Innocent Until Proven Guilty – Part 9

To begin at the beginning of this story, click here to go to Part 1.

Part Nine: It ain’t over ’til it over

The Day Book, Chicago, IL, LAST EDITION, of December 22, 1916, lead with the headline:

TRIBUNE LOSES IN LIBEL SUIT ––– RAKED WOMAN’S PAST ––– MURDER MYSTERY FIGURES

Facts supporting the headline were that Fred H. Memhard and his wife Lucille McLeod-Memhard, formerly of Chicago, existed Judge Slosser’s courtroom that day as winners of a libel suit against the Chicago Tribune.

The trial resolved a law suit filed by the Memhards against the Tribune, who were than living in Kentucky, for the libelous and slanderous claims made about Lucille McLeod-Memhard in its March 6, 1916 issue. The disparaging remarks were the context of a story about “a will left by a distant relative” of Lucille. The Tribunewrote she “shot and killed Nieman [sic] in 1905 and was repudiated by her relatives.” In addition, the Tribunecharacterized Lucille as “a bad woman, a daughter of the relights, a vampire and a murderess.”

The Day Book seems to sling mud at the Tribune as well when it stressed that four consecutive days of legal wrangling took place, with the lawyers for the Tribune putting on witnesses to prove its claims about Mrs. Memhard. The Day Book portrayed the case and its outcome as the Tribune being in the center of its territory, “where it swings a newspaper club of wide and brutal power.” But that “the two strangers from Kentucky (the Memhards had relocated) were able to beat the Tribune, prove it a falsifier and show that in Cook County it’s not exactly true that it’s harder to convict a newspaper than a woman of a crime.”

What seems like an attempt to represent the Memhards as a normal family and further embarrass the Tribune, The Day Book detailed that “a boy was born to them. He stands higher than his mother’s knee and is learning to talk. His mother and father are proud of the way he could say the family name.”

Though the Memhard’s existed the courtroom as victors, the jury’s verdict was to award the plaintiff “$1 damages after four hours of deliberation.”  Sources reported a majority of the jurors, on its first ballot, were in favor of assessing the Tribune $10,000. There is no report why that award was reduced to a final disposition of one dollar.

Postscript

It is only fitting that this saga end with a copy of William T. Niemann, Jr. “Certificate of Death.”

The cause of death states Niemann died as a result of “Shock and hemorrhage due to a bullet wound of the head said bullet fired from a revolved held in the hand of one Lucille McLeod . . . “ That determination, one can argue, conflicts with the evidence.

 

Readers are invited to post their thoughts and opinions on the “trials and tribulations” (pun intended) of Lucile McLeod-Memhard.

13 thoughts on “Innocent Until Proven Guilty – Part 9

  1. Pingback: Innocent Until Proven Guilty – Part 8 | old spirituals

  2. Goodness gracious. These people’s lives read like News of the World or something. And the absolute nonsense the papers spew; guesses, wild accusations, and other nonsense all to make a buck off some gullible reader. They seemed like the social media misinformation rackets of their day, lol. I don’t know what to think about the gun being under William. That would seem a bit out of place if he was shooting himself from the side or front. How on earth did it end up underneath him?

    Liked by 3 people

  3. What a flaming reputation the papers gave Lucille: “a bad woman, a daughter of the relights, a vampire and a murderess.”
    I don’t know what relights are but I will go so far as to say she probably did murder good old William Niemann. Good story Nicola!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I can’t really explain why, but Lucille’s life story caused me to instantly think of the Kenny Rogers song, “Lucille,” and the lyrics, “You picked a fine time to leave me, Lucille.” Lucille was certainly a parental challenge.

    Liked by 1 person

    • The Gambler gets all the attention but Lucille was one of Kenny Rogers’ best songs!
      BB King named his guitar Lucille. During one of his first shows ever, two men got in a fight over a woman and kicked over a gas lantern on the floor. The whole joint went up in flames and BB got out but then he ran back in to save his guitar.
      He named it Lucille after the woman who started the brawl that night 😉

      Liked by 1 person

Share your thoughts on this post