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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