Read Clarence Darrow: Attorney for the Damned Online
Authors: John A. Farrell
Moyer was a talented organizer—“brave and determined,” Darrow would recall—with a sharp face and husky voice. Pettibone was “witty, friendly and kindly” and “something of a chemist.” It was widely believed that he had blown up the Frisco mine in Idaho. The third man—Big Bill—was powerfully built and square jawed. He was “hard, tough … [but with] a final touch of idealism, a Jesuitic zeal that carries the man beyond himself,” the journalist
Ray Stannard Baker wrote. Haywood had made his mark as a rabble-rousing socialist.
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It was at their request, Orchard would claim, that he and an associate,
Steve Adams, blew up the Independence depot of the Florence and Cripple Creek Railroad on June 6, 1904. The platform was packed with two dozen nonunion miners whose shift had just ended. Thirteen died and others were horribly mangled, their screams cleaving the summer night. And yet it was the Federation that paid the heaviest price for the bombing.
The union hall in the town of Victor was surrounded by vigilantes, and after a gun battle the miners surrendered.
Sherman Bell and his militia arrived and hauled hundreds at gunpoint to the Colorado border, where they were dumped in the wasteland and told not to return.
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WFM
HAD
been routed in Idaho and Colorado. Its leaders looked outside the West for allies, and helped organize the Industrial Workers of the World—dedicated to the overthrow of capitalism—in Chicago in 1905. The Wobblies, as they became known, believed in a Marxist class struggle and declared in their manifesto that “economic evils … can be eradicated only by a universal working class movement” led by “one great industrial union.” Moyer and Haywood were joined by Debs and other prominent radicals. Haywood urged American workers to follow their Russian counterparts and “rise in revolt against the capitalist system.” If western industrialists needed further motivation to take down Moyer and Haywood, the Red talk offered it. And Orchard gave them the means.
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As
Will Steunenberg ran, sliding in the snow, to his dying brother’s side on the night of the bombing, he instantly decided: “It’s the Coeur d’Alenes.” The next morning’s edition of the
Daily Statesman
, the state’s leading newspaper, barely reported the details before reaching the front-page conclusion that “a great many minds turn to the troubles in the Coeur d’Alenes and to the ‘inner circle’ which was said to rule by blood.”
The
Statesman
was the voice of Idaho’s anti-union, Republican establishment. With uncanny precision, in that first edition, it likened the Steunenberg bombing to the destruction of the Independence depot. And Sheriff
Harvey Brown of Oregon, who knew Orchard, just happened to be on the special train that traveled from Boise to Caldwell that night with the state’s two top Republicans, Governor
Frank Gooding and soon-to-be senator
William E. Borah. There were other suggestive details that led union men to believe that the bombing was the work of corporate provocateurs or a crazy loner. Orchard had not fled or disposed of the incriminating items stashed in his room and his baggage, including explosives, a sawed-off shotgun, and a postcard addressed to Moyer. After Brown identified him, Orchard had cooperatively surrendered and was formally charged less than forty-eight hours after Steunenberg stooped to close the gate.
And there were, in fact, other potential motives for the bombing. Steunenberg was a leader of Idaho’s wool growers, whose war with the state’s cattlemen had periodically erupted with deadly violence and histrionic murder trials. Then there was this to consider: Steunenberg’s wife said he had seemed troubled in recent weeks, and particularly on the day he died. Federal investigators had targeted him for his role in a massive timber fraud conspiracy, with links to Borah, Idaho mine owners, and the family that published the
Statesman
. Idaho’s Republican establishment had ample motive to want the murder case closed quickly, with blame fixed on the union. Orchard most assuredly had killed Steunenberg. But not until Lee Harvey Oswald would an assassin’s motives, and his paymasters, be the topic of such dispute.
G
OODING STASHED
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RCHARD
in the state penitentiary in Boise, where, after time in solitary confinement, he was introduced to the Pinkerton detective who had been hired to lead the investigation.
