Discovery of a whiskey ring in Minnesota with bootleggers and moonshiners and organized crime. Bootleggers were people who sold alcohol in small amounts, either in small bottles in the pockets of their jackets, or maybe in their boots like the name suggest. Moonshiners made illegal hard liquor, which was very dangerous and illegal, as it is today. Clay County was not exempt from the market of Canadian and moonshine whiskey. The arrest of Charley Shumacher in Moorhead for having 500 quarts of Canadian and American whiskey in his possession was dismissed from his charge. He told a juror that whiskey runners came to him and he traded a brand new automobile for 500 quarts of liquor. As they went away with the car, he later got arrested as officers took possession of the liquor.[1]
Charley Shumacher got into trouble a year earlier as well when agents did a search of his resident and found a 290 quart of bottles of Canadian whiskey concealed under his bedroom floor that was valued then at $4.35. Shumacher was arrested and taken in before a United States commissioner at Fergus Falls and his case would come up for trial at the term of the U.S. circuit court in the fall of 1921. Mr. Darbey and his agents raided another place, a popular hotel and three quarts of booze was found and the man was arrested. Mr. Haugen of the European hotel in Moorhead and Mr. Magnuson the owner of the Rex was also arrested. [2]
[1] “The Country Press,” The Country Press (Moorhead), August Friday, 1922, 11.
[2] “Arrested for Bootlegging?,” The Country Press (Moorhead), August Friday, 13.
