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* T A Y L O R O L O G Y *
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* A Continuing Exploration of the Life and Death of William Desmond Taylor *
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* *
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* Issue 15 -- March 1994 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* All reprinted material is in the public domain *
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*The commentary by W. T. Sherman is Copyright 1994 by William Thomas Sherman*
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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*****************************************************************************
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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William T. Sherman, Guest Editor:
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Some Responses to a Number of Points Made in TAYLOROLOGY
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In Defense of Mabel Normand
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The Issue of Peavey's Credibility
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The Credibility of Howard Fellows' Testimony
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The Time Element Problem
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Evidence for a Cover-Up
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Summaries of the Cases against Charlotte Shelby and Carl Stockdale
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What is TAYLOROLOGY?
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TAYLOROLOGY is a newsletter focusing on the life and death of William Desmond
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Taylor, a top film Paramount film director in early Hollywood who was shot to
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death on February 1, 1922. His unsolved murder was one of Hollywood's major
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scandals. This newsletter will deal with: (a) The facts of Taylor's life;
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(b) The facts and rumors of Taylor's murder; (c) The impact of the Taylor
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murder on Hollywood and the nation. Primary emphasis will be given toward
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reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it for
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accuracy.
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*****************************************************************************
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William T. Sherman has asked to temporarily take over the helm of TAYLOROLOGY
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in order to present his views on the Taylor case, so for this issue and the
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next, editorship will be his. Except for the endnotes (where Bruce Long
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couldn't resist a few defensive comments), the rest of this issue is his
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doing. Take it away, Bill!
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"Before we can make any accurate speculations of the causes and guilt of
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those involved we must know something of the community in which the victim
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lived and in which he died. It is my first contention that the murder itself
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and its consequent lack of solution had its roots deeply buried in the inner
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character of the community. I am convinced of this. I was there!"
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-- King Vidor, private papers
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I want to express my humble gratitude to Bruce Long for giving me this
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opportunity, using the forum of his TAYLOROLOGY, to express some ideas and
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views on the William Desmond Taylor murder case. I am an author working on a
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book on silent film comedienne Mabel Normand. Beginning in November 1990, a
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four part article I did on Mabel, entitled "Love and Courage: A Look at the
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Films and Career of Mabel Normand" appeared in CLASSIC IMAGES. As well, an
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updated filmography of her work, was published in July 1992 in that same
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magazine.
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Those with a special interest in the Taylor case owe Bruce a great debt
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for the absolutely excellent and invaluable research he has done on the
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mystery, and there can be no gainsaying that he ranks with Vidor and
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Kirkpatrick as one of the most preeminent modern authorities on the case
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(Giroux, to my mind, has contributed little but more confusion). Although, as
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evinced by what follows, I am not in agreement with him on all the
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conclusions he has reached, I would be the first to admit that without the
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work he has done, I would have made little headway of my own in examining and
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chronicling the mystery. Not a few of the articles and clippings included
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here originated from him. To Bruce then, a very special and respectful
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thanks!
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THOSE WITH COMMENTS OR INFORMATION ON ANY OF THE FOLLOWING MAY WRITE ME:
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WILLIAM T. SHERMAN, 3014 N. W. 75TH ST., SEATTLE, WA 98117
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In the course of this my guest "stint," I would like to address the
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following:
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1). Some Responses to a Number of the Points Bruce has made in his
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TAYLOROLOGY.
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2). In Defense of Mabel Normand
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3). The Issue of Peavey's credibility
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4). The Credibility of Howard Fellows' Testimony
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5). The Time Element Problem
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6). Evidence for a Cover-up
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7). Summaries of the Cases against Charlotte Shelby and Carl Stockdale
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8). A Look at the Character of Dist.-Atty. Thomas Lee Woolwine and his
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Administration
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Note. Emphasis given in italics [changed to capitalization below] to
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portions of articles here is my own. Also, I would ask that readers withhold
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final judgment till they have been through all of the analysis or evidence
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presented. Finally, I do not, by any means, claim to have completely solved
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all of the mystery, but it is hoped that the effort made here will help
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towards that end.
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1). SOME RESPONSES TO A NUMBER OF POINTS BRUCE HAS MADE IN HIS TAYLOROLOGY.
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a) In Issue 11 of TAYLOROLOGY Bruce states that Charles Eyton did not, based
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on the inquest testimony of Detective Ziegler, arrive on the scene of the
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murder prior to the arrival of the police.
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According to Detective Lieutenant Sanderson in his 1941 official report,
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Eyton and company were on the scene prior to the arrival of the police, see
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WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, page 321. A possible explanation for
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Ziegler's statement was that he was lying as part of a quite understandable
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cover-up -- which cover-up will be looked at later in my analysis. [1]
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b) While it is true that the contents of the letters exchanged between Mabel
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and Taylor were not (at least to my knowledge) ever published, it is not
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strictly true that there was never printed a specific indication as to the
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character of their contents.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 11, 1922
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LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
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"There is no secret about any phase of my relations with Mr. Taylor. My
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letters to him--I would gladly set them before the world if the authorities
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care to do that. I have nothing to conceal.
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"I knew Mr. Taylor had letters of mine. Once several weeks before he was
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murdered I saw them in a drawer of his desk. I remonstrated with him. `Why do
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you save my letters, Billy? I asked. There's nothing in them.' He merely
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smiled in answer.
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"I have been charged with trying to recover those letters; with trying
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to conceal them. That is silly. If those letters are printed you will see
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that they are most of them casual; they express the jesting spirit that
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characterized our relations. We teased each other and made fun of each other
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a great deal. We did that continually on the night he was murdered, when I
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dropped in for a few minutes to see him."
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As for the letters, she said, he would write her:
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"Dear Mabel: I know you're an awfully busy woman and haven't much time
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to grant a poor duffer like me, but--how about dinner together next Wednesday
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and then the Orpheum?
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"Yours always,
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"Billy."
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And on one occasion she said she answered:
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"Dear Desperate Desmond:
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"Sorry I cannot dine with you tomorrow. But I have a previous engagement
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with a Hindoo Prince. Some other time."
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"Then," she said, "I would sign the letter with a little sketch of
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myself, or by drawing a `daffodil.' You know the daffodils, those funny
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little comic figures."
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"Or he would write to me about books. I just want to show you some of
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the books he gave me."
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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2). IN DEFENSE OF MABEL NORMAND
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The person who probably suffered the most from the Taylor murder in
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public eyes was Mabel Normand. More than any other connected with the case,
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she received most of the press' harsh criticism and crude sarcasm as a result
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of her involvement, and quite unfairly.
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a). Did Mabel lie?
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There can be little room for doubt that Mabel gave more interviews on
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her involvement in the case than anyone else. She gave numerous interviews
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over the years till her death in 1930, recounting the events which took place
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in the afternoon and early evening of February 1, 1922, and in all of them
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there is very little or no deviation from the story she gives. If she ever
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had been not telling the truth, this would have been quite a feat, especially
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when we take into account the many illnesses and traumas she was subject to.
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In Issue 6 of TAYLOROLOGY Bruce gives his speculated interpretation of
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the conversation that took place between Mabel and Taylor the night of the
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murder. Well, with all due respect to Bruce, his characterization is
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preposterous and without justifiable foundation. The only persons who could
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possibly speak to what was said were Mabel, Taylor and possibly Peavey. For
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my part, I see no reason to doubt Mabel's own version given her consistency.
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There is, not surprisingly, some honest dispute as to the nature and
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extent of Mabel's use of profanity and drugs. While I think few scholars
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would out and out deny the incidences of either, there are some who have
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jumped to conclusions as to the character and extent of both her use of
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profanity and drugs without any hard evidence to substantiate such
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conclusions. [2]
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For example, Bruce is quick to conclude that the many reported cases of
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Mabel's being ill were covered-up instances of problems she was having with
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drugs, and not real, natural illnesses at all. Again, there is no hard
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evidence to warrant such an assumption. [3] Some have said she did not die of
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tuberculosis, but instead died of drug addiction. If the illnesses Mabel was
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frequently reported as suffering from were genuine, they could easily be
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explained as early symptoms of the tuberculosis. Where did Mabel contract
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this illness? While we can never know with certainty, it is interesting to
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note a little story Samuel Goldwyn tells in his 1923 autobiography and look
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at Hollywood entitled BEHIND THE SCREEN:
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"Those interested in the personality of Mabel Normand can receive no
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more illuminating introduction to her than the incident just sketched. There
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are a hundred tales of this characteristic response to any human appeal
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clustering about the name of Mabel Normand. One which came directly under my
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observation relates to a poor girl with a dependent family. The girl was
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stricken with tuberculosis and, although Mabel did not know her, she became
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interested in her condition through a friend of hers. Immediately she went to
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see her, and when she left she pressed something into the sick girl's hand.
