Willie Sutton

American criminal
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Also known as: William Francis Sutton, Jr., Willie the Actor
Quick Facts
Also called:
Willie the Actor
Byname of:
William Francis Sutton, Jr.
Born:
June 30, 1901, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Died:
November 2, 1980, Spring Hill, Florida (aged 79)
Also Known As:
Willie the Actor
William Francis Sutton, Jr.

Willie Sutton (born June 30, 1901, Brooklyn, New York, U.S.—died November 2, 1980, Spring Hill, Florida) was a celebrated American bank robber and prison escapee who earned his nickname “the Actor” because of his talent for disguises, posing as a guard, messenger, policeman, diplomat, or window cleaner to fool authorities.

Raised in a tough Irish-American district in Brooklyn, he was a veteran thief and hoodlum by the time that he was a teenager and, at the age of 21, was arrested and acquitted on a murder charge. After a prison term for safecracking (1926–27), he engaged in bank and store robberies. In 1930 in Manhattan, he robbed his first bank, and a jeweler as well, while disguised as a Western Union messenger. Two months and other robberies later, he was caught and sentenced to Sing Sing prison. In 1932 he escaped, moved to Philadelphia, was caught again in a robbery, and spent the next 15 years in Pennsylvania prisons. In 1947 he and some confederates made a spectacular escape from Holmesburgh County Jail, near Philadelphia, using one real pistol, one dummy wood pistol, and guard uniforms.

Sutton remained free until 1952, when he was recognized and seized by police in Brooklyn. Sent to Attica state prison, New York, he remained there until paroled in 1969. In his book I, Willie Sutton (1953, written with Quentin Reynolds), Sutton estimated that in his lifetime he had stolen at least $2 million from banks. The title of Where the Money Was (1976, written with Edward Linn) echoes his allegedly oft-repeated reason for robbing banks: “Because that’s where the money is.”

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.