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  1. Machine Gun Kelly and his crimes are portrayed in films such as Machine-Gun Kelly (1958), The FBI Story (1959) and Melvin Purvis: G-Man (1974). Crime novelist Ace Atkins ' 2010 book Infamous is based on the Urschel kidnapping and on George and Kathryn Kelly.

  2. George “Machine GunKelly. He probably never uttered those now famous words,“Don’t Shoot G-Men, Don’t Shoot.” But George “Machine GunKellyreally, George Kelly Barnes—earned a...

  3. (1895-1954) Who Was Machine Gun Kelly? Machine Gun Kelly was a bootlegger, small-time bank robber and kidnapper who ranged through Tennessee, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico...

  4. Machine Gun Kelly (born 1897, Tennessee, U.S.—died 1954, Leavenworth, Kansas) was a bootlegger, small-time bank robber, and kidnapper who ranged through Tennessee, Mississippi, Texas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico in the 1920s and ’30s.

  5. Poco tiempo después, Kelly se casó con Kathryn Thorne, una criminal experimentada que compró la primera ametralladora de Kelly e insistió, a pesar de su falta de interés en las armas, en que realizara prácticas de tiro en el campo.

  6. George Kelly Barnes, better known as “Machine GunKelly, was a notorious Prohibition -era criminal whose crimes included bootlegging, armed robbery, and, most prominently, kidnapping. He spent some time in Alcatraz Prison in California before dying of a heart attack at Leavenworth Federal Prison in Kansas on July 18, 1954.

  7. By William DeLong | Edited By John Kuroski. Published April 24, 2018. Updated June 13, 2018. Prohibition-era gangster George "Machine Gun" Kelly pulled off one of American history's most infamous crimes and thought he got away with it. Then his victim got revenge.