Joe Morse, an attorney for racketeer Ben
Tucker, realizes that thousands of people select the number "776" in
the lotteries on Independence day and conceives of a clever scheme
to fix that as the winning number on the Fourth of July, thus
bankrupting the numerous numbers banks operating in the city and
enabling Tucker to gain a stranglehold on the racket. Joe is
motivated by Tucker's promise to consolidate the new syndicate under
his brother Leo's small-time numbers operation.
Knowing that Leo, an intrinsically
honest man in a dishonest business, will resist joining the
syndicate, Joe goes to visit his brother on the eve of the Fourth at
his numbers bank, hidden in a small apartment in the slums.
Joe offers his brother a piece of the impending combine, but Leo
denounces the proposed alliance with Tucker, then excoriates his
brother's lack of principles and reminds him of the sacrifices that
he has made to put him through law school. To save his brother
from financial ruin, Joe arranges for Leo's bank to be raided that
night, thus assuring that it will be closed the next day when 776
hits. After Joe leaves, Leo's young secretary, Doris Lowry,
who witnessed Leo's barrage, tearfully informs her boss that her
conscience will no longer allow her to work for him.
Soon after, the police arrive and arrest
everyone on the premises, including Doris, Leo and his meek
bookkeeper, Freddy Bauer. Although Leo refuses Joe's help, Joe
goes to the jailhouse and pays everyone's fines. When Leo
announces that tomorrow will be his last day in business, Joe
advises him to close immediately, but Leo insists on honoring his
patron's bets. Feeling responsible for Doris' arrest, Leo asks
Joe to escort her home, and along the way, they discuss issues of
ambition and guilt.
The next day, July 4th, all the numbers
banks in the city are thrown into bankruptcy when the number 776
hits. Joe pays another visit to his brother, and now ruined,
Leo reluctantly enters into an alliance with Tucker.
Encountering Doris in the lobby of Leo's apartment building, Joe
justifies his actions by assuring her that his brother really wanted
to be forced into the combine. During the first day of
reorganization, Tucker's men take control of Leo's operation, and
Bauer, terrified, states his intention to quit, but Joe uses implied
threats to convince him to stay on. In desperation, Bauer
determines to drive Tucker out of business by informing Link Hall,
the city's new special prosecutor, of the location of Leo's bank.
Later, as Bauer is leaving the office,
he is approached by Wally, an emissary from Tucker's business rival,
Ficco, who asks him to arrange a meeting between Ficco and Leo.
That evening, Joe finds Tucker's flirtatious wife Edna and Doris
waiting to see him at his office. After Edna warns Joe that
her husband's phone has been tapped, Joe, sensing the law closing in
on him, checks his private line to Tucker. Troubled, Joe
leaves the office with Doris and confides his fears and self-doubts
to her.
Following Bauer's tip, the police raid
Leo's bank the next day, arresting Bauer, Leo and Doris once again.
When Tucker vows war on Ficco, Joe, sensing trouble, asks Tucker to
release Leo from the bank and promises to take his place, thus
opening himself up to criminal charges. As they await
arraignment, Doris, blaming Joe for her arrest, denounces him and
warns that he will be responsible for Leo's death. Afterward,
Leo refuses Joe's offer to buy him out and discovers that Bauer was
his betrayer. That night, Joe returns to his office and finds
an intruder there. After the man leaves, Joe extracts a wad of
cash from his safe and flees the building.
Leo, meanwhile, fearing for Bauer's
safety, gives him a ride in his car. When the frightened Leo
wanders off by himself, he is accosted by Wally and forced to set up
a meeting with Leo. As soon as the unsuspecting Leo enters a
café to meet Bauer, Ficco's men rush in, shoot Bauer and kidnap Leo,
who then suffers a heart attack. Joe, meanwhile, has finally
come to the realization that he has ruined his life.
In a restaurant, as Joe drunkenly tells
Doris his plans to run away, Doris fights for his salvation.
When Joe spots the morning newspaper headlines trumpeting Leo's
kidnapping, he runs out of the restaurant. Just as Ficco and
Tucker reach an accord at Tucker's apartment, Joe pounds at the door
and Tucker informs him that he has gone into business with Ficco.
After Ficco coolly declares that Leo is dead and that his body has
been dumped under a bridge, Joe, filled with vengeance,
surreptiously picks up the receiver of Tucker's tapped phone.
When Joe begins to recite a litany of Tucker's crimes for Hall to
hear, Tucker realizes what is happening and attacks Joe,
extinguishing the lights in the process. In the darkness, all
three men nervously finger their pistols. After stalking
Tucker, Joe kills him and then turns his gun on Ficco. Then,
picking up the phone receiver, Joe declares that he is on his way to
police headquarters. First, however, he goes with Doris to
find Leo's body under the bridge. As they walk away, Joe
voices his determination to join Hall in his battle to end
corruption.