For The Thrill Of It: Leopold, Loeb, And The Murder That Shocked Chicago

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For The Thrill Of It: Leopold, Loeb, And The Murder That Shocked Chicago Page 45

by Simon Baatz


  26

  Despite the severity of the report, White survived. He had as many supporters in Congress as he had enemies, and his allies viewed the criticisms as politically motivated. White continued to win honors and acclaim in the psychiatric profession. In 1926 he was president of the American Psychoanalytic Association, and in 1930 he presided over the First International Congress on Mental Hygiene in Washington, D.C. He remained at St. Elizabeths Hospital until his death in 1937.

  * * * 27

  Predictably, Clarence Darrow also received public criticism for his role in saving Leopold and Loeb from the scaffold. Darrow was the villain of the piece--he had organized the defense and by means of the guilty plea had tricked the court into acquiescence. But Darrow, unlike White, could shrug off his enemies with practiced ease--he had become accustomed to such hostility and typically paid no attention to his detractors.

  In any case he was too busy to respond. He had begun his campaign against capital punishment in October 1924, just weeks after the end of the hearing, and that fall he had already committed himself to a series of lectures and talks. Thousands turned out to hear him speak, and wherever he went, the crowds followed. In the wake of the Leopold-Loeb hearing, Darrow had regained his stature as a national celebrity. He always preferred to debate with a well-known public official; his opponent served as the foil for his jokes and gave him an opportunity to ridicule those who advocated the death penalty. His appearance at the Manhattan Opera House in New York that October was the highlight of his fall speaking tour. Alfred Talley, a judge on the Court of General Sessions, spoke in favor of a motion in support of capital punishment; Lewis Lawes, the warden of Sing Sing prison and an opponent of the death penalty, chaired the debate; Darrow spoke in opposition. The hall was packed to overf lowing with an audience of 3,000 New Yorkers; hundreds more stood outside on 34th Street, hoping to catch a glimpse of Darrow as he left the building, and dozens of journalists were in attendance, ready to write up their reports for the morning newspapers. There was nothing new in Darrow's talk that evening--he repeated his criticisms of the electric chair and the scaffold, scolded those who believed in free will and moral responsibility, and ended his contribution to the debate with a ringing admonition that the barbarism of capital punishment be no longer a part of the penal code. "There isn't," Darrow concluded, "a single admissible argument in favor of capital punishment. . . . We believe that life should be protected and preserved. The thing that keeps one from killing is the emotion they have against it; and the greater the feeling of sanctity that the State pays to life, the greater the feeling of sanctity the individual has for life."

  28

  Darrow's triumph in the Leopold-Loeb hearing now endowed his opinions with authority and gravitas. Darrow had no education or training in criminology other than that provided by his courtroom experience, yet the popular press accorded him the status of an expert on all questions connected with crime and the criminal justice system. Also, Darrow had no knowledge of science apart from that gleaned by reading popular texts, yet his pronouncements on science, medicine, and psychiatry now found their way into the newspapers. New York politicians and business leaders had recently announced the construction of a neuropathic hospital--the first in the country--at a cost of more than $2 million for the treatment of the mentally ill. The founders of the new hospital sought, and received, Darrow's endorsement of the plan as the most essential component of the campaign against crime. If mental defectives, Darrow stated, could be identified at an early stage and if treatment facilities were readily available, then the crime rate would rapidly fall. "This movement should be countrywide," Darrow asserted. "The case of Loeb and Leopold is, after all, merely an isolated instance. . . . Modern science says that young mental defectives can be adjusted to meet the problems of life in a normal manner. . . . Correct diagnosis, proper treatment, and healthful environment and inf luences can bring about cures that, in their wider application, spell crime prevention."

