Lindbergh

Home > Memoir > Lindbergh > Page 87
Lindbergh Page 87

by A. Scott Berg


  Condon used a pseudonym with all except the innermost circle at the Lindberghs’. Even Mrs. Morrow called him “Mr. Stice” for weeks, thinking his name was J. U. Stice.

  WAITING; PAYING RANSOM: CAL, “Statement,” The Detriot News, Mar. 20, 1932, n.p.; AML to ELLL, Mar. 8, 12, 16, 21, and 23, Apr. 1, 6, 8, 13, 18, 29, 1932; ECM (D), Mar. 20, 22, 26, 29, and 31, Apr. 2–5, 7–9, 11, 1932; J. M. Keith (FBI) report to J. E. Hoover, Apr. 9, 1932; FBI “Summary Report,” pp. 183–8, 208–10; Fisher, L Case, pp. 72, 76–7, 79; Kennedy, Airman, p. 104; HGHL, pp. 231–3, 235–7, 242–3; AML, (U) fragment, “The Tulips,” late winter, 1940; AML to ERMM, Mar. 18, 1932; John F. Condon, Jafsie Tells All! (New York: Jonathan Lee, 1936), p. 148; CAL, “Statement” to Harry W. Walsh, May 20, 1932; J. E. Seykora, “Report” re Condon, Mar. 3, 1934; J. F. Condon, “From Memory: Meeting Kidnapper at St. Raymond’s,” Mar. 23, 1934; Larimer, FBI Report, n.d.; John F. Condon, grand jury testimony, May 20, 1932; CAL, grand jury testimony, Sept. 26, 1934; J. E. Seykora, “Title: Unknown Subjects,” re Condon, Mar. 8, 1934; CAL (N) on back of Secretary of Treasury to CAL, May 7, 1932; Waller, Kidnap, p. 79; ELLL to AML, Apr. 13, 1932.

  WAITING; PURSUING ALTERNATIVE LEADS: Fisher, L Case, pp. 94–5, FBI Summary Report, pp. 384, 390–8; ECM (D), Apr. 14, 19, 20, 24, and 29, May 8–11, 1932; C. Lloyd Fisher, “The Case New Jersey Would Like to Forget,” Liberty, Aug. 1–Sept. 12, 1936 (seven weekly installments), esp. Aug. 8, pp. 31, 33, and Aug. 15, p. 15; CAL, “Statement” to Harry Walsh, May 20, 1932; CAL, “Outline of Information” re Curtis, Apr. 20, 1932; AML (D), May 11, 1932; HGHL, p. 245.

  DISCOVERY OF CORPSE: “Two Distinct Fractures,” pp. 1,2, and “Trenton Negro Tells of Finding Body,” n.p., Trenton State Gazette; FBI Summary Report, pp. 58, 108–11; Larimer report, “Alpine 1230,” Condon Ex. #29; Fitzgerald and Zapolsky report, and Corp. Frank Kelley report, May 12, 1932 [NJ State Police Hq., L case archives]; Betty Gow to ASB (I), Sept. 25, 1993; ECM (D), May 12, 1932; AML (D), May 12, 1932; HGHL, pp. 246–8, 252; AML to ELLL, May 12, and 17, 1932; Whipple, L Crime, pp. 98–9; Waller, Kidnap, p. 104; Ross, Last Hero, pp. 211–28; Fisher, L Case, pp. 112–4; Betty Gow, “Statement” to Robert Coar and Samuel Leon (NJ State Police), May 13, 1932; Walter Swayze, “Report on Unknown Baby,” May 12, 1932.

  L subscribed to the theory that the baby fell to his death when the ladder broke. (Larimer report, Mar. 4, 1933, p. 11.)

  11 APPREHENSION

  E: AOV, p. 390.

