0:03 [SPEAKER_00]: It's the evening of October 10, 1890, and Helen Reesh is playing cards. 0:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Her husband's Steven sits across the table. 0:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Fred Bennett, their bartender, a big man hired to keep order, among miners who drink hard and settle arguments harder, deals the next hand. 0:25 [SPEAKER_00]: Outside, the campers retreat tavern sits on 62 acres of dry scrubland near the Bradford quick silver mine, three miles south of Middletown, California. 0:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Up the road, the sheriff and his deputies are out of candidates ball, music, dancing, 0:51 [SPEAKER_00]: October in this part of California smells like dry oak and cooling dust. 0:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The hills hold heat all day and release it slowly after dark. 1:04 [SPEAKER_00]: At the campers retreat, the only sounds are the card game, the creak of the building in the wind, and the distant percussion of crickets in the scrub. 1:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Three miles of empty road between this tavern and the nearest badge. 1:21 [SPEAKER_00]: According to later testimony, around half past eight, the front door crashes open. 1:34 [SPEAKER_00]: They carry rifles, shotguns, and pistols. 1:39 [SPEAKER_00]: They have also brought a cationine tails, a bucket of tar, and a bag of feathers. 1:46 [SPEAKER_00]: They have come for Bennett. 1:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Helen Reach does not hide. 1:52 [SPEAKER_00]: She does not cower. 1:54 [SPEAKER_00]: She does not scream. 1:55 [SPEAKER_00]: She runs toward the nearest masked man, and rips the flower sack off his face. 2:02 [SPEAKER_00]: She is looking at Henry Akara, a Bradford minor, her neighbor. 2:10 [SPEAKER_00]: That act, done on instinct, done before her brain caught up to the danger. 2:16 [SPEAKER_00]: We'll solve this case. 2:19 [SPEAKER_00]: It will also cost Helen Reesh her life. 2:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Hello friend, welcome to Fowl Play. 2:27 [SPEAKER_00]: I'm Shane Waters. 2:30 [SPEAKER_00]: This is season 40, 50 states, 50 for gotten crimes, America's 250th year. 2:40 [SPEAKER_00]: This is episode 9, California, in Alabama. 2:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Two states, two cases where communities decided the law was not enough and reached for something uglier. 2:53 [SPEAKER_00]: In California, it was 10 men and flower sack hoods. 2:58 [SPEAKER_00]: In Alabama, it was 2,000 citizens in the street. 3:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Both times, they called it justice. 3:06 [SPEAKER_00]: Both times, the wrong people died. 3:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Lake County, California, in the late 1880s, was a Mercury County. 3:23 [SPEAKER_00]: Sinobar, the red ore that yields quick silver, ran to the hills like veins and a body. 3:30 [SPEAKER_00]: A settler named Bradford had found it, and sent hell on a creek bed, back in 1877, and by the time the mine opened for full production a decade later, 3:47 [SPEAKER_00]: quick silver mining was a killing trade. 3:51 [SPEAKER_00]: At the nearby sulfur bank mine, temperatures underground reached 176 degrees. 3:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Mercury exposure caused tremors. 4:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Neurological damage, a slow erasure of the 4:13 [SPEAKER_00]: that was the campers retreat. 4:17 [SPEAKER_00]: Stephen and Helena Reish ran it, a roadside tavern on rough land near the Bradford mine. 4:25 [SPEAKER_00]: It was the only real gathering place for the mining population, which meant it drew men who carried both their wages and their grudges through the door. 4:37 [SPEAKER_00]: We do not know where Helen Matilda Reish was born. 4:41 [SPEAKER_00]: We do not know how she met Stephen or what brought them to a quick silver country tavern. 4:47 [SPEAKER_00]: The historical record is then on their life before October 10, 1890. 4:54 [SPEAKER_00]: What it preserves is a woman who ran a hard business and a hard place, a mining camp saloon in northern California Hill Country, managing a clientele of mercury miners who drank accordingly, that tells you something about who she was, what tells you more is 5:18 [SPEAKER_00]: The Middletown Methodist Church, in a community where saloon keepers could easily puberate off as rough trade figures, the church held her funeral, in the town turned out for the procession. 