00:00Attorney retained for Negro servant at Frank's home, Atlanta Journal, Tuesday, June 3, 1913.
00:05George Gordon represents Manola McKnight as attorney and may seek habeas corpus during
00:10afternoon. Negress declares her husband has lied. She swears Leo M. Frank was at home at time.
00:16He testified before the coroner's inquest. It became known Tuesday morning that attorney
00:20George Gordon had been retained to represent Manola McKnight, the Negro cook employed by
00:25Mr. and Mrs. Emil Selig, parents-in-law of Leo M. Frank, held for the murder of Mary Fagan.
00:31Who employed the lawyer could not be learned, but the fact remains that Mr. Gordon is representing
00:36the Negress, whose arrest Monday by city detectives followed a questioning by Solicitor General Hugh
00:42M. Dorsey. It is also understood on good authority that Mr. Gordon is seriously considering the
00:47matter of seeking a writ of habeas corpus for the McKnight woman, and further developments along
00:52this line are expected during the afternoon. Woman questioned. Shortly after noon Tuesday,
00:57the McKnight woman was taken from her cell on the first floor at police headquarters by detectives
01:02T. Sarnas and Sample, who led her to a private room adjoining the detective department on the third
01:07floor. Two unknown white men and a Negro man, supposed to be the woman's husband, were left alone with her
01:13for about an hour and a half when the detectives were called in. After talking with the woman for a
01:19few
01:19minutes, Detective Sarnas came out of the room, gathered up a pen, ink and paper, and went back.
01:25It is presumed that she has made some kind of a statement which the detectives consider significant,
01:30and which they desire to take down in the form of an affidavit. Attorney George Gordon was outside
01:36in the detective department for a portion of the time the woman was being questioned.
01:40The hysteria, which marked her demeanor when she first was arrested, has subsided,
01:45and Manola McKnight, the Negro cook for Mr. and Mrs. Emile Selig, of 68 East Georgia Avenue,
01:51home of Leo M. Frank, still sticks to the story she hysterically shouted throughout police headquarters
01:57Monday afternoon. The Negress was arrested at the Selig residence shortly after noon Monday
02:02upon the order of Solicitor General Hugh M. Dorsey. She was carried to the solicitor's office,
02:07and that official with Detectives Campbell and Starnes examined her for more than an hour.
02:12The woman grew hysterical during the vigorous examination, and finally was led from the
02:16solicitor's office to the police patrol, weeping and shouting,
02:20I am going to hang and don't know a thing about it. Later it developed that the woman's husband,
02:24Albert McKnight, had been in the room with the officers. The husband, it is said, reported to the
02:29police officials that Manola told him that Mr. Frank returned to the Selig residence about noon
02:34of the Saturday Mary Fagan was murdered, and went back to the office at 1 p.m. The husband further
02:41quotes his wife as saying that on the Sunday morning after the tragedy misses, Frank complained
02:46that she did not sleep during the night because of the nervousness of Mr. Frank. Albert McKnight,
02:52in the room with the solicitor and the two detectives, is said to have attempted to induce his wife to
02:57repeat the statements which he claimed she had made to him. She refused, however, calling her husband
03:02a liar, and saying that she never made any statements faintly resembling those attributed to her.
03:07At variance with the allegations of her husband, the negress declares that Frank arrived at the
03:13residence on the Saturday of the tragedy, about 1.20 or 1.30 o'clock, that he ate his luncheon
03:19and then
03:19lay down on a couch in one of the rooms. He went downtown later, she says, and returned about 6
03:25.30 o'clock.
03:26She says that she is certain that he was at the residence at about 7.45 or 8 o'clock
03:30that evening,
03:31for at that time he gave her a week's wages, $5.01 bills, and she left the Selig residence for
03:36her own
03:37home in the rear of 351 Pulliam Street. Manola declares that she will stick to her story despite the
03:43efforts of her husband to induce her to change it. Manola declares that some time ago she had a fuss
03:48with
03:48her husband, and this quarrel, she avers, must have led him to tell the police lies about her.
03:55During the first hours of her incarceration, the cook shouted continually that she was going to hang,
03:59although innocent, and frequently she shouted too that Frank is innocent.