  CONDOLENCES AND AFTERMATH: HB comment comes from Oren Root to ASB (I), Apr. 19, 1994; CAL papers include lists of “Ts Received from Organizations,” “Letters of Condolence Received from Organizations,” May–June, 1932, “Letters Received from Personal Friends,” May–June, 1932; “Ts Received from Officials,” “Flowers and Gifts,” c. week of May 13, 1932, “Ts—Personal,” May, 1932; Ortíz Rubio to CAL, May 18, 1932; Mayor Frank Kiewele to CAL and AML, May 13, 1932; ELCS to CAL, May 14, 1932; Elsie Allen to AML, May 16, 1932; James F. Spink, “The Little Eaglet” (Buffalo: Sword & Shield Bookstore, 1932), pamphlet; n.a. “Oshamnu,” The Hungarian Jew, May 24, 1932, p. 4; Kathleen Norris, “Save All ‘Lost Children,’” n.s., c. May 15, 1932; Charles Elliott, NJ Commissioner of Education to CAL (re Puerto Rican schoolchildren), July 7, 1932; Joseph Stehlin (of Jacksonville Beach Chamber of Commerce) to CAL, Oct. 4, 1932; Z. Szabodosz (of Amerikai Magyar Nepszava) to AML (re Hungarian woman offering her son for adoption), June 15, 1932; AML to ELLL, May 18 and 22, June 10, 1932; ECM (D), Mar. 15 and May 23, 1932; AML (D), May 20–23, 31, June 4, 1932, HGHL, pp. 254–8, 262, 265, 269; AOV, p. 140.

  Ls REASSEMBLE THEIR LIVES; CASE WINDS DOWN: Amelia Earhart quip related by CMM to ASB (I), Mar. 3, 1993 and Dr. David Read to ASB (I), May 2, 1993; AML to ERMM, June 10, 1932; HGHL, pp. 269–272, 282–7, 292, 296–7; FBI, “Summary Report,” NY-62–3057, pp. 80–93; AML to ELLL, June 13, July 2 and 5, 1932; ECM (D), June 10 and 11, 1932; AML (D), June 11 and 12, July 9 and 24, 1932, Aug. 14, 1932; H. Norman Schwarzkopf to “All Law Enforcement Officials,” flier, May 21, 1932; AML to ERMM, Aug. 8, 1932; Mina Curtis, “CL: A Personal Portrait,” c. 1941, p. 6 [Sophia Smith Library]; DAVIS, Aug. 19, 1969.

  BIRTH OF JML; MARRIAGE OF ERMM: AML (D), Aug. 16–7, 20, 24, 28, Sept. 3, 8, 14, 17, Dec. 28, 1932; HGHL, pp. 297–301, 303, 305–7, 309–11, 313, 315, 318–23; AML to ELLL, Aug. 16 and 18, Sept. 15, ca. Oct. 15, Dec. 15, 1932; ECM (D), Aug. 16 and 17, 1932; Dr. Hawks is quoted by Lynn Frost in a letter from Thomas B. Congdon, Jr., to ASB, Apr. 22, 1991; CAL to United Press (T), Aug. 16, 1932; Fred Ferguson of NEA Service Inc., to HG, Aug. 17, 1932; ERMM to ELLL, Oct. 29, 1932; “Another Morrow Bride,” (NY) Daily News, Dec. 29, 1932.

  In 1933, the Lindberghs gave away their property outside Hopewell, New Jersey. It was named High Fields and has since been used as a home for children in need.

  RENEWED SOCIAL LIFE; NEW TRAVELS: AML (D), Jan. 13, 18, 21, 24, 30, Feb. 6, Apr. 26–30, May 6–71933; LROD, pp. 5, 8–13, 18–20, 26–37; AML to ECM, Mar. 2, 1933, AML to ELLL, Mar. 2 and May 11, 1933; AML pouring water on CAL related by CMM to ASB (I), Mar. 3, 1993; CAL to ELLL, June 5, Sept. 3, 1932; CAL, log of flights, Mar. 30–Apr. 25, 1932; CAL to Nettie Beauregard, May 17, 1933; “L Visits Friends,” St. Louis Post Dispatch, Apr. 22, 1933, n.p.; “L Flies Again,” Detroit Times, Apr. 20, 1933, p. 1; “Ls Reach Ohio,” NYT, Apr. 21, 1933, n.p.; “Ls Here,” Kansas City Times, Apr. 25, 1933, p. 1; AML to ERMM, May 1933; “Ls Held By a Sandstorm,” NYT, May 8, 1933, p.1.

