Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 02, 1913, Image 3

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To the casual spectator who feels no personal interest in the outcome of the Frank trial, the one great feature of the courtroom is the cross-examining of the State’s witnesses by Luther Z. Rosser. Rosser roars, Rosser whispers, Rosser threatens, Rosser pleads, Rosser insinuates, Rosser cajoles. Rosser jests. At the left is shown Rosser holding his arms out as though to receive and clasp to his breast the answer about to come to a difficult question he has put. At the right is Rosser grinning sarcastically. A witness for the State has just said that his memory was as fresh after two years as two days. * -V i «** THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. ===== LUTHER ROSSER EXEMPLIFYING THE GENTLE ART OF CROSS-EXAMINING Rosser gently starting battery of questions. By JAMES B. NEVIN. FRANK JUROR'S LIFE ONE The testimony of Dr. Roy Harris, chairman of the State Board of Health, and one of the most learned s-nd approved physicians in Georgia, was dramatic,-both in its.^ubManct? and in the manner of it6 delivery Friday. It was not calculated to help Leo Frank—and it did not. The exhibition of a portion of the content* of the dead girl’s stomach, for the purpose of approximating the time of her death, held breathless the packed courthouse—and the faint ing of the physician during the progress of his testimony gave a final touch of melodrama to the trial th^t thrilled the a idience as nothing else has thus far. Dr. Harris impressed me, too, a* believing in Frank’s guilt—I do not know that he does belie v© ^that way, it merely happens that he seemed so to impress ipe. And if he impressed that jury as he impressed me, then the tilings he testified may, if the iretnainder of tnc case against Frank holds together, prove eventually to. be .-the defend ant’s undoing. ' • . % Shows He Had Chance. To be .rure, the State has not yet fixed the crime definitely on Frank— but it HAS definitely shown, unless ita witnesses be impeached, which is highly unlikiefljL that- Leo Frank MIGHT have murdered Mary Phagan and that he DID have the opportunity to accomplish it. Having shown that the OPPOR TUNITY was there, and that the murder likely was consummated dur ing the time limits of that oppor tunity, the remaining elements of the case need but to be knitted properly together to make dark indeed the out look for Frank. Frank himself, Monteen Stover. Mrs. White and Dr. Harris--they to gether form a chain thus far ap parently strong and, dapgerous! . That, from the standpoint of the defense, however, is the worst view to take of it. It must be remembered that the defense as yet has introduced no witnesses. Such, advantage as it so far has gained—and it has won many points—It has gained by wringing from the State’s own witnesses mat- , ter? of fact fa^iraplc tp Frank. When the defense,comes to tell its story it m^y be confidently antici- . pated that additional weak points in ‘ the State’s ca5*e niar be' discovered. The only question is, will they be found SUFFICIENTLY wfeak to cause the entire chain to fall apart? Defense Seeks Weakest Link. A chAin is, of course, oniy as strong as its Weakest link. Will the defense be able to locate the State’s weakest link? And having located it, will it. can it be strained to the point of giving way?* That is the perplexing and grim puzzle that RoMer and Arnold are .. contemplating from one standpoint and to-day Dorsey and Hooper from the other. The black, forbidding shadow of the negro, Jim Conley, has fallen heavily athwart the courtroom in the old City Hall, where Frank is bat tling for his liberty, ni» good name and the restoration of his status as an .upright and honorable man among has fellows. ' The "State is paving the way to the ctimax of its case—it is leading up, and with considerable sk”! and adroitness, to the test of its biggest asset or its most tremendous liability, as the case may be—Jim Conley 1 , confessed accessory after the fact of Mary Phagan’s murder and by many suspeefed., of being the principal to the murder. Soujfchnw it seemed to me that Luther Rosser grew more and more cautious in his cross-examining Fri day ajid Saturday, and certainly Reu ben Arnold appeared to weigh we!! his words and carefully propound his questions,' Dorsey Has Temper in Leash. Dorsey, too, has his tempre much more thoroughly in hand—and Hoop er? * Hooper is the same as ever—smil ing, calm, deliberate, rarely speaking at all, save to whisper directing words into his associate’s ear n-»w and then. When Jitfi Conley is on the stand, Leo Frank will be face to face with the crisis in his trial—either Conley will leave the stand Frank's final de liverance and refuge, or his eternal damnation on earth! For this is a battle in truth to the very death—a battle in which quar ter is being neither g.ven nor asked! It means hope, and love, and life, and liberty to Frank, or it means ! I ooked. long and earnestly into the faces of those twelve “good mnn and true,” the “gentlemen of the Jury” on Friday afternoon. To me, the Frank jury appears to be much above the average. A composite picture of it would indicate, I suspect, intelligence, level headedness, business knowledge and poise. If