List of Pseudonyms - Criminals

Criminals

  • Baby Face Nelson (Lester Joseph Gillis; also used the alias George Nelson)
  • The Barefoot Bandit (Colton Harris-Moore)
  • Billy the Kid (William H. Bonney; born William Henry McCarty, Jr.)
  • Black Bart (Charles Earl Bowles)
  • BTK (Dennis Rader)
  • Bugsy Siegel (Benjamin Siegelbaum)
  • Bumpy Johnson (Ellsworth Raymond Johnson)
  • Buster Edwards (Ronald Christopher Edwards)
  • Butch Cassidy (Robert LeRoy Parker)
  • Dutch Schultz (Arthur Flegenheimer)
  • Frank Costello (Francesco Castiglia)
  • Green River Killer (Gary Leon Ridgway)
  • The I-5 Killer (Randall Woodfield)
  • Legs Diamond (Jack Nolan)
  • Lucky Luciano (Salvatore Lucania)
  • Machine Gun Kelly (George Celino Barnes)
  • Meyer Lansky (Meyer Suchowljansky)
  • Murf the Surf (Jack Roland Murphy)
  • Murray The Hump (Murray Humphreys)
  • Ned Kelly (Edward Kelly)
  • The Night Stalker (Richard Ramirez)
  • Pretty Boy Floyd (Charles Arthur Floyd)
  • Son of Sam (David Berkowitz)
  • The Sundance Kid (Harry Alonzo Longabaugh)
  • The Unabomber (Ted Kaczynski; pseudonym was an FBI acronym for UNiversities and Airline Bomber)
  • Waxey Gordon (Irving Wexler)
  • The Yorkshire Ripper (Peter Sutcliffe)

Read more about this topic:  List Of Pseudonyms

Famous quotes containing the word criminals:

    The judges did the punishing, the criminals paid for their crimes and I, free of responsibilities, removed from judgment and from punishment, I ruled, freely, in an edenic light.
    Albert Camus (1913–1960)

    Although knaves win in every political struggle, although society seems to be delivered over from the hands of one set of criminals into the hands of another set of criminals, as fast as the government is changed, and the march of civilization is a train of felonies, yet, general ends are somehow answered.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    How vainly shall we endeavor to repress crime by our barbarous punishment of the poorer class of criminals so long as children are reared in the brutalizing influences of poverty, so long as the bite of want drives men to crime.
    Henry George (1839–1897)