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Nineteen years not guilty : the Leonard Hankins story in his own words / as told to Earl Guy PDF

110 Pages·1956·4.143 MB·English
by  HankinsLeonardGuyEarl
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Nineteen Years Not Guilty The Leonard Hankins Story in His Own Words NINETEEN YEARS NOT GUILTY AS TOLD TO EARL GUY EXPOSITION PRESS * NEW YORK EXPOSITION PRESS INc., 386 Fourth Avenue, New York 16, N. Y. FIRST EDITION @ 1956 by Earl Guy. All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. Manufactured in the United States of America. Library of Congress catalog card number: 55-12282. Foreword Leonard Hankins gave me this story on a tape recorder, and my main concern has been to keep it his, to maintain the simple directness of the narration. It would have been easy to over- dramatize it. It would have been easy also to pile detail on detail, to glamorize and pretty it up, to add in short another two or three hundred pages. But the real Leonard Hankins would have been lost in the verbiage probably, and it seems to me about time for the individual to have a chance to speak for him- self, without the writer interpreting his experiences or inflating them unduly. Now and then, the narrator knows more about what is real and important. I have tried, therefore, to let Leonard speak his own mind in his own words, to add only the detail and atmosphere which will bring out his feelings and give the book continuity and order. EARL Guy Contents Foreword 5 Nineteen Years Not Guilty 9 Epilogue 99 Appendix: Report of the Claims Commission 101 I I am fixing to tell you of a crime for which I did nineteen years, a crime I had no knowledge of-the robbery of the Third Northwestern National Bank of Minneapolis. When it happened, I was in a barber-shop on Wabasha in St. Paul, getting a shave. As a matter of fact, I shaved myself because both barbers were busy. After I had finished and had started out of the place with a friend I'll call Jack, a bunch of squad cars passed, rushing toward Minneapolis, their sirens wide open. The traffic wheeled over, came to a stop. The police disappeared toward the dome of the capitol, that looked over the town. It was an accident, I thought, or maybe a fire. But at the house where I was stopping, the lady ran to the door to tell us that the bank had been robbed, and that the bandits had killed a couple of policemen. And inside, just as we were about to get seated, a second broadcast came in over the radio, saying that the mob was believed to be surrounded in Como Park. We heard nothing further that evening. But we did note by the paper that a curious motorist had been killed in the park, and that the robbers had all got away. The next day, Jack came over to St. Paul-he was living in Minneapolis-and we played a few hands of cards, drank some beer and walked down to a place to see a man about a game we were interested in. There was still a lot of talk about the holdup, of course. But there were no new developments, 10 NINETEEN YEARS NOT GURTY and we didn't think a great deal about it. We finished our busi- ness and returned to the apartment. By then, Jack figured he ought to start home, for his wife had just got out of the hospital and he had to pay a woman to stay with her. He said too that his cash was getting down pretty low. So I told the lady at the house to give him fifty dollars out of some money she was holding for me. She went to get it, discovering that it was gone; that another boy who was stopping there was also gone. I couldn't believe it. He hadn't lived far from me in Kentucky. All we found in his room, though, was an old gun which I stuck in my belt, thinking I might be able to peddle it. I turned back through the door, sure he would try to leave town. But we checked the bus stations, the depots and all trains and buses running south. We got no line on him at all. We wound up at Jack's apartment, where I spent the night. The following morning, we heard in a newscast that one of the bank bandits had been caught in St. Paul with part of the loot. But I didn't think too much about it, because I was in a hurry to get back, and Jack still had to get the woman to stay with his wife again. So we stopped at a filling station around the corner from her place, and while Jack ran up to get her, I had the car serviced. He hadn't returned by the time the attendant had finished. I waited maybe another twenty-five minutes, but he still didn't show up. I cut around to this apartment to check on him, see what had happened. When I knocked on the door, the woman there said, "Just a minute." And within a minute, I'd say, she told me, "Okay," and opened the door, and I stepped in to find myself covered with guns. The room and the hallway were swarming with police- men. They ordered me to get my hands in the air. I just stood there kind of numb and surprised. But I wasn't scared in particular. I remember thinking, What the hell is this? Then I thought of the old gun. I knew that was bad. I pulled the thing out and handed it, butt-first, to a policeman.

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.