Publication information |
Source: Ogden Standard-Examiner Source type: newspaper Document type: article Document title: “Case VII” Author(s): Flynn, William J. City of publication: Ogden City, Utah Date of publication: 12 March 1922 Volume number: 51 Issue number: 248 Part/Section: magazine section Pagination: 3 |
Citation |
Flynn, William J. “Case VII.” Ogden Standard-Examiner 12 Mar. 1922 v51n248: mag. sect., p. 3. |
Transcription |
excerpt |
Keywords |
Emma Goldman (impact on Czolgosz); Leon Czolgosz (connection with anarchists); McKinley assassination (investigation of conspiracy); Andrea Salsedo; anarchists; McKinley assassination (investigation of conspiracy: compared with other cases). |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; Luigi Galleani; Emma Goldman; William McKinley; Andrea Salsedo. |
Notes
|
The article (excerpted below) is an installment in a series titled
“On the Trail of the Anarchist Band.”
“By William J. Flynn, Former Chief of the United States Secret Service” (p. 3). |
Document |
Case VII [excerpt]
[. . .] my readers may recall that Leon Czolgosz, before being
executed for the murder of President McKinley, announced his belief in the speeches
of Emma Goldman. Czolgosz declared that he had decided upon the assassination
after listening to Goldman talk four or five times. But I was never able to
fasten upon Goldman the direct responsibility. I was never able to prove that
she had said that President McKinley should have been assassinated. In brief,
we were unable to trace Czolgosz’s crazy deed back to the source defined.
But there was no reasonable argument against the
belief that it was Goldman who planted the seed in the assassin’s mind.
You will recall Andrea Salsedo, the Anarchist
printer, who committed suicide by jumping from one of the windows of the Department
of Justice offices in Park Row. Salsedo admitted to us that he was a member
of the Galleani group of radicals. I learned from sources too impressive and
reliable to be disbelieved that it was Galleani who not only sowed the seed
that grew into the attack upon Wall street [sic] but he plotted the thing and
forwarded his suggestions to America.
I might have connected Salsedo with that outrage
more closely than we could connect Czolgosz’s act with Emma Goldman or Emma
Goldman with the actual assassination of President McKinley, but between the
actual outrage and the Anarchists we questioned there was, as there always is
in such affairs, that vague span of probability for which we could find no solid
foundation. In other words, evidence of the sort the court would require was
missing.