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It was only after she had gone that the other realized what her caller had
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left. It was a check for a thousand dollars.
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"Nor does Mabel wait for the large demand upon her sympathy. Gifts from
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her come unprovoked as manna. She is likely to go out and buy a hundred
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dollar beaded bag for a stenographer in the organization, and just as likely
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to invest a corresponding amount in remembering somebody whom she has met
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once and happened to like."
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Mabel was a far more talented, prominent and influential movie star at
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the time of the murder than some have led us to believe. Anita Garvin, now
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87, who appeared with Mabel in "Raggedy Rose" told me that, at her height,
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Mabel was as popular in fans' love and admiration as Pickford. In terms of
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her relations to the press she was like someone like Marlon Brando in that
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she did not feel a great need to seek publicity, yet it came to her. No doubt
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some were jealous of this fact. She championed the under privileged, for in
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practically all her feature films she plays working girls. Most of all,
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however, due to her free spirited, uninhibited, character, she represented a
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threat to established money and established society. She inspired envy and
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resentment, both for her charm and looks, and for the incredible amount of
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money she made as a film star. It is little wonder then, the extremely
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negative myths and story telling that grew up around her after her connection
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with the Taylor case. The reasons for this become even more clear when we
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contemplate the possibility of a cover-up.
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3) THE ISSUE OF PEAVEY'S CREDIBILITY
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In Issue 6 of TAYLOROLOGY, Bruce examines Peavey's theory behind the
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murder. It is my confirmed contention that Peavey was an unabashed liar, and
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accomplice, willingly or no, in the cover-up of the murder. Perhaps he was
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even in on the murder himself. [4] To prove these claims, let's look at some
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of the statements Peavey made in interviews:
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a) In his earliest accounts of finding Taylor's body on the morning of
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February 2, Peavey states that he found his dead employer lying in a pool of
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blood. Interestingly enough, this crucial detail he gives in his first
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interviews, which discredits the notion that when Taylor was found it was
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thought he died of natural causes, is omitted entirely from all the later
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interviews he gave.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 2, 1922
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R. W. Borough
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LOS ANGELES RECORD
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NEGRO VALET SOBS STORY OF TRAGEDY
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"`Good night, Henry, good night,' he said to me when I left him
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yesterday," said Henry Peavey, Taylor's colored valet, between sobs as he
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told of the tragedy that ended the life of his beloved employer last night.
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"`Good night, Mr. Taylor," I said to him, and that's the last I saw of
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him until I opened the door this morning and found his dead body, his feet
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stretching toward me on the floor."
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The negro broke into soft sobs and then declared passionately: "I wish I
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could get the man that did it. I'd go to jail for the rest of my life if I
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could get him."
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As Peavey talked, he was taking some white cloths clotted with blood
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from a wire paper basket and placing them in the court incinerator.
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"His blood," the negro said, pathetically. "We just used the cloths to
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clean up the room."
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"Mr. Taylor was the most wonderful man I ever worked for and I don't see
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how anybody would want to kill him. I have been with him six months."
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Peavey said that he came to Taylor's apartment early today, intending to
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go through the usual round of his duties.
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"I was going to fix his bath water for him," said the valet, "and then
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give him his dose of medicine. After that I was going to fix his breakfast--a
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couple of boiled eggs, some toast and a glass of orange juice.
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"WHEN I OPENED THE DOOR I SAW HIM LYING THERE STRETCHED OUT ON THE
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FLOOR, HIS FEET TOWARD ME AND THE FLOOR ALL BLOODY.
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"I turned and screamed and the landlord came rushing in.'
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Peavey said he lived at 127 1/2 Third Street.
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"I have not been staying with Taylor during the night, but have been
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sleeping in my room."
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Peavey's theory was that somebody slipped into the open door of Taylor's
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apartment when Taylor took Mabel Normand to her car late last night, and shot
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him from ambush inside the room.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 3, 1922
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LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
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VALET TELLS OF FINDING BODY
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There were tears on the cheek of Henry Peavey, colored, who for six
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months had been employed as William Desmond Taylor's valet, as he told the
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story yesterday of how he discovered the murdered man's body upon entering
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the apartment yesterday morning.
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The night before, when Peavey left to go to his own home, Taylor called
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a cheery, "Good night, Henry."
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"I can hear his voice yet," said this humble mourner. "It was the kind
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of strong, friendly voice that made a man feel good." And then he burst out,
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"I'd be willing to go to jail for the rest of my life if I could get the man
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that did it."
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The valet was at his last task for the master; he was wiping up the
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blood from the floor, but his sobs shook him at times so that he could not
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proceed.
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"I've worked for a lot of men," he went on, "but Mr. Taylor was the most
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wonderful of all of them. I came here this morning intending to fix his bath
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and get his breakfast, which I always does. And before the bath I'd bring him
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a dose of medicine. It was always just the same--for breakfast two soft-
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boiled eggs, toast and a glass of orange juice.
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"And having it in my mind to make everything just as nice as I could,
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knowing he would be pleased and say a kind word, I opened the door.
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"AND THEN I FOUND HIM STRETCHED OUT ON THE FLOOR, WHICH WAS ALL BLOODY
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AND HIS FEET TOWARD THE DOOR.
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"And then I backed to the door, pretty near overcome with horror, and
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yelled for the landlord. The way I figure it is that somebody slipped in last
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night when Mr. Taylor took Miss Normand to the car and shot him from hiding.
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But how could any one kill such a man as he was?"
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Peavey lives at 127 1/2 East Third street. His habit was to reach the
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Taylor apartment before breakfast and leave after dinner.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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b) Peavey later clearly implied, if not stated, that he believed Mabel
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committed the murder. If he was lying about this what might have been his
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motives?
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1) It was Mabel, who through giving her version of her visit with
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Taylor, disclosed to the public Peavey's charge for "vagrancy" in Westlake
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Park.
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2) Mabel, in describing her visit, refers to Peavey's silly outfit in a
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way he might not have found particularly flattering.
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3) Peavey was involved, voluntarily or no, in a cover-up
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 11, 1922
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LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
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"I then directed William, my chauffeur, to drive to Mr. Taylor's home. I
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arrived, went up on the porch, and the door was opened by Mr. Taylor's valet,
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Henry Peavey. I saw Taylor inside talking on the phone, and when Henry asked
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me to step in, I refrained because I didn't want to eavesdrop on his
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conversation.
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"Then Henry went inside and told Mr. Taylor I was there. At once he said
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good-by, hung up the phone and came forward to greet me."
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"I know why you're here," he said. "You haven't come to see me at all;
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you've just come after that book!"
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"The book was `Rosmundy,' by Ethel M. Dell. It was not a copy of one of
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Freud's works as has been said. I read Freud and Nietzche long before I met
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Mr. Taylor.
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"For some time Mr. Taylor and I spoofed each other in our usual way,
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while Henry worked about the back part of the house. I looked about and said,
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`This place has changed since I saw it last. I see you have both a piano and
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Victrola now. My, you're getting all together too rich.'
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"Then we discussed books. We discussed `Three Soldiers,' a book that
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Chicago newspaper man, John Dos Passos. He had read it only recently and was
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much interested. And several other new books came into the discussion.
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"When Henry Peavey entered I stared at him in amusement. I stared at his
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curious attire. He wore green golf stockings, yellow knickers and a dark
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coat. He left by the front door, smiling broadly and saying good night to me
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and Mr. Taylor. The way he said it--he's a funny colored boy with lots of
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mannerisms--made me smile.
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"When Henry had gone I said, `Why don't you get him a set of golf
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sticks? Then he'd be all set up.'
