Sunday, July 19, 2009

Charles 'The Bug' Workman



Charles Workman
aka The Bug,
1908 – mid 1970s

Charles Workman was the second child to Samuel and Anna Workman, both whom lived up to the family name as hard working parents juggling six children on the Lower East Side. Obviously with such a numerous brood of children, it wasn’t easy to keep a handle on them all and little Charlie soon strayed from the pack and became the requisite black sheep. Trouble found him early and he quit school before reaching high school level. During his teenage years Workman quickly developed a hard exterior shell from the daily challenges that life offered on the East Side, and his reputation grew as one of the neighborhood’s tougher kids. His first arrest came at the age of 18, a petty theft of a $12 bundle of cotton off a truck and was served probation. It was just the beginning though as further trouble loomed for Charlie in the coming years.

As the 1920’s were coming to a close, the strong-arm twins of Jacob Shapiro and Louis ‘Lepke’ Buchalter had become notorious figures in the neighborhood; especially in the wake of the shooting death of their former labor slugger boss Jacob ‘Little Augie’ Orgen on Norfolk Street in 1927, conveniently by their own hand in a grab for power.
Much of 1920s gangland’s financial foundations were built upon the prosperities of Prohibition, but New York City’s long history of labor wars was also a lucrative affair and Shapiro and Buchalter excelled at it through union payoffs and protection rackets. On occasion they would call up on freelancers and teenage toughs who looked like they could defend themselves to help with the strike lines in exchange for a quick buck. When they spotted Workman he fit the bill.

His freshman year with Shapiro and Buchalter taught him the inner working of the garment business, and Lepke was impressed enough with Workman to take him under his wing and put him on his personal payroll. This made Workman available to Lepke at all times – and as extra muscle to the Brooklyn based combination under his command when needed. Suffice to say Workman’s straight ahead bravado and strong, silent demeanor was a breath of fresh air for Buchalter, who generally found himself surrounded by too many dimwitted torpedoes and egos much of the time; all clamoring for the position of top tough guy in order to please the boss He developed quite a fondness for Charlie, and that affection at times roused a little jealousy among the ranks. Buchalter claimed Workman had more guts than the rest of his men put together, so much so he was “bugs” - hence his underworld sobriquet was cemented.

Despite his preferred standing with Lepke, much of the remaining troop couldn’t hold their envy for Workman for too long as he was genuinely like and respected all around. Handsome Charlie was a stand up guy and the Brooklyn triumvirate of Abe Reles, Buggsy Goldstein and Harry Strauss regularly invited Workman to a fair share of family weddings and Bar Mitzvahs; they considered him family, especially after Workman decided to start one of his own and moved to the borough. His reputation as hit man grew considerably as well, and was at one time, not only on Lepke’s payroll, but also moonlighted for Meyer Lansky and Dutch Shultz.

In October of 1935, when the syndicate decided it was time for the Dutchman to go, Workman was the unanimous choice. Lepke sent his second in command Emanuael ‘Mendy’ Weiss as his back up, while a man only known as Piggy was the designated driver. Workman didn’t even flinch at the prospect of rubbing out a former employer as he headed over the Washington Bridge.

After the smoke had cleared in the back room of The Palace Chop House in Newark, NJ, and Dutch Shultz lay on the bathroom floor with five bullets in his body, Workman exited the restaurant to find Weiss, Piggy and the car gone. Fuming, Workman later claimed he followed the train tracks and walked back into Manhattan, irate over Weiss abandoning him in the Garden State. Words flew and tempers raged between the two men for quite some time and Lepke had to step in and maintain the peace, sending Workman down to Florida to cool off.
Mendy Weiss’s reason for abandoning the scene was he poked into men’s room after Shultz was shot and saw Workman pilfering his wallet. In his mind, the hit was over. Nothing was ever discussed about stealing money and wasting valuable time. He ordered Piggy to take off and not wait for Workman. The job was over and if Charlie wanted to stay behind and pinch his wallet that’s a whole other business. And so goes gangster logic and perhaps a sting of jealousy on Weiss’s part in hopes the cops swooped down in time to handcuff the boss’s favorite boy.

