The Leo Frank case
Murder in Georgia - 1913
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| The Victim | |
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Mary Phagan A 12 yr. old employee of the National Pencil Factory, in Atlanta, was murdered .
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The Murderer | |
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Leo Frank |
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The Witness | |
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James Conley |
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Watchman | |
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Newt Lee |
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The Factory | |
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The murder
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12 years old
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April 26th, 1913 - Leo Frank had Conley "watch out" for him while he "chatted" with Mary Phagan. Frank demanded sex, and Phagan refused. Next Frank, in cocaine induced rage, beat her mercilessly. He then pulled her underwear off, tied it around her throat, and raped her. After Frank finished he strangled her to death with the cord. | ||||
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Newt Lee |
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| Jewish involvement | |
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Banai Brith employs senator
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| Body exhumed | |
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Alibi broken
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The Prosecutor |
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Jewish Lawyers Accused Of Bribing Detectives |
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Nina Formby |
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Various witnesses to Leo Frank's sexual deviancies | ||||||||||
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Body Exhumed Second Time | |
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Family Cook Testifies About Frank's Confession And Attempted Bribery | |||||
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Minola McKnight
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Leo Frank's Various Alibi's | |
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A Jewess lies Lucille Frank |
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Jewish Assistant Herbert Schiff |
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Witnesses Tampering Revealed |
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Devastating witness
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On the witness stand, Jim Conley was devastating. According to Conley, Frank had confessed the murder to him and had tried to get him, (Conley), to burn the body in the factory's basement furnace. Frank's lawyers were unable to shake Conley's story. | |
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John Starnes
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Harry Scott
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August 5, 1913 When the day ended Conley was still on the stand, while defense attorneys argued that his testimony of having been a lookout for Frank on earlier occasions should be stricken from the record as irrelevant to the case. | ||||
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Frank's mother
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Leo Frank Testifies |
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August 18, 1913 - Leo Frank took the witness stand. He spoke for four hours, calmly but firmly laying out his story. Frank said Jim Conley's tale was all lies, and that the detectives tried to distort everything he (Frank) said in order to incriminate him. |
He never saw Jim Conley that day. Frank concluded his statement thus: "Some newspaper man has called me 'the silent man in the Tower.' (for his unwillingness to talk to police or the press) Gentlemen, this is the time and here is the place! I have told you the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth." | |
Prosecutor's final argument |
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The verdict | |
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Jury decides |
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Monday morning the Fifth Regiment, Georgia National Guard, was posted throughout the city, and Judge Roan gave the jurors their instructions. |
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Georgia State Militia Was Called Out In Case Leo Franks Was Acquitted | |
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Leo Frank sentenced | ||||||
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Governor Bribed to Commute Sentence | |
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Governor flees for his life
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June 20, 1915 |
He was influenced by his law partners, who represented Frank. Either way, Slaton's act was political suicide. He was forced to leave the country in fear for his own life. | |
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| The lynching | |
| Lynch mob of leading citizens gathers | |
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Lynching mob consisted of leading citizens in the community, men prominent in business and social circles, and even in churches." |
Calling themselves the Knights of Mary Phagan, they cut the telephone lines, surprised the guards and entered the barrack of Leo Frank, who two years earlier had been convicted of the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan in one of the most infamous trials of the century. The intruders seized Frank and departed back to Marietta. | |
| Leo Frank lynched | |
August 17, 1915 - Frank was hanged there in Frey's grove. When word of the lynching spread, crowds gathered to see the body hanging from a tree. | |
Frank's body was rushed to an undertaker in Atlanta, with a line of vehicles trailing behind. Although the undertaker tried to keep the body concealed, a large crowd soon gathered demanding to see it. After a rock was thrown through a window, officials agreed to let the public view Frank's body. | |
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