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"Mr. Taylor's face grew serious then and he discussed Henry at some
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length, telling me how Henry had been arrested a short time before and how he
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had gone down to see the judge about the vagrancy charge. And how he had put
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up a bond of $200 to secure Henry's release.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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c) What was Mabel's attitude toward Peavey?
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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February 7, 1922
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LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
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"If Peavey, his colored servant, says that I had asked him about any
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girls that Mr. Taylor had ever been interested in, it is a venomous
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fabrication. Never in my life have I spoken to this man directly, and never
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have I talked to him in any way except in the presence of others, including
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Mr. Taylor. And as for the subject of girls--the question never entered my
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mind." [5]
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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d) Peavey claimed that Mabel once came over to Taylor's bungalow and in
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a jealous fit of rage ripped up her pictures he possessed of her in his
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presence. [6] Is it possible that Peavey fabricated this incident based on
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something that takes place in Mabel's film "Molly-O"? Note the following
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excerpt from the synopsis to that film.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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from synopsis to "Molly'O"
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Mack Sennett papers
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Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
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"...At this Molly'O becomes enraged, denouncing the heavy woman and all
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society, and storms from the house. The hero is, perhaps, just coming up the
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steps to pay a call and is surprised to meet Molly'O. He speaks to her
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pleasantly, but she, being so angry, merely sees him as one of the society
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clique. She denounces him and walks away, much to his surprise.
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It may be a good touch to show the effect of this insult on Molly'O by
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having her, on reaching home, take the hero's picture and the article about
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him and destroy them, getting over her disappointment in the treatment of the
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class of people she had thought were respectable."
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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e) Peavey and George Arto's testimony
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In mid February 1922, George Arto, brother in law of King Vidor, came
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forward with a quite interesting story which was presented to the public as
|
|
follows: Note how Peavey's response changes over time.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 12, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES TIMES
|
|
Peavey Questioned
|
|
|
|
Henry Peavey, colored valet for Mr. Taylor. was summarily called to
|
|
Dist.-Atty. Woolwine's office late yesterday following the discovery of new
|
|
and important information regarding the murder. Peavey had previously been
|
|
questioned at considerable length in Mr. Woolwine's office by Chief Deputy
|
|
Doran.
|
|
The valet arrived at Mr. Woolwine's office shortly after 3 p.m.
|
|
yesterday and was closeted for a considerable time with the District
|
|
Attorney, Mr. Doran and officers of the police department and of the
|
|
Sheriff's force.
|
|
The instructions for the officers to bring Peavey to the office where
|
|
the investigation into the murder mystery has been centralized came shortly
|
|
after a new witness had been in long conference with the officials.
|
|
This witness whose name was said by Undersheriff Biscailus and Deputy
|
|
Sheriff Nolan to be Henry Britt, but which was signed by the young man as
|
|
Edward F. Arto, was taken to Mr. Woolwine's office from Sheriff Traeger's
|
|
headquarters. He refused to give his name to newspaper men.
|
|
Mr. Arto, as he signed himself. said he over heard a conversation either
|
|
the night of the murder or the night before between Peavey and another man
|
|
regarding Mr. Taylor's affairs. The nature of the conversation aside from
|
|
that Mr. Arto declined to divulge, but he believed the information of value
|
|
to the investigators.
|
|
Mr. Arto was going to the home of some relatives near the Taylor
|
|
apartments on South Alvarado street about 7:10 p.m. when he heard the two men
|
|
talking. He gave a rather vague description of the strange man but said he
|
|
was an American apparently, wore a cap and aroused Mr. Arto's suspicion.
|
|
PEAVEY STRENUOUSLY DENIED THAT HE HELD ANY SUCH CONVERSATION.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 20, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES RECORD
|
|
A search was being conducted Monday for the third man, who, according to
|
|
the statement of George F. Arto, was talking with Mabel Normand's chauffeur
|
|
and William Desmond Taylor's valet outside the Taylor bungalow the night of
|
|
the murder.
|
|
William Davis, chauffeur, insists there was no third man. Arto declares
|
|
just as strongly that there was. HENRY PEAVEY, THE NEGRO VALET, SAYS HE IS
|
|
NOT SURE THAT A MAN MIGHT HAVE STOPPED WHILE HE WAS TALKING TO DAVIS TO ASK
|
|
FOR A MATCH OR SOMETHING OF THAT SORT. Arto describes the third man as a
|
|
rough looking customer. The sheriff's office attaches great importance to
|
|
this point and it is believed that the mystery would be on the way to
|
|
solution if this third man could be found and identified.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 20, 1922
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER
|
|
William Davis, the chauffeur of Mabel Normand is to be questioned again.
|
|
He has been three times upon the grill, and each time has corroborated with
|
|
unchanging relation of minute circumstances, the story told by Miss Normand
|
|
of her visit to Taylor on the evening of his murder. Woolwine, however, is
|
|
not yet satisfied concerning the presumed error of George F. Arto, who
|
|
continues emphatically to declare that, passing the premises, he saw Henry
|
|
Peavey, the colored valet, talking to a stranger in a plaid cap and muffler
|
|
in front of the house, while Davis was seated in Miss Normand's car, and the
|
|
actress was inside the bungalow with Taylor. DAVIS AND PEAVEY BOTH DECLARE
|
|
ARTO TO BE MISTAKEN. ARTO, WITH EQUAL VEHEMENCE, DECLARES HE IS NOT.
|
|
Arto, a motion picture mechanic and brother of Florence Vidor, one of
|
|
the best known of screen actresses, reiterated today with a good deal of
|
|
emphasis the declaration of the scene as he observed it.
|
|
"There were three men," he said. "One was a chauffeur who was sitting in
|
|
the car at the wheel. His cap was down over his face, and I could not make
|
|
out his features.
|
|
"On the sidewalk, some distance from the car and engaged in conversation
|
|
were two men--Peavey, whom I recognized, having seen him a number of times,
|
|
and the other a white man.
|
|
"This man wore a cap and was rather rough looking.
|
|
"As I passed I heard the name "Taylor" spoken two or three times.
|
|
"In my original statement I was uncertain as to whether this occurred on
|
|
the night of the murder or the preceding one. However, there was a
|
|
circumstance which enabled me to check up on this. I was on my way to the
|
|
home of a young woman, (I) was calling on her.
|
|
"On comparing notes with her I established the date Feb. 1.
|
|
"Although it is doubtful whether I could identify this man should I see
|
|
him again, there can be no question that I saw him."
|
|
It is a possibility, the police believe, that Davis may not have seen
|
|
this man. BUT, ON THE STRENGTH OF ARTO'S MOST POSITIVE ASSERTION, THEY CANNOT
|
|
ACCOUNT FOR PEAVEY'S FAILURE TO REMEMBER HIM.
|
|
Peavey has been cross-examined some five or six times, the last by the
|
|
District Attorney, but in none of the latter statements was there any
|
|
substantial variations from the original. Although he was instructed not to
|
|
leave town or change his residence without notifying the District Attorney,
|
|
the authorities have taken it for granted that he has told all he knows.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
4) THE CREDIBILITY OF HOWARD FELLOWS' TESTIMONY
|
|
|
|
It has been taken for granted by most scholars that the testimony of
|
|
Taylor's chauffeur, Howard Fellows, brother of Lasky employee Harry Fellows,
|
|
is not to be doubted. Fellows' testimony is critical because it supposedly
|
|
places almost exactly when the murder was to have taken place. Is it
|
|
possible, however, that Fellows, as part of a cover-up, was lying?
|
|
Here is Fellows' testimony:
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 8, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
Declaring that he called William D. Taylor at 7:55 o'clock Wednesday
|
|
night and receiving no answer, went to the apartment of the film director.
|
|
arriving there at 8:15 o'clock, rang the doorbell and still met with no
|
|
response, Howard Fellows, chauffeur for the murdered director, last night
|
|
definitely fixed the time within which the crime must have been committed and
|
|
added facts regarded as of first magnitude importance in their bearing upon
|
|
the crime.
|
|
Strangely enough, this young man, who had been Taylor's driver for
|
|
nearly six months, had not been questioned at length until yesterday, when an
|
|
Examiner representative called on him at his home, 1622 Shatto place.
