Publication information |
Source: Evening World-Herald Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Few Anarchists in Omaha” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Omaha, Nebraska Date of publication: 9 September 1901 Volume number: none Issue number: none Pagination: 3 |
Citation |
“Few Anarchists in Omaha.” Evening World-Herald 9 Sept. 1901: p. 3. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
John J. Donahue; McKinley assassination (personal response); McKinley assassination (opinions, theories, etc.); John J. Donahue (public statements); McKinley assassination (investigation of conspiracy: Omaha, NE); anarchism (Omaha, NE); McKinley assassination (public response: anarchists). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; John J. Donahue; William McKinley. |
Document |
Few Anarchists in Omaha
None of Those Express Sympathy with Czolgosz—Chief Donahue’s Opinion.
Chief Donahue of the Omaha police department
is very positive in the assertion of the opinion that the shooting of President
McKinley was not the result of a deliberately organized plot.
“You mark my words,” he said this morning, “when
this matter is sifted to the bottom it will be found that Czolgosz did the shooting
on an insane impulse of [h]is own, without being either abetted or directed
by any band of organized anarchists. If the shooting had been the result of
a plot the attempt would never have been made at the exposition, with the president
surrounded by guards and police, and all the chances not only against the success
of the plot, but the escape of the criminal as well. In Washington, at his own
home, where he walks and drives practically undefended and unattended is where
any attempt on his life would be made that had been carefully plotted and planned
in advance.
“While I am convinced that there was no anarchist
plo[t] for the assassination of the president I have still been to the trouble
of looking up all the anarchists known to the police in Omaha. There are not
more than fifteen anarchists in the city, and these have no organization and
no meeting place. Any attempt on their part to organize and hold meetings in
Omaha would be promptly squelched by the police. We would not stand for it.
Of those I hunted up and talked to there was not one who had the hardihood to
express satisfaction over the president’s shooting or to indorse the deed.”