In early 1940 Workman was picked up in Brighton Beach on a vagrancy charge. The real motive for the police was that Abe Reles was in custody and was starting to talk. A lot.
Reles was feeding the Brooklyn District Attorney some important facts slowly as he was building up his deal and immunity demands in exchange for testifying. When he told them he could tell them who had shot Dutch Schultz back in ’35, he knew he had their full attention. It had been an open case for five years.
Workman faced a $75,000 bail that he couldn’t pay. The amount was intentionally high as the rounds up in Brooklyn were continuing and the authorities wanted to make sure all suspects in custody were to remain in place as the prosecution stacked their decks and prepared their cases. Workman had no idea at the time he was not to see the outside again for many years. When finally formally charged with the Shultz killing, Charlie pleaded frame up.

Allie ‘Tick Tock’ Tannenbaum, was also ratting on his former colleagues and taking the witness stand, and had been chummy with Workman when the Palace Chop House rift made the underworld gossip column. Workman had supposedly told Tannenbaum, who was also a soldier for Buchalter, the details of the Shultz hit and his side of the story. Charlie had always wanted to make sure he got full credit for it, as it was the highest profile gangland hit since the St. Valentines Day Massacre. Tannenbaum recounted the incident to his captors, in essence corroborating Reles’s testimony, and Charlie’s outlook at liberation was not looking good.

Charlie Workman's trial in June of 1941 was one of almost impossible odds to beat.
His case was formally heard and judged in New Jersey since that was the jurisdiction of Shultz’s killing and so ended up out of the very busy hands of Brooklyn DA William O’Dwyer and prosecutor Burton Turkus.
A man named Louis Cohen, who ran a funeral parlor, was brought in to testify that Workman had been on his payroll and was working for him the night of the shooting. Cohen, perhaps secretly bullied by the prosecution, had an unexplainable change of heart the next scheduled day in court and admitted he was lying and the Bug was squashed.
Unlike some of his co-horts like Buggsy Goldstein and Harry Strauss, who were recently executed in Sing Sing, Workman got off 'easy' - staring down at life-hard labor at Trenton State Prison.
He was 34, and took it without flinching.

Workman took his straight-ahead bravado and strong, silent demeanor that he carried on the streets and applied it to his prison life. He was a model prisoner, and was paroled twenty-three years later in 1964.
Charlie Workman returned to the world as a gray-haired grandfather; sustained during his long period of incarceration by the love and support of his wife Catherine. In a brief statement to the press he claimed he regretted his younger wayward ways but knew there was nothing he could do to change it.
One of the first things he did was address his new grandchildren to stay out of trouble no matter how bad things may look or seem, and that they come to him first if there was anything troubling them.
He took a job in the garment industry ironically enough in the same district where Lepke Buchlater presided over many years before, and never discussed his past life again.

27 comments:

Anonymous said...

Workman was a valued hitman! The Dutch Schultz job is an example of his capabilities, and what the powers that be thought of him! Dutch had to go, he publicly embarassed and defied Lucky and the Board of Directors regarding D.A. Tom Dewey!! "The Bug" was reliable and could be depened on to make sure the job was a success!
A man who, in my opinion, never received the credit due him...but in his line of work, you do not exactly brag or carry a list of victims in you holster!!

natashia said...

Thanks for the nice comment!! That's my great grandpa!!!!:)

Anonymous said...

My name is Ken Andrew Workman. This was my Grandfather. I knew him as pop. This man was a great teacher to me for his wisdom and kindness to me and our family.

Anonymous said...

Too bad he died w/o ever writing a book of his memoirs. It would've made an interesting good reading from a historical perspective about organized crime.

Anonymous said...

From what I have read about him,he was a pretty nice guy.To bad he became what he became.He learned crime does not pay the hard way.Hopefully his last years were peaceful.

Anonymous said...

It seems bad choices at a young age happen. He obviously channelled his energies and ethics for good when the time came. I wonder where he is buried. I do not know if any of his progeny were Jewish, but Jewish underworld characters did not encourage their kids to follow in their footsteps; they saw this lifestyle as a quick entrance ramp to success in the eyes of society and when they joined the moneyed mainstream let their children enjoy their labors. This was how a couple of my old time underworld patients described it to me, as well as saying Dutch Shultz was a most miserable person and nobody regretted his death.

Anonymous said...

My name is Spencer. Carlton Fredericks was my father. Was Bernie Workman your father? They were like brothers

Peter Cimino said...

