A Quote by Robert Stack

I never put my arms around John Gotti, Al Capone or Lucky Luciano. — © Robert Stack
I never put my arms around John Gotti, Al Capone or Lucky Luciano.
How many gangsters you know, from Al Capone up to John Gotti, been gay?
I think we've always been fascinated with the idea of the romantic outlaw. John Gotti could be in one instance a charismatic, kind and loving family man, and in another, deadly to his enemies. The opportunity to tell the true story of Gotti with John Travolta is a director's dream.
I went to high school with Al Capone.
Putin is like Al Capone.
You don't get John Gotti to testify against his driver. You get the driver to testify against John Gotti.
When I look at old pictures, I see my son Luciano, not me. Luciano looks identical. That's what's extraordinary, the power of a gene pool.
When I was young I looked like Al Capone, but I lacked his compassion.
Millions and millions of years would still not give me half enough time to describe that tiny instant of all eternity when you put your arms around me and I put my arms around you.
One of the things is that the good intentions of Prohibition, from reading over the years and from becoming obsessed with the research of gangs in New York City, seems to have allowed crime figures at the time, like Luciano, Capone, Torrio and Rothstein, to organize to become more powerful, which pulled all the way through until the '70s.
So while you're imitating Al Capone, I'll be Nina Simone And defecating on your microphone.
The spookiest thing I can remember about John Gotti is his eyes.
Someone once accused me of being like Eliot Ness. I sad no sir, I'm not E.N., but I can promise you that I'm not Al Capone!
Everybody owned stock in the Capone mob; in a way, he was a public benefactor. I remember one time when he arrived at his box seat in Dyche Stadium for a Northwestern football game on Boy Scout Day, and 8,000 scouts got up in the stands and screamed in cadence, 'Yea, yea, Big Al. Yea, yea, Big Al.'
In 1969, John Iliopoulos and Luciano Maiani came to Harvard as research fellows. Together, we found the arguments that predicted the existence of charmed hadrons.
Gangsta to us didn't have anything to do with Al Capone and stuff like that. It's just about living your life the way you want to live it. And you're not going to let nothing stop you.
They are superpower of villains. They are superpower of Al Capone.
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