  29

  Darrow had launched his campaign against the death penalty in October 1924. Eight months later, on 25 May 1925, a special grand jury, meeting in Dayton, Tennessee, indicted John T. Scopes, a twenty- four-year-old science instructor, for teaching the theory of evolution to a high school biology class. The trial of Scopes, Darrow believed, would pit science against ignorance, knowledge against superstition, secular thought against religious fundamentalism. It was a chance for Darrow to grab the national spotlight yet again, and so on 10 July, he found himself in the sweltering heat of a Tennessee courtroom leading the defense of Scopes against the forces of reaction.

  Darrow lost the case--the jury found Scopes guilty. The defense had hoped to appeal the conviction to the United States Supreme Court and then, in front of a national audience, demonstrate that the Tennessee statute was unconstitutional. But the Tennessee supreme court overturned the original conviction on a technicality; there was to be no appeal before a higher court. To the leaders of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) it seemed that their financial support of the defense attorneys had gone for naught--the statute remained on Tennessee's books, and the antievolution movement spread outward from Tennessee to other southern states. Mississippi (in 1926) and Arkansas (in 1928) both outlawed the teaching of evolution in public high schools.

  The trial had been a disappointment for the ACLU, but for Darrow it had been a personal triumph. He had shifted the focus away from a defense of the constitutional rights of the defendant--had it been legitimate for Scopes to teach evolution to his class?--and toward a debate on the literal truth of the biblical account of creation. He had lured the prosecuting attorney, William Jennings Bryan, onto the witness stand. Bryan, like Darrow, was a larger-than-life character; he had been a presidential candidate in 1896 at only age thirty-six, had been a member of Woodrow Wilson's cabinet until his resignation in 1915, and was now a national spokesman for the fundamentalist movement. The confrontation between Darrow and Bryan was the centerpiece of the Scopes trial. Bryan, responding to Darrow's questions, was obdurate in his defense of the literal truth of the Bible; and Darrow, as a consequence, could compel Bryan to reveal to the world both his ignorance of modern science and his imprecise understanding of the Bible. Darrow emerged from the Scopes trial with his reputation intact and enlarged--he was now the darling of the intellectuals, the hero of the age, the voice of reason, and a spokesman for modern science and progressivism.

  30

  While Clarence Darrow's fame reached the stratosphere, Robert Crowe's reputation as state's attorney dwindled and diminished in the years following the Leopold-Loeb hearing. The murder rate in Chicago had doubled during Crowe's tenure as state's attorney yet the number of convictions in the courts had declined precipitously. Gangland killings were a daily event, and no one seemed able to stop the violence. Crowe now had seventy deputies on his staff, and his annual budget had increased by more than $100,000, yet the gunmen always seemed able to escape justice.

  A rumor began to be whispered in Chicago: was Robert Crowe or someone in Crowe's office secretly working with the gangsters? Had the mob corrupted the state's attorney or members of his staff?

  On 27 April 1926, at eight o'clock in the evening, William McSwiggin, an assistant state's attorney who was one of Crowe's closest aides, emerged from the Pony Inn, a saloon on West Roosevelt Road in the town of Cicero, a few miles west of Chicago. As McSwiggin and his drinking companions walked toward their Lincoln automobile, a motorcade--five cars, one following closely behind another--moved slowly down the street toward them. As the fourth car passed McSwiggin and his friends, there was a hail of bullets, fired from a machine gun. McSwiggin and two others died later that night; the remaining two escaped unhurt.

  It soon emerged that McSwiggin had spent his final hours drinking with the leaders of the O'Donnell gang. Myles O'Donnell and his brother, Klondike, along with Tom (Red) Duffy and Jim Doherty, had been feuding with the Italian gangs over the control of the beer trade. Duffy and Dohert
y had died alongside McSwiggin that evening; the O'Donnell brothers had ducked behind a car and lived.

  Why had McSwiggin been drinking with gangland leaders? Had he been working with the O'Donnells? Had the mobsters corrupted him? Could corruption have spread further within Crowe's department?