|
|
He is brother of Harry Fellows, who was Taylor's assistant director.
|
|
Yesterday Detective Sergeant Tom Zeigler took Howard to the Taylor home,
|
|
404-B South Alvarado street. He was partially identified by a resident of the
|
|
neighborhood as the person he had seen seated in a car on the night of the
|
|
murder near the scene of the crime and about the time it was committed.
|
|
Fellows denied this and convinced Zeigler that the man was mistaken.
|
|
One of Fellows' most interesting statements, other than that relating to
|
|
his movements and observations on the night of the assassination, had to do
|
|
with an alleged quarrel between Taylor and Mabel Normand.
|
|
"I was driving Mr. Taylor and Miss Normand from the Ambassador Hotel,
|
|
where they had attended a New Year's Eve party, to her home," said Fellows.
|
|
"On the way they had a quarrel. I don't know what it was about, but both
|
|
were very much excited.
|
|
"Mr. Taylor took Miss Normand home and then returned to his apartment.
|
|
Upon arriving there he broke down and wept.
|
|
"On the following morning he did up some jewelry in a package and took
|
|
it to Miss Normand at her home."
|
|
Henry Peavey, Taylor's colored valet, confirms this.
|
|
"Mr. Taylor and Miss Normand were very affectionate," continued Fellows.
|
|
Questioned independently, Peavey said Taylor often caressed her.
|
|
As to these matters Fellows spoke casually, but when he entered upon the
|
|
events of the night of February 1, his narrative became astounding both as to
|
|
its content, and because he never told it before.
|
|
"I left the house (Mr. Taylor's) about 4:30 Wednesday afternoon,"
|
|
Fellows began.
|
|
"Mr. Taylor told me he might be going out in the evening and instructed
|
|
me to be sure to telephone by 7:30. I went to the home of a young lady friend
|
|
and was there until 7:55. I recall the time accurately because I had it on my
|
|
mind to call Mr. Taylor and ask him if he would need the car.
|
|
"I called him two or three times before that hour, but received no
|
|
reply. I left the house of my girl friend at five minutes to eight and drove
|
|
directly to Mr. Taylor's.
|
|
"I reached there about quarter past eight.
|
|
"There was a light in the living room. I was surprised that Mr. Taylor
|
|
should be home and not have answered the telephone.
|
|
"I rang the doorbell. Silence. I rang again. Still, no response. I must
|
|
have rung three or four times. Then I concluded: `Well, he has some one there
|
|
and doesn't want to answer.
|
|
"So I put up the car, I was around back of the house, and it is peculiar
|
|
that persons in the neighborhood should have heard me walking and not have
|
|
heard me put up the car. I made a good deal of noise doing this, as the
|
|
garage is difficult to get into, and I guess I must have backed the car up
|
|
four or five times.
|
|
"I am satisfied that I am the man Mrs. Douglas MacLean saw standing on
|
|
the porch and leaving the house, I wore a cap and a raincoat.
|
|
"I noticed no cars in the immediate vicinity and saw no one who aroused
|
|
my suspicions.
|
|
"Naturally, I am convinced that both when I phoned and when I rang the
|
|
doorbell, Mr. Taylor was lying there on the floor murdered."
|
|
Taking the testimony of Fellows and Miss Normand together, it is now
|
|
possible to fix the time of the murder within fifteen minutes.
|
|
Miss Normand said she left Taylor between 7:30 and 7:45 o'clock.
|
|
Fellows called at 7:55.
|
|
The murder was committed between Miss Normand's leave taking and
|
|
Fellows' phoning.
|
|
Hence, for the first time, the police have a picture of the murder as it
|
|
relates to the time when and in which it was committed.
|
|
Before Fellows' statement became available there was no conclusive
|
|
evidence as to the time the bullet of the assassin struck the film director
|
|
down. testimony as to the shot being heard was so vague as to be
|
|
unconvincing. It could not be said with finality that the murder did not
|
|
occur at midnight or at any hour of the night.
|
|
The acts of the drama leading to the murder must have been brief. It
|
|
would appear, indeed, that there were no preliminaries, that the intruder,
|
|
concealed in the room, stepped out and fired the shot.
|
|
It is therefore deduced that it was a premeditated crime and not one
|
|
precipitated by a quarrel or any sort of scene more than of momentary
|
|
duration.
|
|
One group of police investigators and most of the deputy sheriffs
|
|
working on the case are now convinced that the visit of Mabel Normand was the
|
|
immediate antecedent occasion for the crime.
|
|
This theory naturally takes for granted that Miss Normand had not the
|
|
slightest intimation that her dear friend was to be shot to death, but
|
|
officers cannot help but believe that the murderer found the way for his
|
|
crime paved in some way by the visit of Miss Normand.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Some Questions:
|
|
|
|
a) Fellows says that Taylor broke down and cried when he brought him
|
|
home from the Ambassador Hotel outing with Mabel. Why would Taylor, a man
|
|
known for his emotional reserve, invite his chauffeur inside the house and
|
|
permit him (the chauffeur) to see him break down and cry?
|
|
|
|
b) Why did it take almost a week (February 7-8) for Howard Fellows'
|
|
testimony to come forth? Surely, he must have been aware of its weighty
|
|
significance? Why did he not contact the police earlier and why hadn't the
|
|
police contacted him, given his close personal business relationship to the
|
|
slain director? [7]
|
|
|
|
c) Did no one hear Fellow's starting his car because he wasn't there in
|
|
the first place?
|
|
|
|
d) Why did Fellows insist it was he whom Faith MacLean saw? Fellows
|
|
merely knocked on the door, whereas Faith MacLean said she saw a man leaving
|
|
the bungalow and closing the door behind him.
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
5) THE TIME ELEMENT PROBLEM
|
|
|
|
It has generally been assumed that Taylor's murder took place within the
|
|
last quarter hour prior to 8 o'clock, but could this be wrong? The final
|
|
conclusion that the murder took place within this time frame rests entirely
|
|
on Fellows testimony
|
|
|
|
a) To bring into question this assumption, let's return to the testimony
|
|
of George Arto.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 22, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
An amplified statement secured yesterday by The Examiner from George F.
|
|
Arto, motion picture writer, gives new facts which tend to change the whole
|
|
theory of the crime as to its time element.
|
|
Arto, it will be recalled, passed front of the Taylor house on the night
|
|
of the murder and, as he states, saw Peavey standing on the sidewalk talking
|
|
to a man of swarthy complexion--a rough looking character.
|
|
This was at approximately 7 o'clock.
|
|
HIS MEMORY REFRESHED BY CIRCUMSTANCES TO WHICH HIS ATTENTION HAD BEEN
|
|
CALLED SINCE GIVING HIS FIRST STATEMENT, HE REMEMBERED YESTERDAY THAT HE
|
|
RETURNED TO THE BUNGALOW COURT AT 7:45 O'CLOCK.
|
|
HE IS POSITIVE OF THIS, HE SAID, AS HE PHONED A YOUNG WOMAN WHO LIVES
|
|
NEAR THE TAYLOR BUNGALOW, ON WHOM HE WAS CALLING. HE TOLD HER IN THIS
|
|
CONVERSATION THAT HE WOULD BE OVER IN FIVE MINUTES AND, LOOKING AT HIS WATCH,
|
|
HE FOUND THE TIME TO BE 7:40.
|
|
HE IMMEDIATELY STARTED TO WALK FROM HIS HOME AT 220 SOUTH BONNIE BRAE
|
|
STREET. HE REACHED A POINT IN FRONT OF TAYLOR'S HOUSE WITHIN FIVE MINUTES.
|
|
"AT THAT TIME," HE SAID, "I SAW NO ONE AROUND. MISS NORMAND'S CAR HAD
|
|
GONE, AND PEAVEY WAS NOT IN SIGHT."
|
|
HE WENT TO THE HOUSE OF THE YOUNG WOMAN, AND SAT IN THE FRONT ROOM NEXT
|
|
TO THE WINDOW UNTIL ABOUT TEN MINUTES AFTER EIGHT.
|
|
"DURING THAT TIME," HE DECLARED, "I HEARD NO SHOT AND AM POSITIVE THAT I
|
|
WOULD HAVE HEARD A SHOT BEEN FIRED."