  PLANNING ATLANTIC SURVEY TRIP: CAL, “Foreword,” LTW, pp. v–viii; AOV, pp. 108–9; CAL, “North Atlantic Survey—1933,” July 28, 1934; Richard Sanders Allen, “The Lockheed Sirius,” A. A. H. S, Journal, Winter, 1965, pp. 269–70; DAVIS, Aug. 19. 1969; F. C. Meier to CAL, Dec. 20, 1933; Fred C. Meier, “Collecting Micro-Organisms From the Arctic Atmosphere,” The Scientific Monthly, Jan., 1935, pp. 5–20; Vilhjalmur Stefansson to CAL, June 8 and July 8, 1933; F. Gledhill (of Pan American) to V. Stefansson (M), July 7, 1933; CAL to Milton Lehman, Apr. 6, 1963; AML to ELLL, June 12 and 20, 1933; LROD, pp. 40–4; ERMM to AML, May 28, 1933; AML (D), June 25, 1933; AML to ERMM, June 24, 1933.

  GREENLAND AND EUROPE: CAL, “Lockheed Sirius,” log, July 1–Sept. 17, 1933; “Ls Start Flight to Arctic,” NYT, July 10, 1933, n.p.; AML (D), July 9, 21, and 22, 1933; AML to ELLL, June 20, Sept. 15, Oct. 10, 22, 25, 1933, LROD, pp. xviii–xix, 42–3, 46–58, 60–94, 110, 112–4, 132–8, 153–4; AML to ECM, Aug. 11 and 20, 1933; AML quoted in “Ls,” Smithsonian World, Mar. 1984, p. 27; “L Rumor Creates Worry Throughout the World” and “The Rumors About L,” (Copenhagen) Politiken, Aug. 11 and 12, 1933; John Grierson quoted in (Tom Crouch, ed.) CAL: An American Life (Washington, D. C.: National Air and Space Museum, 1977), p. 13; AML (U) draft of “Introduction” to John Grierson, I Remember L (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977); AML (D), Aug. 17–20, Sept. 17, Nov. 22–3, 1933; John Grierson to Editor, “Letters,” Flight International, Sept. 19, 1974, n.p.; AML to ERMM, Nov. 6, 1933; “L Pays Homage … Shows Wife Bourget,” Chicago Daily Tribune (European edition), Oct. 31, 1933, n.p.; AML quoted in Winifred Rogers, “Does Baby Jon Need His Mother?,” The Cleveland Press, Dec. 1, 1933, n.p.

  AFRICA; SOUTH AMERICA: AML (D), Nov. 27, Dec. 5, 9, 11, and 12, 1933; LROD, pp. 157–8, 168–75, 178–9; AOV, pp. 113–5; LTW, pp. 203–17, La Varre to William A. Orr, Jan. 5, 1934; William Orr to CAL, Mar. 8, 1934.

  RETURN TO AMERICA: FDR to CAL and AML (T), Dec. 16, 1933; AML and CAL to FDR, Dec. 17, 1933; CAL, “Foreword,” LTW, p. ix; FRDT; CAL to Dr. H. E. Anthony (American Museum of Natural History), May 1, 1934; CAL to Clarence Hay, Feb. 20, 1934; Clarence Hay to AML and CAL, Nov. 11, 1934; “Ls Sign Off After Flight,” Newsweek, Dec. 30, 1933, p. 19; CAL to Orville Wright, Jan. 5, 1933; Orville Wright to Dr. Charles G. Abbot, Dec. 23, 2933, Orville Wright to CAL, Jan. 11, 1934; AML to ERMM, Feb. 19 and June 7, 1934; AML to ELLL, Mar. 2, 1933, Jan. 24, c. Feb. 25, Apr. 26, 1934; LROD, pp. 19, 190, 192–3; FDR to CAL and AML, c. Jan., 1934; CAL and AML to FDR and Eleanor Roosevelt, c., Jan
., 1934.

