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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 65 -- May 1998 Editor: Bruce Long bruce@asu.edu *
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* TAYLOROLOGY may be freely distributed *
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CONTENTS OF THIS ISSUE:
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175 Errors and Contradictions in "A Cast of Killers"
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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 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; (d) Taylor's associates and the Hollywood
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silent film industry in which Taylor worked. Primary emphasis will be given
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toward reprinting, referencing and analyzing source material, and sifting it
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for accuracy.
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Another Mary Miles Minter film, "The Ghost of Rosy Taylor," is now available
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from Grapevine Video, their third Minter offering on home video.
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A new $25,000 reward has been offered by the NATIONAL ENQUIRER for
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information leading to the arrest and conviction of William Desmond Taylor's
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killer. The March 3, 1998 issue included an error-filled segment on the
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Taylor case in a section of "Unsolved Hollywood Mysteries," aptly calling the
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murder "Hollywood's most baffling mystery," and the reward was offered for
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any of the cases mentioned there. Also, the "E!" cable channel has a new
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series on "Mysteries and Scandals," with one episode examining the Taylor
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case.
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175 Errors and Contradictions in "A Cast of Killers"
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The first book-length examination of the William Desmond Taylor murder
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was A CAST OF KILLERS by Sidney D. Kirkpatrick (Dutton, 1986), based largely
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upon material gathered by noted film director King Vidor. That book was
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entertainingly written, very popular and it introduced many people to the
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Taylor case for the first time, presenting "proof" of the commonly-held
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viewpoint that Charlotte Shelby murdered Taylor. We have commented at
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length on Kirkpatrick's book in WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER (Scarecrow
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Press, 1991); however we feel it is time for an updated re-examination,
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particularly since many more errors in A CAST OF KILLERS have come to our
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attention, and many of our cited references have been reprinted in previous
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issues of TAYLOROLOGY. Kirkpatrick was fortunate to have obtained a copy of
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the police file on the case, though only a very small portion of that
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material found its way into his book. It is that material from the police
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file which makes Kirkpatrick's book valuable for those interested in the
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Taylor case.
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A CAST OF KILLERS makes constant reference to press reports but
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specific references are rarely cited. There is an enormous difference
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between press reports published immediately after the murder and the reports
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published much later. Right from the beginning there were inaccuracies in
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the press coverage of the case, and those inaccuracies tended to multiply as
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time passed.
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A CAST OF KILLERS contains a very substantial amount of material which
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appears to be inaccurate, is strongly contradicted elsewhere, or is not
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logical. The numbers in parentheses indicate the page numbers in A CAST OF
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KILLERS where the items are found; the numbers in brackets cite sources in
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endnotes, at the end of this newsletter. Some of the errors are found in
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interviews in the book and are not directly stated by Vidor/Kirkpatrick. In
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the analysis below, "official statement" refers to the statements taken by
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the District Attorney's office in 1922 and reprinted in KING OF COMEDY.[1]
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This list refers to the hardcover edition; a few errors in A CAST OF KILLERS
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were corrected in the subsequent paperback editions.
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#1. (3) No early press reports made any mention of a fireplace--much less
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that letters were being burned there. Diagrams and photos of the murder
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scene were published in several newspapers--there was no fireplace in
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Taylor's home. Tales of the fireplace came many years later, in fanciful
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and highly unreliable accounts.
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#2. (3) No early press reports stated that Peavey was washing dishes when
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the police arrived. Indeed, the statement makes no sense--what dishes could
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Peavey possibly have been washing? He had finished washing the supper
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dishes before departing the previous evening. The only unwashed items were
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the two cocktail glasses and shaker used by Mabel Normand and Taylor, and
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those items were still unwashed on the serving tray when reporters arrived
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later, as they were mentioned and photographed.
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#3. (6) The theory that the killer "entered through the den, then shot
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Taylor in the back and left by the front door" makes no sense. What "den"?
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Taylor's home had two doors, a front door and a kitchen door, which Peavey
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had locked before leaving. The ground floor of Taylor's home only had a
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kitchen, dining room, and living room. There was no "den."
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#4. (7) No early press reports indicated any pornographic pictures of
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Taylor and famous actresses had been found. All such reports came much
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later and were evidently magnified from the following press item reporting
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the estate sale of Taylor:
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District Attorney Woolwine yesterday...withheld from sale a number
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of pictures among the effects of William D. Taylor, murdered film
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director...There were some of young women in "art poses," the kind
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that Boston frowns upon. Some were exceedingly daring.[2]
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#5. (7) No early press reports told of a secret locked closet with a
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collection of women's lingerie, tagged with initials and dated. Again, all
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such tales came many years later, in highly unreliable accounts.
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#6. (6, 169, etc.) Although were some early press reports implying that a
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nightgown had been found with the initials "M.M.M.", the cumulative press
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evidence indicates that a nightgown did exist and had been the property of
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Taylor for some time before the murder[3]--but there is strong reason to
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doubt the existence of any initials on the nightgown:
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Herman Cline, former chief of detectives, who was one of the
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original investigators, recalled having found a garment "resembling a
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nightgown" in the Taylor apartment.
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"But I am positive there were no initials on it," he declared...
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"I was working on the case with Detective Ziegler," he said, "and
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the day following the murder we found a filmy flesh-colored gown in a
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dresser drawer in Taylor's bedroom. We also found several
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handkerchiefs bearing the initials M.M.M.
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"We took the gown, handkerchiefs and a package of letters to the
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office of the late Thomas Lee Woolwine, then District Attorney, and
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turned them over to him.
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"At the time I recall Woolwine as saying, 'I don't know how the
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gown will fit into the picture, as we cannot identify its owner.
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There isn't even a laundry mark on it.' "
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Cline added that he had no idea what had become of the exhibit.[4]
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And even Hearst's L.A. EXAMINER reported in 1922:
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Little importance was attached to the pink silk nightgown found in
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the director's apartments. This, it was learned, had been laundered
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only once or twice and bore no initials or other marks by which its
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ownership might be determined.[5]
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#7. (7) No early press reports indicated Taylor visited Berger on the
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morning before the murder. All early press reports only mention an
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afternoon visit and a telephone call.
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#8. (7, 26, etc.) Some early press reports did indicate a substantial sum
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of money had been withdrawn by Taylor and then re-deposited. However, these
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press reports were soon retracted and an authoritative statement was made
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that no money had been withdrawn for several weeks prior to the murder.
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...The fact that no deposit was made late that day [the day of
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Taylor's murder] was confirmed by W. T. S. Hammond, cashier of the
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First National Bank, who testified that some time during the morning
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Taylor deposited $2300.
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...At the same time it was definitely learned that the director did
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not draw $2500 from the bank on the day preceding the murder, or at
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any other time within several weeks previous to his death.[6]
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#9. (8) The description Taylor's sister-in-law gave of her husband did
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not "fit uncannily that of Edward Sands." There was a drastic difference in
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age and physical appearance:
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Mrs. Deane-Tanner, when shown a photograph of Sands at her Monrovia
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home, pointed out points of dissimilarity...
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Sands is short and stocky, with plump, round face. Dennis Deane-
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Tanner was slender like his brother...Besides, Mrs. Deane-Tanner
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explained, her husband's nose had been broken in athletics, which gave
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him a noticeable mark.[7]
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#10. (8) The book states that Edward Sands had been fired by Taylor for
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stealing jewelry and forging checks. No, Sands was not "fired" by Taylor.
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Taylor had gone on vacation to Europe while Sands had remained to take care
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of Taylor's home; Sands stole from Taylor and fled before Taylor
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returned.[8]
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#11. (19) Taylor had indeed been sent to Runnymeade, near Harper, Kansas,
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but his younger brother Denis had not. Denis was still in school at that
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time.
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#12. (19, etc.) The name of Denis (not Dennis) is misspelled throughout
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the book.
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#13. (19) When Denis Deane-Tanner disappeared in 1912, he left behind a
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wife and TWO children, not one. His daughters were named Muriel and
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Alice.[9]
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#14. (20) It is stated that "Captain Kidd, Jr." was a highly regarded
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film. On the contrary, reviews of the film were decidedly mixed. VARIETY
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(April 25, 1919) stated "As a whole it is rather a disappointment", and
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PHOTOPLAY (July 1919) stated "...the play suffers because its director,
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William D. Taylor, considered it an inconsequential trifle."
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#15. (20) It is stated that "Judy of Rogue's Harbor" was a highly
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regarded film. On the contrary, some reviews of that film were scathing.
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The DRAMATIC MIRROR (March 6, 1920) stated "It is hard to believe that
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William D. Taylor is responsible for the direction. Most of the time it is
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merely bad and never does it rise above mediocrity", and HARRISON'S REPORTS
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(February 17, 1920) stated "This picture should never have been made".
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#16. (20) Police never made any early claims that Denis Deane-Tanner
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might have been Sands.
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#17. (20) It was not in 1917 that Taylor's ex-wife saw him on the screen
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for the first time since he left her. She stated this took place in
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1919.[10] There is very strong evidence that she knew Taylor was in Hollywood by
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1915, but kept the information from her daughter.[11]
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#18. (21) Press reports did indicate that Taylor met with his daughter in
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New York after his European trip in July 1921, but by July 21st he was
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already back in Los Angeles, so his meeting with his daughter must have
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taken a few days earlier than July 21.[12]
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#19. (22) No early press reports quoted Mrs. MacLean as stating the
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person she saw "had an effeminate walk."
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#20. (28) The published coded letters, which Mary Miles Minter later
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admitted writing, were not signed "Mary." They were unsigned.[13]
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#21. (29) Mary NEVER claimed to have been at Casa de Margarita on the
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night of the murder. She ALWAYS said she was at the house on Hobart.[14]
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#22. (29) None of the early press reports published within four years of
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the murder raised the question of Shelby's ownership of a gun. In fact it
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was eight months after the murder before any press report cast even a hint
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of suspicion in Shelby's direction.[15] Immediately following the murder,
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the press viewed Mary's involvement with Taylor as casting serious suspicion
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upon Marshall Neilan and Tommy Dixon, both of whom had dated Mary and were
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rumored to be jealous.[16]
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#23. (29, etc.) Police never "granted the entire family complete
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exoneration from wrongdoing."
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#24. (31) The most reliable press report indicated Walter Kirby served in
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the American Army, not the Canadian. It also indicated that the reason why
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Kirby was released was not because he had an "airtight alibi," but because
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the farmer could not be positive in his identification. There was also no
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indication here that Kirby had served under Taylor in the army. This was the
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only newspaper to directly interview the rancher:
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"I'd rather see fifty guilty men go free than convict one innocent
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man, especially when it meant life or death."
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Andrew Cock, local rancher, today gave this explanation of why he
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declined positively to identify a man arrested at his insistence at
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Calexico last Thursday night by Los Angeles detectives working on the
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William Desmond Taylor murder mystery.
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Cock and the two detectives, Sergeants Edward King and Jesse A.
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Winn, of the Los Angeles police department, returned home from the
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border last night without the prisoner, who was turned over to them in
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Calexico by Colonel Jose Avila, chief inspector of the Mexican secret
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service, at Mexicali. The man was freed after four hours of grilling
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by the detectives and Cock.
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Because the man, who had previously been arrested in Los Angeles in
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connection with the same case and released after an investigation,
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appeared to Cock to be several inches taller than the man "Spike,"
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whom Cock had given a ride between Tustin and Santa Ana on the night
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before the Taylor murder, the rancher refused to say positively that
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it was the same man.
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There was convincing circumstantial evidence that the man, who was
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described as a former Los Angeles actor and taxicab driver, was the
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man "Spike" whom Cock had heard make threats against a certain
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Canadian army captain named "Bill" on the night before Taylor, who was
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himself said to be a former Canadian [sic] army captain, was slain.
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Cock himself had pointed the man out on the street in Mexicali as the
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man sought. But on closer inspection and realizing that the man's
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life might hang upon his decision, Cock would not make his
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identification absolute.
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"They put it up to me," he said today. "They said, 'if you say he
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is the man, we'll take him with us.' But under the circumstances I
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couldn't do it."
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The detectives, King and Winn, after Cook pointed him out on the
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street, recognized the man as the one whom they had investigated
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before.
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After Avila had brought the man across the border into Calexico,
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they searched his room and found army trousers and leggings which
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answered in the description of those worn by "Spike" near Santa Ana.
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They did not find the coat, but did find a sweater coat similar to one
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worn by "Spike." Also they found a blank .38 caliber revolver
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cartridge and several loaded shells of the same caliber. "Spike" had
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dropped a .38 caliber gun when he got out of the car on the night Cock
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saw him. Taylor, the motion picture director, was killed by a .38
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caliber bullet the next day...
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The man showed a discharge from the United States army to explain
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the army uniform found in his possession. He had served three days in
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the army. There was nothing to show that he had been in the Canadian
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army.
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Serving further to direct suspicion toward the suspect, as the man
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Cock had heard utter the veiled threat against the Canadian captain,
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Cock recalled that "Spike" had asked numerous questions regarding road
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and stage service between Santa Ana and the border.
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However, Cock's recollection of "Spike" did not quite fit the new
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suspect's height, although in particulars the resemblance was
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convincing. It was difficult to compare his impression of "Spike's"
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height with that of the suspect because of the fact that "Spike" wore
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a heavy overcoat, whereas the man in the present instance wore a light
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suit. Identification was otherwise complicated by the fact that
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"Spike" wore a several days' growth of beard, whereas the other was
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smoothly shaven.
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Cock had estimated "Spike's" age to be between 33 and 36. The
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other man claimed he was 23. Cock, however, believes that he is
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older.
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Had Cock been able to see the "pardner," he could probably have
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told whether the latter was the same man who was with "Spike" on the
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ride between Tustin and Santa Ana. "Spike's" partner had a scar over
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each ear, Cock noticed...[17]
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#25. (32) The press reports and article by Ed King indicated that it was
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not "another man named Walter Kirby" who was arrested the same month--it was
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the same individual as was previously arrested.[18]
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#26. (32) Otis Hefner's story said nothing about a fight between Taylor
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and a woman dressed like a man. In his clearly-fabricated story he blamed
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the killing on Mabel Normand.[19]
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#27. (33) Peavey did not die in a ghetto in Sacramento. He spent the
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last year of his life in the Napa State Hospital, where he died.[20]
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#28. (33) Mabel Normand's reported dying statement "I wonder who killed
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poor Bill Taylor?" sounds like press fabrication. A month before Mabel's
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death, during the 1930 flare-up of the case, Julia Benson (Mabel's
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companion) said:
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"We have read to her [Mabel]--the nurses and I--but we have not
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mentioned anything of Mr. Taylor's death to her, and Miss Normand
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never talks about it."[21]
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Most of the Los Angeles papers quoted other "last words," for example:
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...The last words of the film star whose admirers numbered
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thousands were a plea.
