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Edward "Butch" O'Hare went on to become a Navy pilot and was awarded the Medal of Honor after shooting down five Japanese bombers and damaging a sixth, preventing them from attacking an air craft carrier. He was later killed in action. Jonathan Eig, a best-selling author who addressed O'Hare's slaying in his book "Get Capone," which is due out in April, said that while Edward J. O'Hare did provide information about Capone, there is no evidence he was doing so to help his son. "There's a chance he had his own tax problems and he was involved in a bootlegging case (in which) he got off when everybody else was convicted," he said after the hearing. "He may have made a deal." Nor does he believe, as Burke suggested, that Capone, from his prison cell in Alcatraz, ordered a hit on O'Hare, who was killed about a week before Capone was released from prison. Capone's brain was ravaged by syphilis at the time and while he was heard railing about his enemies, Eig said there is no record of him talking about O'Hare. But, Eig said, there is a possibility that Capone's family members, who had their own money problems at the time, asked O'Hare for money. Or maybe Capone's henchman, Frank Nitti, demanded money from the very successful O'Hare, he said.
Whatever the reason, on Nov. 8, 1939, O'Hare was in his car on the city's southwest side when somebody armed with a shotgun killed him. Nobody was ever arrested for the slaying. "History deserves that there be a true depiction of what happened," Burke said.
[Associated
Press;
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