it is the sort of jury I think it is, it is just the-sort of Jury that should try a case of such unusual quality as the on*-,it now has in hand. I am assuming that a vast majority of Georgians are hoping sincerely to see the truth of this famous case es tablished—that it is largely an ab stract proposition to the average man. The point, however, is not so much What any one of us thinks—the point is what does that JURY think? The- impressions that evidence pro duce are varied and sometimes marked. One never can exactly and precisely say which way it will cut. And right here my mind goes back involuntarily to Dr. Roy Harris, and his remarkable testimony. Undoubtedly the defense will have to put on its thinking cap, straight and firmly set, if it hopes not only to upset that testimony and discredit it as particularly and relatively In point, but to remove the profound impres sion it may have made upon the jury. It is, after all. largely upon mental impression—perhaps more often than no t—that jury verdicts are predicted The psychological receptiveness of the jury frequently controls the finding, I doubt not. If Dr. Harris’ testimony has Rosser thundering, his face clouded by anger. 0. B KEELER. weighed heavily against Frank in the mind of the jury. t>.e defense will find It extremely difficult to remove that weight. The Solicitor General may have been far more astute and incisive, too, than some have thought, when, time and again, he claimed to have been entrapped by his own witnesses —that they were not now swearing the same things that a few weeks age they swore readily enough. Effect May Be Decisive. If the Solicitor has managed to get it into the minds of that Jury that Frank needs protection against actu ally damaging circumstances, that witnesses deliberately have been drilled to protect him against sinister things, that witnesses have been tam pered with in his behalf—all of which things may be inferentlally set up, without many genuine reasons there for being given—then a psychological effect will have been achieved that may prove dangerous in the extreme to the defendant. Now, I do not mean to say the State HAS succeeded In doing that, and I hardly see wherein those impressions would be warranted altogether in the minds of the Jurymen, still Dorsey and Hooper are driving at SOME THING—and It may be they are driv ing at that exact psychological ef fect! And you never can tell. The way of a serpent upon a rock, of an eagle in the air, and of a man with a maid—these things have been said to be the strangest of all things. But the fourth strangest thing, and there may be so many as four super latively. strange things, is the way of a jury with a defendant at bar! Therefore, if Hooper and Dorsey have been seeking, through the clever manipulation of their own witnesses and through the still cleverer direct ing of the cross-examination Into de sired channels, and if they have suc ceeded, which no man possibly may know now, the art employed has been consummately far-reaching and keen. It will brace up the amazing story of Conley wonderfully and make his tale the easier for the jury to accept as true, and it will in inverse ra*tio discount the moreover, if the jury can be brought to that psychological statu- suggest ed in this article, if it be the.true pur pose of the State U> bring it there. Situation Rests on “Ifs.” There are a good many "ifs” in this idea, to be sure—but all psychological situations are build^d largely upon ”ifs.” That the State is undertaking to establish a psychological effect in at least one other direction, too, Is evi dent in the way it insists, over and over, that Frank was “nervous” or “extremely nervous” just after the crime was committed—the idea being chat if he was agitated it likely was because of his guilty conscience. The State has combated this won derfully well, in so far as the sub stance of its denials are concerned— and yet into this idea obtrudes the thought that maybe here, again, the State has been cleverer than the de fense has imagined, by forcing the State rather to overdo its hand in that direction! Now, these suggestions may be more or less elusive and hard to get Jiolii of, but they are in no-way impossi ble. Indeed, when it is remembered that the State all along has been de veloping a rather weak circumstantial case against* Frank always up to its ^tar witness, Conley—at once both its hope and its despair—and that the story of that witness is grimly gro- t*■ sijijc, ii, pans .strenuously raining Roan Holding Scales Justice With Steady of Hand By L. F. WOODRUFF. defendants statement, on the imagination, based, as it is in portions, upon admitted lies and mis representations, the great help and assistance to tne State of a mentally receptive Jury may be, and doubtless will be, appreciated immediately oy the reader. In any and every aspect of the case it is but the simple truth to say that both the State and the defense have been forced to the skating on dangerously thin ice more than once so far. Wilson Takes a Day Off; Golfs a Little Washington, auk. 2.