| TAXEVASION | Crime of which US gangster Al Capone was convicted on October 17 1931 (3,7) |
| EVASION | US gangster Al Capone was imprisoned for eleven years for income tax ... |
| METSARECHAMPS | OCTOBER 17, 1969 |
| SCARFACE | Nickname of US gangster Al Capone, deriving from knife wounds received in a barfight in 1917 (8) |
| TAKINGPOT | *Crime of which one stoner accuses another? |
| TRESPASSER | He could be convicted on the wrong grounds (10) |
| IDENTITYTHEFT | Crime of which 17-, 26-, 51- and 59-Across are victims? |
| PRISONER | Al Capone was one in Alcatraz |
| ALONE | Going without headgear, Al Capone was unique (5) |
| ELCHAPO | Nickname of Mexican drug lord Joaquin Guzman, convicted on ten criminal charges in New York last month (2,5) |
| FRAMED | Convicted on false evidence |
| HRHALDEMAN | President Nixon's Chief of Staff who was convicted of Watergate-related crimes: 3 wds. |
| DICKTURPIN | English highwayman who was convicted at York Assizes in 1739 (4,6) |
| CAPONE | It's US gangster Al - and there's nae cop around (6) |
| CIA | Richard Helms was convicted of lying to Congress over the undercover activities of this US spy body |
| RAE | Carruth of the Carolina Panthers who was convicted of conspiring to commit murder |
| ALCAPONE | US gangster (1899-1947), convicted of tax evasion in 1931 (2,6) |
| ALARMED | Capone was given weapons which really frightened people (7) |
| MCSORLEY | Hockey player Marty, who was convicted of assault for a stick-swinging incident |
| MATAHARI | Dutch dancer and courtesan who was convicted of spying for Germany during World War l (4,4) |