Tuesday, 25th November 1913: Conleys Lawyer Will Ask Immediate Trial, The Atlanta Constitution
The Atlanta Constitution,
Tuesday, 25th November 1913,
PAGE 8, COLUMN 4.
Attorney William Smith will today in
the criminal branch of the superior court make formal demand that his negro
client, Jim Conley, the factory sweeper whose testimony convicted Leo Frank of
the Phagan murder, be given immediate trial.
Following a conference late Monday
between Attorney Smith and Solicitor Dorsey, Smith announced that he would
waive a jury trial for his client and await the courts decision as to whether
his man shall be sentenced under a misdemeanor of felony charge.
The indictment against Conley charges
him with being an accessory after the fact in the murder of the Phagan girl.
Attorney Smith has declared openly that there is no law on the statute books in
this state under which his client can be convicted and has hinted that all the
court can do with the negro is to free him.
If Attorney Smith succeeds in having
Judge Ben Hill place the negro on trial all there will remain to do today is to
have Solicitor Dorsey and Attorney Smith argue the points of law involved and
then the court will pronounce sentence.
Whether Judge
Hill will allow the negro to be tried today is not yet known. It is within the
power of the court, even upon formal demand, to hold a prisoner over the next
session of court. In Judge Hills court the negro will not necessarily have to
be tried until some time in January.