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"Don't leave me alone, please," she whispered an hour or so before
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her death to Mrs. Benson, her secretary and faithful friend for over
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eight years.
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"I won't, dear," said Mrs. Benson, gently.
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From then on Miss Normand sank rapidly. Several times she
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attempted to speak, but could not...[22]
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#29. (35) MOVING PICTURE WORLD was not a "fan rag"--it was the most
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highly respected trade journal in the movie industry.
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#30. (36) Florence Vidor never acted under William Desmond Taylor's
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direction. See Taylor's filmography in WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER,
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pp. 433-445.
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#31. (37) The book indicates that King Vidor and Colleen Moore were on
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location filming "The Sky Pilot" and were trapped in a snowstorm at the time
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of the Taylor murder. But "The Sky Pilot" was released in May 1921, many
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months before Taylor was murdered. Press items do indicate King Vidor was
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snowbound on location at the time of the Taylor murder, but he was with the
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crew of the film "The Real Adventure" starring his wife Florence Vidor, as
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indicated in this item published on February 6, 1922:
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MOVIE COMPANY IS MAROONED
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Florence Vidor's company left for Bear valley last week, arrived
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O.K.--and stuck. At last accounts it was marooned in the middle of a
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trackless snow desert hid up in the mountains. Its whereabouts were
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learned at the nearest point of approach by signal fires which were
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made, and General Manager Gus Inglis left with a dog team and all the
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snowshoes that could be gathered together. As it is impossible to
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reach the party otherwise the snowshoes will be dropped from an
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airplane...In the marooned movie party are Florence Vidor and King
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Vidor, her husband and director; Clyde Fillmore, leading man; David
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Howard, assistant director; George Barnes and Ed Roberts, cameramen,
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and other technical workers. Fortunately the party has a good supply
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of food an an experienced cook and is in a neighborhood where there is
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a plentiful supply of wood for fuel. The Vidors are filming "The Real
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Adventure" by Henry Kitchell Webster, and some of the story calls for
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rugged snowstorm scenes, which they will surely get.[23]
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At the time of the Taylor murder, there were already rumors that Colleen
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Moore was engaged to John McCormick, and she was reportedly wearing his
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engagement ring.[24]
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#32. (40) Taylor's birth certificate clearly states Taylor was born on
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April 26, 1872--not 1867.[25]
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#33. (41) Taylor was not waiting to go on the London stage in 1884. He
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was only 12 years old at that time and was still living at home.
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#34. (41) Taylor's studio biographies frequently mention his years at
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Clifton College, but inquiry indicates that he never attended Clifton.[26]
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#35. (42) As correctly stated later on p. 65 of A CAST OF KILLERS, Taylor
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was in the British Army, not Canadian.
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#36. (42) The statement that Taylor never found the need for glasses is
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obviously false--one of the photographs in the book has him wearing glasses,
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and others have been published elsewhere.[27]
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#37. (42) It is stated that Taylor never returned again to his family
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home in Ireland. But in an interview with his ex-wife it was reported:
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"Mrs. Robins said last night that shortly after their marriage she and
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Tanner visited his folks in Ireland...His family entertained her at their
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home in Fitzwilliam Square..."[28]
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#38. (43) Fanny Davenport did not sign Taylor as her leading man; her
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leading man was her husband, Melbourne MacDowell, though Taylor did
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sometimes understudy the leading role.
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#39. (43) Taylor did not "inexplicably" leave Fanny Davenport. He was
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with the Davenport theatrical company until she died on September 26, 1898,
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and the troupe disbanded.
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#40. (43) The story that Taylor had gone to prison in England to protect
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a woman's honor, did not come from a Klondike miner; it came from H. M.
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Horkheimer, the president of Balboa Studios.[29]
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#41. (45) There were several reports that Taylor's finances were not "in
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perfect order" when he deserted his wife:
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...[Taylor] told Mr. Morrison...that he had left New York because
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of an overwhelming burden of debt he had contracted while an art
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dealer in New York.[30]
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And:
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Financial and other troubles were pressing hard upon W. C. Deane-
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Tanner at the time of his disappearance..."Pete's" habits, especially
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his extravagances, were held to blame...Pete confided that he had
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borrowed a great deal of money from Mr. Braker...but he was confident
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he and Mrs. Tanner would be remembered handsomely in Mr. Braker's
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will. Pete's hopes...were completely dashed in the summer of 1908,
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when Mr. Braker died suddenly and his will, filed shortly before
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Pete's disappearance, contained a brief clause to this effect: "To W.
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C. D. Tanner, I leave and bequeath the amounts of money owing to me by
|
|
him."...At the time "Pete" Tanner deserted his wife and six-year-old
|
|
daughter in October, 1908, he was in serious financial straits, owing
|
|
thousands of dollars to Wilson Marshall...and to others.[31]
|
|
|
|
#42. (46) That Taylor experienced "memory losses" was attested to by
|
|
others beside his wife. One of his former business associates reportedly
|
|
stated:
|
|
"We all had noticed the facial neuralgia which distorted 'Pete's'
|
|
face so, and he had several mental lapses during the time I knew him.
|
|
We all agreed with Mrs. Deane-Tanner at the time of his disappearance
|
|
that he had wandered away while seized with one of these spells."[32]
|
|
|
|
#43. (48) A CAST OF KILLERS strongly implies that reports of Taylor's
|
|
rumored homosexuality had not been published in contemporary newspaper
|
|
accounts of the murder. Althout the Los Angeles papers did not publish
|
|
those rumors, they were indeed published elsewhere, e.g.: "The fact that his
|
|
houseman, Henry Peavey, and his former secretary, Edward F. Sands, are both
|
|
said to be 'queer persons,' has led to much speculation whether Taylor was
|
|
abnormal himself."[33]; "It has been charged that Taylor was a member of an
|
|
unnatural love cult, a cult comprised entirely of men."[34]
|
|
|
|
#44. (52) The romance between Neva Gerber and Taylor was certainly more
|
|
than just "studio publicity." They went together from the Balboa Company to
|
|
Favorite Players to American Film. While at American in Santa Barbara,
|
|
Taylor reportedly was living in the same house with Neva and her mother.[35]
|
|
Taylor continued to give Neva presents of cash and automobiles up until the
|
|
time of his death.[36]
|
|
|
|
#45. (52) Mary Miles Minter was not at American Film while Taylor was
|
|
employed there; he left in October 1915[37] to go to Pallas (Paramount), and
|
|
Mary did not arrive at American Film until mid-1916:
|
|
MOVING PICTURE WORLD (June 24, 1916): Led by the Mayor and various
|
|
of his official family, Santa Barbara, Cal., residents gave a rousing
|
|
reception to little Mary Miles Minter, the American-Mutual child star,
|
|
on her recent arrival at the southern California city to begin work on
|
|
her first Mutual feature release...
|
|
Neva Gerber was at American film during the entire period of time that
|
|
Taylor was employed there.
|
|
|
|
#46. (53-4) The rumor, that the blacksmith in "Captain Alvarez" was Denis
|
|
Tanner, was indeed mentioned in the papers, attributed to an anonymous New
|
|
Yorker who stated he recognized him.[38]
|
|
|
|
#47. (58) Wallace Reid's drug problem reportedly began in 1919 when he
|
|
was given morphine for an injury which occurred during the filming of
|
|
"Valley of the Giants."[39] Taylor last directed Reid in 1917 in "Big
|
|
Timber." Reid had no drug problem when Taylor directed him.
|
|
|
|
#48. (60) Antonio Moreno was having a contract dispute with Vitagraph,
|
|
and wanted Taylor's assistance to arbitrate it. Moreno's statement to the
|
|
press indicates the scheduled meeting with Taylor on the morning after his
|
|
death did not involve Woolwine at all.
|
|
"...we arranged that I should call for Mr. Taylor, at the Lasky
|
|
studio, about 10 o'clock Thursday morning...Mr. Taylor was to go with
|
|
me to the Vitagraph studio, on a matter of personal business."[40]
|
|
|
|
#49. (61) The career of Julia Crawford Ivers peaked prior to the Taylor
|
|
murder, and went almost straight downhill after his death.[41]
|
|
|
|
#50. (65) A CAST OF KILLERS has scrambled the details of Taylor's
|
|
military career. In reality Taylor went from Nova Scotia to England, where
|
|
he received an officer's commission and was assigned to the Royal Army
|
|
Service Corps. He was more than just a "temporary lieutenant."[42]
|
|
|
|
#51. (65) Taylor was in uniform for approximately 9 months, not 15
|
|
months. He reported for active duty in August 1918 and returned in May
|
|
1919.[43]
|
|
|
|
#52. (66) There is no big mystery as to why Taylor enlisted so late in
|
|
the war. The following local newspaper item appeared in the month before
|
|
Taylor signed his enlistment papers:
|
|
A move was started here yesterday by several patriotic Britishers,
|
|
headed by Sergt. Howard Allen of the local British recruiting office
|
|
and Dr. A. D. Houghton of the Receiving Hospital staff, to compel all
|
|
Britons between the ages of 18 and 50 to enlist for service abroad.
|
|
This movement, according to Dr. Houghton, will be aided by the
|
|
American Protective League, its object being to round up every
|
|
available man in this community. It was stated that there are between
|
|
2000 and 3000 British subjects here and every one, except such as are
|
|
supporting dependents, will be pressed into service...
|
|
A special canvass of the movie camps is to be made...[44]
|
|
Taylor's enlistment was probably a result of this recruiting drive.
|
|
|
|
#53. (68) The photograph of Taylor and the three army buddies was printed
|
|
in the L.A. TIMES, along with another photo of the same individuals.[45] If
|
|
one of them had been Denis, surely his wife would have recognized him. When
|
|
the photograph was printed in the SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, the soldiers were
|
|
all identified (and one of them was interviewed). The name of the soldier
|
|
who allegedly looks like Denis, is Sgt. Hawkins.[46]
|
|
|
|
#54. (71) No six-page photo spread announcing the birth of Realart
|
|
appears in any issue of PHOTOPLAY. An ad such as the one described would
|
|
have appeared in a trade paper, not a fan magazine.
|
|
|
|
#55. (71) Ads for the birth of Realart did not appear until mid-1919.
|
|
|
|
#56. (72) "Huckleberry Finn" was the first film directed by Taylor after
|
|
his return from military service and was filmed prior to "Anne of Green
|
|
Gables," though "Anne" was released to theaters first.[47]
|
|
|
|
#57. (72) There was indeed a public explanation given as to why the team
|
|
of Minter and Taylor was broken up: Taylor was promoted. In the film
|
|
industry at that time, there could be only one "star" in any film, whether
|
|
actor or director. At the end of 1919 Taylor was promoted, given his own
|
|
producing unit and given "the name above the title." Taylor and Minter
|
|
could not both have top billing in the same film, yet each of their
|
|
contracts now required top billing. Hence, their professional separation:
|
|
William D. Taylor, one of the screen's best known and most artistic
|
|
directors and before that a prominent and successful doer of things
|
|
theatric, has signed a new contract with Famous Players-Lasky whereby
|
|
he will make his own productions for the Paramount-Artcraft program,
|
|
beginning this month.
|
|
Films directed and produced by Taylor will be trademarked "William
|
|
D. Taylor Productions" and will be given the same prominence and
|
|
publicity that now is given those of Cecil B. De Mille.
|
|
At present Mr. Taylor is directing Mary Miles Minter. He has
|
|
directed several of the silver sheet's most famous stars.[48]
|
|
|
|
#58. (74) It is stated that Taylor did not move into the Alvarado
|
|
bungalow until summer of 1920. But press items indicated Taylor moved there
|
|
immediately after his return from military service in May 1919.
|
|
LOS ANGELES RECORD (May 30, 1919): Since returning to Los Angeles,
|
|
William D. Taylor, the director, who spent a strenuous year on the
|
|
other side as a captain in the British army, has rented himself a
|
|
bungalow and is settling down to the grind of directing feature
|
|
pictures for the Morosco studios.
|
|
|
|
#59. (74) It is stated that Taylor moved into the bungalow on the
|
|
recommendation of Douglas MacLean. But press items indicated that the
|
|
bungalow was found for him by his fiancee, Neva Gerber:
|
|
"Mr. Taylor used to depend on me to look after many things for him.
|
|
It was I who found the house for him in which he was living at the
|
|
time of his death, and when he and I were engaged and were going out
|
|
together I would frequently stop there for a few minutes, but there
|
|
was always a servant present."[49]
|
|
|
|
#60. (75) ROUND THE ROOM does not state that Taylor's car which was
|
|
stolen by Sands was a Packard. Press items published after the murder
|
|
indicated that the wrecked car was repaired and repainted, and was in
|
|
Taylor's possession at the time of his death.[50] The two automobiles in his
|
|
estate were a McFarlan and a Chandler. It had to be one of these two cars
|
|
which was stolen by Sands, and was undoubtedly the very expensive
|
|
McFarlan.[51]
|
|
|
|
#61. (75) Although the merchandise stolen by Sands was pawned under the
|
|
name of William Deane Tanner, there is no mention in the early press reports
|
|
that the envelope sent to Taylor was addressed that way.
|
|
|
|
#62. (88) Peavey testified at the inquest that he always left and entered
|
|
Taylor's residence by the front door, not the back (kitchen) door. Before
|
|
he left each evening he would fasten a latch on the back door and leave a
|
|
key in the lock, preventing outside entry through the back door.
|
|
|
|
#63. (88) If Taylor's cigarette case had been stolen by Sands and been
|
|
missing for "many months," how could it possibly be a Christmas gift from
|
|
Mabel Normand inscribed "Christmas 1921"? There were less than two months
|
|
between Christmas 1921 and the murder. Sands' last robbery was on
|
|
December 4, 1921, three weeks PRIOR to Christmas.
|
|
|
|
#64. (88) On the day Taylor was killed, James Kirkwood was on board the
|
|
ship Aquitania, en route from Europe to New York. He was not in Los
|
|
Angeles, or even in the United States.[52]
|
|
|
|
#65. (89) According to Antonio Moreno's statements to the press, he had
|
|
been trying to get in touch with Taylor for two days, finally contacting him
|
|
by telephone around 7:00 p.m. on the night of the murder. It therefore
|
|
appears he did not meet with Taylor at the Athletic Club on the morning of
|
|
that day.[53]
|
|
|
|
#66. (89) On the day Taylor was killed, C. B. De Mille was on board the
|
|
ship Aquitania, en route from Europe to New York. He was not in Los Angeles:
|
|
NEW YORK TELEGRAPH (February 4, 1922): Cecil B. De Mille, connected
|
|
with the Famous Players-Lasky Corporation, who has been abroad on a
|
|
vacation, returned yesterday on the Aquitania of the Cunard Line.
