Word: prosecutors
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Stenographer. First Mr. Stephenson sent word to Miss Mildred Meade, his onetime stenographer, to tell Prosecutor Remy all that she knew concerning the Stephenson regime. What Miss Meade told Mr. Remy has not been made public...
Black Box. Then Mr. Stephenson gave L. G. Julian, onetime business associate and also custodian of the much discussed "black box" in which the bulk of Mr. Stephenson's documentary evidence was believed hidden, permission to turn over the black box to Prosecutor Remy. There were really two black boxes, both of which the Prosecutor received. The contents of the boxes were not made public, but it was announced that they included, among other papers, checks for $21,000 and for $24,000. Mr. Remy appeared pleased at the evidence disclosed...
Editor Daudet felt safe in his office, announced that he would reside there indefinitely in a self-proclaimed state of siege. To reporters he cried: "My house, my stable and my inkpot are henceforth here! My Leaguers ["Camelots") will not allow me to go to prison. Let the Prosecutor General dare to try to arrest me! He is mistaken if he believes, as he says, that I will have to bear the expenses of his proceedings. I am within my right and I shall not move! I am ready for anything and will do whatever circumstances or my fancy dictate...
...Daughter of the late Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan of the U. S. Supreme Court; sister of John Maynard Harlan, able Chicago lawyer; aunt of Assistant U. S. District Attorney John Marshall Harlan of New York, successful prosecutor of Earl Carroll, perjurer...
Born. To Robert E. Crowe, famed Illinois State's Attorney, able prosecutor of Leopold & Loeb (TIME, Sept. 8, 1924); a son, Thomas George Crowe (9 Ibs.). Attorney Crowe is now the father of five...