  AIR-MAIL CONTROVERSY: FDR, Executive Order #6591, Feb. 9, 1934; Lipsner, Airmail, pp. 238–43, 245–50, 252–3; Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., The Coming of the New Deal (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1958), pp. 448–54; A. G. Patterson to CAL, Dec. 8, 1933; CAL to Hugo Black, Jan. 11, 1934; Grace Robinson, “The Rentschlers Fly the Dollar,” p. 33, “Are the Rentschler Boys Good?” p. 31, “Capitalism at its Damndest,” n.p., New York Daily News, Jan. 19, 1934; Richard Robbins to Postmaster General Farley; AOV, pp. 140–2; AML, fragment, n.d. with CAL emendations; CAL to FDR (T), Feb. 11, 1934; “Cracking Down on the Colonel,” Washington Star, Feb. 13, 1934; “Roosevelt Rebukes Lindy,” Herald and Examiner, Feb. 13, 1934, n.p.; CAL to W. R. Hearst, Feb. 21, 1934; the “plain citizen” who wired in CAL’s behalf was Maurice Goodman to Stephen Early (T), Feb. 13, 1934; Will Rogers, “Will Is Stumped by Air Mail Cleanup Order,” Kansas City Star, Feb. 12, 1934, n.p., which is also referred to in Owen Lovejoy to CAL, Feb. 26, 1934; James A. Farley to CAL (T), Feb. 13, 1934; AML to ERMM, Feb. 11, 1934, LROD, pp. 188–90; R. W. Robbins to “All T & WA Personnel,” (M), Feb. 18, 1934; Secretary George Dern to CAL (T), Mar. 13 and 15, 1934; CAL to George Dern (T), Mar. 14 and 15, 1934; George Durno, “Lindy,” (Philadelphia) Evening Public Ledger, Oct. 2, 1934, n.p.; “L Testifies,” New York American, Mar. 19, 1934, n.p., “L Testifies,” Washington Star, Mar. 18, 1934, n.p.; CAL (U-N), Mar. 1934; Carl L. Ristine to CAL, Mar. 16, 1934; HB (M), c. Mar. 16, 1934; CAL, “Statement,” to Carl Ristine, Mar. 16, 1934; CAL to Carl Ristine (T), Apr. 7, 1934; Montague (of Paramount News) to CAL (T), Feb. 13, 1934; Ralph Renaud (of Washington Post) to CAL (T), Feb. 12, 1934; Charles Ford (of Universal Newsreel) to CAL (T), Feb. 12, 1934; John Royal (of NBC) to CAL, Feb. 12, 1934; Paul White (of CBS) to CAL (T), Mar. 15, 1934; “The Weight of Evidence,” NYT, Mar. 19, 1934, n.p.; Hamilton Fish, remarks, Congressional Record, Feb. 21, 1934, pp. 3108–10; Walter Lippmann, “The Air-Mail Fiasco,” New York Herald Tribune, Mar. 20, 1934; “Mr. Farley Hoists the White Flag,” Philadelphia Inquirer, Apr. 17, 1934, n.p.; “The Sore Spot,” U. S. Air Services, Apr., 1934, n.p.; Henry Suydam, “Critics Show Roosevelt Is Only Human,” n.s., Feb. 26, 1934, n.p.

  SUMMER, 1934; CLOSING IN ON HAUPTMANN: AML to ELLL, Apr. 26, July 11, 1934; LROD, pp. 192–202; AML to ERMM, June 7, July 11 and 29, Aug. 23 and 28, Sept. 1, 1934; FRDT; ERMM to AML, Sept. 4, 1934; AML to ECM, Sept. 19, 1934; AML to CAL, quoted in Kennedy, Airman, p. 13, and verified by AML to ASB (I), Feb. 28, 1990; L Case Archives and “L Kidnapping—A State Police Review With Annexes,” NJ State Police Headquarters, Mar. 15, 1980; Arthur Koehler, “Technique Used in Tracing the L. Kidnaping Ladder,” American Journal of Police Science, incorporated in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, vol. 27, no. 5, 1937, pp. 712–24; W. O. Woods, Treasurer of the U. S. to “President of the Banking Institution Addressed,” Apr. 14, 1933; Treasury Dept. (M) re L bills, ca. Aug. 16, 1932 [MHS: B24/F1]; FBI File, NY 62– 3057, “Chronology,” pp. 26–43; L. C. Haag, “L Case Revisited,” Journal of Forensic Sciences, vol. 28, no. 4, Oct., 1983, pp. 1044–8.