|
|
Mr. De Mille is suffering from rheumatism and was carried from the
|
|
steamship on a stretcher, with his left arm and right leg bandaged,
|
|
and placed in an ambulance and taken to his suite in the Ambassador.
|
|
Mrs. De Mille met her husband at the pier, as did Adolph Zukor, motion
|
|
picture owner.
|
|
Asked about William Desmond Taylor, director of the Famous Players-
|
|
Lasky studios who was shot dead in his home in Los Angeles, Mr. De
|
|
Mille said he had worked with Mr. Taylor about four years, before and
|
|
after the war...
|
|
"He was a charming man," said Mr. De Mille. "There was none
|
|
cleaner in the motion picture industry." Mr. De Mille frowned on
|
|
rumors that association with women might have brought about the
|
|
murder.
|
|
And:
|
|
Cecil De Mille's illness has been wildly rumored to be decidely
|
|
serious. We are glad to report James Kirkwood's comments upon the
|
|
tale.
|
|
Mr. Kirkwood returned from Europe on the same steamer with Mr. De
|
|
Mille and spent nearly every afternoon during the voyage with him. He
|
|
says he marvels at Mr. De Mille's courage and poise in the midst of
|
|
his affliction.
|
|
In Paris the physicians warned Mr. De Mille against making the trip
|
|
at this time, but the director insisted that he must return to
|
|
Hollywood. So, in the face of their forebodings and well-nigh
|
|
helpless from rheumatism, he started homeward.
|
|
"It was marvelous to sit and talk with the man," said Kirkwood.
|
|
"Sick and utterly worn out, he maintained the same charm of the host
|
|
that he did in his days of health in California. It was superb
|
|
bravery."[54]
|
|
|
|
#67. (89) Two weeks prior to Taylor's death, Julia Crawford Ivers began a
|
|
three-month leave of absence away from Paramount. She had been given the
|
|
assignment of writing the scenario for a Constance Talmadge film, and was
|
|
working at United Studios for Joseph Schenck:
|
|
Los Angeles, Jan. 16--Mrs. Julia Crawford Ivers, special writer and
|
|
supervising director on the Paramount staff, closed her desk at the
|
|
Lasky studio Saturday and moved her script case over to the United
|
|
Studios where she is to be with the Constance Talmadge unit under the
|
|
management of Joseph Schenck. This association is but a temporary
|
|
one, however, Mr. Lasky having granted Mrs. Ivers a leave of absence
|
|
for three months to permit her to do some special scripts for Miss
|
|
Talmadge. At the end of that time she is due back on the Lasky
|
|
lot.[55]
|
|
And:
|
|
Los Angeles, Jan. 30--Mrs. Julia Crawford Ivers, who is filling a
|
|
special writing engagement with the Constance Talmadge unit, by
|
|
arrangement with the Lasky studios, is working overtime these days on
|
|
the adaptation and continuity of her original comedy "Our Fiancee."
|
|
this is to serve for a coming Connie Talmadge, production, having been
|
|
written by Mrs. Ivers expressly for Connie.[56]
|
|
|
|
#68. (89) Prior to Taylor's murder, Mary Miles Minter was not "all washed
|
|
up, a has-been." According to Jesse Lasky, the Minter pictures cost
|
|
$100,000 to produce and grossed $200,000.[57] It's certainly true that
|
|
Minter did not develop into the Pickford-magnitude star that Paramount had
|
|
hoped she would become, but she was still a successful member of Paramount's
|
|
stellar stable at that time.
|
|
|
|
#69. (90) At the First National Bank, Taylor did not deposit $2300 in
|
|
cash. The most reliable press reports state that the deposit was in the form
|
|
of checks, including two $800 paychecks.
|
|
It had been taken for granted by the police, positive statements to
|
|
this effect having been made, that Taylor drew $2500 from the First
|
|
National Bank on January 31 and made a deposit of that sum or of $2350
|
|
on February 1. He was killed on the night of February 1.
|
|
It was disclosed yesterday that he had not withdrawn any
|
|
considerable sum from the bank, at least within two weeks of the date
|
|
of his slaying and that his deposit of that day included four items,
|
|
viz., two checks for $800 each on the Merchants National Bank, one
|
|
check for $600 and one for $150 on the Citizens National.
|
|
The two $800 checks were explained yesterday by Mr. Eyton: they
|
|
were for salary. While the other checks have not been investigated it
|
|
is assumed for the present that they represent dividends Taylor
|
|
received from stock held by him...
|
|
"Mr. Taylor evidently had held a pay check for a week," said Mr.
|
|
Eyton last night, "which accounts for two checks having been
|
|
deposited. I might explain that his contract called for a salary of
|
|
$1200 a week, but when the let-down in the motion picture business
|
|
came he voluntarily offered to accept one-third less than the amount
|
|
he might have collected."[58]
|
|
|
|
#70. (90) According to Mabel Normand's official statement to the D.A.,
|
|
her maid told her Taylor had sent his chauffeur over with a book from
|
|
Parker's (not Fowler's), and had also made a book purchase at Robinsons for
|
|
her to pick up at his place.[59] In her lengthy LIBERTY interview, Mabel
|
|
stated that the two books she picked up from Taylor were ROSA MUNDI and a
|
|
commentary on Nietsche.[60] She also mentioned ROSA MUNDI in an interview
|
|
published in the L. A. EXAMINER.[61] The employees of C. C. Parker's
|
|
Bookstore were interviewed after the murder; they remembered Taylor and his
|
|
purchase, THE HOME BOOK OF VERSE.[62] Clearly this was the book sent to
|
|
Mabel's home by his chauffeur, while the two books from Robinsons were the
|
|
books she picked up at his place. She explicitly denied receiving a volume
|
|
of Freud from Taylor at that time.[63] Where did Freud come from? The
|
|
answer is easy to deduce. In her LIBERTY interview, Mabel says she had her
|
|
volume of Freud with her when she visited Taylor. Mabel's initial press
|
|
interviews, made on the day the body was discovered, did not name the books
|
|
Taylor had given her; but she did mention Taylor's joke when he took her to
|
|
her car and saw the POLICE GAZETTE there--he jokingly contrasted the POLICE
|
|
GAZETTE with the volume of Freud. The reporters naturally assumed that the
|
|
volume of Freud had been just given to her by Taylor, and a few of them
|
|
reported it that way--they were clearly wrong.
|
|
|
|
#71. (90) Taylor did not meet with Berger in his home at 6:15 p.m.
|
|
According to press reports, Taylor met with Berger in her office between
|
|
approximately 2:00 and 4:00 p.m.[64] Taylor and Berger later spoke by
|
|
telephone. The LOS ANGELES EXAMINER interviewed Berger and reported that
|
|
her phone conversation with Taylor took place between 5:30 and 6:30.[65]
|
|
|
|
#72. (90) Many of the events of Taylor's "last day" as described in A
|
|
CAST OF KILLERS, are inaccurate. He did not spend most of the day at the
|
|
studio; he only spent a little time there on that day.[66]
|
|
|
|
#73. (90) It is stated that on the day of his death Taylor took tango
|
|
lessons from a young man at a dance class. But according to the LOS ANGELES
|
|
TIMES, the dance class he attended was at the Payne Dancing Academy, and his
|
|
regular dancing instructor, Mrs. Waybright, gave him his lesson:
|
|
"He was just brushing up on some of the old steps," Mrs. Waybright
|
|
stated last night. "He had always taken private lessons. His previous
|
|
lesson was taken on the preceding Monday night. On Wednesday night
|
|
[Feb. 1] I noticed nothing unusual about his actions. He was as
|
|
jolly, though quiet and reticent to talk, as on his preceding visits.
|
|
He never discussed his personal affairs with me while we danced. We
|
|
only talked of his progress in dancing. Had there been any worry on
|
|
his mind on his last visit I would have noticed it.
|
|
"He had completed one course, and before his departure purchased a
|
|
new set of tickets. He said he wanted to take up a tango step the
|
|
following evening, which would have been Thursday. He added that he
|
|
possibly would be sent on location Thursday, and that if he did not
|
|
appear that evening he would surely come back on Friday."[67]
|
|
|
|
#74. (100) Taylor's last production was not "The Top of New York." "The
|
|
Green Temptation" was the last film Taylor made, even though "The Top of New
|
|
York" was released to theaters last.[68]
|
|
|
|
#75. (107) It is stated that when D. W. Griffith took his troupe of
|
|
Biograph film players to California he left Mabel Normand behind in New
|
|
York. On the contrary, the filmography in MABEL NORMAND: A SOURCE BOOK TO
|
|
HER LIFE AND FILMS pp. 287-289, shows that Mabel indeed accompanied them to
|
|
California. The biography of Mabel Normand written in 1929 by Harry Carr
|
|
also stated that Mabel went to California with Biograph.[69]
|
|
|
|
#76. (108) May "Busch," not May "Bush."
|
|
|
|
#77. (108) Mabel Normand had already been working for Goldwyn for over a
|
|
year when "Mickey" was released in August 1918. She already was a "full-
|
|
fledged star," though "Mickey" was indeed her most successful film.
|
|
|
|
#78. (109) Mabel Normand never went to Europe during her Goldwyn years;
|
|
her first European trip took place after Taylor's murder.[70] No fan
|
|
magazines or newspapers during her Goldwyn years reported that she was in
|
|
Europe.
|
|
|
|
#79. (109) It is stated that "Molly O", Mabel Normand's 1921 film, was a
|
|
disaster at the box office. But in Sennett's autobiography he states that
|
|
the film was financially successful.[71] Contemporary newspaper reports
|
|
indicated that the film played for six weeks in Los Angeles, reportedly
|
|
attracting 100,000 patrons during that time.[72] Cinema historian John Kobal
|
|
referred to "Molly O" as Mabel's "last great success."[73]
|
|
|
|
#80. (110) It is stated that Normand and Cody kept separate residences
|
|
from the time they were married in 1926 until her death in 1930. But in
|
|
December 1927 it was announced that they would no longer keep separate
|
|
residences, but would live together in Mabel's house in Beverly Hills.[74]
|
|
|
|
#81. (111) It is implied that Mabel Normand's death was largely caused by
|
|
narcotics. But the material in MABEL (pp. 218-230) shows that she truly
|
|
died of tuberculosis, and that it was a lingering, horrible death. After
|
|
her death, one press item stated: "Miss Normand died at the Pottinger
|
|
sanitarium, Monrovia, early Saturday morning, after waging a losing battle
|
|
for over a year against tuberculosis...Miss Normand had wasted away until
|
|
she weighed scarcely 50 pounds at the time of her death."[75]
|
|
|
|
#82. (114) None of the newspapers published in the week after the murder
|
|
reported that Mabel had been searching for her letters at the bungalow when
|
|
the police arrived at the murder scene. Those fanciful reports came later.
|
|
|
|
#83. (116) In her official statement to the district attorney, Mabel
|
|
stated that did not know who was on the phone with Taylor when she arrived:
|
|
"No, I don't know to whom he was talking."[76] The press also indicated that
|
|
she did not know to whom Taylor had been talking.[77] There was one solitary
|
|
early interview which quoted her as stating it was Berger, but that
|
|
statement is clearly "enhanced." Peavey is also quoted in that same paper
|
|
as stating that Berger had telephoned before Mabel's arrival, and the
|
|
reporter had obviously interpolated the information into Mabel's interview,
|
|
since the reporters present from the other papers made no mention of it.
|
|
The LOS ANGELES EXAMINER interviewed Berger and reported that her phone
|
|
conversation with Taylor took place between 5:30 and 6:30.[78] Antonio
|
|
Moreno's statement indicated his phone call with Taylor took place at 7:00,
|
|
which is when Mabel arrived. So the press evidence indicates Taylor was
|
|
talking with Moreno, not Berger, when Mabel arrived. Ed King also stated
|
|
the call was with Moreno.[79]
|
|
|
|
#84. (116) Taylor's alleged premonition did appear in one early press
|
|
report, but the statement was clearly fabricated. As soon as the report
|
|
appeared, Mabel gave an interview explicitly denying it:
|
|
"I wish to deny also the statement attributed to me that Mr. Taylor
|
|
had told me of premonition of his death," added Miss Normand. "I
|
|
never heard him mention any fear for his life or fear of any person or
|
|
persons."[80]
|
|
|
|
#85. (117) Sennett was not with Mabel Normand on the morning after the
|
|
murder. He sent his studio manager, John Waldron to handle the
|
|
situation.[81] Sennett went into seclusion and did not emerge in public for two weeks.
|
|
|
|
#86. (118) Regarding Mabel Normand's injuries in 1915, A CAST OF KILLERS
|
|
reportedly quotes Minta Durfee as stating that Mabel was not injured by a
|
|
vase thrown by Mae Busch, but rather by jumping off a pier. There were a
|
|
number of different published accounts of Mabel's injuries. That Mabel was
|
|
injured by the thrown vase was elsewhere directly asserted several times by
|
|
Minta Durfee herself, who once stated:
|
|
...the vase that was over the fireplace, suddenly went flying through
|
|
the room, down the corridor, right to Mabel's forehead. It was a direct
|
|
hit, but Mabel, before she fell to the floor, was able to see the person
|
|
who threw it with such deadly accuracy: a lady in a flimsy black
|
|
negligee--Mae Busch.[82]
|
|
Two 1922 accounts of Mabel's injuries were previously published in
|
|
TAYLOROLOGY. In Wallace Smith's account, Mabel found Mack with a woman and
|
|
another couple; Mabel attacked Mack, and the other man broke a beer bottle
|
|
over Mabel's head.[83] In Ed Roberts' account, Mabel attacked Mae; during
|
|
the catfight Mae gained the upper hand and bashed Mabel's head repeatedly
|
|
against a wooden window casing.[84] The pier-jumping account seems to have
|
|
originated from Adela Rogers St. Johns.[85]
|
|
|
|
#87. (122) It is stated that Claire Windsor went with Taylor to the
|
|
Ambassador Hotel, where they met Antonio Moreno and James Kirkwood, on the
|
|
Saturday before Taylor's death. As mentioned above, Kirkwood was not even
|
|
in the U.S.A. at that time. Also, in interviews given shortly after the
|
|
murder, Claire Windsor stated that she had only been out with Taylor this
|
|
once, and she and Moreno both stated that this evening at the Ambassador
|
|
hotel took place on the previous Thursday, not Saturday.[86] A CAST OF
|
|
KILLERS indicates that the evening concluded with Taylor and Moreno going
|
|
off together, and Claire Windsor had to get a ride home with Mabel. But in
|
|
interviews given after the murder Moreno stated that he saw Taylor and
|
|
Claire Windsor leave the hotel together[87], and other interviews stated that
|
|
Moreno had escorted Betty Francisco to and from this event.[88] Moreno did
|
|
state that he had indeed been with Taylor on that Saturday, in the L. A.
