William J. Kinney

His duty station was the Jack Daniel's building in St. Louis (liquor warehoused there during Prohibition could only be used for prescribed medicinal purposes).

[2] He was an ally of the Egan's Rats, a group of notorious local gangsters.

In August 1923, crooks methodically siphoned bourbon through 150 feet of hose to trucks, draining 893 barrels.

After Prohibition ended, Jack Daniels moved back to Lynchburg, Tennessee.

This biography of a person who has held a non-elected position in the federal government of the United States is a stub.