Gangster Al Capone died of a stroke and pneumonia at his Florida home in 1947, eight years after being released from prison. He was buried in a family plot in Chicago’s Mount Olivet Cemetery, with simple services conducted by the family priest (the archbishop forbade a requiem mass). Monsignor William Gorman told reporters, “The Church never condones evil … this very brief ceremony is to recognize his penitence and the fact that he died fortified by the sacraments of the Church.” Capone’s remains were later removed to a grave in Mount Carmel Cemetery in Cook County, Illinois.
Tamerlan Tsarnaev Is Buried in Virginia: Where Other Notorious Criminals Were Laid To Rest
TIME takes a look at where the remains of other notorious criminals throughout history have ended up