|
|
Athletic Club, along with Arthur Hoyt and Capt. Robertson; but Moreno stated
|
|
that Taylor, Hoyt and Robertson left together without him because Moreno had
|
|
a dinner engagement elsewhere.[89] So there are many discrepancies here when
|
|
comparing A CAST OF KILLERS with the statements made by Claire Windsor,
|
|
Antonio Moreno, and Betty Francisco a few days after the murder.
|
|
|
|
#88. (122) Mary Miles Minter played in "The Littlest Rebel" in Chicago in
|
|
1911 and 1912, but not in 1914.
|
|
|
|
#89. (128) It is stated that in 1914, at the age of 11, Mary Miles Minter
|
|
(Juliet Reilly) assumed the identity of the real Mary Miles Minter, who had
|
|
died eight years earlier at the age of eight, so that she could pass herself
|
|
off as being 16 years old and thus not get in trouble with child labor laws
|
|
in Chicago. But in a 1923 interview, Minter says this happened several
|
|
years earlier:
|
|
"When I was eight years old I was passed off for 16, twice my age,
|
|
and dressed as a midget, with high heels and long skirts, so that I
|
|
could play the stellar role of 'The Littlest Rebel' at the Chicago Opera
|
|
house. That was because the state law of Illinois prohibited children
|
|
under 16 years of age from appearing as professional performers."[90]
|
|
So which is correct? Did this happen when Minter was eight, or when she was
|
|
11? Both accounts agree that she was passed off for 16, so everything
|
|
depends on when the real Mary Miles Minter died. One month after the birth
|
|
of Juliet Reilly in April 1902, the SHREVEPORT TIMES reported the following:
|
|
Mansfield, La., May 22--Mary, the 8-year-old daughter of Mr. Fayette
|
|
Minter, of Eastpoint, was buried by the side of her mother here this
|
|
morning. The remains were accompanied by Mr. Minter, Mr. W. F.
|
|
Scarbrough and Mr. Wm. Gray...
|
|
Mesdames Julia Miles and J. Homer Reilly, of Shreveport, were
|
|
visitors this morning.[91]
|
|
As this item indicates that the real (deceased) Mary Miles Minter was eight
|
|
years older than Juliet Reilly, then if Juliet Reilly assumed the identity
|
|
of Mary Miles Minter at the age of eight that would indeed make her appear
|
|
to be legally 16. So Minter's version, pretending to be 16 at age eight, is
|
|
supported by this documentary evidence. Since Charlotte Shelby was
|
|
obviously in town to attend the funeral that morning, it's no wonder that
|
|
the identity switch (Juliet Reilly to Mary Miles Minter) occurred to her
|
|
eight years later. However, Minter's appearance in "The Littlest Rebel" at
|
|
the Chicago Opera House actually took place in 1911, when Minter was 9 years
|
|
old.[92]
|
|
|
|
#90. (129) There were many divergent accounts of how and when Taylor and
|
|
Minter first met. James Kirkwood later stated he introduced them to each
|
|
other on the American lot.[93] There were a number of social events where
|
|
Taylor and Minter were both present, such as the Motion Picture Directors
|
|
Association Thanksgiving Ball in 1916.[94] But from the written statement
|
|
made by Minter in August 1923 it is clear that she did not remember any
|
|
meetings which had taken place before the filming of ANNE OF GREEN GABLES in
|
|
1919: "William Desmond Taylor came into my life when I was 17 years of
|
|
age..."[95] (Minter turned 17 in April 1919.)
|
|
|
|
#91. (129-30) Regarding Minter's contract with American Film, it is
|
|
stated that Charlotte Shelby got out of the contract due to a legal
|
|
loophole, and then signed with Paramount. But the material in TAYLOROLOGY 9
|
|
indicates that although Minter did not work during the last two months of
|
|
her final two-year contract with American Film, which was signed in April
|
|
1917, that contract was indeed completed before she signed with Realart on
|
|
June 17, 1919.
|
|
|
|
#92. (130) It is stated that the Shelby family moved from the home on
|
|
Fremont to the home on Hobart, and then later to the home at 7th & New
|
|
Hampshire (known as Casa Margarita). But this sequence is wrong. The
|
|
family moved into the Mathewson house on Fremont in late 1919, signing an 18-
|
|
month lease.[96] The lease was not completed because the Mathewson house was
|
|
sold in late 1920, so the Shelby family spent a few months at the Ambassador
|
|
hotel. Then they moved to Casa Margarita (which was known as the Duque
|
|
house at the time they moved in) in April 1921[97]. They did not move into
|
|
the house on Hobart until Fall 1921--they were there from Fall 1921 to
|
|
Spring 1922 while renovation work was underway at Casa Margarita.[98]
|
|
|
|
#93. (130) It is stated that the home at 2039 North Hobart was "down the
|
|
road from Mabel Normand." But Mabel Normand lived at 3089 West Seventh
|
|
Street, at the corner of 7th and Vermont, which was not down the road from
|
|
the home on Hobart.[99] Mabel Normand lived down the road from Casa
|
|
Margarita, not the home on Hobart.
|
|
|
|
#94. (131) It is stated that Mary's final film contract was terminated on
|
|
April 25, 1923. But in her lawsuit filed against her mother, it was stated
|
|
that Mary's contract ended on January 27, 1923.[100]
|
|
|
|
#95. (131) It is stated that "Paramount paid off the rest of her contract
|
|
for $350,000..." That figure does not seem credible. Contemporary press
|
|
items stated nothing about Minter's contract being "paid off", only that the
|
|
30-month contract had been completed and would not be renewed.[101] Minter's
|
|
original contract was for 30 months, 20 films, $1,300,000. The 30 months
|
|
had been fully completed, and she had done 18 films. There were only two
|
|
films still due on the original contract when it was terminated; why would
|
|
they have paid $350,000 (over 25% of the total contract) to pay off the last
|
|
two films (10% of the total contract)? Another indication that the $350,000
|
|
figure is unreasonable is in the lawsuit filed against her mother, stating
|
|
that between April 1, 1920 (when she turned 18) and January 23, 1923 (when
|
|
the contract terminated) Shelby had received $700,000 of Minter's money from
|
|
the studio.
|
|
|
|
#96. (131) It is stated that Carl Stockdale had starred in one of Mary's
|
|
early Paramount pictures. Stockdale had played supporting roles in several
|
|
of Mary's movies made for American Film, but was not in any of her Paramount
|
|
films.
|
|
|
|
#97. (131) Margaret died in 1939, not 1937. The date is correctly given
|
|
later in the book.
|
|
|
|
#98. (131) It is stated that Mary Miles Minter made six more pictures
|
|
after the Taylor murder. But Minter only made four more pictures after the
|
|
murder: "South of Suva," "Drums of Fate," "The Cowboy and the Lady," and
|
|
"The Trail of the Lonesome Pine." All her other pictures had been completed
|
|
before the murder.
|
|
|
|
#99. (136) The AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTE CATALOG, FEATURE FILMS: 1911-1920,
|
|
does not indicate that Florence Vidor appeared in any films with Mary Miles
|
|
Minter.
|
|
|
|
#100. (142) In 1937, Faith MacLean "partially identified" Carl Stockdale
|
|
as having been the person she saw leaving Taylor's home after the shot was
|
|
fired.[102] This directly contradicts the report that she was certain the
|
|
person was Charlotte Shelby.
|
|
|
|
#101. (144) Ike St. Johns was secretary and campaign manager for Mayor
|
|
Meredith Snyder, but Snyder lost his bid for re-election in 1921. At the
|
|
time of the Taylor murder, George Cryer was Mayor. A few months prior to
|
|
the murder, Ike St. Johns was reportedly called as a Grand Jury witness to
|
|
testify about political corruption in the Snyder administration.[103] Ike St.
|
|
Johns was not working for the Mayor's office at the time of the murder.
|
|
|
|
#102. (Photo insert) The photograph identified as the coroner's
|
|
photograph of Taylor is not Taylor--no coroner's photograph of Taylor was
|
|
taken. That photograph is actually the suicide victim in Connecticut who
|
|
was at one time rumored to be Sands. On March 7, 1922 the HARTFORD COURANT
|
|
printed this very same photo and said it was the coroner's photo of the
|
|
local suicide victim. There was some speculation that the unidentified
|
|
victim might be Sands, and the next day the COURANT reported that a copy of
|
|
the photo was being sent to the Los Angeles authorities to determine whether
|
|
or not the individual was indeed Sands. So although this photo was in the
|
|
police file of the Taylor case, it is not a photo of Taylor.
|
|
|
|
#103. (Photo insert) Taylor's funeral was held on February 7, 1922, not
|
|
February 8, as any contemporary newspaper accounts will verify.
|
|
|
|
#104. (Photo insert) The "I love you" letter shown in A CAST OF KILLERS
|
|
is a forgery. A photograph of the genuine letter was printed in the press
|
|
shortly after the murder; the wording is the same, but the monogram, layout
|
|
and handwriting is different.[104] The handwriting on the real letter is
|
|
identical with Minter's handwriting which appears on the photograph of hers
|
|
which was found in Taylor's bungalow.[105]
|
|
|
|
#105. Photo insert) The photograph identified as Faith MacLean is not
|
|
Faith MacLean, but rather a photo of Kathlyn Williams (Mrs. Charles Eyton)--
|
|
she signed Taylor's death certificate identifying the body.[106]
|
|
|
|
#106. (Photo insert) The woman identified as Mary Miles Minter, in the
|
|
film still with King Vidor, is not Minter.
|
|
|
|
#107. (Photo insert) One photo is identified as "William Desmond Taylor
|
|
and Mary Pickford, 1919," but according to Robert Birchard the man in the
|
|
photo is not Taylor--this was a publicity photo taken for the film "Amarilly
|
|
of Clothesline Alley," and the man was a Canadian officer. That film was
|
|
made and released in 1918, before Taylor even entered the British (not
|
|
Canadian) army. Also, the man in the picture has a mustache, and no
|
|
accounts indicated Taylor ever grew a mustache during his Army years, or
|
|
during the years of his film career.
|
|
|
|
#108. (Photo insert) One photograph of the Shelby-Minter family is
|
|
identified as having been taken at Casa de Margarita "c. 1919," but the
|
|
family did not move into Casa de Margarita until April 1921.[107] In 1919 the
|
|
family lived in Santa Barbara (while her contract with American Film was
|
|
concluding), then on Fifth Avenue in New York (while competing producers
|
|
were trying to outbid each other for a contract with Minter), and, at year's
|
|
end, in the Mathewson house at 56 Fremont in Los Angeles.
|
|
|
|
#109. (Photo insert) The photograph identified as "Sands" is actually
|
|
Harry Fellows. Sands was NEVER Taylor's chauffeur, he was Taylor's
|
|
valet/cook. The photograph on the dust jacket was indeed published and
|
|
erroneously identified as Sands, but the next day:
|
|
The photograph of Taylor and a man thought to be Edward F. Sands
|
|
which appeared in yesterday's EXAMINER was identified as that of Harry
|
|
Fellows in company with the slain director. Fellows, an assistant
|
|
director, declared the picture was taken some time ago.[108]
|
|
Harry Fellows was Taylor's chauffeur before becoming his assistant director.
|
|
When Taylor bought his new expensive McFarlan late in 1920, several photos
|
|
were taken with Taylor in the car, and a few of them had Harry Fellows
|
|
behind the wheel. (Harry Fellows should not be confused with his brother,
|
|
Howard Fellows, who was chauffeur at the time of Taylor's death.)[109]
|
|
|
|
#110. (149, 153) Mary Miles Minter described a gas station robbery in
|
|
Taylor's neighborhood by three youths on the night Taylor was killed; the
|
|
book implies no such robbery actually took place. Although not as close as
|
|
Mary claimed, the following reported robbery was still within walking
|
|
distance of Taylor's residence:
|
|
[After giving the details of a robbery that took place at 10 p.m.
|
|
on the night of the murder] ...Earlier in the evening...three bandits
|
|
held up an oil filling station at 601 South Catalina Street and robbed
|
|
William Barer, the manager, of $100.[110]
|
|
|
|
#111. (164) It is stated that published reports indicated Taylor's front
|
|
door was unlocked when Peavey arrived. On the contrary, the early press
|
|
reports stated: "The door, which has a night latch, was locked from the
|
|
outside, but the latch was set so that no key was necessary to accomplish
|
|
this."[111]
|
|
|
|
#112. (164) The book indicates that as soon as Peavey discovered the
|
|
body, the landlord was next to enter, followed immediately by Douglas
|
|
MacLean. But in Douglas MacLean's official statement, he said that he was
|
|
in bed when he heard Peavey yelling that Taylor was dead. MacLean said he
|
|
got dressed first and then went to Taylor's house; when he got there the
|
|
house was already full of people:
|
|
"In the morning I heard someone screaming in the court. At first
|
|
it was just a lot of jumbled noise. We sat bolt upright in bed and
|
|
listened...I hurried into my clothes and went over to Mr. Taylor's
|
|
house. It was full of people."[112]
|
|
|
|
#113. (164) Douglas MacLean did not live in the bungalow directly
|
|
opposite Taylor. He lived in #406-B, which was the bungalow at right angles
|
|
to Taylor's. MacLean's bungalow faced Alvarado.[113] The book's diagram is
|
|
likewise in error regarding the location of the MacLean residence.
|
|
|
|
#114. (164) The book reports that Jessurum [sic] and MacLean stated to
|
|
the police that Taylor's body was found with one arm extended--the body was
|
|
not "laid out." But Jessurun later returned to the scene with Woolwine and
|
|
a posed photo was taken in the exact position he purportedly first saw the
|
|
body. Both arms were at Taylor's sides.[114] Douglas MacLean stated, in his
|
|
own official statement:
|
|
"...He was lying flat on his back, his feet separated a little, his
|
|
hands at his side, perfectly flat on his back. I said to Mrs.
