested

  • @atroticious
    @atroticious 5 лет назад +3

    wrong, after Dillinger, the Public Enemy nr. 1 was Pretty Boy Floyd and then Baby Face Nelson

    • @magnusmackay3363
      @magnusmackay3363 2 года назад +1

      You are wrong, there could only be one'public enemy no 1' .. Karrpis was promoted to the position after Dillinger was captured ..

    • @somersfamily
      @somersfamily 2 года назад

      Wrong it was Jimmy two toes then whicky white .

  • @Ainttnoway
    @Ainttnoway 10 лет назад +1

    was there a depression in canada?

    • @adonblustar5495
      @adonblustar5495 9 лет назад +1

      yes there was it spread over if the us castches a cold we get it eventually

    • @Ainttnoway
      @Ainttnoway 9 лет назад +1

      Adon blustar
      ohh i get it,.... so if US goes to war... canada does... what again?

    • @adonblustar5495
      @adonblustar5495 9 лет назад +2

      I endorse the reply above

  • @andrewlerdard-dickson5201
    @andrewlerdard-dickson5201 2 месяца назад

    Number One..... John Dillinger..... Charles Arthur Floyd.....Leister Gillis....Then it was Alvin Karpis

  • @PennyWisee14
    @PennyWisee14 12 лет назад +2

    one of my idols

    • @bandccoresohio
      @bandccoresohio 6 лет назад +1

      Penny Wisee especially the part where he engaged in "prison romance"????

  • @Theasker123456
    @Theasker123456 11 лет назад +11

    Lietuva

  • @andrejuskorolkovas2278
    @andrejuskorolkovas2278 Год назад

    His name Albinas Karpavičius, lithuania,n men

  • @danielvalderrama8499
    @danielvalderrama8499 Год назад +1

    Dont seem creepy to me, almost normal

  • @Naturally666
    @Naturally666 10 лет назад +1

    I don´t have any Lithuanian member in my family and I have same surname.

    • @Dziugenonas
      @Dziugenonas 7 лет назад +2

      You do, you just don't know about it.

    • @emmachapman6979
      @emmachapman6979 6 лет назад +4

      Richie Karpis His surname was shortened to Karpis. His real surname was Karpavičius.

  • @tonydio666
    @tonydio666 3 года назад +2

    Creepy! Lol

  • @neilgoulding7086
    @neilgoulding7086 5 лет назад +2

    Not creepy at all

  • @hemming57
    @hemming57 8 лет назад +3

    He never mentioned he knew Charles Manson.

    • @richardmiller257
      @richardmiller257 8 лет назад +3

      +Peter Hemming He knew Manson in McNeil Island federal penitentiary. According to Karpis he taught "little Charlie" how to play guitar. Manson tried to get Karpis into Scientology...Karpis wasn't interested.

    • @hemming57
      @hemming57 8 лет назад +2

      +Richard Miller Never mentioned that in his autobiography

  • @superchitownhustler
    @superchitownhustler 11 лет назад +1

    a crook is a crook.

  • @saltasledas1402
    @saltasledas1402 5 лет назад +2

    Alvin Karpis Lithuanian hero...

  • @jntj3007
    @jntj3007 11 месяцев назад

    The Interviewer is annoying.

  • @jimibeckert
    @jimibeckert 11 лет назад +2

    But he does care what others think of him. Phycopathic

  • @michellelewis9519
    @michellelewis9519 4 года назад +4

    Hovor was a monster an a lier he took cradet for some one else job.

  • @mazhas08
    @mazhas08 12 лет назад +2

    He wasn't Lithuanian. His parents were. He was born in Canada and grew up and lived in US and Canada.

  • @giedriusbi4621
    @giedriusbi4621 5 лет назад +1

    Thats why we call its Lithuania!! :))