5:32 [SPEAKER_00]: The respectable community claimed her as one of its own. 5:36 [SPEAKER_00]: She must have been a formidable woman. 5:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Bennett testified that when the masked writers burst through the door that night, Helen Reesh did not retreat. 5:48 [SPEAKER_00]: She ran into the room to confront them. 5:51 [SPEAKER_00]: She demanded they leave. 5:54 [SPEAKER_00]: When one of the men grabbed her to bind and gag her, she fought back. 6:00 [SPEAKER_00]: The raid grew from a web of grudges that had been tightening for months. 6:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Blackburn, the mine foreman, had been thrown out of the campers retreat after our brawl with Bennett. 6:13 [SPEAKER_00]: He wanted payback. 6:16 [SPEAKER_00]: Staley had argued with Bennett over boundary lines between the Bradford and Boolean mines. 6:23 [SPEAKER_00]: McGuire had quarreled with Stephen Reish, over stray cattle. 6:28 [SPEAKER_00]: These were not strangers, they were neighbors. 6:32 [SPEAKER_00]: To make sense of this, you need to know what white-capping was. 6:37 [SPEAKER_00]: The movement started in southern Indiana in the 1880s. 6:41 [SPEAKER_00]: Hooded men enforcing what they called community morality, through beatings, tar and feathers, forced expulsions. 6:56 [SPEAKER_00]: The plan was straightforward, burst in wearing hoods, fog, bent it with a cat on nine tails, tar and feather him, march him to the county line, tell him never to come back. 7:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The plan collapsed, the moment Helen Reesh acted. 7:19 [SPEAKER_00]: She reached for the nearest masked man, and did what you already know she did. 7:25 [SPEAKER_00]: The face beneath the flower sack belonged to a man she had served drinks too. 7:31 [SPEAKER_00]: A man who lived up the road. 7:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Gunfire erupted. 7:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Bennett ran toward the bedroom to get his pistol. 7:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Raiders chasing and shooting behind him. 7:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Ellen Reesh was hit five times, chest and side. 7:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Even with five bullets in her body, she grabbed her husband's 44 Winchester Rifle and tried to return fire. 7:57 [SPEAKER_00]: One of the Reader's wrenched it from her hands and threw it aside. 8:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Stephen Reesh also hit by gunfire, carried her to the bedroom. 8:12 [SPEAKER_00]: McGuire was found dead outside the tavern door, wearing red sleeves, burlap sacks for clothing, and a white flower sack mass still over his face. 8:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Who killed him was never determined, possibly another raider, making sure he could not talk. 8:33 [SPEAKER_00]: The white caps killed, Helen reached that night. 8:37 [SPEAKER_00]: They also killed one of their own. 8:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Bennet jumped out of a window, in the darkness. 8:44 [SPEAKER_00]: He rode three miles north to the candidate's ball. 8:48 [SPEAKER_00]: The sheriff was still dancing. 8:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Bennet reached the candidate's ball and reported the attack. 8:56 [SPEAKER_00]: The sheriff mobilized immediately, riding three miles south to the campers retreat. 9:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Deputies surrounded the tavern. 9:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Others searched McWyer's cabin nearby, 9:08 [SPEAKER_00]: In a small mining community, the attackers were not difficult to identify. 9:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Ellen Reesh had unmasked Akara, Bennett recognized others during the assault. 9:22 [SPEAKER_00]: As his story in Henry Maldon later documented, in his late county notes, the white cap raiders were not outlaws or strangers passing through. 9:32 [SPEAKER_00]: They were ordinary people, most of them well known in Middletown, or at the neighboring 9:39 [SPEAKER_00]: 10 men were arrested. 9:41 [SPEAKER_00]: They were jailed in Lake Port without bail. 9:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Then Helen Reesh died. 9:49 [SPEAKER_00]: October 14, 1890. 9:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Four days, five gunshot wounds to the chest inside, and 1890's medicine had nothing to offer her. 10:02 [SPEAKER_00]: She received what the record calls a stately funeral, 10:10 [SPEAKER_00]: The same community that knew her in life showed up to bury her. 10:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Stephen reached through himself into the prosecution. 10:20 [SPEAKER_00]: He pushed authorities to hold every radar accountable. 10:24 [SPEAKER_00]: He attended hearings. 10:26 [SPEAKER_00]: He demanded the system work. 10:29 [SPEAKER_00]: He never saw the trial. 10:33 [SPEAKER_00]: December 29th, 1890, Stephen Reish died. 10:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Official cause, apoplexy of the brain. 10:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Contemporaries believed the bullet wound from the raid, which never healed properly, combined with the weight of grief and stress to destroy what remained of his health. 10:55 [SPEAKER_00]: less than three months after his wife. 10:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The white caps did not just kill Helen reached that night. 11:02 [SPEAKER_00]: They erased the entire household. 11:06 [SPEAKER_00]: here is where the evidence starts to build. 11:10 [SPEAKER_00]: The trial opened on February 6th, 1891, in Lake Port. 11:15 [SPEAKER_00]: People of the State of California, verse B. F. Staley at all, before Judge R. W. Crump, who presided over the seventh district, 11:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Prosecutor Andrew Rocka, the Lake County District Attorney, presented more than three dozen witnesses across ten cases, one for each defendant. 11:39 [SPEAKER_00]: Helen Rocka Goss, Andrew Rocka's descendant, later wrote the most detailed account of the trial in her 1969 study, the California White cap murders. 11:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Her family had access to the trial papers, 11:55 [SPEAKER_00]: What those papers show is a prosecution built on overwhelmingly local testimony. 12:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Everyone knew everyone. 12:04 [SPEAKER_00]: The defense argument that carried weight was this. 12:08 [SPEAKER_00]: The raiders testified that the plan had never included harming the reshes. 12:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The target was Bennett. 12:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Helen Reesh, they argued, 12:26 [SPEAKER_00]: According to state records, 10 of the 12 jurors wanted murder in the first degree. 12:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Two held out for manslaughter. 12:36 [SPEAKER_00]: They could not move each other. 12:38 [SPEAKER_00]: The compromise was second degree. 12:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Ten jurors looked at the evidence and said this was a planned killing. 12:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Two said it was not. 12:50 [SPEAKER_00]: And the two won. 12:52 [SPEAKER_00]: Murder in the second degree for four men, Blackburn, Staley, All's Good, and Crowdwick, all with a recommendation to the courts mercy. 13:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Not first degree, not death, second degree with a request for leniency. 13:13 [SPEAKER_00]: Blackburn, the ringleader, was sentenced to 25 years, stately, 20, Cradwick, 20, Osgood, 12, all four sent to San Quentin. 13:29 [SPEAKER_00]: The six cooperating defendants, including Akara, had their charges dismissed for eating the prosecution. 13:41 [SPEAKER_00]: The man the white caps rode out to destroy, before the trial, newspapers reported he was somewhere in California, and that no dependence could be placed upon him as a witness. 13:54 [SPEAKER_00]: The one man who survived that night by jumping out a window had effectively vanished. 14:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Whether he testified is unclear from the record, what is clear is that he disappeared 14:08 [SPEAKER_00]: The man at the center of every crutch that led to the raid was the one man who got away clean, and then was never hurt from again. 14:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Twenty-five years, that was the price the state of California put on Helen Reyes' life. 14:26 [SPEAKER_00]: The governor was about to lower it. 14:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Despite an avalanche of angry letters and speeches, Governor Henry Harrison Markham commuted Blackburn's 25-year sentence to 10 years on December 31, 1894. 