—President Wilson to-day dropped all official business. He golfed in the morning with Dr. C G. Grayson, his physi cian. and planned to go to the ball game in the afternoon. Emotion’s entire gamut is daily run on the screen of faces watching the Frank trial. A student of facial expression can find anything he seeks by watching the throng of spectators a half hour. A glknce at one man may show a sneer of hate as bitter as gall. His neighbor in the next seat will prob ably be smiling in amused content as if he were witnessing the antics of his favorite comedian. Looking to the left he may see fear as vividly depicted on a counte nance as trapped felon has ever felt. And another glance might show a spectator in studious contemplation as rapt as that of a philosopher en deavoring to fathom a new frailty in human character. Men have been mad, and shown it, during the progress of Atlantans most famous criminal case. And men have shown that they were glad to the point of jubilation at the very same instant. Roan Utterly Impassive. But throughout the tedious hours and hours of the hearing, one man sits, listening to every word. And he has yet to display the fact that his emotions are any more affected by the dramatic trial in which he is a commanding figure than those of a business man going through the daily routine of his prosaic grind. That quality shows why the man is sitting there. If he were a man to show that his feelings were a war ed as the fide of battle turned fi st for one side and then the other, »‘e would not be qualified for the emi nent position he holds. Judge L. S Roan is performing the ■arduous duties of presiding Justice in the Frank case, because the people of Fulton County recognized that he is the man of the county’s 250,000 best endowed by nature to perform this task. His attitude throughout the hearing has shown that the people chose wise ly and well. Think of his position. It Is one of supreme Importance Just at this time, when passion and prejudice are more likely to rule than cool reason ing. It is his work to uphold the theory that Justice is blind, and that the courts of the land are the blindfold that darkens the vision of the goddess. He must see that the scales are evenly balanced. He must be sure that the sword is sharp. There are scores, yes hundreds, of people in Atlanta to-day convinced absolutely of Frank's guilt in the Phagan mystery, and it would take a power of inconceivabU magnitude to change their mental attitude. There are scores and hundreds right here who believe thoroughly and hon estly that Flunk is innocent of any crime, and is as cruelly a persecuted person us the earth has known since the days of the martyrs. And so firm is this belief that it could not be shaken by dynamite or earthquake. No Doubt as to Fairness. Judge Roan’s position and his oath of office call on him to see that both of these classes are firmly convinced of one fact in common, and that i- that the case of Leo M. Frank isbe- ing fairly, honestly and effectively tried according to the law' and evi dence. When he does this, he Is removing a tremendous amount of the poison in the case. People are too prone to hint that a man’s money can as sure him of safety in any act he may commit. People are too likely to say that law and order becomes as nothing beneath a. weight of pre judice. Every word that Judge Roan speaks is as eagerly listened to as the voice of a diva. His every action is watched as closely as those of the President of the United States are by his secret service protectors. Therefore, in action as well as in word, the judge must be impartial. Therefore, he can not smile as one side or the other scores a point. He can not evince extraordinary interest if it is apparent that the lawyers are about to tear to shreds the story of a witness. He must make a mental pic ture of everything in the long- drawn-out battle in orderjp give his final instructions to the jury. but he must not permit this picture to be reflected on his face. And he has not. His rulings have, been quick. They are spoken in a low voice. Just loud enough for counsel and witness to hear. In rendering a decision, he rarely straightens himself from tlie reclining attitude he assumes in the office chair. Heat Hard on Judge. He sits through the long hours, his right hand waving a huge palm leaf fan. though two electric fans fire turned on the bench. He needs all three, for the courtroom is stifling hot, and Judge Roan is no longer young. Occasionally he mops a hair less spot on his high forehead with a handkerchief. Several times during each day dur ing the duller moments of the trial, he speaks a smiling word to some member of the bar, not connected with the rase, who passes the bench or exchanges pleasantries with a court attache. But his mind is never off the burn ing issue that he must play so im portant a part in deciding. The juror s life is not unmixed with care. Look him over next time you,attend, the Frank trial. Size up his little job. Weigh his responsibility. Consider nis problems. And then, if seeking employment, go out and sign a contract to make little ones out of big ones. It’s a more satisfactory' way of earning $2 a day. The juror’s business is to collect evidence by' the earful, sift the same, separate the true from the false, and make It into a verdict as between the Stat of Georgia and Leo Frank. On the face of it, the plan is beau- | tifully simple. Rut the beauty is only skin deep. You are recokning without the law yers. Here Entereth the Lawyer. The