|
|
Arto is familiar with firearms, having tested guns for the Savage Arms
|
|
Company and would be able, he asserts, to distinguish a pistol shot from the
|
|
backfire of automobiles.
|
|
As close to the scene of the crime as was either Mrs. MacLean or her
|
|
maid, Christina Jewett, and in a better position to hear and observe, Arto
|
|
nevertheless was not attracted by any unusual noises.
|
|
Hence, it is now believed possible that the murder may have been
|
|
committed either before or after the time fixed by Mrs. MacLean. And District
|
|
Attorney Woolwine yesterday admitted the likelihood that the man seen by Mrs.
|
|
MacLean leaving Taylor's front door was Howard Fellows, the film director's
|
|
chauffeur.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
b) In the MacLean's earliest version of their sitting down to dinner and
|
|
hearing the shot, they state that the time was 9 O'CLOCK. Why this major
|
|
discrepancy with later versions? [8]
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 2, 1922
|
|
LONG BEACH DAILY TELEGRAM
|
|
Shot down while writing at a desk by a mysterious assassin, William
|
|
Desmond Taylor, well known motion picture producer and director, was found
|
|
dead today in his bungalow in the Westlake District. Death was caused by a
|
|
bullet wound in the back, just below the left shoulder, according to police.
|
|
Taylor, who was 50 years old and wealthy, apparently was killed between
|
|
9 and 10 o'clock last night. The body was found today by a colored servant
|
|
when he reported for duty at the house.
|
|
Police detectives who first reached the scene reported that death was
|
|
from natural causes and it was not until nearly an hour later when an
|
|
undertaker was removing the body that the bullet wound was found.
|
|
Additional officers immediately were dispatched to the house and a
|
|
comprehensive investigation was begun. The bullet wound caused an internal
|
|
hemorrhage and Taylor accidentally died a few minutes after being attacked.
|
|
DETECTIVES QUESTIONED NEIGHBORS, WHO STATED THEY HEARD WHAT APPARENTLY
|
|
WAS THE REPORT OF THE REVOLVER SHORTLY AFTER 9 P.M. BUT AT THAT TIME BELIEVED
|
|
IT WAS CAUSED BY AN AUTOMOBILE.
|
|
The police immediately began search for Edward F. Sands, former
|
|
secretary of Taylor. Robbery was not the motive for the murder it was
|
|
announced, as officers found $73 in the pocket of the slain man, as well as a
|
|
large amount of jewelry in the house.
|
|
Taylor's revolver was found in a drawer of the dresser in his bedroom on
|
|
the second floor of the pretentious house. It had not been discharged and
|
|
none of his personal effects had been disturbed.
|
|
The officers reported they are confident that revenge was the motive of
|
|
the mysterious slayer.
|
|
The police records state that when Taylor went to England a year ago on
|
|
a business and pleasure trip he left Sands, then his secretary, in charge of
|
|
his personal affairs and when he returned he reported to Detective Sergeants
|
|
Herman Cline and E.R. Cato that Sands had robbed him of money, jewelry,
|
|
clothing and a valuable automobile.
|
|
A felony warrant was issued for Sands and the police say he never was
|
|
found.
|
|
A second robbery at the Taylor residence was attributed to Sands by the
|
|
police.
|
|
Among the witnesses questioned by the police during the morning were
|
|
Mabel Normand, Edna Purviance and Douglas MacLean, prominent film stars.
|
|
MISS NORMAND ADMITTED HAVING VISITED TAYLOR'S BUNGALOW IN THE EARLY
|
|
EVENING YESTERDAY TO DISCUSS A NEW PRODUCTION AND THAT HE HAD ESCORTED HER TO
|
|
HER AUTOMOBILE AT THE CURB SHORTLY BEFORE 9 P.M. Taylor was to telephone to
|
|
her later in the evening. Miss Normand said he did not do so.
|
|
Miss Purviance, who lives in a house adjoining Taylor's bungalow,
|
|
returned home about midnight and saw a light burning in Taylor's study.
|
|
MACLEAN AND HIS WIFE, WHO LIVE IN THE SAME DISTRICT, STATED THEY HEARD
|
|
THE SHOT FIRED AFTER 9 O'CLOCK. THEY THOUGHT AT THE TIME IT MIGHT BE AN
|
|
AUTOMOBILE EXHAUST. THEY DESCRIBED A STRANGE MAN WHOM THEY SAW IN THE STREET.
|
|
Miss Normand told detectives that while she was talking with Taylor
|
|
early last evening concerning a new picture production the robberies of the
|
|
Taylor home were mentioned.
|
|
"He told me he feared Sands and that he had a premonition of something
|
|
wrong," Miss Normand was quoted as telling officers.
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 2, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXPRESS
|
|
...The police are not, however, basing their investigation now upon the
|
|
theory that the thief was the slayer. Instead, they at present list it as a
|
|
"murder mystery."
|
|
THE SLAYER EVIDENTLY COMMITTED THE CRIME ABOUT NEAR 9 O'CLOCK LAST
|
|
NIGHT. IT WAS AT THAT TIME THAT DOUGLAS MACLEAN, MOTION PICTURE ACTOR, AND
|
|
HIS WIFE, WHO LIVED NEXT DOOR, SAY THEY HEARD THE SOUND OF THE PISTOL SHOT.
|
|
Police also believe that the slaying occurred at that time because of
|
|
the opinion expressed by the deputy coroner that the man had been dead for
|
|
more than ten hours when the body was found.
|
|
The last person who saw Taylor alive, with the exception of the
|
|
assassin, was Miss Mabel Normand, film star. She visited him at his home last
|
|
night. She arrived at the home shortly before 7 o'clock, she said. Her
|
|
statement to Detectives Winn and Murphy follows:
|
|
"I had my chauffeur drive out to Mr. Taylor's home last evening, as we
|
|
had a number of business matters to discuss. I should judge that I arrived
|
|
there a little before 7 o'clock. It was while I was there that we again
|
|
discussed the case of a man who had been in Mr. Taylor's employ and who stole
|
|
from him.
|
|
"I asked Mr. Taylor what he intended doing with the man if he was
|
|
captured--and he said that he would see that the man was prosecuted. We then
|
|
discussed a certain scenario that I had written and a scenario that a friend
|
|
of mine had written.
|
|
"While we were talking, William Peavey, Mr. Taylor's butler, was moving
|
|
about in the two rooms. It was then, also, that Mr. Taylor told me that
|
|
William was in some little trouble. He said that his servant had been
|
|
arrested on a charge of vagrancy and that he had been forced to go down to
|
|
the police station and deposit $200 bail for him.
|
|
"He said that he intended appearing in police court at a o'clock [sic]
|
|
this afternoon and said he would do what he could to aid his servant if he
|
|
was convinced that the man was not guilty. But he said that if Peavey had
|
|
been guilty of doing any wrong that he would be forced to discharge him.
|
|
"After we had discussed a few other trifling matters Mr. Taylor asked me
|
|
if I would remain and have dinner with him. I excused myself and told him
|
|
that I must hurry to my home. He then asked me if he might visit me later
|
|
that night and I told him I should be glad if he would come over to my home.
|
|
He promised to call me on the telephone some time about 9 o'clock.
|
|
"Mr. Taylor then accompanied me from his house to my automobile. My
|
|
chauffeur, William Davis, was seated in the machine and heard Mr. Taylor bid
|
|
me good-night. Mr. Taylor and I were talking when I saw Peavey leave the
|
|
house. He spoke to all of us and bid us good-night. We talked for a few
|
|
minutes longer and Mr. Taylor turned and walked up toward his house and my
|
|
machine moved away. I have not seen him since."
|
|
Davis, who lives at 1920 Las Palmas avenue, when questioned by the
|
|
officers said the same story as did Miss Normand, and said that when they
|
|
left there was no one moving about the yard that surrounds the house in which
|
|
the tragedy occurred.
|
|
It is evident, the detectives believe that Taylor after he entered the
|
|
house sat down at once in front of his desk and that the assassin entered a
|
|
few minutes later.
|
|
The papers on the desk were mussed up and there were a large number of
|
|
cancelled checks lying upon the desk. Miss Normand, in her statement to the
|
|
police stated that the desk was in the same condition when she left the
|
|
house, about 8 or 8:30 o'clock last night.