14:45 [SPEAKER_00]: His written rationale said Blackburn in no way participated in the fatal results, and that no greater crime than Manslaughter should have been found against him. 14:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Blackburn was reportedly a leader in the grand army of the Republic, the most powerful veteran fraternal organization in Republican politics. 15:08 [SPEAKER_00]: Markham was a Republican governor. 15:11 [SPEAKER_00]: The letters that flooded his desk came from that world. 15:16 [SPEAKER_00]: 10 of the 12 jurors had won it first degree murder. 15:20 [SPEAKER_00]: Two holdouts forced the compromise to second degree. 15:28 [SPEAKER_00]: All four convicted men were released from St. Quentin, within approximately six years of their incarceration. 15:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Blackburn walked out in September, 1897. 15:39 [SPEAKER_00]: The three years later, he was arrested for horse theory. 15:44 [SPEAKER_00]: That is the last the record shows of the man who organized a mass trade that killed Helen Reesh. 15:52 [SPEAKER_00]: California's legislature responded to the white cap murders by enacting new laws, targeting vigilance committees, and massed vigilante activity. 16:03 [SPEAKER_00]: Helen Reesh ripped a mask off a man's face. 16:07 [SPEAKER_00]: California made sure no one could hide behind one again. 16:12 [SPEAKER_00]: The community that buried her that had turned out for the procession now watched her killers 16:21 [SPEAKER_00]: The same small town, the same neighbors. 16:25 [SPEAKER_00]: The mind-formin, who organized the raid, walked out of San Quentin, and came back to the world that had mourned at the woman he killed. 16:35 [SPEAKER_00]: And with both Wrecious Gone, there was no family left to carry the case forward. 16:40 [SPEAKER_00]: No children, no errors, no want to stand in the courtroom, and demand accountability. 16:48 [SPEAKER_00]: The prosecution belonged to Andrew Raka and the state of California, the grief belonged to Middletown. 16:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Now we go south. 17:01 [SPEAKER_00]: Two years before the White Caps wrote into California, another community reached for the same answer. 17:09 [SPEAKER_00]: Two communities, same conclusion. 17:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Birmingham, Alabama, December 1888, a new city, raw and loud, built on iron and coal, and the kind of ambition that does not ask for permission. 17:42 [SPEAKER_00]: The railyards never stop, the hammers never quit. 17:48 [SPEAKER_00]: In a house on the south side of the city, a woman is packing a suitcase. 17:53 [SPEAKER_00]: Her husband, an engineer on the Georgia Pacific Railroad, named Richard Haas, is helping her fold close. 18:02 [SPEAKER_00]: He has told her she is going to Atlanta to bring home their youngest child. 18:08 [SPEAKER_00]: A routine trip, a mother collecting her son. 18:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The kind of errand that does not make it into the historical record. 18:18 [SPEAKER_00]: She believes it. 18:23 [SPEAKER_00]: she should not have. 18:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard Hawes was going to murder his family, his wife, two of his three children. 18:33 [SPEAKER_00]: He was going to wait their bodies with railroad iron from his job and sink them into two separate lakes within a mile of his home. 18:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Then he was going to board a train 18:50 [SPEAKER_00]: That is what happened in Birmingham in December 1888, to understand how it happened, you have to understand the city where it happened. 19:02 [SPEAKER_00]: Birmingham set on top of a geological accident, the only place on earth where coal, iron ore and limestone existed in close enough proximity 19:17 [SPEAKER_00]: The city had been incorporated in 1871, 17 years old. 19:24 [SPEAKER_00]: They already called it the Magic City. 19:28 [SPEAKER_00]: The population had roughly 3,000 in 1880. 19:30 [SPEAKER_00]: By 1888, it was pushing toward 26,000. 19:31 [SPEAKER_00]: And no one thought that was the ceiling. 19:42 [SPEAKER_00]: furnaces were going up on every hillside. 19:45 [SPEAKER_00]: The smoke from the smelters hung in the air on still days. 19:50 [SPEAKER_00]: A yellow grey haze that tasted like sulfur and hop metal at the back of your throat. 19:56 [SPEAKER_00]: You could see it from the rail lines coming in. 19:58 [SPEAKER_00]: A smudge on the horizon that told you Birmingham was close before you could see a single building. 20:07 [SPEAKER_00]: The railroad's hauled more tonnage out of this valley than the entire cotton crop of Alabama. 