00:00Not guilty, say both prisoners, Atlanta Constitution, Saturday, May 3, 1913.
00:05Leo M. Frank and the night watchman Newt Lee reiterate declarations of innocence in Fagan
00:10Crime. Leo M. Frank, yesterday morning in his cell in the tower, reiterated his plea of innocence
00:15to a reporter for the Constitution. I swear I'm not guilty, he declared. I could not conceive of
00:21such a hideous murder, much less commit it. I am accused unjustly. The report that I have made a
00:26confession is totally and basely false. I have no confession to make. Newt Lee, the suspected
00:31night watchman, also repeats his statement that he is innocent. White folks, I ain't guilty. White
00:37folks, he said in his characteristic dialect. I ain't guilty. If them detectives is any good,
00:42they'll find out I didn't have a thing to do with killing that little girl. I don't know nothing
00:46except I found her body. That was all. I swear for God it was. In pursuance of an independent
00:52investigation he is making into the Fagan mystery, Solicitor General Hugh M. Dorsey
00:57yesterday conferred with a number of detectives from police headquarters who are working on the
01:01case. They gave him an insight into the situation as it thus far has been developed by them.
01:06It was announced that the Solicitor has put a number of investigators from his office at work
01:11on the murder, and that although but little has been developed as yet, his staff is following a
01:16number of important clues. Grand jury may act Monday. It was stated positively that there will
01:22be no grand jury action until Monday. The jury met Friday, took action on a number of matters,
01:28but did not take a hand in the Fagan case. It is said though that they will probably take it
01:33up
01:33Monday morning. The attitude of the Pinkerton agency has incited widespread comment. They were
01:39employed by the National Pencil Company through the suspected superintendent. In order that the correct
01:45position of the Pinkertons might be made known, Detective Harry Scott said to a reporter for
01:50the Constitution Friday afternoon, we don't care who our investigation hits. We have been employed to
01:56find the guilty man, and the guilty man we're going to find. We are going to give every bit of
02:01evidence
02:01we gain to the state authorities, and are going to lend our utmost energy in prosecuting the case.
02:06We have added two men to the case. We do not intend to cease until the guilty man is caught
02:10and
02:10convicted. The public may rest assured of the fact that the murderer will be caught and
02:15given justice. We are confident of success. A story and a dream. U.I. Smith, a resident of Eagan,
02:22Georgia, visited police headquarters Monday morning and asked to see Chief Lanford. Ushered into the
02:26office of that official, he began a remarkable narrative of a scene he had witnessed in Atlanta
02:31Saturday and of a subsequent dream. If the body of Mary Fagan is to be exhumed, he said, I want
02:37to see it.
02:38I am satisfied I can identify her as a girl I saw Saturday shortly after noon on Mitchell Street.
02:43She was with a middle-aged woman and was being followed by two men. She reeled as though dizzy
02:48from drugs, and often she staggered over the curb into the street. Each time one of the men would
02:54catch her by the arm. She resented it, it seemed, and jerked away from him. I followed them for
02:59several blocks. They finally went into a suspicious-looking house. When I returned home, what I saw
03:05continually preyed upon my mind. I have already had three dreams over it. Each dream told me it was
03:10Mary Fagan I saw. I've been worried so much over it that I felt it my duty to come and
03:15tell the
03:15detectives. Chief Lanford assured him that, in the event the body was exhumed, Smith would be notified
03:21and called upon to identify the girl. Mrs. Barnett on case. Believing she can aid in solving the Fagan
03:27mystery, Mrs. Hattie Barnett, a well-known detective who lives on Woodward Avenue, is now working on the
03:32case. She is not connected with any detective agency, but will work independently. Solicitor Hugh Dorsey
03:38denied last night the rumor that he would engage female detectives in the investigation he is
03:42making. Mrs. Barnett would not discuss her theories with the Constitution reporter who talked with her.
03:48I am confident that I can obtain evidence which will convict the guilty person, she says.
03:52My methods of investigation, I will say, will be along lines never used before in Atlanta.
03:57The mystery, I am assured, will be solved in surprisingly short time.
04:01Burns may take a hand. Detective William J. Burns may be persuaded to take a part in the investigation.
04:06He will pass through Atlanta sometime next week on the way to attend the State Bankers Association
04:11to be held in Macon, at which he will deliver a speech on the protection of banking institutions.
04:17It has been suggested by a number of persons directly interested in the mystery that Mr.
04:22Burns be engaged to conduct an investigation. When he stops over in the city, the probability
04:27is that he will be consulted.
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