simple-minded layman—and that rating includes the juror—starts out with the idea that the business of a lawyer is to extract evidence from the witness in available form for proper consideration by the juror. It speedily develops that the full Intent of counsel is to prevent the witness from unburdening himself in any way whatsoever. The more ex pensive the counsel, the less infor mation the opposition will be able to wheedle out of Its star performers. The method of blocking is objective —that is, it is by means of objections. It appears that our system of Juris prudence takes cognizance of the juror as a mere babe in arms, not fit j to assimilate the strong meat of evi dence straight. How the Juror Is Spared. So he is sedulously raised on tho bottle. Mr. ftorsey (for example) has a witness by whom he is aching to show that Leo Frank was nervous the morning he was apprised of the trag edy. Mr. Rosser and Mr. Arnold are equally positive that the witness Is not competent to judge if Mr. Frank was nervous. Also they are quite sure that the bottle-fed Juror is ut terly incapable of deciding if the wit ness is competent to decide if Mr. Frank was nervous. They do not intend that the juror shall endanger his delicate thinking apparatus by grappling with any such abstruse problem. So they fix it up this way. Witness: “He insited on having some coffee.” Mr. Rosser: “I object to the use of the word insisted.’ It manifestly is a conclusion of the witness, and as such has no place in the evi dence. 1 ask that the word be ruled out." , _ Objections Fix the Fact. And the court orders it ruled out, thereby fixing the circumstance firm ly in the mind of the juror. And then Mr. Dorsey twists the query around and gets the witness to state that Frank asked for coffee twice at his house and once at the factory. Just why that arangement suits the defense beter than the simple propo sition that Frank insisted on the coffee is not entirely plain—to the layman. But it seems that the juror is to be shielded from any breath of any thing not bearing strictly on tho guilt or innonce of the accused. Specific and accurate ^formation I care. being thus at a premium, the juror probably is amazed when Mr. Rosser, vibrating with grief and Indignation, protests against Detective Scott read ing from some notes he made while working directly on the case. The court also is shocked, but per mits Mr. Scott to “refresh his memo- rl” by means of the notes and then retail the product of pitch refresh ment by word of mouth. This is agreeable to Mr Rosser and the court, but when Mr. Dorsey of fers further to refresh Mr. Scott's somewhat wilted recollection, Mr. Rosser intimates at the top of a ro bust voice that such a thing shall he accomplished only* over his (Mr. Rosser’s) inanimate form. And that promptly affords, the bot tle-fed juror some n^ fl _ *^ence to ponder. Mr. Dorsey insists it is his right to "lead” the witness. The witness demands to know if he is suspected of holding, back. Mr. Dorsey declares he has been trapped by the witness, and Mr. Rosser appends the somewhat doubt ful comment that Frank Hoopei* is a wise man. • Here Are More Problems. Now, add this to the problems of the troubled juror: Is Mr. Scott balking? If so, has Mr. Dorsey the right to hold an ear of corn in front of him? Has Mr. Dorsey been trapped? And, in view -wT the foregoing, is or it not Mr. Hooper a wise nKan? Other problems for the exercise pf the Frank juror on the side, as it were, would include th e following: Should Mr. Dorsey be permitted to examine a witnes without interrup tion by Mr. Rosser? Should Mr. Rosser be permitted to object ? If so, should Mr Dorsey scowl while Mr. Rosser Is objecting? Does Mr Rosser consider whisky a good remedy for indigestion? Would He Hide Evidence? Woud anybody think that Mr. Ros ser would have anything to do with suppressing evidence, except In the regular and approved objective method prescribed by law? Is Mr. Scott a trained 1 sleuth? And one more thing that tend* to lend an acrobatic cast to the mental processes of the Frank Juror. once in a while—not very often, it*® true bur once in a while something gets by Mr. Rosser and Mr. Arnold. The witness may be quick on the trigger. Or Mr. Dorsey may manage to frog up a subtle query with a joker In it. And after the storm of objection has thundered Itself out and Mr. Ros ser is mopping the signs of honest toil from his brow, and Mr. Dorsey is wearing an expression similar to that of a cat that knows all about what happened to the canary—why, then the court orders the stenogra pher to strike out the answer. And the obliging juror is instructed to forget it. Yes? Would You Forget it, Too? Just suppose that you, being an honest and hard-working juror, try ing in an honest and hard-working way to extract a morsel of real in formation from a Jungle of cross questions and crabbed answers and objections and oratory and recrimi nation—suppose that the honest and hard-working witness should beat ’em to it for once, and disgorge something really interesting. And then suppose the judge should tell you to wipe it right off your mental slate, and not remember it, or consider it, or think about it any more forever. You would do it would you not? Neither would we. The juror's life is not unmixed with