20:15 [SPEAKER_00]: Iron rail, pig iron, coal by the train load, the noise of it was constant, hammers on steel, furnace blasts that shook windows three blocks away, wheels on rail at all hours. 20:33 [SPEAKER_00]: the screech and grind a freight cars, coupling in the switching yards south of downtown. 20:40 [SPEAKER_00]: At street level, the roads were unpaved, passed the commercial blocks. 20:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Mud in the wet months, red orange dust in the dry ones, kicked up by mule traffic and wagon wheels, settling on windowsills, on laundry, hung to dry, 21:03 [SPEAKER_00]: the air smelled like cold smoke and horse-dong and limestone dust and underneath all of it, the faint metallic sweetness of molten iron. 21:15 [SPEAKER_00]: This was a city that did not yet know what it was, to new to have traditions, to ambitious, to slow down. 21:24 [SPEAKER_00]: Growing so fast that the civic institutions could not keep pace with the population. 21:31 [SPEAKER_00]: A city where things happened, and the system scrambled to respond afterward. 21:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Emma Haas must have been one of thousands of women in Birmingham, whose daily lives were shaped by a husband's railroad schedule. 21:47 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard ran trains on the Georgia Pacific between Birmingham and Columbus, Mississippi. 21:55 [SPEAKER_00]: They called him Handsome Dick. 21:58 [SPEAKER_00]: He had eloped with Emma Petus, daughter of Colonel William Petus, and Atlanta Businessman 22:07 [SPEAKER_00]: the Colonel disowned her for it. 22:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Three children followed in quick succession. 22:15 [SPEAKER_00]: May, born 1880, Irene, born 1882, Willie, born around 1883 or 1884. 22:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Then the marriage fell apart. 22:29 [SPEAKER_00]: They moved from Atlanta to Montgomery to Birmingham. 22:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard later claimed Emma Drang, that she was unfaithful. 22:42 [SPEAKER_00]: Those accusations came from the man who murdered her. 22:46 [SPEAKER_00]: They were never independently verified. 22:50 [SPEAKER_00]: By 1888, Emma was living on 32nd Street, South, with her three children under eight, largely alone. 22:59 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard ran trains across state lines for days at a stretch. 23:04 [SPEAKER_00]: One of the few steady presences in the children's lives, May the eldest at eight, shoulder 23:16 [SPEAKER_00]: According to later testimony, she took charge of the household when Emma could not. 23:22 [SPEAKER_00]: A small girl doing the work of a parent and a home already coming apart. 23:28 [SPEAKER_00]: In the weeks before December, Willie the youngest was sent to stay with Richard's family in Georgia. 23:35 [SPEAKER_00]: That decision saved his life. 23:40 [SPEAKER_00]: The weekend of December 1st to the 2nd, 1888. 23:45 [SPEAKER_00]: Fanny Bryant later testified that she saw Richard and May helping Emma pack, for what was described as a trip to Atlanta to bring Willie home. 23:55 [SPEAKER_00]: It was a lie. 23:57 [SPEAKER_00]: December 3rd, evening. 24:00 [SPEAKER_00]: I witnessed his saw Richard and May board a rail together, around seven or eight o'clock. 24:10 [SPEAKER_00]: Less than an hour later, a man matching Richard's description got back on the rail, alone. 24:18 [SPEAKER_00]: December 4th, morning, two teenage boys rowing on East Lake, John Keith, and Ben Cobalson saw what they thought was a dead dog floating near the eastern bank. 24:33 [SPEAKER_00]: It was not a dog. 24:36 [SPEAKER_00]: Coroner Alfred Babitt determined the manner of death to be homicide. 24:42 [SPEAKER_00]: at Lockwood and Miller's funeral parlor. 24:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Thousands of Birmingham residents filed past the body of an unknown girl. 24:50 [SPEAKER_00]: The next day, a local butcher identified her. 24:55 [SPEAKER_00]: May pause. 24:57 [SPEAKER_00]: Eight years old. 24:59 [SPEAKER_00]: In Richard Haas, on the day his daughter's body was pulled from East Lake, he was in Columbus, 25:10 [SPEAKER_00]: a telegram arrived at the offices of the weekly age hailed. 25:14 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard Haas had married a woman named May's story, at her father's home in Columbus, Mississippi. 25:22 [SPEAKER_00]: The telegram included their travel-itinerary. 