FROM cold-blooded murders to running battles with the police, these black-and-white pictures shed light on the brutal lives of gun-toting gangsters during the American Depression.
The amazing images show notorious mobsters such as Al Capone who committed violent crimes in their search to get rich quick during the early 1930s.
The snaps were taken at a time when the stock market had crashed, meaning people were eager to make cash in anyway they could.
And notorious gangs such as the North Side Italian mob and the Dillinger gang formed in cities including Chicago, where they would rob banks and gun down their rivals.
The mobs would stop at nothing and gunned down bodies would often be found in warehouses, homes and even lying in the streets of New York.
The gangsters would also be well-armed and were often involved in running battles with the police who worked to stop their rackets.
Among the images are those of the most famous Depression-era crime, the St Valentines Day massacre, which saw seven men murdered by the infamous South Side Italian gang led by Al Capone.
Other graphic pictures show the murder of gangster Rosario Riggio, who was found slumped in the back of his car because he didn't listen to the mob's orders.
While other images show how the body of fellow gangster Walter Sage ended up thrown in a lake after he was found to have skimmed money for the mob's slot machine profits.
But as well as the old images showing scenes of brutal crimes, the gangsters also appeared to be living high life in their luxury homes with glamorous clothes.
One snap shows gangsters enjoying a dinner party with their wives while another shows how they tried to hide their criminal lives by hiding their weapons in violin cases.
But the gangsters' lives of crime didn't last for long as federal agents closed in on the mobs and shut down their gun-toting activities.
Al Capone was sent to jail and served time in Alcatraz for tax evasion.
Mob boss John Dillinger was shot dead by police when they closed in on him leaving a movie theatre as he attempted to brandish his weapon.