00:00Inquest scene is dramatic in its tenseness. Atlanta, Georgian, Thursday, May 8, 1913.
00:05Crowd in small, smoke-filled room breathlessly follows the Fagan slaying inquiry. Father weeps
00:11silently. Jurors, officials, and detectives manifest intense interest in replies of witnesses.
00:16In a small, crowded, and smoke-filled room at police headquarters, Coroner Don Who on Thursday
00:21morning began what it is thought will be the last session of the jury impaneled to inquire
00:25into the death of Mary Fagan, strangled to death in the basement of the National Pencil
00:30Factory April 26. The situation was tense and pregnant with possibilities. The fact that
00:36the investigation of the case is rapidly drawing to a close, coupled with the admissions of
00:41officials that new and important evidence would develop the examination of the witnesses
00:45today, brought out a large and curious crowd. At one end of the long table, heaped with notebooks
00:52and typewriters, sat Coroner Don Who, flanked on each side by members of the jury. At the
00:58foot of the table sat the newspaper reporters and the official stenographers, four in number.
01:03Facing Coroner Don Who and the jury sat the witness. Ranged along the wall were curious
01:08spectators, relatives of the dead girl and friends of the witnesses. Long before the inquest was
01:13called, every available chair in the room was taken, and latecomers ensconced themselves
01:18on the window ledges, Dorsey takes active part. Prominent among the spectators were the attorneys
01:25for Frank, Pinkerton, and city detectives and county and state officials. Solicitor Hugh Dorsey
01:30sat just behind Coroner Don Who and took an active part in the questioning of the witnesses.
01:35While Mr. Dorsey asked no questions himself, several times he conferred with the coroner on the best
01:41manner in which to examine the witnesses. Attorney Luther Rosser also occupied a seat near the coroner
01:46and took keen interest in the proceedings of the inquest. He did not object to any of the
01:51questions asked the witnesses that had bearing on the actions of Leo M. Frank on the day of the
01:56murder. Ranged against the wall behind Coroner Don Who were Detective John Black, in charge of the
02:02city investigating squad, Detective Starnes, and Detective Harry Scott of the Pinkertons. All of
02:08the officers paid close attention to the examination of the witnesses. To the left of the coroner sat Dr.
02:14J.W. Hurt, county physician, who examined the body, and whose testimony is awaited with considerable
02:21curiosity. Father, a pathetic figure. J.W. Coleman, father of the dead girl, stood against the wall
02:27to the right of Coroner Don Who, a pathetic figure in his sorrow. Mr. Coleman evinced keen interest in
02:34what was transpiring. He kept his eyes fixed constantly on the witness who sat at the foot of
02:38the long table, and his eyes filled with tears, as the tragic details of the finding of the child's
02:44body were related. The attitudes of the individual members of the jury showed their realization of the
02:50responsibility that rests upon them. Each of the six sat with his arms on the table, paying closest
02:55attention to the statements of the witnesses. Most of the questions were asked by the coroner,
03:01but now and then a juror would interrupt to ask the witness to make some point clearer.
03:05The air of tense eagerness with which the jurors awaited the replies of the witnesses
03:09was communicated to those whose only interest in the case was the satisfaction of curiosity,
03:15crowd tense and quiet. The crowd in the room was one of the quietest that has ever attended a session
03:21of the inquest. Save for the occasional scratching of a match or the dragging of a chair across the
03:26floor, nothing was heard but the voices of the coroner and the witnesses. All of the witnesses
03:32brought in were subjected to a close examination by coroner Donahue, and all bore the ordeal well.
03:38Boots Rogers, one of the policemen who found the body, was on the stand more than an hour.
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