|
|
MacLean, later on, 'He looked just like a dummy in a department store,
|
|
so perfect, so immaculate.'"[115]
|
|
|
|
#115. (165) Neal Harrington is identified as a "resident of a building
|
|
across the street," but press items indicated that Harrington was staying
|
|
with Verne Dumas in apartment 408-A of Taylor's apartment complex.[116]
|
|
|
|
#116. (167) It is stated that after the first policeman (Ziegler) arrived
|
|
at the death scene at 8:00 a.m., no reporters were allowed inside Taylor's
|
|
home. But in his autobiography, reporter Frank Bartholomew of United Press
|
|
states he arrived at the scene the same time as the deputy coroner and that
|
|
"roaming the house," Bartholomew went upstairs and personally saw the
|
|
nightgown.[117]
|
|
|
|
#117. (168) The statement that Taylor had keys which fit no known locks
|
|
did not originate from the police but from the person in charge of
|
|
administering Taylor's estate:
|
|
In an effort to locate William Desmond Taylor's lost will Public
|
|
Administrator Frank Bryson Friday began a search of safety deposit
|
|
boxes in Los Angeles' 100 banks and bank branches. "I have some of
|
|
Taylor's keys," Bryson said, "but I don't know what they fit." The
|
|
keys were tried out on several safety deposit boxes in downtown banks
|
|
Thursday but found not to fit.[118]
|
|
|
|
#118. (168) The coroner's report states that the bullet
|
|
"...passed out of the chest on the right side of the middle line,
|
|
posterior to the right collar bone [behind the collar bone], and
|
|
entered the tissues of the neck..."[119]
|
|
The bullet did not actually strike the collar bone.
|
|
|
|
#119. (169) By the time Mary arrived, the "EXTRA" newspapers may have
|
|
indeed been on the streets. A telegram had been sent at 10:08 a.m. which
|
|
referred to newspaper accounts of the killing.[120] Mary later stated it was
|
|
around 11:00 a.m. when she was notified by her mother that Taylor had been
|
|
killed.[121]
|
|
|
|
#120. (169) It is stated that Captain Adams allowed Mary Miles Minter to
|
|
enter Taylor's bungalow when she arrived at the murder scene on the morning
|
|
Taylor's body was found. But Peavey's official statement indicates Mary did
|
|
not go inside.[122] In Mary's own statements to the press, she also makes no
|
|
mention of going inside the building--as soon as she learns Taylor's body
|
|
has already been taken to the undertakers she immediately leaves and goes
|
|
there.[123]
|
|
|
|
#121. (169) Minter's presence at the bungalow that morning was indeed
|
|
reported in several local papers and by several wire services. The LOS
|
|
ANGELES RECORD even quoted her comments at the scene:
|
|
Tears streaming down her pretty face, Mary Miles Minter, famous
|
|
motion picture star, hurried to the door of the Taylor bungalow at
|
|
noon today and asked brokenly:
|
|
"It isn't true, is it?"
|
|
"Taylor is dead," said Detective Sergeant H. J. Wallis.
|
|
"Oh, my God, I can't believe it," Miss Minter cried with a gesture
|
|
of despair.
|
|
She turned in her grief to her mother [grandmother], who had
|
|
accompanied her to the bungalow court in her automobile.
|
|
"And I saw him only yesterday," she said. "His car passed mine at
|
|
Seventh and Alvarado--it was the first time I knew it was gray."
|
|
...The star cried and offered to do anything she could to aid
|
|
police in solving the mystery.[124]
|
|
|
|
#122. (170) The existence of the blonde hairs found on Taylor was
|
|
initially kept quiet by the police. But in 1926 the briefcase belonging to
|
|
District Attorney Asa Keyes was stolen by Hearst reporters, and the
|
|
existence of the hairs became widespread public knowledge. The banner
|
|
headline from the LOS ANGELES EXAMINER on March 26, 1926 was: BLONDE HAIRS
|
|
CLEW IN TAYLOR CASE.[125] Additional publicity was given to the blonde hairs
|
|
in 1930 by Edward King.[126]
|
|
|
|
#123. (173) The rumor that the police found a closet full of women's
|
|
underwear did not originate from the studios. The rumor grew from
|
|
statements made by Earl Tiffany and Henry Peavey:
|
|
From former employees of Mr. Taylor it was learned that silken
|
|
things unknown in a man's wardrobe were among the effects of Mr.
|
|
Taylor. That the police found evidence of this was learned for the
|
|
first time yesterday, following the stories related by two former
|
|
employees.
|
|
Henry Peavey, the houseman who discovered the body last Thursday
|
|
morning, declared he had seen at least one pink silk nightgown there.
|
|
In connection with this, it also was learned yesterday how Edward
|
|
F. Sands, former secretary, accused robber and forger and now being
|
|
sought as a material witness in the murder case, spied on his employer
|
|
while working for Mr. Taylor.
|
|
Sands related his observations to Earl Tiffany, former chauffeur
|
|
for Mr. Taylor, so Mr. Tiffany says. He observed silken things of
|
|
pink hue in the upstairs rooms of the expensively appointed apartment.
|
|
His curiosity was aroused.
|
|
So Sands folded the garments in a trick manner, according to the
|
|
story related by Mr. Tiffany, who was employed at the same time as was
|
|
Sands. The result of the servant's trap were that became convinced
|
|
the garments were not merely kept there for sentimental reasons. He
|
|
paid particular attention to the visitors to the Taylor home, it was
|
|
declared, and drew his own conclusion.
|
|
Peavey stated last night he remembered seeing at least one pink
|
|
nightgown.[127]
|
|
The stories of a supposed closet full of women's lingerie did not come until
|
|
many years later when sensationalist publications sought to "spice up" this
|
|
original item.
|
|
|
|
#124. (175) Denis Deane Tanner had indeed been an employee of Taylor's.
|
|
But after Taylor deserted his wife, Denis went to work for another store
|
|
across town.[128]
|
|
|
|
#125. (175) It is stated that Taylor was best man at the wedding of Denis
|
|
and Ada Tanner in 1907. But in her statements to the press, Ada said that
|
|
the first time she met Taylor was after the birth of her first child in
|
|
1908.[129]
|
|
|
|
#126. (176) The police did not feel obliged to comment on all the wild
|
|
stories which were appearing in print after the murder. But they did
|
|
discredit the theory that Sands and Denis were the same person:
|
|
Detectives ridiculed a theory advanced today that Sands may have
|
|
been Dennis Tanner... Tanner, if alive, would be considerably more
|
|
than 40, it was said, while Sands' age is 25.[130]
|
|
And years later, when the theory resurfaced, District Attorney Buron Fitts
|
|
stated:
|
|
"...the [finger]prints of [Denis] Deane-Tanner and Sands are
|
|
definitely of two different men."[131]
|
|
The handwriting of Sands and Denis Tanner were also compared and found to be
|
|
totally different.[132]
|
|
|
|
#127. (181) No early published accounts made any statement to the effect
|
|
that Taylor had met with Berger in his bungalow on the day he was killed.
|
|
|
|
#128. (177) The estimate of Taylor's 1922 financial worth as $1.5 million
|
|
(adjusted for inflation to 1967) seems quite unrealistic. The total value
|
|
of Taylor's estate, as inherited by his daughter (his sole heir) was
|
|
$18,733.[133]
|
|
|
|
#129. (179) It is stated that on the last day of his life, February 1,
|
|
Taylor ordered flowers for both Mary Miles Minter and Mabel Normand. But
|
|
according to the probate papers, Taylor's last order with his regular
|
|
florist, S. Murata & Company, was placed on January 31.
|
|
|
|
#130. (181) Berger met with Taylor at her office in the AFTERNOON, when
|
|
Shelby reportedly called looking for Mary. Mary claimed to have been home
|
|
reading a book in the EVENING. These are two different periods of time.
|
|
Taylor reportedly left Berger's office around 4:00 p.m.[134]
|
|
|
|
#131. (184) The question is raised as to why, in the year following the
|
|
murder, Minter was only questioned once. Yet, earlier in A CAST OF KILLERS
|
|
on p. 169 it is stated that she was questioned at the scene by Captain Adams
|
|
who indicated she had an acceptable alibi for her whereabouts the previous
|
|
evening. Press reports also indicated she was questioned again on
|
|
February 4:
|
|
Late last night Detective Captain Adams, after a three hours
|
|
conference with Mary Miles Minter, issued an official statement in
|
|
which he said, "Detective Sergeants Cato and Cahill, together with
|
|
myself, interviewed Miss Minter. We talked with her several hours
|
|
regarding her relations with Taylor. We are absolutely satisfied that
|
|
Miss Minter knows nothing that will throw any light at all on this
|
|
mystery nor do we believe that she is even remotely connected with the
|
|
case."[135]
|
|
It was also reported that detectives King and Winn questioned Minter.[136] So
|
|
although her session with William Doran on February 7 was the only time a
|
|
stenographer took Minter's statement verbatim, there were certainly other
|
|
instances when she was questioned by the investigators.
|
|
|
|
#132. (183-4) It is implied that no attempt was made to question
|
|
Charlotte Shelby in the year following the murder. On the contrary,
|
|
Detectives King and Winn attempted to question her, but she refused to talk
|
|
to them:
|
|
After questioning Miss Minter, we went to the home of her mother,
|
|
Mrs. Charlotte Shelby, to question her regarding any knowledge she
|
|
might have of the mystery.
|
|
Mrs. Shelby was preparing to leave for New York on the 6:00 o'clock
|
|
train. When I requested an interview, she came to the door, fastening
|
|
her dress. She informed me coldly that her attorneys, Mr. Mott and Mr.
|
|
Cassill, were in the house for the purpose of answering questions, and
|
|
that she was in too much of a hurry to reach New York to devote any
|
|
time to an investigation about which she knew nothing.[137]
|
|
|
|
#133. (184) In 1926 Charlotte Shelby was not "declared innocent without a
|
|
trial" and "officially exonerated from blame." In 1929, Shelby issued a
|
|
written statement recalling the 1926 meeting with Keyes:
|
|
"...My attorney and I invited his questioning me, thereupon
|
|
demanding a statement vindicating me. His statement was promised
|
|
within three days, but I was unable to get this satisfaction."[138]
|
|
And Keyes, referring to the 1926 episode, replied:
|
|
"I exonerated no one in the case and refused to do so until the
|
|
guilty person was arrested and prosecuted."[139]
|
|
|
|
#134. (184) The book states that the police knew more about Taylor and
|
|
Minter's relationship than even the most muckraking of journalists had
|
|
suspected. But the "muckraking journals" suspected and implied that Taylor
|
|
and Minter had an extremely sexual relationship (which the presence of the
|
|
purportedly initialed nightgown implied). If, as indicated in the book, the
|
|
police had concluded Taylor and Minter had not made love, than this was less
|
|
(not more) than the "muckraking journals" suspected.
|
|
|
|
#135. (187) Charlotte Whitney reportedly states that she had never been
|
|
questioned by investigators on the case prior to 1925. Yet the LOS ANGELES
|
|
TIMES did report that she had indeed been questioned shortly after the
|
|
murder.[140]
|
|
|
|
#136. (188) Keyes did not wait four months after Charlotte Whitney's
|
|
testimony before "deciding" to question Shelby. Shelby went to Louisiana
|
|
for a court case (a relative was contesting the will of Shelby's mother,
|
|
Julia Miles)[141] and then to New York; as soon as she returned to Los
|
|
Angeles, Keyes did question her. Also, it is natural that Keyes would want
|
|
to question Minter--who was potentially a star witness--prior to questioning
|
|
Shelby; but Minter was in New York at that time, so a trip to New York had
|
|
to be made in order for Keyes to first question Minter.
|
|
|
|
#137. (192) According to newspaper reports there were over 300 written
|
|
confessions received within five weeks of the murder, not one year.[142]
|
|
These press items were obviously enhanced--a much more plausible report
|
|
stated that the 300 figure included letters from people who "know" who the
|
|
murderer is; in other words, the 300 figure included tips, hunches and
|
|
purported visions by psychics.[143] In his 1930 article detective Ed King
|
|
stated that about a dozen persons had confessed to the murder.[144]
|
|
|
|
#138. (213) Cahill reportedly states that every time Mabel told her story
|
|
of that evening she said that Taylor had "received" the telephone call; but
|
|
in her official statement to the D.A. she makes no mention of whether Taylor
|
|
made the call or received it--she only states that Taylor was talking on the
|
|
phone when she arrived.[145] If Taylor was talking to Moreno, then the call
|
|
was "made" and not "received," as Taylor was returning Moreno's earlier
|
|
call.
|
|
|
|
#139. (213) Cahill reportedly states that it was very strange for
|
|
Taylor's door to have been open when Mabel arrived; it was far too cold to
|
|
have the door open. But in an interview Mabel stated:
|
|
"A peculiarity the director had was that he never closed his front
|
|
door during the day and seldom at night..."[146]
|
|
Taylor's favorite sports were golf, hunting and camping; he may have had a
|
|
touch of claustrophobia. In any event, it was Taylor's normal behavior to
|
|
have his door open.
|
|
|
|
#140. (214) Mary Miles Minter was not present at Taylor's inquest; she
|
|
was in seclusion.
|
|
|
|
#141. (216) The book implies that Eyton planted the nightgown in Taylor's
|
|
bedroom on the morning the body was found in order to make the public
|
|
believe that Taylor was quite a ladies' man. Yet reportedly Eyton, one of
|
|
the few to actually see the nightgown, tried to discredit it:
|
|
[from an interview with Paramount executive Frank A. Garbutt]
|
|
"Take the pink nightgown for example. I have talked to Charles
|
|
Eyton about it. He told me that he saw the nightgown at the house
|
|
after the murder. He said it was in a box which he opened while going
|
|
through Taylor's effects. He said that he barely glanced at the
|
|
garment, but the thought flashed through his mind that it was
|
|
something that Taylor had probably bought for his daughter."[147]
|
|
And Peavey told reporters that the nightgown had been there earlier:
|
|
Peavey contributed additional information regarding the night
|
|
dress. When he entered Taylor's employ some six months ago, he said,
|
|
he straightway began to put his master's room in order. Among several
|
|
articles lying around he noticed a small flat green box; he found that
|
|
it contain a pink silk garment--a woman's. It had a lace edging. He
|
|
placed this in one of the bureau drawers, where it remained surviving
|
|
even the two burglarious raids of Sands, his predecessor as Taylor's
|
|
valet.[148]
|
|
|
|
#142. (216) Suppose the nightgown did have the "MMM" initials on it--how
|
|
could it possibly have been planted by the studio? There was only a half
|
|
hour between the time the body was discovered by Peavey and the time the
|
|
police arrived. Someone in a position of authority like Eyton would have
|
|
had to learn about the death, obtain a nightgown, have initials embroidered
|
|
on it, go to the murder scene, and plant the nightgown, all within a half-
|
|
hour. The top priority of the studio employees was to remove damaging items
|
|
from the murder scene (correspondence, liquor, etc.) before the police
|
|
arrived. There was no time to obtain, initialize, and plant a nightgown.