|
|
It was at midnight that Miss Edna Purviance, who resides in the house
|
|
adjoining Mr. Taylor's to the west, returned home. At that time, she said,
|
|
she noticed that the lights were burning in Mr. Taylor's house.
|
|
She went to the door, she said, and rang the bell and knocked upon the
|
|
door. When she failed to secure a response she returned to her own home,
|
|
believing Mr. Taylor probably had left the house after forgetting to turn off
|
|
the electric light switch.
|
|
At the time she was knocking upon the door the body of her friend was
|
|
lying just behind the door and within a few feet of her.
|
|
As detectives reconstruct the murder scene, they believe that the slayer
|
|
opened the door a few minutes after Miss Normand had left, at the time Taylor
|
|
was seated on a chair in front of the desk checking over the canceled checks.
|
|
As Taylor half rose from his chair the slayer stepped into the room, and
|
|
with pistol carefully aimed, pulled the trigger. The bullet entered the left
|
|
breast just below the shoulder and ranged downward through the heart.
|
|
Taylor fell over backward mortally wounded and probably died within a
|
|
few seconds after he had been shot. But one shot was fired. The person who
|
|
wielded the gun was evidently experienced in the handling of firearms and an
|
|
excellent marksman. From the appearance of the wound it was evidently a .32
|
|
caliber pistol.
|
|
The police believe that this was the caliber of the pistol because it
|
|
made so little noise that the slayer was able to leave the house without
|
|
attracting significant attention.
|
|
When Peavey arrived and opened the house this morning all of the
|
|
electric lights were burning just as they had been when Miss Purviance
|
|
knocked at the door.
|
|
Robbery was clearly not the motive of the crime. A purse containing $78
|
|
and a very valuable watch were found in the clothing on the body. There was
|
|
no indication that any search had been made of the house for valuables and
|
|
nothing was found to be missing when a careful check of the effects were made
|
|
by Charles Eyton, manager of the Lasky studios and a close friend of the dead
|
|
man.
|
|
Charles Maigne, a friend of the dead man, told officers that he was
|
|
positive that Taylor believed that sometime an enemy might return and do him
|
|
harm.
|
|
Douglas MacLean and his wife were having their supper in their home that
|
|
also adjoins Taylor's house, but to the east, when they heard the sound of a
|
|
shot. They place the time at about 9:30 or 9 o'clock in the statement they
|
|
made to Detective Sergeants Wallis and Ziegler.
|
|
Mrs. MacLean, however, told the officers that she noticed a man WALKING
|
|
RAPIDLY DOWN THE WALK towards Taylor's home last evening shortly after Miss
|
|
Normand left. She gave the following description of the man to officers:
|
|
Height about 5 feet 8 or 9 inches, weight about 165 pounds. He had a muffler
|
|
about his neck and was at the time wearing a plaid cap pulled over his eyes.
|
|
She did not notice the clothing he was wearing and was unable to furnish the
|
|
police with a better description because she says, she was unable to see
|
|
distinctly at that hour of the night.
|
|
"I had, of course, no reason to be suspicious of that man at that time,"
|
|
said Mrs. MacLean, when discussing the case with the two detective sergeants.
|
|
"But now I am convinced that he was the slayer. It was after I had seen him
|
|
that my husband and I sat down to dinner. THAT WAS ABOUT 8:30 OR 9 O'CLOCK, I
|
|
GUESS.
|
|
"We had just started our dinner when we heard a pistol shot. We did not
|
|
investigate because we heard nothing further after that to arouse our
|
|
suspicions and we thought that possibly the sound we heard then was that of
|
|
an automobile backfiring in the street. Now, of course, we know that it was
|
|
the shot that ended the life of Mr. Taylor."
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Some Questions:
|
|
|
|
1) If Taylor was killed between 8:30 and 9, as given by the MacLean's
|
|
original story, how did the killer get inside and wait to shoot him? Was he,
|
|
based on this theory, killed and then left neatly in place, with his coat
|
|
buttoned, the way he was found? Did someone gain entrance because they knew
|
|
him?
|
|
|
|
2) Why is it stated that Mabel said he escorted her to her car shortly
|
|
before 9 o'clock?
|
|
Is this what she actually said in her very first interviews or was this
|
|
falsely injected into reports?
|
|
|
|
3) Why are there differences in the MacLean's story, the first and later
|
|
ones given? The first story says she saw a strange man walking "toward" the
|
|
house (not leaving it).
|
|
|
|
4) Given Arto's testimony, was William Davis, Mabel's chauffeur, somehow
|
|
in cahoots with an alleged cover-up conspiracy, perhaps even a conspiracy to
|
|
commit the murder itself? It is interesting, if not in itself significant, to
|
|
note that Davis was discharged from Mabel's employ not long after the murder.
|
|
|
|
5) Mabel is said to have referred to Peavey in the interview contained
|
|
in the above article as "William." How could she possibly have made this
|
|
mistake knowing full well that Peavey's first name was "Henry?" Was this
|
|
interview with her concocted out of whole cloth or is it in fact genuine? Are
|
|
the errors contained in the above piece a product of the reporter's
|
|
sloppiness, or was he simply getting his report from someone else, i.e.
|
|
hearsay? If the interview or interviews were purposely distorted or
|
|
fabricated how might this be explained? Who might have gained by this?
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
6) EVIDENCE FOR A COVER-UP
|
|
|
|
The following are a number of brief points which suggest that there was
|
|
a deliberate cover-up of Taylor's murder on the part of official authorities.
|
|
Is it perhaps even possible that some official authorities actually
|
|
participated in some way with the killing?
|
|
|
|
Note. Neither this or subsequent listings presumes to be exhaustive.
|
|
|
|
* In Peavey's interviews the first days after the murder (presented earlier
|
|
here) he states that he found Taylor lying in a pool of blood. The bungalow
|
|
court owner Jessurums made a similar statement. If so, what person in their
|
|
right mind would automatically leap to the assumption that Taylor died of
|
|
natural causes, as is reported to have happened when he was first found?
|
|
* Woolwine's connections with Shelby prior to murder
|
|
* Jim Smith, Woolwine investigator, in Shelby's apt/home night of murder (see
|
|
Marjorie Berger's testimony).
|
|
* Missing key evidence in police files, particularly Shelby's Grand Jury
|
|
testimony which closed investigation.
|
|
* Investigators let go who picked up on good leads
|
|
* Neither Stockdale nor Kirkwood was brought in for testimony
|
|
* Shelby wasn't brought in for questioning, despite Berger's testimony about
|
|
her phone call the morning of Feb. 2, 1922
|
|
* Woolwine in 1915 accused of bribery, Asa Keyes convicted for same in 1930
|
|
* Woolwine's well known and widely reported bungling of the investigation.
|
|
* Focus on drug dealers instead as the "real" problem facing the city. The
|
|
absurdity of many of these drug dealer stories, such as that of Harry "the
|
|
Chink" Field, speak for themselves. Obviously much of these testimonies were
|
|
got out of criminals who wanted to get a deal on their sentence, and corrupt
|
|
police officials, such as Keyes, took advantage of this.
|
|
* The host of innumerable and ludicrous leads and "confessions"
|
|
* Buron Fitts makes statement, 1930, that all evidence on the case would be
|
|
saved for the record, while this is far from what actually has happened.
|
|
* Mabel left in lurch, focus distracted to her, even though most
|
|
investigators knew she was innocent.
|
|
* Burton Fitts commits suicide with .38 revolver very similar to one used in
|
|
murder. Was his message perhaps, "This is where the department went wrong?"
|
|
|
|
POSSIBLE MOTIVES FOR COVER-UP:
|
|
|
|
1. Protect Shelby (and possibly Mabel as well, assuming Stockdale's
|
|
involvement)
|
|
2. Bribery by Shelby.
|
|
3. Antipathy to nonconformist, womanizing, anti-censorship radical Taylor.
|
|
4. Shelby close friends with Woolwine.
|
|
5. D.A.'s thought that it was better to let Shelby go free, then to admit
|
|
their mistake/corruption; or exonerate Mabel (she was after all an alleged
|
|
drug user so she must be guilty of something anyway, right?).
