Anthony Chebatoris was born on May 10, 1898, in the
Suwałki Governorate of the
Russian Empire, a predominantly
Lithuanian area which lies in modern-day
Poland. His father, Michael Chebatoris (
né Czebatorius) immigrated to the United States from Suwałki in advance of his wife Victoria and two sons in 1900. In 1902, the family settled in Treveskyn, an unincorporated area of
South Fayette Township, Pennsylvania, where Michael worked as a
coal miner and the family eventually grew to seven children. Chebatoris attended school through the eighth grade and worked as a laborer before moving to
Detroit in 1919, where he found employment as a chauffeur. On March 30, 1920, he married 17-year-old Catherine Boyd, who was four months pregnant with their daughter Vera. On July 20, 1920, Chebatoris was convicted of armed robbery of a
Packard cashier in Detroit and faced a maximum sentence of twenty years behind bars, but was
paroled after serving six-and-a-half years at
Jackson State Prison. In 1927, he was arrested for violating the
Dyer Act in
Louisville, Kentucky, and was re-imprisoned at Jackson to serve his full sentence for armed robbery. In 1928, Chebatoris and fellow inmate John "Jack" Gracey conspired to escape from Jackson and were consequently transferred to
Marquette Branch Prison in Michigan's
Upper Peninsula. Chebatoris was released from prison in December 1935 and moved back to his hometown of Treveskyn, Pennsylvania, where he was quickly sought by police in
Washington County on suspicion of
burglary and
assault. By 1937, Chebatoris had spent fifteen of his previous seventeen years incarcerated. He had not seen his wife since 1920 and had never met his daughter. He had moved back to Detroit and become reacquainted with fellow ex-convict Jack Gracey, who lived in nearby
Hamtramck and was formulating plans for a bank robbery. ==Robbery and murder==