|
|
|
|
#143. (219) The book concludes that "obviously" there never was a
|
|
mysterious doctor who stated Taylor died of a stomach hemorrhage. But Eyton
|
|
told of the doctor, under oath, at the inquest; he volunteered the
|
|
information, it was not given in response to a question. It is very
|
|
doubtful that he would perjure himself unless he were asked a specific
|
|
question to which he felt compelled to lie. Also, the doctor was mentioned
|
|
in the official statement made by Douglas MacLean.[149] Naturally, once the
|
|
doctor later learned of his mistaken diagnosis, he would not be anxious to
|
|
step forward and identify himself as the incompetent doctor at the scene.
|
|
|
|
#144. (219) It is stated that Cato was totally convinced shortly after
|
|
the murder that Sands had nothing to do with Taylor's killing. Yet in the
|
|
1929/30 flare-up of the case, the contrary was reported:
|
|
Captain Ray Cato, chief of the police homicide squad said yesterday
|
|
that he still believed Sands was the murderer of Taylor.[150]
|
|
and two days later
|
|
...Captain E. Ray Cato, who was one of the investigators, likewise
|
|
stated that all the police records point more strongly to Sands as the
|
|
killer than to any other person.[151]
|
|
|
|
#145. (219-20) The press evidence leads to the conclusion that the
|
|
suicide in Connecticut was not Sands. In 1926, Keyes took a coast-to-coast
|
|
trip investigating several leads on the case. Upon his return it was
|
|
reported:
|
|
...[Keyes] visited Bridgeport, Conn., where police told him that
|
|
three years ago Captain Jim Bean of the Los Angeles police department
|
|
had investigated the death of a man there thought at one time to have
|
|
been Edward F. Sands, former valet to Taylor, and the suspected
|
|
slayer. Bean at that time learned for certain that the man buried in
|
|
Bridgeport was not Sands, and made a formal report.[152]
|
|
|
|
#146. (231) Chapter 32 of A CAST OF KILLERS, supposedly detailing the
|
|
meeting between Vidor and Hopkins, is worded very strangely. During the
|
|
meeting, "Vidor" launches a defamatory attack on Taylor's character and,
|
|
from his conversation with Hopkins, Vidor supposedly concludes that:
|
|
(a) Taylor was homosexual; (b) Taylor liked to molest young boys; (c) the
|
|
room which Taylor rented for Peavey is where Taylor would molest the boys;
|
|
(d) Peavey would solicit the young boys for Taylor; (e) Peavey's recent
|
|
arrest in Westlake Park was for one such solicitation for Taylor. And yet
|
|
Hopkins is quoted as saying NONE of that! "Vidor" pulls each theory out of
|
|
the air and "Hopkins responded with an affirmative silence." "Hopkins
|
|
raised his glass in salute." etc. All the defamatory confirmation is in
|
|
"Vidor's" own head! (Kirkpatrick doesn't even have "Hopkins" nodding in
|
|
agreement.) Assuming Kirkpatrick has accurately portrayed this meeting
|
|
between Hopkins and Vidor, it would appear Vidor is a true psychic--someone
|
|
who can distinguish between an affirmative silence, a negative silence, and
|
|
a noncommittal silence. That chapter's conclusions defy credulity. (In
|
|
1922, would someone use a black servant like Peavey--who was 40 years old
|
|
and very big--to solicit young boys?) To brand Taylor as a molester of
|
|
young boys on such flimsy and unsubstantiated theorizing is totally at odds
|
|
with Taylor's character as revealed in the material published prior to his
|
|
death, and with the published statements (and not silences) of those who
|
|
knew him. When Mabel Normand was interviewed after Taylor's death, she
|
|
recalled her last meeting with Taylor and said Taylor told her he would
|
|
stand by Peavey if he were innocent of any wrongdoing, but if Peavey were
|
|
guilty he would have to fire him.[153] Mabel also reportedly stated,
|
|
"I begged that Billy wouldn't fire him [Peavey] on a rumor which might be
|
|
false."[154] There is no reason to believe that Peavey's acts which led to
|
|
his arrest were done on behalf of Taylor, or that Taylor even condoned those
|
|
acts. And exactly what is it that Peavey is supposed to have done? In the
|
|
earlier chapters of A CAST OF KILLERS it is just referred to as a "morals
|
|
charge" (p. 7, 139, 176), even when discussing the contents of the police
|
|
file on the murder. Los Angeles newspaper reports are vague, "asserted acts
|
|
of indecency several days ago in Westlake Park"[155] or "charged with being
|
|
lewd and dissolute"[156] or "social vagrancy."[157] Does Vidor/Kirkpatrick
|
|
really have any grounds for his statement later in the book that the
|
|
allegation was "soliciting young boys"? In A DEED OF DEATH, Giroux says the
|
|
allegation was indecent exposure.[158] If Giroux is correct, then the charge
|
|
might have been based on nothing more substantial than Peavey urinating
|
|
behind a bush in the park (perhaps Peavey had previously experienced
|
|
unpleasant racial confrontations in public restrooms), and a white
|
|
policeman's desire to rid the park of "undesirable" individuals.
|
|
|
|
#147. (251) All of the legal material involving Charlotte Shelby was not
|
|
filed under the name "Lily Pearl Miles." Most legal documents are under the
|
|
name "Pearl Miles Reilly." Even her death certificate reads "Pearl Miles
|
|
Reilly AKA Charlotte Shelby."
|
|
|
|
#148. (251) Press evidence indicates the first Minter-Shelby lawsuit over
|
|
the money earned by Mary was filed in 1925 and not three months after the
|
|
murder.[159]
|
|
|
|
#149. (252) It is stated that beginning in 1922, Leslie Henry had, at
|
|
Shelby's instructions, transferred sums from Minter's account to Shelby.
|
|
But in Leslie Henry's testimony he stated that at that time he had no
|
|
account whatsoever for Minter. Shelby herself testified that she had set up
|
|
a small personal checking account for Minter, but everything else (cash,
|
|
stocks and bonds) had been deposited in Shelby's own accounts: "I was not
|
|
concerned about what belonged to me and what belonged to Mary."[160]
|
|
|
|
#150. (252) The book claims Les Henry stated that all his improper
|
|
financial transactions were done with Shelby's knowledge and consent, but
|
|
press evidence (including the letter from him reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 41)
|
|
indicates Les Henry fully admitted to stealing the Shelby money.[161] He
|
|
eventually pleaded guilty to ten felony counts of grand theft and forgery,
|
|
admitting to robbing Shelby's account of over $40,000.[162]
|
|
|
|
#151. (253) It is stated that Leslie Henry began working for Shelby in
|
|
1918. But in his testimony he stated he first did business with her in
|
|
1920.[163]
|
|
|
|
#152. (255) It is stated that Shelby "paid off" Asa Keyes to avoid
|
|
prosecution. But that makes no sense. The testimoney of Leslie Henry
|
|
indicated that Shelby was very much afraid of being prosecuted by Keyes.
|
|
(See TAYLOROLOGY 5 and 35.) Shelby fled to Europe in 1926 and remained
|
|
there for over three years, not returning until Keyes was out of office and
|
|
safely behind bars himself. Leslie Henry's testimony in TAYLOROLOGY 5 and
|
|
35 does not give any indication of a Keyes payoff; the opposite is implied--
|
|
that Shelby had had no previous dealings whatsoever with Keyes and she fled
|
|
the country to escape his reach.
|
|
|
|
#153. (255) As stated earlier on p. 131, Mary's Paramount contract
|
|
terminated in 1923, not 1922.
|
|
|
|
#154. (255) Mary did not move to New York until August 1924.[164] When her
|
|
grandmother became ill in April 1925, she returned to Los Angeles and lived
|
|
in Casa Margarita with the family for several months before returning to New
|
|
York again.[165]
|
|
|
|
#155. (255) Regarding the lawsuit between Minter and Shelby, the book
|
|
states that case had gone to trial and the judge was ready to hand down his
|
|
decision when Minter and Shelby settled out of court, with Minter only
|
|
receiving $25,000. But press reports indicated that the case had not gone
|
|
to trial, and that Minter and Shelby were both in Paris when they reconciled
|
|
and settled out of court on January 24, 1927. Minter received $150,000 in
|
|
bonds plus ownership of Casa Margarita.[166] Press reports also indicated
|
|
that a $100,000 trust fund had previously been set up for Minter, on
|
|
July 22, 1924.[167]
|
|
|
|
#156. (257) Press evidence indicates Mary did not arrive in Los Angeles
|
|
three hours after Julia Miles had died; Mary was making preparations to
|
|
leave for Los Angeles when word of her grandmother's death came. Shelby
|
|
ordered a quick funeral, and Mary was not even present for the funeral.[168]
|
|
|
|
#157. (257-8) It is stated that after Margaret made inflammatory
|
|
statements in the 1937 Fillmore vs. Shelby lawsuit, the trial concluded with
|
|
the judge ordering Margaret to appear before district attorney Buron Fitts
|
|
to answer any questions he might have about the Taylor murder. We have not
|
|
seen the judge's order, so we cannot be certain that this statement is
|
|
incorrect. However, the verdict in that trial was given on September 23,
|
|
1937. A CAST OF KILLERS is clearly implying that the judge's order for
|
|
Margaret to appear before Fitts was responsible for the 1937 flare-up of the
|
|
case. On the contrary, Margaret made her statement before Fitts four months
|
|
earlier, on May 5, 1937, and appeared before the grand jury on May 6, 1937.
|
|
Both events took place three months before the Fillmore vs. Shelby trial
|
|
even began, on August 13, 1937. The 1937 grand jury investigation into the
|
|
Taylor murder was initiated at the request of Charlotte Shelby. Yes, AT THE
|
|
REQUEST OF CHARLOTTE SHELBY! It was her request that began the whole 1937
|
|
investigation into the case (see TAYLOROLOGY 22), not the order of a judge.
|
|
|
|
#158. (258) Casa de Margarita was not sold by Shelby in 1926. It was
|
|
part of the Paris settlement with Mary. On January 24, 1927, an agreement
|
|
was signed whereby Mary received $150,000 in bonds plus ownership of Casa de
|
|
Margarita in settlement of all claims against her mother.[169] The mansion
|
|
was sold by the bank to collect unpaid mortgage payments in 1932.[170]
|
|
|
|
#159. (258) Charlotte Shelby did not sail to Europe prior to Margaret
|
|
Shelby's marriage to Hugh Fillmore. The marriage took place a year before
|
|
Shelby sailed for Europe.
|
|
|
|
#160. (258) Margaret Shelby and Hugh Fillmore were married in Casa
|
|
Margarita on May 26, 1925, not in 1926.[171]
|
|
|
|
#161. (258) Charlotte Shelby was present at the wedding of Margaret
|
|
Shelby and Hugh Fillmore. The L.A. TIMES even published a photo of the
|
|
wedding party, with Charlotte standing next to the bride and groom.[172] Also
|
|
attending the wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Henry. Margaret was not "cut
|
|
off financially" at the time of her marriage.
|
|
|
|
#162. (258-9) The marriage of Margaret Shelby Fillmore and Emmett J.
|
|
Flynn was not motive for murder. Contrary to what is stated in A CAST OF
|
|
KILLERS, this is the true sequence of events: Margaret is committed to a
|
|
mental hospital by Charlotte Shelby on August 5, 1936, primarily because of
|
|
Margaret's erratic behavior due to alcoholism[173] and because Shelby felt
|
|
Margaret was too unstable to testify in the lawsuit against the brokerage
|
|
firm.[174] After her release, Margaret sues Shelby in October 1936, and is
|
|
estranged from her for the remainder of her life. Margaret and Flynn are
|
|
married in March 1937; a few days after the marriage both are arrested on
|
|
charges of public intoxication.[175] In April 1937 the marriage is annulled--
|
|
not because of anything Shelby does, but because Flynn is already
|
|
married.[176] The Margaret/Flynn marriage has no effect on the estranged relationship
|
|
between Margaret and Shelby.
|
|
|
|
#163. (266) There was no "secret conversation" between Taylor and
|
|
Kirkwood a few days before the murder. Kirkwood was not in America at that
|
|
time.[177]
|
|
|
|
#164. (267) The book contends that Mary Miles Minter was in Taylor's
|
|
bungalow during Mabel Normand's last visit. Not likely. In 1930 Peavey
|
|
expressed his belief to reporters that Mabel killed Taylor. Peavey
|
|
expressed the same opinion in 1922, shortly after the murder, during his
|
|
abduction by Hearst reporters.[178] Peavey had good reasons, from his
|
|
perspective, to believe Mabel Normand was guilty.[179] His 1930 statement was
|
|
essentially an unburdening of his conscience. If Mary were still in the
|
|
bungalow when Peavey left, it is inconceivable that Peavey would not have
|
|
mentioned it in 1930 or that he would have been so certain about Mabel
|
|
Normand's guilt. In Peavey's official statement made in 1922, he stated
|
|
that he was aware of only one visit by Mary to Taylor's home, and that visit
|
|
took place shortly after he first began working for Taylor (in August
|
|
1921).[180] In 1930, Peavey declared that he had been ordered to keep quiet
|
|
about the argument he witnessed between Mabel and Taylor during Mabel's last
|
|
visit. If Peavey had also been ordered to keep quiet about Mary's presence
|
|
in the bungalow, surely he would have said so at this time. It also is
|
|
inconceivable that Mary could have been in the bungalow without Peavey
|
|
knowing about it. During Mabel's visit Taylor asked her out for dinner--she
|
|
declined. In her official statement she said: "Mr. Taylor asked me if I had
|
|
had dinner. I told him I had not and he said, 'Oh, then please let me take
|
|
you out to dinner.'"[181] Would Taylor have asked Mabel out to dinner if Mary
|
|
were waiting upstairs? Not likely.