|
|
6. Get rid of Mabel
|
|
7. Perhaps there was actual complicity by some of the police in Taylor's
|
|
murder. Given the bizarre nature of the Taylor case, an explanation like this
|
|
may not be as far fetched as it might at first seem. [9]
|
|
The following is a rather interesting article with regard to this
|
|
possible theory:
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
February 4, 1922
|
|
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
Woman Tells Of Seeing Man Acting Suspiciously
|
|
|
|
An excellent example of habitual observation was brought to light
|
|
yesterday when Mrs. Ida Garrow, a modiste living at the Rose of Sharon
|
|
Apartments, told Examiner investigators that on Wednesday night as she was
|
|
walking down Ocean View avenue, at the intersection of Alvarado street, she
|
|
noticed a man acting in a very peculiar manner.
|
|
"It was about EIGHT THIRTY, OR POSSIBLY TWENTY MINUTES OF NINE," said
|
|
Mrs. Garrow yesterday, "Wednesday evening I was hurrying to my club which
|
|
meets at the corner of Grand View and Ocean View avenue. I was late for a
|
|
class that was studying Hebrew which I did not want to miss, but as I have
|
|
trained my observational faculties in the study of astrology. It is without
|
|
voluntary effort that I perceive whatever comes within the range of vision.
|
|
"As I came to Alvarado street, I saw a tall, slender, smooth shaven
|
|
policeman, whose face I would instinctively recognize if I were to see him
|
|
again, walking toward Ocean View avenue. Walking with him was another man, to
|
|
whom I did not pay particular attention, because my curiosity was aroused by
|
|
the peculiar actions of a man who was coming toward me a few feet in front of
|
|
the policeman. Although the policeman was not paying the slightest attention
|
|
to this man, the man was glancing back apprehensively over his shoulder, and
|
|
at times looking in away from the street which would be directly in toward
|
|
the court where the body of Mr. Taylor was found.
|
|
"As the policeman got closer to this man, the man crossed the street,
|
|
and I noticed as he crossed that he was short and stout and wore a long
|
|
overcoat, but there was the shadow of a building falling at such an angle
|
|
that I could not determine whether he wore a cap or a hat."
|
|
Who was the policeman walking down Alvarado street at 8:30 or 8:45, and
|
|
what did he see? This slight clue given by a careful observer may lead to
|
|
very important developments in the mysterious murder whose points are now
|
|
baffling the keenest detectives of the city.
|
|
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
7) SUMMARY OF THE CASES AGAINST CHARLOTTE SHELBY AND CARL STOCKDALE
|
|
|
|
It is my belief that Shelby and or Carl Stockdale are primary suspects
|
|
in the case. I am surprised the possibility of Stockdale's guilt did not
|
|
occur to Bruce, as least as far as his work has made manifest. [10] Here are
|
|
some reasons for believing that one or the other or both are the perpetrators
|
|
of the crime.
|
|
|
|
A) SUMMARY OF THE CASE AGAINST CHARLOTTE SHELBY:
|
|
|
|
a) Possible Motives:
|
|
|
|
1. Wanted to protect her money
|
|
2. Wanted to protect Mary's "virginity"
|
|
3. Was in love with Taylor herself; was jealous
|
|
4. Taylor rejected Mary. Mary felt insulted. Charlotte was defending Mary's
|
|
honor--possibly with Mary's help
|
|
|
|
b) Evidence which suggests Shelby might have been involved:
|
|
|
|
1. Pulled revolver on James Kirkwood.
|
|
2. Was well known to be violent, possessive, manipulative.
|
|
3. Had threatened Taylor before--see Chauncey Eaton's testimony.
|
|
4. Owned a gun similar to the one used in the case.
|
|
5. Charlotte called up accountant, Marjorie Berger, the day of murder looking
|
|
for Mary.
|
|
6. Mary's strange, infatuation for Taylor.
|
|
7. The mysterious nighty.
|
|
8. Taylor loved Mabel not Mary is suggested by the fact put forth that he
|
|
sent only 6 flowers to Minter, 2 dozen to Mabel. That the record of this
|
|
purchase did not come out in the probate papers can easily be explained by a
|
|
cover-up.
|
|
9. Blonde hairs, traced to Mary Miles Minter, found on Taylor's body.
|
|
10. Mary in 1926 admitted to having seen Taylor the afternoon of the day
|
|
murder took place.
|
|
11. Missing $750,000 from Shelby money--payoff?
|
|
12. Evidence missing from police files--payoff?
|
|
13. People were out to get Mabel, making a payoff of officials easier.
|
|
14. Shelby was not questioned or indicted until later, in fact left town.
|
|
15. Margaret accuses her mother of murder.
|
|
16. Inter-family litigation over money.
|
|
17. Contemporaries, including Adela Rogers St. Johns, "knew" Shelby did it.
|
|
18. Mary was known in later years to be eccentric, alternatively kind and
|
|
friendly or angry, bossy and bitter--did her love for Taylor on becoming
|
|
jealous perhaps turn into hate or "You always hurt the one you love."
|
|
19. Margaret Fillmore loss of the suit against her mother in the late
|
|
thirty's can be explained by officialdom's bias due to their own complicity
|
|
in the cover-up. Her death by "alcohol poisoning" or ingestion sounds very
|
|
suspect to put it mildly. If what Margaret claimed was true who could really
|
|
blame her for her strange behavior?
|
|
20. Testimony of Chauncey Eaton, Shelby employee, incriminates Shelby.
|
|
21. Testimony of Charlotte Whitney, Shelby employee, incriminates Shelby.
|
|
22. Marjorie Berger's testimony. What are we to make of this? While she was
|
|
convicted of tax fraud this in no way would seem to justify why she would
|
|
necessarily lie in a homicide investigation. If she did lie about Shelby's
|
|
phone call what possible motive could she have had? Perhaps the subsequent
|
|
efforts to smear Eaton and Berger by `trailing' or specifically targeting
|
|
them so as to catch them in some wrong doing was merely another part of
|
|
keeping the truth hidden.
|
|
23. Mary's suicide attempt with gun suggests a violent family temperament.
|
|
24. From the very beginning, local newspaper accounts assumed jealousy was
|
|
the real motive behind the slaying. [11]
|
|
|
|
B) SUMMARY OF THE CASE AGAINST STOCKDALE:
|
|
|
|
1. Fitted Faith MacLean's description very closely. There is a discrepancy of
|
|
height, but this seems a trivial anomaly.
|
|
2. Had ties both with Shelby and Sennett. Indeed, he appeared in films with
|
|
both Mary Miles Minter and Mabel.
|
|
3. Was not brought in for questioning, even though he was Shelby's sole
|
|
alibi.
|
|
4. Man's handkerchief found in the bungalow with a monogrammed "S"
|
|
(Stockdale?)
|
|
5. Stockdale's missing check stubs
|
|
|
|
Possible motive:
|
|
1. May have been acting, as he believed, to protect the honor of Shelby,
|
|
Minter, Sennett and Mabel.
|
|
[Continued next issue]
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
NEXT ISSUE: William T. Sherman, Guest Editor:
|
|
Some Glimpses of The Shelby Family Caught up in The Taylor Case
|
|
"The Mystery of the Movie Director" by Sidney Sutherland
|
|
A Look at the Character of D.A. Thomas Lee Woolwine & His Administration
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
NOTES by Bruce Long:
|
|
[1]Nothing in Sanderson's recap states that Eyton arrived before Ziegler;
|
|
Sanderson only states that Eyton and Harry Fellows were both involved in
|
|
removing letters and other articles from the murder scene. According to Ed
|
|
King (WDT: DOSSIER, pp. 275-6) Eyton arrived after Ziegler, and removed the
|
|
items while Ziegler was there. At the inquest, the testimony of both Ziegler
|
|
and Eyton indicate that Ziegler arrived first.
|
|
[2]There are many examples of Mabel's common use of profanity (not just
|
|
profanity under extreme stress), some of them are cited in MABEL--where Hal
|
|
Roach said she was "the dirtiest talking girl you ever heard" (p. 113).
|
|
I consider the comments of those who knew her and worked with her to be
|
|
sufficient "hard evidence" concerning her frequent use of profanity.