  HAUPTMANN’S ARREST: H. C. Leslie, Special Agent, (M) for File, Oct. 6, 1934; W. F. Seery, “Bruno Richard Hauptmann,” report for U. S. Bureau of Investigation, Sept. 26, 1934; Special Agent Thomas H. Sisk, trial testimony, Jan. 17, 1935; Fisher, L Case, p. 195, 212, 249; Sgt. A. H. Albrecht, “Investigation of Bruno Richard Hauptmann’s employment record at the Majestic Hotel,” Sept. 20, 1934; B. R. Hauptmann interrogation, transcript, L Case Archives, NJ State Police; Anna S. Hauptmann, “Statement,” Apr. 20, 1935; L. G. Turrou (M) re “Unknown Suspects,” Sept. 21, 1934; Kennedy, Airman, p. 195, 240; Lewis J. Bornmann, “Searching Apartment and garage of … Hauptmann,” Sept. 26, 1934; Anna S. Hauptmann to ASB (I), June 11, 1990; n.t., NYT, Oct. 9 and 10, 1934, n.p.; Tamm of FBI to J. Edgar Hoover, Jan. 22, 1936.

  LIFE AT NEXT DAY HILL; PREPARING FOR TRIAL: Harold Nicolson to Vita Sackville-West, Sept. 30, Oct. 2, 4, 6, 13, 14, 15, Nov. 7, 8, 14, 1934; Nigel Nicolson, ed., Vita and Harold (New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1992), pp. 255, 259; Mina Curtiss comment related by CMM to ASB (I), Mar. 3, 1993; AML (D), Oct. 13, Nov. 15, Dec. 3–5,. 11, 29 1934; LROD, pp. 209, 216, 223–4, 226, 232; ECM (D), Dec. 3, 1934; Margot Wilkie to ASB (I), Apr. 26, 1993; “L Asks Permission,” New York Evening Journal, Dec. 31, 1934, p. 4; “Life in Flemington Is Transformed,” p. 12, “Hauptmann Trial Will Start Today,” pp. 1, 12, “Hauptman Spends Day on Cot,” p. 12, NYT, Jan. 2, 1935; Lt. Allen L. Smith (of NJ State Police), report, Jan. 1, 1935.

  Mina Curtiss came to admire CAL. In “Charles L: A Personal Portrait,” (U), c. 1941 [Sophia Smith Collection], she wrote of the penetrating quality of his mind. “He’s like a radium beam,” Mrs. Curtiss told AML. Years later she concluded that he was “a man of honor and integrity, a scientist of great distinction … [a man who] has by an accident of fate been placed in a position where it is impossible for more than a few people ever to know him as a simple human being.”

  12 CIRCUS MAXIMUS

  E: DAVIS, Aug. 13, 1969.

  TRIAL COMMENCES; L TESTIFIES: “State [of New Jersey] vs. Hauptmann,” transcript, Jan. 2–Feb. 13, 1935 [a satisfactory redaction of which exists in The Trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann (Birmingham, AL: The Notable Trials Library, Division of Gryphon Editions, Inc., 1989)]; Russell B. Porter, “Hauptmann Trial Will Start Today,” pp. 1, 12, “Life in Flemington Is Transformed,” “Highlights of Trial Will Be Broadcast,” “Huge Wire Service Set Up For Trial,” Porter, “55 Witnesses Go To Jersey Today,” p. 12, NYT, Jan. 2, 1935; “10 Hauptmann Case Jurors Quickly Chosen,” pp. 1, 3, “Foreman of Jury 25 Years in Same Job,” pp. 1, 4, “Stopping of Clock Prolongs First Session,” p. 4, Kathleen Norris, “Novelist Sketches the Trial Scene,” p. 4, “First Day’s Speed Pleases Defense,” p. 5, NYT, Jan. 3; “Extra Jobs at Trial End Flemington Depression,” p. 4, “Bookkeeper 55, Carpenter 60, Fill Jury,” p. 5, Porter, “Col. and Mrs. L on Stand,” pp. 1, 3, “Inside Job Says Reilly,” pp. 1, 6, “Court Room Walls Lined By Standees,” p. 7, NYT, Jan. 4, 1935; “Photographing of Ls Stirs Court,” “Church Lunch Served to Many at the Trial,” p. 8, “Youthful Crowd Waits at Court,” p. 8, “L Stops Carrying Revolver,” p. 8, Porter, “Col. L Names Hauptmann,” pp. 1, 8, “Condon Defense Target,” pp. 1, 8, NYT, Jan. 5; “Reilly Declares He Will Name Four,” Jan. 6, p. 26, NYT, L. D. Lyman, “Col. L Wants Trial to be Scrupulously Fair,” pp. 1, 7, NYT, Jan. 7, 1935; Neil Gabler, Winchell (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1994), pp. 208–13; Lee Israel, Kilgallen (New York: Dell, 1979), p. 51; Milton, Loss of Eden, p. 301; Whipple, L Crime, p. 317; Robert Wilentz to ASB (I), Oct. 20, 1993; David Davidson, “The Story of the Century,” American Heritage, Feb., 1976, pp. 23–4; CAL (U-M), Dec. 28, 1934; Charles Katz, “Only Confession Can Convict Hauptmann?” (Bridgeport) Herald, Jan. 20, 1935, n.p.; ECM (D), Jan. 3, 1935; HB is quoted by Oren Root to ASB (I), Apr. 10, 1994; AML to ELLL, Jan. 9–10, 1935; LROD, p. 235.

