A BIT OF HISTORY
Hours
after Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7, 1941, the Secret
Service found themselves in a bind. President Franklin D. Roosevelt
was to give his Day of Infamy speech to Congress on Tuesday, and
although the trip from the White House to Capitol Hill was short,
agents were not
sure how to transport him safely.
At
the time, Federal Law prohibited buying any cars that cost more than
$750, so they would have to get clearance from Congress to do
that, and nobody had time for that. One of the Secret Service
members, however, discovered that the US Treasury had seized the
bulletproof car that mobster
Al Capone owned when he was sent to jail in 1931. They
cleaned it, made sure it was running perfectly and had it ready for
the President the next day.
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