25:26 [SPEAKER_00]: They were heading to Atlanta by way of Birmingham. 25:30 [SPEAKER_00]: Birmingham police boarded his train at the station. 25:34 [SPEAKER_00]: He was still in his church clothes from the ceremony. 25:38 [SPEAKER_00]: He had a new wife. 25:40 [SPEAKER_00]: He had a new name he was trying on. 25:43 [SPEAKER_00]: He did not yet know that his daughter's body had been found. 25:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Here's what the record shows. 25:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Haws denied everything. 25:54 [SPEAKER_00]: He claimed he had legally divorced Emma two years earlier, but the divorce finalized under Georgia Law in October 1888. 26:04 [SPEAKER_00]: He said the marriage to May's story was lawful. 26:08 [SPEAKER_00]: He said Emma was an alcoholic and unfaithful. 26:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Four days later, May's story testified against him. 26:18 [SPEAKER_00]: She filed for divorce. 26:20 [SPEAKER_00]: She petitioned Mrs. Sippy to restore her maiden name. 26:26 [SPEAKER_00]: Investigators found a blood-speckled axe and a torn piece of ribbon near a fence at Lake View Lake. 26:34 [SPEAKER_00]: Drag marks led from the fence to the water's edge, they dredged, then they drained it. 26:43 [SPEAKER_00]: December 8th, him was body came up from the bottom, bound with curtain cord, 26:53 [SPEAKER_00]: The tools of his trade, holding his wife to the lake bed. 26:59 [SPEAKER_00]: that discovery broke the city open. 27:03 [SPEAKER_00]: That same night, somewhere between two and 3,000 people converged on the Jefferson County jail on 21st Street, North. 27:13 [SPEAKER_00]: They wanted haze, they wanted a rope. 27:18 [SPEAKER_00]: Sheriff Joseph S. Smith stationed armed guards on the jail roof, rifles and shotguns. 27:26 [SPEAKER_00]: He addressed the crowd. 27:29 [SPEAKER_00]: He pleaded for calm. 27:32 [SPEAKER_00]: A single gunshot cut through the noise, its source was never confirmed. 27:38 [SPEAKER_00]: Smith ordered a volley. 27:41 [SPEAKER_00]: 40 weapons fired from the roof into the streets. 27:46 [SPEAKER_00]: 10 people died. 27:48 [SPEAKER_00]: Dozens were wounded. 27:51 [SPEAKER_00]: Among the dead, Maurice Throck Morton, the postmaster, 27:57 [SPEAKER_00]: a bystandard. 27:59 [SPEAKER_00]: A. J. Brandon, a deputy United States Marshall from Gatston. 28:04 [SPEAKER_00]: Also a bystandard. 28:07 [SPEAKER_00]: The mob had come to kill one man. 28:11 [SPEAKER_00]: The law killed 10 of them instead. 28:15 [SPEAKER_00]: The governor deployed 500 militia the following day, Sheriff Smith and police chief O.A. 28:21 [SPEAKER_00]: Pickard were both arrested, charged in connection with the deaths. 28:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Both were later acquitted, and Irene, her body surfaced days later during the continued draining of the same lake, 30 feet from her mother. 28:41 [SPEAKER_00]: six years old. 28:43 [SPEAKER_00]: The state charged haws with three murders. 28:47 [SPEAKER_00]: They chose to prosecute only maze. 28:51 [SPEAKER_00]: The strongest circumstantial case. 28:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Now, Fanny Bryant. 28:58 [SPEAKER_00]: The prosecution's central witness, she testified about the packing, about the lie, about the days before the murders. 29:08 [SPEAKER_00]: But Fanny 29:12 [SPEAKER_00]: According to contemporary reports, she was charged as an accomplice, sentenced to death. 29:21 [SPEAKER_00]: According to one account, she died in a prison riot, before that sentence was carried out. 29:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Her testimony was given under the weight of her own life, hanging in the balance. 29:34 [SPEAKER_00]: The record does not tell us how much that weight shaped what she said, 29:40 [SPEAKER_00]: The defense filed for a change of in-game, a pamphlet titled The Haas Horror, and Bloody Riot at Birmingham, written by Major Goldsmith B. 29:50 [SPEAKER_00]: West, had already become a local best seller. 29:54 [SPEAKER_00]: The defense argued that no impartial jury could be seated in Jefferson County. 30:00 [SPEAKER_00]: Judge Samuel Green denied the motion. 30:09 [SPEAKER_00]: all male jury. 30:11 [SPEAKER_00]: All white. 30:13 [SPEAKER_00]: The state built its case on circumstance. 30:17 [SPEAKER_00]: The railroad iron, the curtain cord, the testimony. 30:22 [SPEAKER_00]: The new marriage on the day his daughter was found dead. 30:27 [SPEAKER_00]: 55 minutes. 30:29 [SPEAKER_00]: That is how long the jury deliberated. 30:32 [SPEAKER_00]: Guilty. 