J. P. McParland was a legend: the nerveless private eye who had gone undercover, risked his life, and brought down the
Molly Maguires. He had drunk and bunked and schemed with the Pennsylvania coal field rebels, then testified at trials that sent twenty to their deaths. Other famous private eyes cashed in and started their own firms, but McParland stuck with the Pinkertons, who prized his anti-union zeal, and his ability to move with equal facility in the “higher or laboring classes,” and among “sporting men or thieves.” He was past sixty now, afflicted with various ailments and reliant on a cane. He had, of course, prejudged the case. It was the Molly Maguires all over again, and would serve as a spectacular bookend to his career.
Before he ever began to investigate, McParland declared that the “inner circle”—Moyer and Haywood—were behind the crime. Using Steunenberg’s murder to dismember the union was a prime business opportunity, McParland told the Pinkertons: “It means a great deal … so far as the mine owners of Idaho are concerned and in fact all mine operators in the whole district.”
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McParland knew the value of manipulating public opinion, and his conversations with Orchard, which he deftly leaked to the press, were portrayed as sacramental: the killer converted by the sage lawman, finding Jesus, and confessing his sins. “I have been an unnatural monster,” Orchard wrote in a letter that found its way to the newspapers. “But the dear Lord regenerated me, so he could use me.”
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Both the actual transcript of Orchard’s confession and McParland’s notes were kept secret for decades. In truth, it was a pedestrian interrogation, the kind conducted by coppers and DAs everywhere. “If you take my advice you will not be hung,” McParland told Orchard. “If you do not you will be hung in very quick order.”
The authorities knew that Orchard was “simply a tool of the Inner Circle,” McParland told him. If the assassin implicated the Federation chiefs as his co-conspirators, the state would spare his life, and one day even set him free. “We would get the leaders, and that was all that the State of Colorado and the State of Idaho wished,” McParland said. “I recited a number of instances which he knew of himself wherein men had become States witnesses in murder cases and not only saved their necks but also eventually got their liberty.”
Orchard asked for, and McParland supplied, the precise story he needed to relate. He must describe how the Federation leaders “being men in authority, detail you to go and commit the murder, advise you how to do it, furnish you with the means,” McParland said. The deal McParland offered was good for Harry Orchard, and Harry Orchard grabbed it. He hoped to be free soon, he told a fellow prisoner, and to start a new life overseas. “I awoke, as it were, from a dream,” Orchard said in his confession. “And realized I had been made a tool of, aided and assisted by the members of the Executive Board of the Western Federation of Miners.”
F
OR THE NEXT
five days, as McParland crafted the questions and a stenographer took notes, Orchard told how he had been dispatched to kill Steunenberg by Haywood and the others. But he did not stop there: He linked every infamous act of western labor violence to the Federation. He had bombed the Vindicator mine and the Independence depot, he said, and the home of a prominent mine owner in San Francisco. He had helped blow up the Bunker Hill mine. He had tried to assassinate Governor Peabody of Colorado, two justices of the state supreme court, and Sherman Bell. He had shot a detective in a dark alley, poisoned a mine owner’s milk, and killed an innocent Denver man who stumbled into one of his plots.
Despite his alleged reconciliation with Christ, the prisoner lied from the first. His real name was not Harry Orchard, as he swore, but Alfred E. Horsley. Pinkerton operative
S. Chris Thiele spent as much time with Orchard as anyone and privately scoffed at his supposed religious awakening. The killer was distilled evil, Thiele told his superiors in an agency memorandum, and he “at no time found Orchard saying that he … had any pity for those to whose hearts he brought sorrow.” Darrow would find Orchard “remarkable … a man whom nothing could touch; he was above all ordinary influences: fear, hope, reward, threats; everything.” Even McParland was impressed. He had known many criminals but never had he seen, until Harry Orchard, such “cold, cruel” eyes.
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ITH
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RCHARD
’
S
CONFESSION
in hand, McParland faced the task of arresting Haywood, Moyer, and Pettibone. “Owing to the fact that neither of these three parties had been in Idaho during this conspiracy, we cannot say that they are fugitives from justice,” he warned Gooding, “and we may have considerable trouble in extraditing them.”