|
|
|
|
#165. (267) On June 13, 1941, Detective Lieutenant Leroy Sanderson wrote
|
|
a lengthy letter summarizing the evidence in the Taylor case, and in
|
|
particular the case against Charlotte Shelby. The letter was reprinted in
|
|
WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, pp. 315-330. There are some major
|
|
differences between Margaret Shelby's 1937 testimony summarized there, and
|
|
the testimony of Margaret Shelby reportedly related by Sanderson to Vidor in
|
|
A CAST OF KILLERS. At the time the 1941 letter was written, Margaret Shelby
|
|
was already dead, so she did not make any further testimony after
|
|
Sanderson's letter was written. This the relevant portion of the Sanderson
|
|
letter:
|
|
...A detailed written statement was taken from Mrs. Margaret
|
|
Fillmore, May 5, 1937. In this statement Margaret disclosed that what
|
|
she had said in her previous statements of March 10, 1926 and
|
|
March 13, 1926 was not true. That she had only tried to cover up for
|
|
her mother regarding the Taylor murder. She stated in substance, that
|
|
on the night of February 1, 1922, Mary had been locked in her room by
|
|
her mother, because Mrs. Shelby feared that Mary was going to run away
|
|
with Taylor. That Mary left the house early in the evening, exact
|
|
time unknown, and returned about 8:30 p.m. That she was nervous and
|
|
upset and was crying. That later on that evening, although Mary and
|
|
she were very bad friends, Mary came to her room and asked to remain
|
|
there, stating that she was lonesome and didn't wish to be alone.
|
|
She stated that when Mrs. Shelby arrived at the Hobart house, early
|
|
in the morning, she walked into Mary's bedroom and told her that Miss
|
|
Berger had phoned her that morning and said that Taylor was dead. She
|
|
stated that later Mary told her that she was sure her mother either
|
|
killed Taylor or was present when he was killed. She also stated that
|
|
during August of 1922, Mrs. Julia Miles carried the gun used in the
|
|
Taylor murder, to her plantation near Vastron, Louisiana and threw it
|
|
into a bayou. She stated that a Doctor and Pauline Johnson resided on
|
|
a plantation just across the bayou from Mrs. Miles' place. That
|
|
Doctor Johnson was a well known dentist in Vastron and probably knew
|
|
about Mrs. Miles throwing the gun into the bayou.
|
|
Margaret stated, both verbally and in her last written statement,
|
|
that Mrs. Shelby had made many conflicting statements as to her
|
|
whereabout and actions on the night of February 1, 1922. She stated
|
|
that Mrs. Shelby had told her family she had hired a private taxi
|
|
about 6 p.m. February 1, 1922 and had been driven to a Swedish
|
|
Eucalyptus Bath House, north of Hollywood Boulevard. She also stated
|
|
that she had questioned the Doctor, who operated the Bath House, and
|
|
after searching his records he informed Margaret that Mrs. Shelby had
|
|
not been there that night.
|
|
Mrs. Shelby also stated that about 7 p.m., February 1, 1922, Carl
|
|
Stockdale had called on her, at 701 New Hampshire, and they had
|
|
sandwiches and milk together. He remained there until about 9 p.m.
|
|
Margaret stated that her mother was in constant fear for several years
|
|
after the Taylor murder, that Mary would talk too much and would
|
|
involve her in the murder. That she was very much afraid of District
|
|
Attorney Asa Keyes...[182]
|
|
In the above summary, nothing is said about Shelby taking the pistol with
|
|
her on the night of the murder. It is unbelievable that Sanderson would
|
|
have omitted mentioning that incident, if Margaret had indeed made such a
|
|
statement.
|
|
|
|
#166. (267) In Sanderson's letter nothing is said about Minter giving
|
|
details on the night of the murder to Margaret about Taylor's death, nothing
|
|
about Minter telling Margaret that she (Minter) had been upstairs during
|
|
Mabel Normand's visit, or about Minter telling Margaret that she (Minter)
|
|
had personally witnessed Shelby shooting Taylor. If these statements had
|
|
been truly made by Margaret, surely Sanderson would have mentioned them in
|
|
his letter. Instead, he writes that Margaret "stated that later [after the
|
|
morning of February 2] Mary told her that she was sure her mother either
|
|
killed Taylor or was present when he was killed." The phrase "or was
|
|
present when he was killed" clearly contradicts what is attributed to
|
|
Margaret in A CAST OF KILLERS, with Minter supposedly suggesting that
|
|
someone else may have assisted Shelby and killed Taylor on behalf of Shelby,
|
|
in Shelby's presence. In addition, Sanderson's letter theorizes that
|
|
perhaps either James Kirkwood or Carl Stockdale killed Taylor on behalf of
|
|
Shelby--further indication that Sanderson had NEVER heard Margaret
|
|
supposedly state that Minter told Margaret that she (Minter) had personally
|
|
witnessed Shelby shooting Taylor. (Sanderson was obviously also unaware that
|
|
Kirkwood was out of the country at the time of the murder.)
|
|
|
|
#167. (267) The timetable of Margaret's statement in the Sanderson letter
|
|
explicitly contradicts the timetable supposedly related by Margaret in A
|
|
CAST OF KILLERS. In the Sanderson letter, Margaret stated that "Shelby had
|
|
told her family she had hired a private taxi about 6 p.m."--indicating that
|
|
Shelby was not at the Hobart house past that time (since Shelby was
|
|
explaining where she had been during that time). Then the Sanderson letter
|
|
has Margaret stating that Mary "returned about 8:30 p.m." So in the
|
|
Sanderson letter, Margaret's testimony indicated there was a minimum of two
|
|
and one-half hours between the time Shelby left and the time Minter
|
|
returned. But A CAST OF KILLERS has Margaret stating that Mary returned
|
|
only one hour after Shelby left, a clear contradiction.
|
|
|
|
#168. (268) A CAST OF KILLERS states that "The woman dressed like a man
|
|
that Faith MacLean saw was Charlotte Shelby, dressed in a long coat." That
|
|
statement defies credulity. In her statement to the District Attorney,
|
|
Faith MacLean stated that the person she saw was about five feet nine and
|
|
believed he wore a dark suit. "He was not a well-dressed man. He was
|
|
dressed like my idea of a motion picture burglar."[183] Charlotte Shelby was
|
|
several inches shorter and was always well-dressed. A woman, dressed in a
|
|
woman's long coat, seen from a distance of about 20 feet, could not possibly
|
|
look like a man dressed in a dark suit. Also, a "motion picture burglar"
|
|
would not have worn a long coat. Some writers (St. Johns, Ed King) have
|
|
expressed the opinion that Shelby committed the murder dressed like a man.
|
|
But A CAST OF KILLERS seems to express the opinion that Shelby committed the
|
|
murder dressed like a woman but was mistaken for a man!
|
|
|
|
#169. (282) The book contends that Mary knew her mother killed Taylor.
|
|
Really? Consider: Mary's infatuation/love for Taylor stayed with her for
|
|
the remainder of her life. A few years before her death she stated, "I
|
|
worshipped him in life...I worship him today."[184] Between 1923-1926, there
|
|
was a fierce public battle waged between Mary and her mother regarding the
|
|
money Mary had earned as a film star. Yet in 1927, there was a settlement
|
|
between Mary and Shelby, and a true reconciliation. During the 1937 Grand
|
|
Jury investigation, and in interviews given later, Mary defended her mother:
|
|
"...mother knew nothing of it [the murder]"[185]; and "She [Adela Rogers St.
|
|
Johns] has pilloried a very good woman [Charlotte Shelby], a very innocent
|
|
woman, who was not particularly well-liked, straight as a die, who had not
|
|
the slightest occasion to be killing Mr. Taylor."[186] It is unbelievable
|
|
that Mary would have reconciled with Shelby and defended her so strongly if
|
|
Mary thought Shelby were guilty of killing the love of her life.
|
|
|
|
#170. (285) Charlotte Shelby's death certificate clearly lists the
|
|
primary cause of death as cerebral thrombosis.
|
|
|
|
#171. (286) Margaret Shelby Fillmore's death certificate, #39-074319, is
|
|
on file under her legal name of Alma Margaret Fillmore, with the causes of
|
|
death listed as alcoholic congestion, acute cardiac dilitation, and postal
|
|
cirrhosis.
|
|
|
|
#172. (287) Peavey's last statements to the press did not claim that an
|
|
actress and her mother killed Taylor--only an actress. From the context,
|
|
the actress Peavey suspected is clearly Mabel Normand.[187]
|
|
|
|
#173. (287) Peavey died in 1931, not 1937:
|
|
Confirming the fact of Peavey's death, a telegram was received late
|
|
yesterday from J. M. Scandland, superintendent of the Napa State
|
|
Hospital, in which it was declared that the valet, suffering from
|
|
general paresis, was admitted to the hospital in 1930 and died on
|
|
December 27, 1931.[188]
|
|
|
|
#174. (188) It is stated that for many years THE HONEYCOMB "contained the
|
|
only no-holds-barred account of the Taylor slaying." By what criteria? The
|
|
Taylor case recap in THE HONEYCOMB is very short and superficial--St. Johns
|
|
even mixes up Sands and Peavey. THE HONEYCOMB certainly did not agree with
|
|
A CAST OF KILLERS' views on Taylor's purported homosexuality; according to
|
|
THE HONEYCOMB Taylor was "debauching" Minter and carrying on a scandalous
|
|
affair with her. Nor was St. Johns the first writer to indicate that
|
|
Charlotte Shelby was the killer; Ed King reached the same conclusion in his
|
|
1930 article (reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 50), which was far more substantial
|
|
than St. Johns' recap of the case written four decades later. Some other
|
|
writers had also indicated Shelby was a prime suspect--for example, William
|
|
H. A. Carr, in HOLLYWOOD TRAGEDY, 1962, which even mentioned Minter's
|
|
abortion from her affair with Kirkwood. In our opinion, the most useful
|
|
account of the Taylor slaying written prior to the 1980's was in KING OF
|
|
COMEDY, due to the quantity of verbatim official testimony it contained from
|
|
the files of the District Attorney. In fact, more verbatim official
|
|
testimony appears in KING OF COMEDY than in A CAST OF KILLERS.
|
|
|
|
#175. (297) It is stated that the 1941 Sanderson letter "indisputably
|
|
supports all of Mr. Vidor's findings in connection with his examination of
|
|
L.A.P.D. files." However, reportedly (pp. 184-5) the police file indicated
|
|
that Taylor consistently refused Minter's advances. Contrarily, the
|
|
Sanderson letter states "Mrs. Shelby...had threatened several times to kill
|
|
Taylor, because she had a full knowledge of the affair that existed between
|
|
him and Mary", indicating that there was indeed a sexual relationship
|
|
between Taylor and Minter. We are not arguing that Taylor actually had a
|
|
sexual relationship with Minter--on this particular subject we feel that
|
|
Taylor probably did not have a sexual relationship with Minter. Our point
|
|
though, is that Sanderson's letter does not "indisputably support" this
|
|
finding.
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Thus concludes our listing of 175 errors, contradictions, and illogical
|
|
statements in A CAST OF KILLERS. The sum total of the above list
|
|
establishes the book's lack of historical value. Shelby may have indeed
|
|
killed Taylor, or had him killed, but convincing proof has not yet been
|
|
presented. She certainly feared prosecution and conviction for the Taylor
|
|
murder (the same was undoubtedly true of Sands), but that does not prove her
|
|
guilt. If a defender of A CAST OF KILLERS wishes to issue a scholarly point-
|
|
by-point rebuttal of items in the above list, citing sources, we will be
|
|
glad to offer "equal time" and present that rebuttal in a future issue of
|
|
TAYLOROLOGY.
|
|
A CAST OF KILLERS also reports some testimony attributed to Leslie
|
|
Henry which we have never seen and remain skeptical unless we see
|
|
verification: (1) Did Leslie Henry, who had a wife and daughter, really
|
|
testify to being physically intimate with Shelby? (2) Did Leslie Henry
|
|
really testify that Shelby stated that Asa Keyes would require more money
|
|
than Woolwine?
|
|
|
|
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
|
|
|
|
Anyone who delves deeply into the Taylor case soon forms opinions about the
|
|
probability of rumored incidents, the characters of the people involved, and
|
|
their relationships with each other. The following are some opinions we have
|
|
formed which are contrary to A CAST OF KILLERS:
|
|
Based on the statements made by Neva Gerber and Taylor's associates, we
|
|
feel confident that Neva Gerber and Taylor had a genuine romantic
|
|
relationship which lasted from 1914 to 1919. It was not just "studio
|
|
publicity"--in fact, we have never seen ANY "studio publicity" which linked
|
|
them together.
|
|
Based on the statements made by Taylor's associates, and the photo of
|
|
Mabel Normand which Taylor carried with him in a small frame engraved "to my
|
|
dearest," we feel confident that Taylor had a genuine romantic relationship
|
|
with Mabel Normand, and that Taylor's feelings for Mabel were probably
|
|
stronger than Mabel's feelings for him.
|
|
Based on the fact that Taylor had given Minter a photograph which he
|
|
autographed "Yours now and forever," we feel that Taylor probably had
|
|
romantic feelings for Minter, at least during 1919-1920.[189]
|
|
Based on the interviews we have read with Mary Miles Minter, her
|
|
reported reaction on the day after the murder, and the statements made by
|
|
those associated with her, we do not believe that Minter was in Taylor's home
|
|
during Mabel Normand's last visit, or that Minter had any knowledge of
|
|
Taylor's death before the morning of February 2, 1922.
|
|
Based on the sum total of everything we have read about Taylor, and the
|
|
statements made by his associates, we do not believe that Taylor was a child
|
|
molester.
|
|
|
|
Despite our criticism of A CAST OF KILLERS we do appreciate its
|
|
publication, because it brought the William Desmond Taylor case to many new
|
|
readers. If it had not been written, A DEED OF DEATH, WILLIAM DESMOND
|
|
TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, and electronic TAYLOROLOGY itself, all might never have
|
|
been published. For taking that first step, A CAST OF KILLERS receives our
|
|
thanks.
|
|
*****************************************************************************
|
|
NOTES:
|
|
[1] See Mack Sennett and Cameron Shipp, KING OF COMEDY (Doubleday, 1954).
|
|
[2] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (May 24, 1922).
|
|
[3] See SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER (February 6, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY
|
|
62.
|
|
[4] LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 4, 1937).
|
|
[5] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 8, 1922).
|
|
[6] LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 17, 1922). Also see LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
(February 15, 1922).
|
|
[7] LOS ANGELES RECORD (February 7, 1922).
|
|
[8] See TAYLOROLOGY 19.
|
|
[9] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 5, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 58.
|
|
[10] See NEW YORK HERALD (February 5, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 45.
|
|
[11] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 5, 1922), NEW YORK HERALD (February 6,
|
|
1922) and NEW YORK AMERICAN (February 14, 1922).
|
|
[12] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 216.
