90
S C A T T E R B R A I N E D
1921:
Anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti are
sentenced to death
on murder and robbery charges with scant evidence; intel-
lectuals like George Bernard Shaw and Dorothy Parker argue
the pair were guilty only of being radicals during an anti-
Communist Red Scare. It doesn’t matter; they hang.
1921:
When a sickly trollop expires in Fatty Arbuckle’s hotel
room, the portly fi lm star fi nds himself charged with rape
and murder. Th
ough acquitted, his career is ruined.
1924:
Wealthy college boys
Nathan Leopold and Richard
Loeb murder a teenager just for fun, their “perfect crime”
foiled when Leopold leaves his glasses with the body. Lawyer
Clarence Darrow gives a 12-hour speech in their defense,
sparing them from hanging.
1925:
Darrow, the era’s reigning liberal heavyweight,
leaps
to the defense of Tennessee schoolteacher John Scopes in the
then- and now-legendary “Monkey Trial.” Darrow loses the
case despite much grandiose speechifying by him and prose-
cutor William Jennings Bryan; Scopes is fi ned a measly $100
for teaching evolution despite a state law banning it (though
he never pays); and 80-plus years later we’re
still arguing
about monkeys. Nice work, fellas.
1931:
Nine black teenagers are falsely accused of gang-rap-
ing two white women in Alabama. Th
e Scottsboro Boys—so
known for where they were jailed—are fi rst sentenced to
death, then variously paroled or pardoned in two landmark
Supreme Court decisions.
1935:
Th
e infant son of aviator Charles “Lucky” Lindbergh is
kidnapped and murdered. Suspected
killer Bruno Haupt-
mann’s trial generates worldwide publicity. Convicted, Haupt-
mann is electrocuted in 1936.
1942:
Swashbuckling fi lm star Errol Flynn is tried and
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acquitted of statutory rape, only furthering his
rep as a devil-
may-care ladies’ man. (Or little girls’ man, as it were.)
1945:
Th
e Nuremberg Trials. An international tribunal de-
cides the fate of two dozen high-ranking Nazis. Journalists
expecting monstrous defendants are surprised by the ordi-
nariness of nasties like Hermann Göring, remarking on “the
banality of evil.”
1949:
State department offi
cial Alger Hiss denies spying for
Russia, despite seemingly damning evidence to the contrary.
Because the statute of limitations
on the spying charge itself
has run out, he is tried and convicted of perjury.
1951:
American Communists Julius and Ethel Rosenberg are
convicted of passing U.S. nuclear secrets to Russia. Executed in
1953, the Rosenbergs’ supposed guilt remains controversial.
1966:
Hollywood glam-girl Hedy Lamarr shoplifts $86
worth of underwear from an L.A. department store. When
confronted in the parking lot, she (reportedly) says, “Th
e
other stores let me do it!” After much ballyhoo on her behalf
from
an adoring public, she is acquitted.
1970:
Charles Manson and his merry gang of murderers are
convicted of murdering actress Sharon Tate and six others in
highly publicized proceedings, further courting media atten-
tion
by carving giant
X
’s into their foreheads.
1976:
Newspaper heiress Patty Hearst is convicted of rob-
bing a federal bank as part of the radical Symbionese Libera-
tion Army, the coverage of which sells a lot of newspapers.
Coincidence? Or genius?
1982:
John Hinckley Jr., the not-quite assassin of president
Ronald Reagan, successfully pleads insanity,
causing several
states to rewrite laws regarding the insanity plea. Th
ough he
is now famous, Jodie Foster still cruelly refuses to date him.
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