Staten Island saw its share of violence and murder as it transformed
from a sleepy community to an urban outer borough. The 1920 discovery of
a woman's body by two young boys walking their dog remains unsolved. An
inmate at Sailors' Snug Harbor--a retirement home for seamen--shot a
preacher in cold blood. Shocking and horrific stories of killers and
their victims such as these plague Staten Island's otherwise pleasant
past. From the handsome soldier convicted of his Russian wife's shooting
in New Dorp Beach to the New Brighton guard beaten to death while
protecting seized whiskey during Prohibition, local historian Patricia
Salmon uncovers Staten Island's most chilling tales of infamous and
long-forgotten acts of violence.