|
|
[3]Based on the material presented in MABEL and A DEED OF DEATH, as well as
|
|
other references indicating that Samuel Goldwyn spent considerable money on
|
|
Mabel's drug rehabilitation (e.g., Louella Parsons, THE GAY ILLITERATE,
|
|
p. 66), I find it reasonable to assume that Mabel's stay at the Glen Springs
|
|
Sanitarium in Fall 1920 was for drug rehabilitation rather than the reported
|
|
"nervous breakdown"--that same expression was used elsewhere when stars were
|
|
being treated for drug problems. But I don't recall ever concluding that
|
|
Mabel's other reported illnesses were "covered-up instances of problems she
|
|
was having with drugs"--indeed, in my criticism of A DEED OF DEATH (in WDT:
|
|
DOSSIER, pp. 358-9) I argue against that line of reasoning.
|
|
[4]The total cummulative press evidence leads me to accept Woolwine's
|
|
characterization of Peavey, as reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY #10: "Peavey...has
|
|
shown a very deep and genuine grief over the murder of Mr. Taylor, and ...
|
|
has at all times given the authorities every assistance in his power in their
|
|
effort to unravel the mystery of the murder." Peavey stated that he
|
|
witnessed some verbal fireworks between Mabel and Taylor during her last
|
|
visit, and that the District Attorney's office ordered him to keep quiet
|
|
about it. With this in mind, it is interesting to look at the type of
|
|
questions Peavey was asked on the witness stand at the coroner's inquest:
|
|
"Were you in his house on the evening when he was found dead there?"
|
|
"What time did you leave the house?"
|
|
"Where was he when you left?"
|
|
"In what part of the house were they?"
|
|
"They were seated?"
|
|
"When you went out, which way did you go out, at the front or at the back?"
|
|
Etc. In view of Peavey's subsequent claim of a cover-up, it does seem strange
|
|
that those questions dealt strictly with time and geography--not one question
|
|
was about the psychological atmosphere. (Was Taylor in good spirits that
|
|
evening? Did anything seem to be troubling him?) There is evidence that
|
|
Peavey's official "for the record" questioning by Woolwine contained similar
|
|
narrowly-focused questions. So that if Peavey did indeed witness an
|
|
"argument," no questions came near that territory and he did not have to lie
|
|
in order to obey the cover-up directive. Peavey's statements appear credible
|
|
to me, as do Mabel's statements. From her honest perspective there was no
|
|
argument--just a friendly and spirited discussion; but from Peavey's honest
|
|
perspective there was an argument. Regarding the possibility that Peavey was
|
|
the killer, there were published rumors to that effect; and those rumors will
|
|
be reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY #17 or 18.
|
|
[5]This is a good example of how the press was distorting interviews.
|
|
A reporter from the LOS ANGELES EXPRESS was present at this same interview,
|
|
and quoted Mabel as having said: "(Peavey) ought to be ashamed to say that I
|
|
asked him about other girls going to Mr. Taylor's house. ...And say this,
|
|
please, on my word of honor, I never spoke to Henry in my life except in
|
|
Mr. Taylor's presence, and can you imagine my asking before Billy about other
|
|
girls? Henry has told an awful big story." The substance of this version is
|
|
similar to the EXAMINER version, but there is an enormous difference in tone
|
|
between "an awful big story" and "a venomous fabrication."--in the former she
|
|
seems to be gently chiding Peavey for telling a fib, in the latter she seems
|
|
livid at his poisonous lie. Based on what is known about Mabel's personality
|
|
and the reputation of the confrontational and sensationalizing Hearst press
|
|
(EXAMINER), the EXPRESS version appears more accurate in this instance, and
|
|
gives quite a different view of Mabel's attitude toward Peavey.
|
|
[6]Peavey reportedly described Mabel cutting up her pictures (reprinted in
|
|
TAYLOROLOGY #6) but he did NOT characterize it as "a jealous fit of rage"--
|
|
to me, her actions imply neither jealousy nor rage (perhaps just moody
|
|
dissatisfaction with the way she looked in those photographs).
|
|
[7]According to the LOS ANGELES TIMES (Feb. 4, 1992) the police officially
|
|
questioned Howard Fellows on Friday, Feb. 3 at the detective bureau of the
|
|
Central Police Station. That edition of the newspaper also reported:
|
|
"Mr. Fellows visited the Taylor apartment at 8 p.m. on the night of the crime
|
|
and though the house was lighted in all rooms he received no response at the
|
|
door. He later called his employer on the telephone but failed to arouse
|
|
anybody." So it does NOT appear that the police delayed in questioning
|
|
Fellows. (Also, given the number of times the 1922 press misquoted or
|
|
"spiced up" interviews, perhaps it confuses the historical material to refer
|
|
to reported newspaper interviews as "testimony." I feel the only material
|
|
which should be considered "testimony" is statements made to the official
|
|
investigators or statements made under oath at depositions or on a witness
|
|
stand.)
|
|
[8]The probable reason for the time discrepancy of the MacLeans' hearing the
|
|
shot (assuming they were not simply misquoted) would have been their desire
|
|
not to cast unjust suspicion on Mabel Normand. Some early press accounts
|
|
stated that Mabel left Taylor shortly before 9:00. Perhaps the MacLeans
|
|
initially told reporters that they heard the shot after 9:00 because they
|
|
wanted no one to have the impression that Mabel was still present when the
|
|
shot was fired. Afterwards, when Mabel's time of departure was firmly
|
|
established at 7:45, the MacLeans would have changed their time of the shot
|
|
accordingly, to reflect what they actually heard.
|
|
[9]In my opinion, the primary motive for a cover-up would have been to protect
|
|
the movie industry, which had been undergoing considerable adverse publicity
|
|
due to the Arbuckle trials. It is reasonable to assume that the movie industry
|
|
wanted the Taylor murder forgotten as quickly as possible, and used its
|
|
influence towards that end.
|
|
[10]The possibility of Stockdale's guilt is mentioned in WDT: DOSSIER,
|
|
pp. 329-330. That possibility is not mentioned in the Kirkpatrick or Giroux
|
|
books.
|
|
[11]Sherman's long list of "evidence which suggests Shelby might have been
|
|
involved" (many points of which I disagree with) does not include the single
|
|
item which I consider to be THE most concrete bit of evidence against
|
|
Shelby--the unfired bullet, removed from the Shelby gun, hidden by chauffeur
|
|
Chauncey Eaton, and recovered by investigators in 1937. According to
|
|
Sanderson, that soft-nosed lead bullet "was the same type and weight as the
|
|
fatal bullet, which was extracted from Taylor's body." Press reports at the
|
|
time of the murder indicated: "The weapon used was probably a revolver, the
|
|
police said, since ammunition of this type is not suitable for an automatic
|
|
pistol. The soft lead point becomes battered in the magazine of an automatic
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frequently causing it to jam. The ammunition used was an old-style, rimmed
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cartrige. Automatic cartridges are rimless." According to the LOS ANGELES
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EXAMINER (Feb. 18-19, 1922): "It has been generally known that Captain Adams
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early last week called into consultation one of the best known gunsmiths in
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America, a man past 60 who has devoted his life to a study of firearms and
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|
explosives...This expert declared...that the bullet from the wound...was .38
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|
caliber, short, soft-nosed, single-rim, made for a Smith & Wesson .38 short
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|
barrel revolver. ...As a matter of fact, say the firearms experts, there
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perhaps cannot be found one pistol in thousands in Los Angeles loaded with
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the ancient brand of ammunition which was taken from Taylor's body."
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Elsewhere it was stated that this type of bullet had not been manufactured
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|
for 12 or 15 years. The circumstantial fact that Shelby's gun was evidently
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|
loaded with the same type of old ammunition that killed Taylor, is the
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|
strongest bit of physical evidence against her. This is a much stronger point
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|
of evidence than just the fact that Shelby's gun was the same type of gun
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|
that killed Taylor. Nevertheless, "reasonable doubt" about Shelby's guilt
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remains.
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*****************************************************************************
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For more information about Taylor, see
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WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow Press, 1991)
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Back issues of Taylorology are available via Gopher or FTP at
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|
etext.archive.umich.edu
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|
in the directory pub/Zines/Taylorology
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|
*****************************************************************************
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