Sutton became a criminal at an early age, though throughout his professional criminal career, he did not kill anyone. He was described by
Mafioso Donald Frankos as "a little bright-eyed guy, just 5'7" and always talking, chain-smoking ... cigarettes with
Bull Durham tobacco." Frankos stated also that Sutton "dispensed mounds of legal advice" to any convict willing to listen. Inmates considered Sutton a "wise old head" in the prison population. When incarcerated at "
The Tombs" (Manhattan House of Detention) he did not have to worry about assault because Mafia friends protected him. In conversation with Donald Frankos he would sadly reminisce about the 1920s and 1930s when he was most active in robbing banks and would always tell fellow convicts that in his opinion, during the days of
Al Capone and
Lucky Luciano, the criminals were the bloodiest. Gangsters from the time period, and many incarcerated
organized crime inmates, enjoyed having Sutton for companionship. He was witty and non-violent. Frankos declared that Sutton made legendary bank thieves
Jesse James and
John Dillinger seem like amateurs. Sutton was an accomplished bank robber. He usually carried a pistol or a
Thompson submachine gun. "You can't rob a bank on charm and personality," he once observed. In an interview in the
Reader's Digest published shortly before his death, Sutton was asked if the guns that he used in his robberies were loaded. He responded that he never carried a loaded gun because somebody might get hurt. He stole from the rich and kept it, though public opinion later made him into a type of
gentleman thief, like
Robin Hood. He allegedly never robbed a bank when a woman screamed or a baby cried. Sutton was captured and recommitted in June 1931, charged with
assault and
robbery. He failed to complete his 30-year sentence, however, escaping on December 11, 1932, using a smuggled gun and holding a prison guard hostage. With the guard as leverage, Sutton acquired a 45-ft (13.5 meter) ladder to scale the 30-ft (9 meter) wall of the prison grounds. Sutton was recaptured the same day by Philadelphia police officer Mark Kehoe. Sentenced to life imprisonment as a fourth time offender, Sutton was transferred to the
Philadelphia County Prison,
Holmesburg section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. On February 10, 1947, Sutton and other prisoners dressed as prison guards carried two ladders across the prison yard to the wall after dark. When the prison's searchlights hit him, Sutton yelled, "It's all right!" No one stopped him. While in prison, Sutton wrote "I, Willie Sutton", a book about his life and career. Co-authored with
Quentin Reynolds, the book was published in 1953. In December of 1969, Farrell ruled that Sutton's
good behavior, along with his deteriorating health, justified commuting his sentence to time served. At the hearing Sutton responded, "Thank you, your Honor. God bless you," and wept as he was led out of the court building. In 1976, Sutton published his second book,
Where the Money Was, co-authored with journalist
Ed Linn. After his release, Sutton delivered lectures on
prison reform and consulted with banks on theft-deterrent techniques. He made a television commercial for New Britain Bank and Trust Company in Connecticut for their credit card with picture identification on it. His lines were, "They call it the 'face card.' Now when I say I'm Willie Sutton, people believe me." ==Personal life and death==