Publication information |
Source: Milwaukee Journal Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Alderman Okershauser Would Chloroform Czolgosz to Get His Confession” Author(s): anonymous City of publication: Milwaukee, Wisconsin Date of publication: 17 September 1901 Volume number: 19 Issue number: none Pagination: 1 |
Citation |
“Alderman Okershauser Would Chloroform Czolgosz to Get His Confession.” Milwaukee Journal 17 Sept. 1901 v19: p. 1. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
William C. Okershauser; William C. Okershauser (public statements); McKinley assassination (personal response); Leon Czolgosz (interrogation). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; William McKinley; William C. Okershauser. |
Document |
Alderman Okershauser Would Chloroform Czolgosz to Get His Confession
William C. Okershauser of the Seventeenth ward
believes extreme measures should be adopted in compelling Czolgosz to divulge
the names of his accomplices in the plot to murder President McKinley. He believes
the assassin had co-workers, and that the life of the president is worth more
than the life of “one miserable anarchist.”
“It hardly seems fair,” says Mr. Okershauser,
“that the life of the nation’s chief should be considered worth the life of
only one miserable anarchist.
“I do not doubt that the assassin of the president
had an accomplice, and that the deed is preying more or less on his mind. It
is well known that any person about to undergo an operation, and while under
the influence of chloroform, will express his last thoughts, or the one thing
uppermost on his mind. I would, therefore suggest that the assassin be put under
the influence of chloroform and questioned concerning his crime, in order to
learn if possible who his accomplices were.”