  Robert Crowe pointed the finger of blame at Al Capone. The O'Donnells had been competing with Capone over control of the saloons and speakeasies in Cook County and Capone's men had struck back. The gunmen had intended to kill the O'Donnells, and McSwiggin had been in the wrong place at the wrong time. But Capone was responsible for the death of McSwiggin, Crowe asserted, and most probably it had been Capone himself who had fired the machine gun.

  But Crowe was never able to explain why a member of his staff had been drinking with prominent members of the Chicago underworld. Crowe seemed to have something to hide or, at the very least, seemed reluctant to reveal the truth. He petitioned the Cook County Criminal Court to impanel a grand jury investigation into McSwiggin's death but simultaneously ensured that his political allies controlled the grand jury. The findings of the grand jury were inconclusive. No one was ever indicted for the killing of McSwiggin.

  31

  There never was any proof of collusion between Crowe's office and the criminal underworld, yet suspicion lingered. And by 1928, public sentiment against Crowe had hardened. He had been in office for eight years, and criminal violence in Cook County continued unabated. Crowe had hoped to be the Republican candidate for state's attorney a third time, in the elections in 1928, but his star, even within the Republican ranks, had dimmed and he failed to win the primary election. His opponent, John Swanson, a judge on the Circuit Court, defeated him handily. It was a welcome sign, according to the

  Chicago Daily Tribune, that the public had finally given up on the political machine that Crowe had so carefully constructed. Everyone was tired of the bombings, shootings, kidnappings, and murders that had given Chicago the national reputation of a city of crime. "A machine which embraced all the jobs at the city hall . . . which had an army of workers in nearly every precinct, the most extensive machine organization in Chicago's history, was pushed into the ditch by a . . . group which had behind it nothing but public sentiment." Robert Crowe's political career was over. He had been forced out of office just four years after his prosecution of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb.32

  While Robert Crowe fought his political corner against enemies inside and outside the Cook County Republican Party, Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb grew accustomed to the daily monotony of prison routine. The guards had put Nathan in a cell in the East Wing of Joliet Prison and, mindful that the two murderers be kept as far apart

  Illustration unavailable for electronic edition.

  as possible, had sent Richard to the other side of the penitentiary, where he occupied a cell in the West Wing.

  The prison, now almost seventy years old, was a crumbling wreck. The prison complex was a grim gray edifice with massive stone walls, enclosing a series of starkly cheerless buildings. An unhealthy, unpleasant odor permeated the cell blocks, and each individual cell--small, dark, claustrophobic, and slightly damp--was as repulsive a space as one could imagine. There were no f lush toilets, of course--in the mornings, before breakfast, each prisoner carried his waste in a bucket to a large trough in the prison yard. The architect had provided the cell blocks with windows so narrow that there was little natural light. It was unbearably hot in the summer and freezing cold in the winter.

  33

  Nathan remained at Joliet Prison only until May 1925, when he obtained a transfer to the new prison at Stateville, three miles north of the town of Joliet. The Stateville prison, built in anticipation of the closure of Joliet Prison, consisted of four roundhouse buildings, each of which had an open tower in the center of a large space surrounded by a circular arrangement of prison cells. The guards standing in the central tower could thus observe all the prisoners in their cells.

  34

  Stateville was one of the most modern penitentiaries in the United States--its circular panopticon design was unusual and innovative-- but discipline within the prison was almost nonexistent. The Illinois state legislature had provided the funds for prison construction but had omitted to ensure a decent wage for the prison guards--the monthly salary was only $100, and there was no pension plan--and, as a consequence, corruption was endemic among the staff. Any convict with money could buy any privilege he desired, and by the early 1930s, internal discipline at Stateville had passed out of the hands of the prison administration. A dozen rival gangs competed for control of the prison. Each gang had constructed a motley collection of tarpaper shacks in the prison yard as its headquarters, and within these shacks the gangs operated whiskey stills, cultivated marijuana plants, and hired out the younger and more vulnerable prisoners as prostitutes.

