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Volstead Act
noun
- an act of Congress, introduced in 1919 by Andrew J. Volstead to implement the Eighteenth Amendment of the Constitution, which forbade the sale of alcoholic beverages.
Example Sentences
But they finally got Al Capone for federal income tax evasion, not for murder, racketeering, or Volstead Act violations, so sometimes you have to pick the clear-cut legal case to put away a career criminal.
The Volstead Act, which banned the production, import and distribution of alcoholic beverages, went into effect at midnight on Jan. 17, 1920.
To prevent this, the Volstead Act held dominion not only over the land but also encroached on the kingdom of Neptune, prohibiting the consumption of alcohol up to 12 miles out to sea.
Guy Bentley, director of consumer freedom at the Reason Foundation, said on Twitter: “Serious Volstead Act vibes here,” referring to the 1920 law designed to implement Prohibition, which failed to end sales of alcohol.
I fondly recall my father telling me stories of his grandmother in Shelton going from a staunch nondrinker pre-Prohibition to an imbiber after the passage of the Volstead Act simply because she didn’t like the government telling her what she could and could not do.
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