  PROSECUTION CONTINUES: “State vs. Hauptmann,” transcript; Betty Gow to CAL (T), Dec. 13 and 16, 1934; Betty Gow to ASB (I), Sept. 25, 1993; AML to ELLL, Jan. 9–10, 1935; LROD, pp. xxii–xxv, 226, 237–8, 240–2; L. D. Lyman, “Col. L Wants Trial to Be Scrupulously Fair,” pp. 1, 4, Russell B. Porter, “Miss Gow on Stand for State Today,” pp. 1, 4, “60,000 See Scenes of L Case,” p. 4, “Hauptmann Uneasy, Jail Guards Report,” p. 4, NYT, Jan. 7, 1935; Kathleen Norris, “Betty Gow’s Poise Praised By Writer,” pp. 1, 8, “Miss Gow Firm in Her Story,” pp. 1, 11, “Miss Gow Is Overcome After Leaving the Stand,” pp. 11, NYT, Jan. 8, 1935; “Hauptmann Is Treated for a Cold in Chest,” p. 1, Porter, “Hauptmann Near the Scene With Ladder, Says Witness,” pp. 1, 10, “Hochmuth Story Surprises Family,” p. 11, NYT, Jan. 9, 1935; Porter, “Condon Names Hauptmann,” pp. 1, 11, “Prosecution Pleased By Condon Testimony,” p. 1, NYT, Jan. 10, 1935; “Condon Gave Ransom to Fisch, Reilly Says,” p. 1, Porter, “Breckinridge Backs Condon,” pp. 1, 10, NYT, Jan. 11, 1935; Porter, “Hauptmann Asks to Go On the Stand,” pp. 1, 30, “Jurors Get Bus Ride,” p. 30, N
YT, Jan. 13, 1935; “Jurors Play Cards and Chat in Rooms,” p. 6, Porter, “Week’s Fight Due Over Handwriting in Hauptmann Case,” NYT, Jan. 14, 1935; Porter, “Woman Swears She Saw Hauptmann Watch Condon,” pp. 1, 15, “Two Handwriting Experts Quit the Defense,” p. 1, NYT, Jan. 15, 1935; Porter, “Two More Experts Name Hauptmann,” pp. 1, 10, NYT, Jan. 16, 1935; “Defense in a Rift in Reilly Methods,” p. 15, “‘You Stop Lying,’ Hauptmann Rages,” pp. 1, 12, NYT, Jan. 18, 1935; Porter, “Woman Says Hauptmann Limped,” pp. 1, 7, “Everybody Against Us,” p. 7, NYT, Jan. 19, 1935; Lyman, “L Ready To Testify Again,” pp. 1, 4, Jan. 20, 1935; “87 Have Testified,” p. 12, NYT, Jan. 24, 1935; Lyman, “Koehler Tells of 18-Month Hunt,” pp. 1, 13, Porter, “Expert Traces Tool Marks,” pp. 1, 13, “Trial ‘Booked Up’ Weeks in Advance,” p. 13, NYT, Jan. 24, 1935; “Judge and L Made Late By Storm,” p. 16, Ford Madox Ford, “Tribute to Judge Paid By Novelist,” p. 18, NYT, Jan. 25, 1935; J. Vreeland Haring, The Hand of Hauptmann (Plainfield, NJ: Hamer Publishing Co., 1936), pp. 197–310; AML (D), Jan. 12, 20, and 23, 1935; Lt. Allen Smith, “Guard Detail M,” Jan. 16, 1935 [cited in Fisher, L Case, p. 313].

 

‹ Prev