00:00Collier imputes arrest to Felder Conspiracy. Atlanta Journal Sunday, May 25, 1913.
00:06Knoxville charge against him not pressed for more than four years.
00:10As Collier was detained late Saturday afternoon on the request of E.D. Connors,
00:15Chief of Police of Knoxville Tenen, to face an indictment charging forgery returned four years
00:19ago by the grand jury at that city. The amount involved is $1.90. Collier hotly maintains that
00:25his arrest is a plot of Colonel T.B. Felder's to get him out of town. He declares that the
00:30Knoxville
00:30official was prompted to press the old charge against him by a friend of Felder's. Collier was
00:35taken into custody by city detectives on the street and accompanied them to police headquarters.
00:40He was closeted with Chief of Police Beavers and Chief of Detectives Lanford for nearly an hour.
00:45Later he secured bond and was allowed his liberty. Says Felder caused arrest.
00:51I have been in Knoxville many times since the indictment was returned against me.
00:55Collier told Chief Beavers. And there never was any attempt to press the charge or arrest me.
01:00If Felder had not devised the plot, no action would have been taken at this time.
01:05Collier says that the charge of forgery grew out of the complaint of a woman of questionable
01:09reputation in the Tennessee city. His statement was corroborated by the Chief of Police of Knoxville
01:15in a long-distance message to Chief Beavers. He asserts that four years ago he was called in to
01:20draw up her will and that she paid him for the work with a check for $1.90.
01:24The check, he says, passed through several hands and was honored at the bank. The woman did not
01:29allege that it was a forged paper until six months later, he maintains. Chief Beavers' statement.
01:35To set at rest all speculations and rumors. Chief of Police Beavers gave out the following
01:40statement Saturday afternoon outlining the connection of A.S. Collier with the recent
01:45sensational developments.
01:46I first met Mr. Collier on Monday, May 5th. Detective Osborne came to me and told me that
01:52he had met a man on the street who he thought could get valuable information in the Fagan case
01:57and these matters which have developed later. He named Collier and said he had known him for
02:02several years. I told Detective Osborne to have Collier call on me in my office. Collier refused to come
02:09and I went to his room in the Williams house number two. He told me then that he thought he
02:13could get
02:13valuable information for me and I told him if he could get it in a legitimate and honest way to
02:18go ahead. That is the extent of my personal acquaintance with Collier. I didn't speak to
02:22him again until today, although I was of course advised of his activity and the part he took in
02:27the case by Chief of Detectives Lanford. Collier aids detectives. Chief Lanford, in commenting on
02:33Collier's connection with the detective department, said that he was by no means an agent of the city
02:37and that he had only worked with the local detectives because it was thought his aid would
02:41be valuable. We are always ready to accept any aid of real value, said the Chief, and we did not,
02:46of course, refuse his. He said that he had been associated with Colonel Felder for several years
02:51and that the latter owed him a considerable sum of money for copying and writing he had done for
02:55him in legal cases. I think he said he did twelve thousand dollars worth of work and received only
03:01dollars six hundred for it. I had several conferences with Mr. Collier and he always was
03:07square in his dealings with me. In connection with the charges of Colonel Felder, I would like
03:11to ask the Colonel why, if he thought Collier a crook and all the rest of the things he called
03:16him,
03:17he let himself be led into a trap.
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