My name is Peter Cimino - I am an author. Over the past year Charlie's son Chuck and I have become very good friends. I am in the process of writing about Chuck's life that of course includes his father. His story is one of the most amazing you will ever hear. Charlie was who he was regarding his life in the mob, but he was much more than that, as were most of his close friends and associates. Hence the working title of our upcoming book, which is in progress is called "The Other Side of the Mob".
I am a mafia aficionado myself, with hundreds of mafia books. I have never heard of any story like Chuck's or his father's. Truly off the charts amazing. www.peterciminouthor.com

Anonymous said...

To the family of this man...... I'm curious of the family tree. I married into the foley/workman family. And we were wondering if he could be related. His pictures look like he could be. We were just curious. Who was he married to? Who are his children? Who are his grand children? Who are his great grandchildren? Who are his siblings? Who are they married to? Who are their kids and so on..... Any info would be helpful!

WhisperingThunder said...

Any chance there's any connection to a Mary Jane Workman. Who later married a Harp. Mary Jane was my
G.G.G.Grandmother on my father's side born very early 1800's.

Gary Epley said...

This is all interesting. My mother's maiden name is workman daughter of Edward and Dorothy Workman from West Virginia. I have heard some talk of a man called Charles (Buggsy or The Bug) Workman being my distance cousin.

Natashia said...

He's my great grandpa too... but he died before I was born. He's my grandpas father.

Unknown said...

Did Dorothy have a sister named Betty?

Golf guy said...

Workman's son, Chuck, became golf pro at Bethpage State Park in NY for many years before retiring to florida. After the Sr Workman died, the mob would drop off an envelope of cash at the golf course every month which was to be passed on to Workman's surviving wife, Catherine to take care of her.

Anonymous said...

My grandmother,Estella Marie Green was Charles the bug Workmans first wife. I am not sure of the exact year they were married but approximately 1918. They had a son, Robert,who they called Bobby and divorced when Bobby was a toddler. Bobby married and had children and died by drowning in his 30's. His death was always questioned as he had been in Navy and was an avid swimmer.We would love to connect with Bobbys children. I am on FB...Debra Gaff.

Britishrailer said...

Schultz was shot once - not five times. Good grief Charlie Brown!

Anonymous said...

This is a great story of a man who changed history stoppin Schulz before a larger war

Unknown said...

Natasha I worked for your Grandpa Chuck from 1988-1997. He treated me like a son.

Unknown said...

I'm finding many interesting things in these comments.

Pete, who wrote the golfing book with Charlie's son, Chuck (PGA golfer who died a couple of years ago), states that he only had one child. This isn't true. Chuck was the only child that Charlie had with his wife, Catherine. He was the only child he claimed and took care of. But he was not Charlie's only child.

Charlie also had a few other children with his previous wife, whom he left (or maybe she left due to his lifestyle?). She remarried but the children kept the Workman name, raised in Indiana.

One of these children was Henry ("Bud") Workman who left a legacy of five children, 10 grandchildren (I'm married to one of them) and more than great-grandchildren.

Cassandra said...

My Father's name is Workman, I have no idea if there is any relation, but it is a very interesting story!

Anonymous said...

Is Lee Workman who lived in Brooklyn any relation to Charlie?

dale stuart said...

Charlie the bug Workman was rumored to be one of the four jewish gunmen impersonating police officers who whacked Salvatore Maranzano back in the 1930s on the orders of charlie lucky luciano and meyer lansky.

Unknown said...

No that was red Levine nor workman

Christina Workman said...

My Grandfather was Russell sylvanius Workman from Logan West Virginia, married my Grandmother Roberta Mayes also from Logan. They had Two children my Dad Robert (Rusty) Workman and my Aunt Jean Workman. The moved to Cleveland when my Dad and Aunt were young. My mom and Dad met later and married, I was born in Cleveland. It would be so Interesting to find out if there's any relation

Anonymous said...

Workman killed the dutchman

Anonymous said...

I knew him quite well

Pam Harris said...

This is truly an amazing store about Charlie , who I have my own theory about the chain of events took place .referring to Charles life before his wife Catherine and son son Chuck in New York . We do believe he is our grandfather but can’t seem to get in touch with relatives who are still living which would be Chucks children and grandchildren . Charlie left his family in Indiana , possibly to protect them , I would love for someone to contact me , maybe leave a message here or find me on FB . Thank you