05/31/2026
Chicago mobster and Al Capone associate Louis Campagna died in 1955.
The 54-year-old mobster was on a fishing trip off the Florida coast aboard a yacht owned by his attorney when tragedy struck. Moments after reeling in a 30-pound grouper, Campagna collapsed. He was flown by air ambulance to a Miami hospital, where he was pronounced dead from a heart attack.
According to a Miami News-Record article reporting on his death, Campagna was "one of Capone's original bodyguards" and earned the nickname "Little New York" from the infamous Chicago Mob boss.
Campagna's criminal career stretched back decades. In 1919, he was sentenced to prison for bank robbery. More than 20 years later, he and Frank "The Enforcer" Nitti were indicted on charges of conspiring to maintain gang control over the Bartenders Union, though those charges were dismissed in 1941.
Campagna was later convicted in a sweeping extortion case involving the movie industry and motion picture executives and sentenced to 10 years in federal prison. However, he served only about one-third of his sentence before being granted parole.