|
|
[13] One of the coded letters from Minter to Taylor can be seen at
|
|
http://www.public.asu.edu/~bruce/MMMCodeLetter.pdf
|
|
[14] See, for example, LOS ANGELES HERALD (August 14, 1923). Also see LOS
|
|
ANGELES RECORD (February 3, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 60: "...here I
|
|
was home, reading a book--enjoying it so much--and he was lying there in his
|
|
apartment, stone dead." "Here" refers to the home on Hobart; note the
|
|
reference in the interview to the "quaint adobe home". Also see TAYLOROLOGY
|
|
6 and 35.
|
|
[15] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (October 4, 1922).
|
|
[16] For some rumors on Dixon see TAYLOROLOGY 7.
|
|
[17] SANTA ANA REGISTER (March 18, 1922). Other articles gave the suspect's
|
|
name as Walter Kirby.
|
|
[18] See SACRAMENTO BEE (March 18, 1922), LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (May 3, 1922)
|
|
and TAYLOROLOGY 50.
|
|
[19] See LOS ANGELES RECORD (January 6, 1930) and TAYLOROLOGY 50.
|
|
[20] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (May 11, 1937).
|
|
[21] LOS ANGELES HERALD (January 14, 1930).
|
|
[22] LOS ANGELES NEWS (February 24, 1930).
|
|
[23] LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 6, 1922).
|
|
[24] See PANTOMIME (March 18, 1922) and NEW YORK TELEGRAPH (February 12,
|
|
1922).
|
|
[25] A copy of Taylor's birth certificate (William Cunningham Deane Tanner) is
|
|
at http://www.public.asu.edu/~bruce/birth.pdf.
|
|
[26] See A DEED OF DEATH, p. 52.
|
|
[27] See A DEED OF DEATH, p. 148.
|
|
[28] NEW YORK DAILY NEWS (February 6, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 45.
|
|
[29] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 17, 1922).
|
|
[30] SANTA BARBARA PRESS (February 5, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 29.
|
|
[31] NEW YORK AMERICAN (February 13, 1922). He had been given the nickname
|
|
"Pete" by friends in New York. His movements were so calculating and
|
|
deliberate that they sarcastically called him "P.D.Q." which was shortened to
|
|
"Petey" and then "Pete." See WASHINGTON TIMES (February 14, 1922) reprinted
|
|
in TAYLOROLOGY 45.
|
|
[32] NEW YORK HERALD (February 6, 1922).
|
|
[33] NEW YORK HERALD (February 5, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 19 and 62.
|
|
[34] DENVER POST (March 3, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 19.
|
|
[35] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 42.
|
|
[36] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 6, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 62.
|
|
[37] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, pp. 41-42.
|
|
[38] See NEW YORK AMERICAN (February 13, 1922).
|
|
[39] See Kevin Brownlow, HOLLYWOOD: THE PIONEERS (Knopf, 1979), p. 111.
|
|
[40] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 5, 1922).
|
|
[41] See Douglas Whitton, "Mystery Woman Director," CLASSIC IMAGES (July
|
|
1985).
|
|
[42] See TAYLOROLOGY 40.
|
|
[43] See TAYLOROLOGY 40.
|
|
[44] LOS ANGELES TIMES (June 4, 1918).
|
|
[45] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 4, 1922).
|
|
[46] See SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE (February 7, 1922).
|
|
[47] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, pp. 92-104.
|
|
[48] LOS ANGELES HERALD (December 18, 1919).
|
|
[49] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 6, 1922), reprinted in WILLIAM DESMOND
|
|
TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 95.
|
|
[50] See LOS ANGELES RECORD (February 2, 1922) and LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
(February 5, 1922).
|
|
[51] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 291.
|
|
[52] See TAYLOROLOGY 20.
|
|
[53] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 5, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 57.
|
|
[54] LOS ANGELES TIMES (March 5, 1922).
|
|
[55] NEW YORK TELEGRAPH (January 22, 1922).
|
|
[56] NEW YORK TELEGRAPH (February 5, 1922).
|
|
[57] See Edward Wagenknecht, THE MOVIES IN THE AGE OF INNOCENCE (Ballantine,
|
|
1971), p. 229.
|
|
[58] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 15, 1922).
|
|
[59] See KING OF COMEDY, p. 243.
|
|
[60] See Sidney Sutherland, "Mabel Normand--Comedienne and Madcap," LIBERTY
|
|
(September 27, 1930), reprinted at
|
|
http://www.mdle.com/ClassicFilms/FeaturedStar/mabel4.htm.
|
|
[61] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 11, 1922).
|
|
[62] See LOS ANGELES RECORD (February 4, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 61.
|
|
[63] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 11, 1922).
|
|
[64] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 14, 1922).
|
|
[65] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 15, 1922).
|
|
[66] See TAYLOROLOGY 21.
|
|
[67] LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 7, 1922)
|
|
[68] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, pp. 241-259.
|
|
[69] See TAYLOROLOGY 58.
|
|
[70] See Betty Fussell, MABEL (Ticknor & Fields, 1982), p. 179, and MABEL
|
|
NORMAND: A SOURCE BOOK TO HER LIFE AND FILMS.
|
|
[71] See KING OF COMEDY, p. 222.
|
|
[72] See LOS ANGELES HERALD (January 9, 1922), reprinted in MABEL NORMAND: A
|
|
SOURCE BOOK TO HER LIFE AND FILMS, p. 133.
|
|
[73] HOLLYWOOD: THE YEARS OF INNOCENCE (Abbeville, 1985), p. 94.
|
|
[74] See clippings in MABEL NORMAND: A SOURCE BOOK TO HER LIFE AND FILMS, pp.
|
|
264-5.
|
|
[75] LOS ANGELES DAILY NEWS, February 25, 1930, reprinted in MABEL NORMAND: A
|
|
SOURCE BOOK TO HER LIFE AND FILMS.
|
|
[76] KING OF COMEDY, p. 244.
|
|
[77] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 6, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 62.
|
|
[78] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 15, 1922).
|
|
[79] See TAYLOROLOGY 50.
|
|
[80] SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER (February 4, 1922).
|
|
[81] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 3, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 56.
|
|
[82] CLASSIC IMAGES No. 70. Also see ROSCOE "FATTY" ARBUCKLE: A BIOGRAPHY OF
|
|
THE SILENT FILM COMEDIAN by Stuart Oderman (McFarland, 1994); and MABEL, pp.
|
|
80-81.
|
|
[83] See TAYLOROLOGY 8.
|
|
[84] See TAYLOROLOGY 30.
|
|
[85] See THE HONEYCOMB, p. 106.
|
|
[86] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 4, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 60;
|
|
and LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 5, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 57 and
|
|
61.
|
|
[87] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 5, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 57.
|
|
[88] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 4, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 60
|
|
[89] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 5, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 57.
|
|
[90] LOS ANGELES HERALD (August 14, 1923).
|
|
[91] SHREVEPORT TIMES (May 23, 1902). Charlotte Shelby was Mrs. J. Homer
|
|
Reilly, and Julia Miles was Charlotte Shelby's mother.
|
|
[92] See NEW YORK CLIPPER (September 9, 1911).
|
|
[93] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (May 22, 1937).
|
|
[94] WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 62.
|
|
[95] See TAYLOROLOGY 11. Minter was 17 in 1919.
|
|
[96] See NEW YORK TELEGRAPH (November 16, 1919).
|
|
[97] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (April 27, 1921) and LOS ANGELES TIMES (April 24,
|
|
1921).
|
|
[98] See TAYLOROLOGY 35.
|
|
[99] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 11, 1922).
|
|
[100] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (January 30, 1925).
|
|
[101] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (December 9, 1922).
|
|
[102] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 329.
|
|
[103] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (October 13, 14 and 17, 1921).
|
|
[104] A copy of the genuine letter can be seen at
|
|
http://www.public.asu.edu/~bruce/MMMLoveLetter.pdf. See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER
|
|
(February 7, 1922), SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER (February 8, 1922), AMERICAN
|
|
WEEKLY (February 25, 1940) or CLASSIC IMAGES (Winter 1977) for other photos
|
|
of this letter.
|
|
[105] See http://www.public.asu.edu/~bruce/MMMPhoto.pdf for a copy of the
|
|
Minter photo autographed to Taylor. Note that the signature is the same as
|
|
in the above letter. This photo originally appeared in the LOS ANGELES
|
|
EXAMINER (February 4, 1937).
|
|
[106] A genuine photograph of Faith MacLean can be seen at
|
|
http://www.public.asu.edu/~bruce/MacLeans.pdf. Another photo of her can be
|
|
seen in MOVIE WEEKLY (February 14, 1925).
|
|
[107] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (April 27, 1921) and LOS ANGELES TIMES (April 24,
|
|
1921).
|
|
[108] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 17, 1922).
|
|
[109] For a genuine photo of Sands, see A DEED OF DEATH, p. 126, and Capt.
|
|
Jesse Winn, "Who Killed William Desmond Taylor?" in FRONT PAGE DETECTIVE
|
|
(June 1937), p. 81.
|
|
[110] LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 2, 1922)
|
|
[111] LOS ANGELES TIMES, February 3, 1922
|
|
[112] KING OF COMEDY, pp. 234-5.
|
|
[113] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 3, 1922), LOS ANGELES EXPRESS
|
|
(February 3, 1922), LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 6, 1922), LOS ANGELES
|
|
HERALD (February 9, 1922), LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 12, 1922) and KING
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OF COMEDY, p. 226.
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[114] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 11, 1922).
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[115] KING OF COMEDY, p. 235.
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[116] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 12, 1922).
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[117] See BART: MEMOIRS OF FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW (Vine Press, 1983), p. 26.
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[118] LOS ANGELES RECORD (February 10, 1922).
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[119] A DEED OF DEATH, p. 246.
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[120] See DENVER POST (February 26, 1922).
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[121] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (August 15, 1923), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 11.
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[122] See KING OF COMEDY, p. 228.
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[123] See Charles Higham, CELEBRITY CIRCUS (Delacorte, 1979) p. 113.
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[124] LOS ANGELES RECORD (February 2, 1922).
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[125] See TAYLOROLOGY 14.
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[126] See TAYLOROLOGY 50.
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[127] LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 6, 1922).
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[128] See NEW YORK AMERICAN (February 13, 1922).
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[129] See TAYLOROLOGY 58.
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[130] CHICAGO HERALD-EXAMINER (February 8, 1922).
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[131] LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 3, 1937).
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[132] See LOS ANGELES HERALD-EXPRESS (February 2, 1937) for comparison of the
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handwriting.
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[133] See WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, p. 331.
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[134] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 17, 1922).
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[135] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 5, 1922).
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[136] See TAYLOROLOGY 50.
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[137] Ed King, "I Know Who Killed Desmond Taylor", TRUE DETECTIVE MYSTERIES
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(October 1930), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 50. Also LOS ANGELES NEWS (September
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|
9, 1937) for the testimony of Jesse Winn.
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|
[138] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (December 24, 1929).
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[139] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (December 24, 1929).
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[140] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 12, 1922).
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[141] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (March 31, 1926).
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|
[142] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (March 6, 1922).
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|
[143] See BOSTON HERALD (March 8, 1922).
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[144] See TAYLOROLOGY 50.
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|
[145] See KING OF COMEDY, p. 244.
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|
[146] LIBERTY (September 27, 1930).
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|
[147] DENVER POST (February 9, 1922).
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|
[148] SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER (February 6, 1922).
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|
[149] See KING OF COMEDY, p. 235.
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|
[150] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (December 22, 1929).
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[151] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (December 24, 1929).
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|
[152] LOS ANGELES RECORD (March 30, 1926).
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|
[153] See LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 2, 1922) reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 56.
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|
[154] LOS ANGELES EXPRESS (February 6, 1922), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 64.
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|
[155] LOS ANGELES TIMES (February 3, 1922).
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|
[156] LOS ANGELES RECORD (February 3, 1922).
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|
[157] LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 3, 1922).
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|
[158] See A DEED OF DEATH, p. 28.
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|
[159] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (January 30, 1925).
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|
[160] See TAYLOROLOGY 35.
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|
[161] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (December 23, 1932), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 41.
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|
Also see LOS ANGELES TIMES (May 22, 1936).
|
|
[162] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (April 11, 1933).
|
|
[163] See TAYLOROLOGY 35.
|
|
[164] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (August 4, 1924).
|
|
[165] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (April 25, 1925).
|
|
[166] See TAYLOROLOGY 35 and See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (May 29, 1936).
|
|
[167] See LOS ANGELES HERALD-EXPRESS (October 11, 1956).
|
|
[168] See PHOTOPLAY (February 1926) and LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (February 6,
|
|
1927).
|
|
[169] See LOS ANGELES EXAMINER (May 29, 1936).
|
|
[170] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (December 28, 1932).
|
|
[171] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (May 27, 1925).
|
|
[172] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (May 27, 1925).
|
|
[173] See LOS ANGELES TIMES (September 1 and 4, 1937).
|
|
[174] See LOS ANGELES HERALD-EXPRESS (May 6, 1937), reprinted in
|
|
TAYLOROLOGY 12.
|
|
[175] See LOS ANGELES HERALD-EXPRESS (March 20, 1937).
|
|
[176] See LOS ANGELES HERALD-EXPRESS (April 26, 1937).
|
|
[177] See TAYLOROLOGY 20.
|
|
[178] See SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER (February 21, 1922) and note 39 to TAYLOROLOGY
|
|
50.
|
|
[179] See TAYLOROLOGY 6.
|
|
[180] See KING OF COMEDY, p. 228.
|
|
[181] KING OF COMEDY, p. 244.
|
|
[182] WILLIAM DESMOND TAYLOR: A DOSSIER, pp. 324-325.
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|
[183] KING OF COMEDY, p. 236.
|
|
[184] MABEL, p. 177.
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|
[185] LOS ANGELES HERALD-EXPRESS (May 6, 1937), reprinted in TAYLOROLOGY 12.
|
|
[186] CELEBRITY CIRCUS, p. 111.
|
|
[187] See LOS ANGELES RECORD (January 7, 1930) and note 39 to TAYLOROLOGY 50.
|
|
[188] LOS ANGELES TIMES (May 11, 1937).
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|
[189] For an excellent reproduction of the photo autographed from Taylor to
|
|
Minter, see TRUE CRIME: UNSOLVED CRIMES (Time-Life Books, 1993), p. 143.
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*****************************************************************************
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*****************************************************************************
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Back issues of Taylorology are available on the Web at any of the following:
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http://www.angelfire.com/az/Taylorology/
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http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/Taylorology/
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http://www.uno.edu/~drcom/Taylorology
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Full text searches of back issues can be done at http://www.etext.org/Zines/
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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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*****************************************************************************
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