Acknowledgements; Prologue; One: Double Death; Two: The Strike and the Piano Player; Three: The Riot Act; Four: Power Boats and Politics; Five: Prohibition Comes to Ontario; Six: Piano Player to Rumrunner; Seven: "In the Event of My Death ... "; Eight: The Crime Boss and the Independent; Nine: Turning the Tide against the Law Breakers; Ten: John Brown Goes to Jail; Eleven: Five Thousand Dollars for Charity; Twelve: Hockey and Homicide; Thirteen: Cross-Border Crime; Fourteen: Bootleggers, Politicians, and Clergymen; Fifteen: Courts and Commissioners; Sixteen: The Quebec Connection
Summary
During the 1920s, Ben Kerr was known as the "King of the Rumrunners" and was put at the top of the most wanted list by the U.S. Coast Guard