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Superintendent reads, receives family, and follows case coverage without apparent fear as grand jury decision draws near

Sunday, May 11th, 1913

Leo M. Frank is waiting.

With the grand jury expected to take up his case sometime this week, the superintendent of the National Pencil Factory sits in the Tower and receives the days much as he has received every other day of his nearly two weeks of confinement. He reads. He exchanges a few words with the guards. He greets his family when they come and converses with them on various subjects in a quiet, composed manner, giving no outward sign that a charge of murder hangs over him.

Comfortable, if Not Free

Beyond the loss of his liberty, Frank has been deprived of little. He eats what he wishes, reads whatever he likes, newspapers and magazines among them, and receives visitors freely. He has followed the full newspaper coverage of the investigation, including the more disturbing details of the crime, reading the accounts with the same dispassion he appears to bring to everything. His comments, as far as anyone knows, have been reserved for his attorney and his family.

Relatives have visited him daily, bringing choice food from the spring market so that he has not been left to depend on ordinary jail fare. This is no special arrangement; any prisoner awaiting trial or grand jury action may receive the same consideration if they are able to afford it. Several close friends have also come to see him, and jail staff say he has received them all pleasantly. His attorney, Luther Z. Rosser, has met with him in brief conference.

The Strain Shows

The toll of confinement is visible, however. Frank is paler than he was a fortnight ago and carries a slight haggardness about him. The composure holds, but it has been tested.

When informed of the coroner's jury ruling, his response was measured: "I expected nothing else at this time." His attitude since has remained unchanged. He says he is confident he will be cleared, that the courts will find the man truly responsible, and that he will eventually go free. Until that day comes, he says, he is prepared to wait and bear his circumstances without complaint.
Transcript
00:00Frank is awaiting action of the grand jury calmly. Atlanta, Georgian Sunday, May 11, 1913.
00:06Leo M. Frank, calmly and without any apparent fear or apprehension, is awaiting the decision
00:12of the twenty-four men who will determine this week whether or not an indictment shall
00:16be returned against him in connection with the killing of Mary Fagan. Yesterday, which
00:21was very much like the other days that he has been confined in the tower, he read, said
00:26a few words now and then to the guards, greeted members of his family as they came to see
00:31him, and discussed various subjects with them in a quiet, matter-of-fact manner, not at all
00:36as though the burden of a great crime were resting on his soul. Frank has privileges. Except
00:43that he is deprived of his liberty and most effectively guarded, Frank is not without the
00:47majority of the privileges enjoyed by the rest of the people in Atlanta. He may eat what
00:52he wishes. He may read the newspapers, the magazines, the current novels, anything he
00:57desires. He may see whom he wishes. He has not been deprived even of the accounts of the
01:02gruesome tragedy whose victim was an innocent and pretty little girl. He has read them dispassionately
01:08as he does everything. He has followed the various theories carefully, reserving comment,
01:13so far as is known, for his counsel and members of his family. His relatives have visited him
01:18frequently. Daily they have brought him the choice delicacies that the spring market affords.
01:24He has not been compelled to rely upon the plain jail fare that most of his jailmates get.
01:28This, of course, is not a special privilege. Any of those awaiting trial or the action of the grand
01:33jury may have the extra luxuries if they care to buy them. Several of Frank's close friends have been
01:39in to see him. He has met them pleasantly, according to the jail attachés. His lawyer, Luther Z. Rosser,
01:45also has been in brief conference with him. Strain has told. The strain of the nearly two weeks
01:50imprisonment unquestionably has told on the young factory superintendent. He is paler than he was
01:55two weeks ago. He is slightly haggard, but through it all he has been calm, imperturbable.
02:01I expected nothing else at this time, was his quiet comment when told of the action of the coroner's
02:06jury. Since then his attitude has been the same. He expresses his confidence that he will be cleared in
02:12the end. He declares his belief that the courts will find the guilty man and that he will be set
02:17free. Until then he is willing to wait and take his present incarceration philosophically.
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