On Valentine’s Day morning in 1929, seven men affiliated with Chicago mobster George “Bugs” Moran were lined up along a wall inside a garage in the city by four men, two of them in police uniform, and sprayed with machine gun and shotgun fire. Due to fortuitous events, Bugs Moran missed what was dubbed as the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre. But his rival was seen as the mastermind: Al Capone, America’s most powerful mobster known as Scarface, later described as Public Enemy No. 1. No one lived to tell the tale and Capone, who was in Miami, Florida during the murders, never faced charges related …