Guest Tom Scully Posted July 27, 2010 Share Posted July 27, 2010 This thread was inspired by the impression I came away with after reading John Simkin's thread, http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.php?showtopic=15583 Tom Mooney and Lee Harvey Oswald I guess the reason that so many seemingly "good people" in the U.S. can make careers as lawyers, judges, and in law enforcement, all of them complacent, almost always, is because they satisfy themselves with the notion that the American legal system is not about attempting to guarantee that justice is done, but simply that the guarantee to "due process" is maintained, above all else. Once there was a young republican governor who was willing to risk his career and his reputation. He spoke out. He was crushed. Perhaps the memory of what he said and did, and the price he was made to pay for doing it, was still fresh in the minds of good men who did nothing, in the months and years following the Warren Commission investigation and issuance of its report.: Gov. Xxxxx said in a statement after granting the reprieve one day beore Xxxxxx was first scheduled to die, Jan. xx, Xxxxx, that he had never expressed an opinion "upon the guilt or innocence of Xxxxxx." He said: "I do, however, share with hundreds of thousands of our people the doubt as to the value of the evidence that placed him in the Xxxxxx xxxxx on the night of the crime...I do doubt that this crime could have been committed by one man, and I am worried about the eagerness of some of our law enforcement agencies to bring about the death of this one man so that the books can be closed in the thought that another great crime mystery has been successfully solved." Twenty years after the [crime]--two years before he died--Xxxxx said his view was unchanged, adding: "If Xxxxxx had been kept behind prison bars for a reasonable time, there would have been an opportunity to answer many of the unanswered question, particularly those involving an accomplice or accomplices." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Greg Parker Posted July 27, 2010 Share Posted July 27, 2010 This thread was inspired by the impression I came away with after reading John Simkin's thread, http://educationforu...showtopic=15583 Tom Mooney and Lee Harvey Oswald I guess the reason that so many seemingly "good people" in the U.S. can make careers as lawyers, judges, and in law enforcement, all of them complacent, almost always, is because they satisfy themselves with the notion that the American legal system is not about attempting to guarantee that justice is done, but simply that the guarantee to "due process" is maintained, above all else. Once there was a young republican governor who was willing to risk his career and his reputation. He spoke out. He was crushed. Perhaps the memory of what he said and did, and the price he was made to pay for doing it, was still fresh in the minds of good men who did nothing, in the months and years following the Warren Commission investigation and issuance of its report.: Gov. Xxxxx said in a statement after granting the reprieve one day beore Xxxxxx was first scheduled to die, Jan. xx, Xxxxx, that he had never expressed an opinion "upon the guilt or innocence of Xxxxxx." He said: "I do, however, share with hundreds of thousands of our people the doubt as to the value of the evidence that placed him in the Xxxxxx xxxxx on the night of the crime...I do doubt that this crime could have been committed by one man, and I am worried about the eagerness of some of our law enforcement agencies to bring about the death of this one man so that the books can be closed in the thought that another great crime mystery has been successfully solved." Twenty years after the [crime]--two years before he died--Xxxxx said his view was unchanged, adding: "If Xxxxxx had been kept behind prison bars for a reasonable time, there would have been an opportunity to answer many of the unanswered question, particularly those involving an accomplice or accomplices." Harry Hoffman on the Lindberg kidnapping. Probably a number of other similar, but less well known examples exist. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Tom Scully Posted July 27, 2010 Share Posted July 27, 2010 (edited) Harry Hoffman on the Lindberg kidnapping. Probably a number of other similar, but less well known examples exist. Yeah, Greg, NJ Governor Hoffman really stuck his neck out and apparently worked that case for a long time. It killed his political career and his reputation.: POLITICAL NOTES: The Hoffman Case - TIME On the night of Oct. 17, 1935, eight days after New Jersey's Court of Errors & Appeals had unanimously affirmed Hauptmann's death sentence, Governor Hoffman ... http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,755961,00.html CRIME: Hoffman to Hauptmann - TIME Governor Hoffman directed the State Police "to continue their search for any ... that placed [Hauptmann] in the Lindbergh nursery on the night of the crime. ... http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,847628,00.html http://news.google.com/newspapers? Documents Said To Vindicate Lindbergh Kidnap... Schenectady Gazette - Oct 22, 1985 Newly recovered documents on the kidnapping of aviator Charles A Lindbergh's son show that the baby was killed and the right man was executed for the the crime, although he was beaten while in police custody, state investigators said yesterday. The 23,633 reports, letters, newspaper articles and photographs, found after 50 years in the garage of the former governor who was unsure about the case, erase lingering questions and disprove claims by men claiming to be Linbergh' son, said state Attorney General Irwin I. Kimmelman.... ...The recently recovered documents include 10,000 items state police did not know were missing and nine fingerprints taken from the Lindberg baby's crib and toys... ..There was also a report from a doctor who examined Hauptmann several days after his arrest in New York City and found bruises indicating that he had been beaten while in the custody of the police there, Kimmelman said. "It was wrongful," Kimmelman said of the beatings. But he said that they were "not material to the case since no confession was beaten out of him..."San Francisco attorney Robert Bryan, representing Anna Hauptmann, said the documents would exonerate her husband, although he was not specific. Bryan interviewed his client yesterday on the "CBS Morning News," said he has learned from a reliable source that the