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Los Angeles Times file photo Attorney Earl Rogers, who drafted L.A.’s ban on picketing and defended Clarence Darrow on charges of attempting to bribe jurors in the trial of the McNamara brothers in The Times bombing.
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July 16-19, 1910: While we were occupied with the Democratic National Convention of 1960, our friends in 1910 were busy approving the famous ban on picketing that was a key element in the bombing of the Los Angeles Times Building on Oct. 1, 1910. The Times published the complete text of the proposed ordinance, which was written by attorney Earl Rogers, one of the major figures in the events leading up to the bombing and the defense attorney for Clarence Darrow on charges of attempting to bribe jurors in the bombing case. Rogers was hired to write the ordinance by the Merchants and Manufacturers Assn., and I’ll have more about them later. Rogers was noted for his courtroom rhetoric, and here’s a bit of his speech in favor of the picketing ban, as quoted in The Times:
Speaking of Rogers, I was down at the Los Angeles Public Library the other day reading Alfred Cohn and Joe Chisholm’s 1934 biography of Rogers, “Take the Witness!”I must say it’s well worth a look, not only for material on Rogers but for what they have to say about Los Angeles. I suppose it’s a sign of a complete research drudge, but whenever I pick up a book on history I always check the index and bibliography first, for here is where authors establish their credentials. Oddly enough, “Take the Witness!” doesn’t appear in the bibliography of Howard Blum’s “American Lightning” (which isn’t indexed) or in the bibliography of Kevin Starr’s “Inventing the Dream.” Even more curious, Earl Rogers merits precisely one mention in Starr’s “Inventing the Dream” and that’s in relation to the Fatty Arbuckle case rather than The Times bombing and the Darrow trials. That doesn’t bode well, does it? There’s more on Rogers in “Final Verdict,” by his daughter, Adela Rogers St. Johns; W.W. Robinson’s highly recommended “Lawyers of Los Angeles”; and Michael Lance Trope’s “Once Upon a Time in Los Angeles: The Trials of Earl Rogers.” |
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July 16, 1910: Los Angeles’ proposed ban on picketing, written by attorney Earl Rogers.
July 17, 1910: The anti-picketing ordinance will take effect July 19. |
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If ever this story is made into a movie, Leonardo DiCaprio would be the obvious choice. No make-up required.
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