And so Idaho kidnapped the three union leaders. To Colorado’s compliant governor, McParland sold the legal fable that the three were “constructively” present in Caldwell on the night of the crime. McParland had them seized on a Saturday night and spirited away on a fast train before the Federation’s lawyers could ask a court to intervene. The Union Pacific Railroad agreed to clear its tracks. Engines, watered and fueled, stood waiting along the route. Sandwiches, bottles of beer, a hundred cigars, and a quart of Old Crow were packed aboard. Cryptic messages flew back and forth. Everyone had a code name. McParland was Owl. Haywood was Viper. Moyer was Copperhead. Pettibone was Rattler. And Harry Orchard, the gifted poser, was Possum.
Moyer was grabbed, without warrant, at Union Station in Denver. Pettibone was picked up without incident at home. And the Viper was arrested in a rooming house, “stark naked and in bed with a woman,” the Owl told Gooding. Haywood’s bedmate was the younger sister of his invalid wife, Nevada Jane. It was to be expected, said McParland, for the Viper was a degenerate.
The abduction infuriated American labor leaders—even moderates, like
Samuel Gompers, who loathed the Wobblies.
AROUSE, YE SLAVES!
read the headline in the socialist
Appeal to Reason
. “It is a foul plot; a damnable conspiracy; a hellish outrage,” Debs wrote. “If they attempt to murder Moyer, Haywood and their brothers, a million revolutionists, at least, will meet them with guns … A general strike could be ordered and industry paralyzed as a preliminary to a general uprising.”
One WFM leader evaded the manhunt.
Jack Simpkins, who was indicted for helping Orchard plan the Steunenberg murder, vanished. But
Steve Adams, whom Orchard named as his accomplice in the bombing of the Independence depot, was seized in Oregon. McParland made his well-rehearsed pitch, and Adams signed a statement linking the WFM chieftains to Orchard’s crime spree. In composing the confession, “McParland led me on step by step and showed me all that he wanted me to say,” Adams later testified. He was a critical witness in the case, for Idaho law was insistent: no defendant could be convicted of a crime on the testimony of a single conspirator. Corroborating proof was required, and in Adams, the state now had corroboration.
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out to Darrow in March 1906. “This is a matter which I would rather avoid … on account of the hard fight and the serious odds,” he told
John Mitchell. “However, I do not see how I can get out of it. I presume that they are trying to railroad these fellows.”
After being assured that organized labor would raise sufficient funds for the defense, Darrow took the case. He traveled to Idaho at the end of May for
pretrial hearings. “Public sentiment … is very necessary in a great case of this kind,” he told Mitchell. He was genial and folksy, far from the cloven-hoofed anarchist whom Idaho expected. He informed the
Statesman
that he found Boise “a mighty nice town” and teased reporters who asked him for inside information. In court Darrow made a show of demanding a quick trial for his clients, though he knew that his union’s challenge of their extradition would take months to reach the U.S. Supreme Court. “They are ready for trial,” he declared. “They are entitled to trial. They demand trial.”
The Supreme Court heard the extradition case in October. The Constitution permits that a person “who shall flee from justice” in one state may be extradited from others, the defense acknowledged. But Haywood and his companions had not fled anywhere. The governor of Colorado
“had full knowledge of the falsity of the proceedings,” the Federation argued. “This is not a case of actual fugitives.” But only one member of the court, Justice
Joseph McKenna, agreed. “Kidnapping is a crime, pure and simple,” he said, in a lonely dissent.
The Idaho prosecutor,
James Hawley, read the court correctly. He was an archetypical sagebrush lawyer: a beefy, hot-tempered, cigar-smoking cowboy with a law book in his saddlebag who grew up with the territory. In the 1892 troubles, Hawley had defended Pettibone and the other union men and helped organize the Federation. But with all the zeal of a convert, he had switched sides. He told the justices that the prisoners had other legal remedies that they could seek if they thought they were improperly snatched. “The parties abducting them could be tried for kidnapping, or the defendants could sue for damages,” he said. Once they were charged on Idaho soil, the route they took was irrelevant: “They are there, and the question is are they guilty or innocent.” On December 3, 1906, the Supreme Court agreed. The “vital fact” was that the defendants were now in Idaho, said Justice Harlan, in a 7-to-1 decision. “It is not necessary to go behind the indictment and inquire as to how it happened.”