Indiana allows disinterment of notorious gangster Dillinger's grave
Is it in fact the notorious American gangster John Dillinger who lies buried in an Indiana cemetery?
Family members want to know, and the authorities have agreed to allow his exhumation.
Dillinger and his heavily armed "Terror Gang" robbed at least a dozen banks -- killing 10 men, including a police officer, in the process -- during the 1930s.
He escaped from jail three times, stole submachine guns from police armories, and fashioned a well-earned reputation as "Public Enemy Number One."
Described by the FBI as a "notorious and vicious thief," Dillinger regularly made Page One of American newspapers, fanning fears and seizing the public imagination in the midst of the Great Depression.
His bloody career ended in 1934, when Dillinger was killed in a shootout with federal agents as he left a Chicago movie theater where he and two female friends had seen the Clark Gable movie "Manhattan Melodrama," police said.
And it was Dillinger, the FBI said, who was buried in Crown Hill Cemetery in .