  35

  Not until March 1931, after Richard Loeb had been transferred from Joliet Prison to Stateville, did Nathan and Richard live in the same prison. Neither joined one of the many gangs operating behind the prison walls, but both soon gained inf luence over their fellow prisoners and, at the same time, were able to curry favor with the prison administration.

  Both had an education far in advance of the majority of the prisoners at Stateville. Nathan, in particular, showed an eagerness to use his education in the service of the prison management, willingly performing various clerical jobs. Under other circumstances his contributions might have seemed nugatory, but Stateville in the late 1920s and early 1930s had a woeful lack of paid clerical staff, employing just six people in administrative positions inside a prison that held almost 4,000 inmates. Nathan was not a model prisoner; he had an uneven disciplinary record at Stateville and was punished several times with solitary confinement. Yet successive wardens recognized his clerical talents as a

  28 . STATEVILLE PRISON. The prison at Stateville opened in 1925. In its original

  form, the prison complex consisted of four cell blocks. A guard tower, surrounded by a circular arrangement of four tiers of cells, stood in the center of each cell

  block. This photograph was taken in 1931. valuable resource that helped the prison function more efficiently, and over time he won the confidence of the senior officers. 36

  Frank Whipp, the warden at Stateville in the early 1930s, emphasized reform and rehabilitation in his management of the prison. A major purpose of the penitentiary, according to Whipp, was an end to recidivism. The sooner a prisoner demonstrated eligibility for parole, the better. Nathan Leopold quickly won his way into Whipp's good books. There was little possibility that Whipp would recommend Nathan's parole, but Nathan adopted Whipp's reform ideology and made sure that Whipp realized it. Nathan assisted the prison sociologist, Ferris Laune, in his attempts to determine the suitability of various categories of prisoners for early release and even published an article (under a pseudonym) on the subject in the

  Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology. Nathan received an appropriate reward for these efforts. By his own account, he soon had the run of the prison--he could go anywhere, and after 1933, he was infrequently subject to the disciplinary regimen imposed on other prisoners.37

  Richard Loeb was less eager to work in tandem with the prison administration. Yet he, too, quickly won a position of privilege within Stateville, in large part because of the money at his disposal. Richard kept a permanent deposit of $500 in the prison office. This sum, always made good by his brothers, was available for his personal use at any time. His parents, unaware that Richard had a private banking arrangement within the prison, sent him an additional fifty dollars each month.

  38

  Loeb used his money wisely, carefully bribing the prison guards to grant him privileges. He had keys to parts of the prison normally accessible to other inmates only at specific times of the day and on a restricted basis. Loeb was one of a small number of prisoners (Nathan Leopold was another) allowed to buy whatever he wished from the commissary; and he could, if
he desired, eat his meals in the privacy of his cell. It was not even necessary, according to one account, for Richard to wear the prison uniform--he customarily wore a white shirt and f lannel trousers.

  39

  Richard's inf luence over the guards could be used in the pursuit of sexual favors from other inmates. Convicts who were willing to have sex with Richard might be rewarded with cigarettes, alcohol, a larger cell, and an easy job within the prison; but a prisoner who fell out of favor with Richard might find himself shoveling coal in the yard or laboriously weaving rattan chairs in the furniture shop.

  40

  James Day, twenty-one years old, was serving a one- to ten-year sentence in Stateville for armed robbery when he first met Richard Loeb in 1935. Day was short, just five feet, six inches tall; weighed 135 pounds; and had a mottled, blotchy complexion. His life had been unsettled. He had never known his father, and his mother had died in 1921, when Day was just eight years old. He moved to Chicago to live with his uncle and aunt, but he proved to be a difficult child, constantly getting into trouble for fighting, thieving, and petty crime. He first attracted the attention of the police in 1928, at the age of fifteen; in that year the Juvenile Court ordered that he be held in St. Charles School for Boys, a reform school. He served a second sentence in the Boys' Reformatory at Pontiac. In 1935, not long after he reached his majority, Day graduated to a cell in Stateville Prison.

 

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