00:00Pinkerton man says Frank is guilty. Atlanta, Georgian. Monday, May 26, 1913. Pencil factory
00:06owners told him not to shield superintendents, Scott declares. Harry Scott, assistant superintendent
00:11of the Pinkertons, announced Monday his belief that Leo M. Frank was responsible for the slaying
00:16of 14-year-old Mary Fagan, April 26. He added that his agency had been working on this theory
00:22from the time its services were engaged by officials of the National Pencil Company,
00:26two days after the crime. Scott previously had said the Pinkertons were on the case to find the
00:32guilty man, even though it might be Frank. His latest statement is believed to have been prompted
00:37by the attack on the Pinkertons by Colonel Thomas B. Felder. Mr. Scott declared he not only believed
00:42Frank responsible for the killing, but that he proposed to lay his evidence before the court
00:47and assist in the prosecution of the factory superintendent. He is in possession, he said,
00:52of considerable evidence which has not been made public. Soon after the investigation was undertaken,
00:58Scott says he went to the men employing him and asked if he was supposed to protect Frank.
01:03He said if he was, he would have to throw up the job. He was told, he said, that he
01:08had been engaged
01:09to find the guilty man, whoever he might be. It was on this assurance the Pinkertons continued the
01:15investigation, according to Scott.
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