When we think gangsters and Prohibition, Brooklyn-born Al Capone usually comes to mind. Known as “Scarface,” Capone gained notoriety for his reign as the crime boss of The Chicago Outfit. Twenty-five years before Capone is born, another later-to-be American gangster is born in Berlin, Germany. “The Ghosts of Eden Park” tells the story of this German immigrant with immense smarts and talent who uses his energies to find ways to skirt the law rather than take the path of a respected trial lawyer. Known as the Volstead Act, the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution was passed in 1919 outlawing the manufacture, sale, barter, transport, import, export, and distribution of intoxicating liquor. In his pursuit of abundant wealth, George Remus (1874-1952) embarks on a destructive path pitting his, often troubled personality, against a devious wife and a savvy, maverick prosecutor. You don’t expect that it is going to end well. One …