The Leo Frank Case, Inside Story of Atlanta Georgia’s Greatest Murder Mystery 1913 – Part 8

Reading Time: 2 minutes [184 words]

Chapter 8 of The Leo Frank Case focuses on the testimony of the witnesses at the Coroner Paul Donehoo's inquest on May 5 and 8th, 1913. Included are the findings of the tribunal jury. Leo Frank explains, in detail, his activities on the day of the murder, but there are already inconsistencies. How does he hear her footsteps receding when she was wearing soft-soled shoes? He doesn't know her, but he knows the hue of the dress she was wearing. He identified her by her employee number but he doesn't know her employee number. Keep watching these installments of a book written anonymously in 1913, so you can decide whether or not he was guilty. The only people who can be placed at the scene of the crime where the murder took place are Leo Frank, superintendent of the National Pencil Company and later, James Conley, janitor at the National Pencil Company. Curiously, Jim Conley did not testify at the Coroner's Inquest, nor the Grand jury. Conley's depositions were not used to secure an indictment against Leo Frank at the grand jury hearing.

Related Posts
matomo tracker