Al Capone’s childhood home in Brooklyn’s Park Slope has sold for $5.82 million, The Post has learned.
The five-story townhouse listed in late April for $6.25 million after undergoing a radical renovation.
Capone, a Brooklyn native, moved to 38 Garfield Place in the early 1900s. Little Al, just 11 at the time, would go on to join the local Five Points Gang.
He moved out of this townhouse in early adulthood to make his fortune in Chicago, eventually building a criminal empire that earned him the title of “Public Enemy No. 1.”
But the home’s ties to the Capone family was not the property’s main selling point, listing representative Nadia Bartolucci told The Post. The association went unmentioned in initial tours, she said, and potential buyers only learned of the home’s mob history when

New York Post Real Estate

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