30:33 [SPEAKER_00]: First degree, death by hanging 30:37 [SPEAKER_00]: Appeals went to the Alabama Supreme Court, all denied. 30:44 [SPEAKER_00]: February 28, 1890, 14 months after the murders, Richard Haw's dressed for his execution, the way some men dress for a wedding, new black suit, white shirt, neck tie, silk patent 31:09 [SPEAKER_00]: He placed a geranium in his lapel, a geranium, a small red flower pinned to the chest of a man about to have his neck broken by the state. 31:21 [SPEAKER_00]: He must have been thinking about something when he chose that flower, not remorse, the record 31:37 [SPEAKER_00]: a man arranging the final version of himself for an audience that had already decided what he was. 31:46 [SPEAKER_00]: That morning he wrote a letter to his brother, Jim. 31:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Not a confession, not an apology. 31:54 [SPEAKER_00]: He blamed his downfall on whiskey and wanted women. 31:59 [SPEAKER_00]: The letter did not mention Emma. 32:07 [SPEAKER_00]: According to one contemporary account, the Gallows' platform was built by J.A. 32:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Griffith, a man who had also served on the jury that convicted him. 32:18 [SPEAKER_00]: The man who voted guilty, the man who built the machine. 32:24 [SPEAKER_00]: The same hands for both. 32:28 [SPEAKER_00]: Sheriff Joseph S. Smith stood on the platform. 32:32 [SPEAKER_00]: The same 32:38 [SPEAKER_00]: The same man who had been arrested for those deaths and acquitted. 32:43 [SPEAKER_00]: Now he stood beside the gallows, performing the duty the mob had tried to steal from him. 32:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Smith counted to three. 32:53 [SPEAKER_00]: The drop was clean, his neck broke. 32:58 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard Haas was 32 years old. 33:02 [SPEAKER_00]: By some accounts, thousands of spectators watched. 33:09 [SPEAKER_00]: in 1890, for admission to watch a man die. 33:16 [SPEAKER_00]: A crowd that large for a county execution tells you what this death meant to Birmingham. 33:23 [SPEAKER_00]: It was not punishment, it was not just deterrence, it was proof that the system could finish what the mob had tried to start. 33:33 [SPEAKER_00]: The legal machinery of Jefferson County defended at the cost of ten lives. 33:40 [SPEAKER_00]: Now performed its function on schedule. 33:44 [SPEAKER_00]: His brother Jim shipped the body to Atlanta in a locked coffin. 33:50 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard Haas was buried in an unmarked grave in the family plot. 33:55 [SPEAKER_00]: Jim took custody of Willie, the youngest, the only child who survived. 34:05 [SPEAKER_00]: Emma May and Irene were buried at Oak Hill Cemetery in Birmingham. 34:11 [SPEAKER_00]: Their graves received no marker, no headstone, no name, no date, nothing to tell a stranger that three people were here, that they mattered to someone that they were taken. 34:26 [SPEAKER_00]: 136 years. 34:29 [SPEAKER_00]: In April 2024, a community group placed a headstone on their grave, 136 years of silence, and then a stone with their names on it, Emma May Irene, finally marked. 34:49 [SPEAKER_00]: Helwind Reesh's killers walked out of St. Quentin within six years. 34:54 [SPEAKER_00]: Richard Haas dressed for his execution, like it was a Sunday service. 34:59 [SPEAKER_00]: One system failed through mercy. 35:02 [SPEAKER_00]: The other performed its function in front of a paying audience, on a platform reportedly built by the man who convicted him. 35:12 [SPEAKER_00]: Executed by the sheriff who had already killed ten citizens, defending 35:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Both communities reach the same conclusion. 35:23 [SPEAKER_00]: The law was not enough. 35:27 [SPEAKER_00]: Both were wrong about what came next. 35:31 [SPEAKER_00]: In California, the mob got their first. 35:35 [SPEAKER_00]: Ten men and flower sacks, a woman dead. 35:39 [SPEAKER_00]: And afterward, the law shrugged. 35:44 [SPEAKER_00]: Twenty-five years commuted to ten. 35:47 [SPEAKER_00]: The ringleader out in six. 35:56 [SPEAKER_00]: In Alabama, the mob arrived after the arrest, 2,000 people in the street. 36:04 [SPEAKER_00]: The law killed 10 of them, to protect its right to kill one. 36:09 [SPEAKER_00]: And then did it, on schedule, efficiently, with a flower in the condemned man's lapel. 36:19 [SPEAKER_00]: Until next time, good night, friend. 36:26 [UNKNOWN]: Thank you.
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