00:00Five to testify Frank was at home at Our Negro says he aided Atlanta, Georgian, Monday, June 2nd,
00:051913. Defense to cite discrepancies in time to disprove Conley's affidavit. Sheriff denies
00:12friends of superintendent approach sweeper and sell. After a two-hour grilling by solicitor
00:17Hugh M. Dorsey Manola McKnight, a Negro woman about 21 years old was taken to police headquarters
00:22and is held under suspicion in connection with the murder of Mary Fagan. She is believed to have
00:28made sensational disclosures to the solicitor. At the police station she was in hysteria,
00:33shouting, I am going to hang, but I didn't do it. Five persons will be prepared to testify at the
00:38trial of Leo M. Frank that he arrived at home for luncheon at 1.20 o'clock the Saturday afternoon
00:44that Mary Fagan was killed, which would have been an impossibility. The defense will assert,
00:49if Frank had directed the disposal of the body and dictated the notes at the time the Negro alleges,
00:55testimony before the coroner's jury by Frank and others indicated strongly that he was at home by
01:011.20 the afternoon of the crime. Conley and his affidavits declared that he went into Frank's
01:07office at four minutes before one o'clock. He said that after a conversation of a few minutes,
01:12Frank heard voices and shoved Conley into a closet. Miss Corinthia Hall and Mrs. Emma Clark entered.
01:18Conley was kept a prisoner in the closet, he said, for eight or ten minutes. It was after this,
01:22he said that Frank asked him if he could write. Conley swore in his affidavit that he answered
01:27in the affirmative, and that he was directed to write several notes, most of which began,
01:32Dear Mother, a long, tall black Negro did this by himself. After this, followed the giving of $2.50
01:39to the Negro, according to his story, as well as the giving of the $1.200, which later was taken
01:45back
01:46by Frank. All of the incidents that the Negro has detailed, in the minds of many interested in the
01:51case, would have kept Frank at the factory considerably after the time that five witnesses
01:56will swear he arrived home, wife and her parents to aid. These witnesses are Mr. and Mrs. Emile Selig,
02:03Mrs. Frank, the cook in the Selig household, and an acquaintance of Frank who is said to have seen him
02:08riding home in the streetcar. Adding doubt to the Negro's affidavit is the testimony of Miss
02:13Corinthia Hall before the coroner's jury. Miss Hall testified that she left the building about
02:18eleven forty-five Saturday forenoon. Conley described her as coming to Frank's office more
02:23than an hour later. Sheriff Mangum made indignant and emphatic denial Monday of the reports that
02:29Conley had been approached, threatened, or intimidated while he was in a cell at the tower.
02:34Conley, he said, was not threatened in any way. He was not approached by friends of Leo Frank,
02:39and no one was permitted to see Conley whom the Negro did not wish to see.
02:43There is not a bit of truth in the statements that have been made to the effect that Frank's
02:47friends were allowed to get to Conley and make attempts to frighten him into a confession,
02:51said the sheriff. It was reported that a group of Frank's friends with a bottle of liquor went to
02:56Conley's cell. This is absolutely a fabrication. Treats all prisoners alike.
03:03Frank is no more to me than Conley, so far as the law is concerned. The law tells me to
03:07protect all
03:08my prisoners without fear or favor. This I have done, and this I shall continue to do.
03:13Conley was treated exactly as Frank has been, or as anyone else awaiting trial or the action of the
03:18grand jury. If anyone came to see him, he was asked first if he wished to see that person or
03:23persons.
03:24If he said he did not, his wishes were regarded to the letter. The report that I am seeking the
03:29Jewish support and the Jewish vote or any other class or race or nationality as against another
03:35is most absurd upon the face of it. I have nothing to say against Chief Lanford. I would only suggest
03:40that he try his case in the court and not attempt to settle the whole case and hang one man
03:45or another
03:46before the twelve men the law prescribes have had a chance to pass on the prisoner's guilty or
03:50innocence. Conley made a personal request of Chief of Detectives Lanford Monday morning to be
03:56taken to confront the factory superintendent. I think I could make him tell everything if I
04:01could just go there to his cell and tell my story again, said the Negro. Conley repeatedly urged upon
04:06Chief Lanford that he be allowed to face Frank. He declared he thought his presence would break
04:11Frank down. The Chief regarded Conley as sincere in his request, but said that he would make no
04:16further effort to bring the Negro and the factory superintendent together. All rested in the
04:21hands of Luther Z. Rosser, Frank's attorney, Lanford announced. I have made several attempts to take
04:27Conley to Frank's cell since the Negro began making his disclosures, explained Chief Lanford. All efforts
04:33have been unavailing. Frank steadfastly has refused to talk with the detectives or with anyone whom the
04:39detectives may bring to see him. Attorney Rosser may arrange for a meeting of this sort, but the
04:44detective department has given it up. Conley not to be indicted now. If Rosser is confident that
04:50Frank is innocent, he may think it will help his client's case to give him a chance to see the
04:54Negro and deny his tale. Chief Lanford said that there would be no bar to Conley's testimony at
05:00the trial of Frank. Conley, he said, would not be indicted as an accessory after the fact at the
05:05present time, but more likely would be indicted after Frank's fate was determined in one way or
05:09another. In the meantime, he will be held as a material witness like Newt Lee, the Negro night
05:15watchman at the factory. Prisoner can shield himself? Sheriff Mengum, in replying to Lanford's
05:20attack of his attitude in preventing detectives from confronting Frank with his accuser, declared
05:25Monday morning the power to do this is not discretionary. If Lanford knew anything about
05:30the law, said the sheriff, he would know that the law allows the prisoner in the county jail to say
05:36whom he will see and whom he will not see. If Frank does not want to see the Negro, he
05:41doesn't have
05:41to. If a prisoner asks a jailer to keep everyone out except his friends, his request is granted.
05:47That was the case when Mrs. Applebaum was in jail, and all others as well. I don't see why Lanford
05:52doesn't try the Fagan case in court. He says he has the evidence to convict Frank. Why doesn't he
05:57take it into court instead of trying to bring the matter into the jail? Added from the afternoon
06:02edition of the Georgian editor.
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