documents contain evidence showing that "the trial of the century...was a trial by fraud." The LN's widow, Anna Hauptmann never stopped working it, http://www.nj.com/lindbergh/hunterdonWidow comes back to Flemington to say again that Bruno was innocent Oct. 10, 1991 For the first time since 1935, Anna Hauptmann returned to Flemington. Nearing 93, Mrs. Hauptmann came to the Union Hotel on Friday, across Main Street from the courthouse where her husband was sentenced to death for the kidnap and murder of the infant son of aviator Charles Lindbergh. "I said if I came near Flemington I don't know what will happen to me," Mrs. Hauptmann said. "When I think what they did to me here, I didn't know if I was strong enough." Her voice was still thick with a German accent and at times just audible, but her message was clear: Her Bruno Richard Hauptmann was innocent and unjustly executed and she wants Gov. Jim Florio to agree. That message is not new.From the time of her husband's arrest in 1934 and through the trial, his execution in 1936 and the years that followed, she has maintained the same thing: That on March 1, 1932, that "nasty and cold night" when 20- month-old Charles Lindbergh Jr. was kidnapped from his parents' estate in East Amwell Township, her husband picked her up from the bakery where she worked and the two drove to their home in the Bronx, where they stayed through the night. Six weeks after his kidnaping, the baby was found dead, but not before Lindbergh had paid $50,000 in ransom. Some of the money was eventually traced to Hauptmann, and he was arrested Sept. 19, 1934. Hauptmann claimed that the money was left by a friend, Isidor Fisch, who had gone to Europe and died there. After arriving in Flemington from an undisclosed town in Pennsylvania, where she lives in a senior citizens apartment, Mrs. Hauptmann was escorted through the Union Hotel's kitchen and into a dining room by San Francisco lawyer Robert Bryan, who has been working on her behalf since 1981. (See statement by Robert Bryan) By her side was also Suzanne Donahue of Clinton, who played Mrs. Hauptmann in a dramatic re-enactment of the trial that ran through Sunday at the courthouse. Wearing a maroon and navy paisley dress, gold earrings, a pearl necklace and her wedding ring on a hand crippled with arthritis, Mrs. Hauptmann spoke. As she did, Ms. Donahue, who said she also believes that Bruno Hauptmann was innocent, clutched her hand. Mrs. Hauptmann didn't seem to notice the photographs on the walls that celebrated the trial and the hotel's place in history. During the trial the jury, the press and onlookers packed the hotel, creating what has been described as a circus-like atmosphere. "I'm here again today fighting for my husband. He was innocent, as innocent as you and me," said Mrs. Hauptmann. "My husband was innocent, and God knows it. Is there really a God in heaven? God saw us drive home. Why did He let them do that?" Bryan said he has accumulated evidence over the last 10 years that shows that Hauptmann was "totally innocent." Some of this evidence, he said, indicates that witnesses were pressured and threatened by the state into testifying against Hauptmann. This spring Bryan again presented his case and sent information to Gov. Florio's office, which turned the matter over to the attorney general for review. "That's like the fox guarding the chicken coop," Bryan said. He wants Florio to meet personally with Mrs. Hauptmann and to proclaim that "the trial of the century was a miscarriage of justice." John Shure, a spokesman for Florio, responded, "The attorney general is the chief law enforcement official the governor should look to for guidance on this." Over the years, Bryan has tried several times on behalf of Mrs. Hauptmann to get Hauptmann's name cleared, and has filed several suits, including one charging wrongful death. All were dismissed. Today, the Hauptmanns would be celebrating their 66th wedding anniversary. Before leaving the hotel Friday, Mrs. Hauptmann recalled some of her memories of life before her husband's arrest.... Neither did this newspaper reporter.: http://www.google.com/archivesearch?q=+by+samuel+g.+blackmanSamuel G. Blackman, at 90, once Associated Press' top editor Providence Journal - ProQuest Archiver - Oct 7, 1995 As a young reporter, Samuel G. Blackman broke the news that Charles Lindbergh's baby had been kidnapped, the first big story in a career of reporting and ... http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2SIRAAAAIBAJ&sjid=5YoDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5163,6641376&dq=i-do-doubt-that-this-crime-could-have-been-committed-by-one-man&hl=en The murder that won't die. Lakeland Ledger - Feb 21, 1982 by samuel g. blackman Baby's Identity Still At Issue . Lakeland Ledger - Google News Archive - Feb 21, 1982 Robert, is i-hief justice of the State Su preme Court whether the state had suppressed any evidence that might have cleared Hauptmann. Wilentz said: Nothing ... http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2SIRAAAAIBAJ&sjid=5YoDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5163,6641376&dq=i-do-doubt-that-this-crime-could-have-been-committed-by-one-man&hl=en The Free Lance-Star - Feb 26, 1972 The Lindbergh Kidnaping In I Retrospect . Free-Lance Star - Google News Archive - Feb 26, 1972 by Samuel G. Blackman ...that Gov. Hoffman, who had given Hauptmann one 30-day reprieve, would still be able to save him from the chair. Hoffman said in a statement after granting the reprieve one day beore Hauptmann was first scheduled to die, Jan. 17, 1936, that he had never expressed an opinion "upon the guilt or innocence of Hauptman." He said: "I do, however, share with hundreds if thousands of our people the doubt as to the value of the evidence... http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=2SIRAAAAIBAJ&sjid=5YoDAAAAIBAJ&pg=5163,6641376&dq=i-do-doubt-that-this-crime-could-have-been-committed-by-one-man&hl=en http://books.google.com/books?The ghosts of Hopewell: setting the record straight in the ... - Google Books Result Jim Fisher - 1999 - True Crime - 200 pages A reporter for News- Week Magazine, ten days after Hauptmann's arrest, ... Elizabeth [sic] Morrow, jealous of her sister's marriage to Lindbergh, ... '> http://books.google.com/books? The case that never dies: the Lindbergh kidnapping By Lloyd C. Gardner Edited July 27, 2010 by Tom Scully Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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