Nettie Herskovitz was wealthy and widowed. Her suitor, Harry Diamond,
was a dashing young bootlegger a decade and a half her junior. At first
she resisted his advances, but soon the two were married with an infant
daughter. Disinterested in a domestic life, Diamond shot Nettie on
Valentine's Day 1923 while riding in their Hudson sedan. He tried to pin
the crime on the fleeing chauffeur, but Diamond made a mistake. Though
mortally wounded, Nettie lived long enough to identify her attacker to
police and change her will. The sensational Diamond murder became
tabloid fodder--a Roaring Twenties story of roadhouse floozies, illegal
booze, orphaned children, trust funds and legal acrobatics.