Word: bailing
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...police, the usual method used by reporters, Kellerman proposed to say nothing to the police, get himself arrested while seemingly committing a serious crime. "And that," he conceded, "made it dangerous." Last week, after seven weeks behind bars, Kellerman had a police record and was out on $500 bail awaiting trial on a burglary charge. He also had his story, which Newsday trumpeted on Page One: ASSIGNMENT JAILBIRD...
...police headquarters, Kellermar "confessed" that he was "David Crandall' and had been out with friends looking for girls, but had been deserted and needed money to get back to New York. Since he could not produce bail, he was tossed into the county jail in Riverhead to await trial in jail, he found just what he was looking for. Young first offenders, as he wrote last week, were locked up in filthy, verminous cells with second and third offenders, dope addicts and sexual degenerates. One aged psychopath, who screamed all night, four days after his release committed suicide...
...attack on Ambassador Bowles for his "friendliness" toward Communists and Red sympathizers like Karanjia. When Bowles pointed out the letter was a fake, Blitz Editor Karanjia also blandly denounced it in his paper as "obviously a forgery." At week's end, both Karanjia and Karaka were out on bail, awaiting trial. Maximum penalty: three years in prison...
Reporter Cahn took the results of his investigation to the police and FBI. Ge Bauer and Newton were quickly picked up and released on bail to await trial for fraud. When police examined a Doodlebug, they found no plutonium, no delicate electronic mechanism. The Doodlebug was just a piece of war-surplus radio equipment that could be bought for $3.50. There had been one slight" change; flashlight batteries had been installed to light up the bulbs when the knobs were turned...
Last week, after they had spent nine days in jail, the Browders managed to raise the $5,000 bail, and were freed to await trial. The lawyer who showed up to represent them: O. John Rogge, an Assistant Attorney General (1939-40) in the Roosevelt Administration and special assistant to the Attorney General for the Nazi sedition trial of 1944. Rogge, once a darling of the Communists, is now the U.S. lawyer representing Marshal Tito's anti-Stalinist Communist government of Yugoslavia...