00:00Frank is guilty, says Pinkerton, Atlanta Constitution. Monday, May 26, 1913. Sufficient
00:06evidence found to convict him declares man hired by the National Pencil Company. Announcing that
00:12he had secured evidence sufficient to convict his employer, Harry Scott, assistant superintendent of
00:17the Pinkertons, who has been retained by the National Pencil Company since the second day of
00:22the Fagan tragedy, said to a reporter for the Constitution Sunday night that it was his
00:27intention to help prosecute the suspected superintendent. Scott has been in command of
00:32the Pinkerton forces working on the investigation. His employment came about in answer to a telephone
00:37call from Frank on Monday morning following the murder. He was engaged, he states, for the sole
00:42purpose of finding the murderer, Scott's connection with case. His connection with the case was explained
00:48once before when he was called to the stand at the coroner's inquest. The Constitution Sunday morning
00:54published an exclusive story explaining that although Scott was employed by Frank's defense,
00:59and although reports of the Pinkertons' daily progress were submitted to the Prisoners' Council,
01:04he was working on the theory that Frank was guilty. Scott declared to the Constitution over the telephone
01:09Sunday night that he was convinced of the suspect's guilt, and that he had evidence to that effect,
01:15which would be submitted before the courts. The Pinkertons' investigation, however, will not cease,
01:20he says, but will continue as relentlessly as heretofore. Because of strict jail regulations,
01:27Frank could not be reached last night for a statement regarding the detective's announcement.
01:32As the assistant superintendent stated on the witness stand during the inquest, he was summoned
01:36to Frank's office on Monday afternoon, April 28th, to confer with Frank. Frank, he says, asserted that it
01:43was due the pencil factory to investigate the murder. Pinkertons, start work. Scott and his men
01:49immediately set to work. The following day, the plant superintendent was arrested. The Pinkerton
01:55investigation proceeded on the theory that Frank was guilty, it is stated by Scott. Later, authorities
02:01of the pencil factory were consulted. The Pinkertons, it is said, asked if they were to continue their
02:06investigation as originally outlined to find the murderer, or would they be expected to assist Frank.
02:12In the latter case, it is said the detective officials declared they would cease connection.
02:17According to Luther Z. Rosser, counsel for Frank and Superintendent Scott, the Pinkertons were
02:23instructed to proceed as in the past, and to find the slayer. Scott says he has evidence not yet made
02:29public, and that it will not be revealed until time of trial.
Comments