Johnson became an associate and enforcer for
numbers queen
Madame Stephanie St. Clair. In the 1930s, he quickly climbed the ranks to become her most trusted soldier. St. Clair incited a war with rival mob boss
Dutch Schultz for control of Harlem's rackets. The war resulted in more than 40 murders and several kidnappings and ended with St. Clair's arrest and imprisonment. Johnson struck a deal with the Mafia after Schultz's 1935 murder through which he quickly built up his own organization in Harlem in exchange for favorable business deals. In 1952, Johnson's activities were reported in the celebrity people section of
Jet. That same year, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison for a drug conspiracy conviction related to
heroin. Two years later,
Jet reported in its crime section that Johnson began his sentence after losing an
appeal. He served the majority of that sentence at
Alcatraz Prison in
San Francisco Bay, California, as inmate No. 1117, and was released in 1963 on parole. Johnson was arrested more than 40 times and served two prison terms for narcotics-related charges. In December 1965, Johnson staged a
sit-down strike at a police station in Harlem by refusing to leave as a protest against police surveillance of black neighborhoods. He was charged with "refusal to leave a police station" but was
acquitted by a judge. ==Death==