Clarence Darrow: Jury Tamperer?
Newly unearthed documents shed light on claims that the famous criminal attorney bribed a juror
- By John A. Farrell
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
He doesn’t say he is innocent—only that his conscience is clear. That was an important distinction for Darrow, for whom motive was the overriding question in defining an evil, a sin or a crime.
Darrow’s great patron was Illinois Gov. John Altgeld, whom Darrow said admiringly was “absolutely honest in his ends and equally as unscrupulous in the means he used to attain them.” Altgeld “would do whatever would serve his purpose when he was right. He’d use all the tools of the other side—stop at nothing,” he said. “There never was a time that I did not love and follow him.”
In both his trials Darrow pleaded not guilty, took the stand, swore an oath and testified that Franklin’s testimony against him was a lie. But in the telegram to his brother and other correspondence to family and friends, Darrow distinguishes between legal and moral guilt. “Do not be surprised at any thing you hear,” Darrow warned his son, in a note newly unearthed from the Minnesota files. But, he told Paul, “my mind and conscience are at ease.”
Indeed, in his second trial, Darrow virtually dared the jury to convict him, making arguments that seemed to justify the McNamaras’ terrorist attack. Jim McNamara placed the bomb in the Times building, Darrow told the jury, because “he had seen those men who were building these skyscrapers, going up five, seven, eight, ten stories in the air, catching red hot bolts, walking narrow beams, handling heavy loads, growing dizzy and dropping to the earth, and their comrades pick up a bundle of rags and flesh and bones and blood and take it home to a mother or a wife.” Darrow went on,“He had seen their flesh and blood ground into money for the rich. He had seen the little children working in factories and the mills; he had seen death in every form coming from the oppression of the strong and the powerful; and he struck out blindly in the dark to do what he thought would help....I shall always be thankful that I had the courage” to represent him.
After hearing that, the jurors told reporters, they were convinced that Darrow would surely resort to bribery, and other illegal acts, to defend or advance his beliefs and clients.
How should we judge Darrow?
He left Los Angeles in 1913 a changed man. “The cynic is humbled,” his friend Steffens wrote. “The man that laughed sees and is frightened, not at prison bars, but at his own soul.”
After he returned to Chicago, he rebuilt his practice and his reputation by taking cases that other lawyers would not touch. Mentally ill men accused of heinous crimes. Black men charged with raping white women. Communists and anarchists snared in the reactionary fervor of the Red Scare. He defended Frank Lloyd Wright when federal prosecutors hounded the architect for violating the Mann Act, which made it a crime to transport women across state lines for “immoral purposes.” He saved the killers Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb from the gallows. Most famously, he scored a triumph for academic freedom after John Scopes was accused of violating a Tennessee law that prohibited the teaching of evolution.
“The marks of battle are all over his face,” the journalist H.L. Mencken wrote. “He has been through more wars than a whole regiment of Pershings....Has he always won? Actually, no. His cause seems lost among us.
“Imbecilities, you say, live on? They do,” wrote Mencken. “But they are not as safe as they used to be.”
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Comments (6)
To Make Men Free,
Excellent point...and quite possible a scenario going off the man's past actions.
But personally even though I am a staunch atheist (& subscriber to the overwhelming fact that is evolution) it is precisely the fact that a person such as Darrow may plausibly defend a creationist at a hypothetical trial that makes him so heroic in my eyes.
There could be times when a "creationists" freedom of religion is violated, and regardless of one's personal beliefs, the truly noble will defend the rights and freedoms of all parties, regardless.
The man is a model to follow in many ways...
(Insert really cliche Voltaire quote)
PS- Clearly I don't mean to insinuate Darrow would ever believe nonsense such as Creationism, but simply that he would defend someone's right to believe in it....
Posted by DrugStarCowboy on February 29,2012 | 10:56 AM
I'm confused - when were the bribery trials? If they were before 1913, then why would he be sending a bribe 14 years later in 1927? This article is interesting, but it would have been better had the dates of these incriminating letters and the trial dates been made clearer. I'm not entirely sure they point to guilt so much as a guilty conscience, and a guilty conscience doesn't always mean a person is actually guilty of a crime.
Posted by Sam on December 29,2011 | 11:33 AM
Mr. Farrell tried to present backstory but his article came off more like gossip. The main thesis seems to be "a lot of people saying 'he would have' adds up to 'he probably did'." No matter how hard the author worked to dig up subjective impressions, such a syllogism would not pass muster in a critical thinking course. But that wasn't the most disturbing aspect of the article. Rather, I found it bizarrely naive, or perhaps disingenuous, that Mr. Farrell labels the unionist McNamara brothers "terrorists" but considers the Ku Klux Klan to be mere "bullies." Dictionaries generally define terrorism as the "use of intimidation in the pursuit of political aims." When in its long history has the Klan not been political?
Posted by Martin Schell on December 29,2011 | 11:23 AM
A fascinating article. I've added the book to my "to-read" list in Goodreads. However, the line about the John Scopes trial should prompt another re-evaluation of Clarence Darrow. The author contends that it was a victory for academic freedom. If so, we need to ask ourselves which side Mr. Darrow would be on if he took a similar case today. Based on the fact that today evolution is the enforced state doctrine on creation, I expect that Mr. Darrow would be defending some teacher for teaching Biblical creation. If such a scenario could possibly occur, I suspect that many who praise him today would then condemn him, and many that now condemn him would instead praise him. He was, apparently, a difficult man for us to understand.
Posted by Make Men Free on December 11,2011 | 08:32 AM
He's been one of my heroes since I read the Irving Stone biography as a teenager. He still is.
Posted by Susan Fox on December 6,2011 | 11:08 PM
Esau was Jacob's older brother.
Posted by Johm Lustik on November 21,2011 | 04:03 PM