Here's a more detailed article about the affidavits submitted in support of the plea for Frenchy's pardon. One of the witnesses was Jacob Riis, the Sun's police reporter and a friend of Teddy Roosevelt.
New York Sun, June 02, 1901, Page 1, Column 1
Shakespeare Murder Key
Found in a Housewife's Jewel Box at Cranford, N.J.
Another attempt to secure the liberation
of "Frenchy," otherwise the Algerian
Ameer Ben Ali, who was sent to prison
for life as the murderer of "Old Shakespeare"
in the East River Hotel, is now
being carried forward by persons actuated
only by the desire for what they belleve
to be justice. This is the third attempt
to secure the pardon of the Algerian.
Eight affidavits were sent to the Governor
at Albany yesterday by Lawyer
Ovide Robillard. An effort was made to
induce Gov. Black to pardon "Frenchy,"
but the Governor did not feel called upon
to act. When Gov. Roosevelt was asked
to grant a pardon to the Algerian he declined
on the ground that there was no
evidence to show that "Frenchy" was not
guilty. This objection of Gov. Roosevelt's
is met in the papers sent to Albany
by Mr. RoblDard, as the prisoner's friends
--who are altogether unknown to the prlsoner
himself--have been fortunate enough to
secure evidence that "Frenchy" did not
commit the murder and evidence that
another man, a Dane, did kill "Old Shakespeare."
As tangible evidence they have
the key to the room where the murder was
committed, which the murderer carried
away with him on the night of the murder
and which has been missing, so far as the
authorities are concerned, for ten years,
but the whereabouts of which during that
time is not known.
The key comes to light through George
Damon, a dealer in printers' materials at
44 Beckman street, who lives at Cranford,
N. J., with the history of its finding and
retention at his home on account of an
unwillingness to face the publicity of coming
forward with it at that time, a belief
that "Frenchy" was of a character such
that he should be In jail anyway, and a
fear of the big, ugly Dane who, Mr. Damon
believes, committed the murder.
Mr. Damon says that about a month
before the murder of "Old Shakespeare"
on April 23, 1891, having some grading to
do at his place in New Jersey, he went to
Castle Garden and hired a big foreigner
whom he knew only as Frank and whom he
took to be a Dane. After the grading was
finished the Dane was retained as an assistant
about the stable and grounds. Mr.
Damon's regular man being partly incapacitated
by reason of an accident, On
the morning of April 24, about 8 o'clock,
Damon went out to his stable and, not seeing
the Dane about, asked his other man where
Frank was. His man told him that the
Dane was upstairs asleep, that be had been
out all night and had come home very
ugly, and that Mr. Damon would be likely
to have trouble if he disturbed him. Mr.
Damon therefore didn't disturb him, but
came to the city as usual about 8 o'clock.
Between five and ten days later, Mr.
Damon say [sic], Frank left his employ abruptly.
He disappeared in the night and Mr.
Damon has never heard of him since. When he
came to Mr. Damon's he brought with him
only a small bundle of clothes. When he
went away he took this with him. When
Mrs. Damon sent one of her maid servants
to the barn to clean out the room Frank
had occupied the girl found there a bloody
shirt and a brass key, the only articles
the Dane had left in the room. The key was
attached to a brass tag on which was
stamped the number 31. This was the
number of the room in which "Shakespeare"
was murdered, and the key to which
had been taken away by the man who occupied
the room with her. The newspapers
had told all about the missing key. THE
SUN had published a picture of another
key belonging to the same hotel just like
the missing one.
The maid told Mrs. Damon of the finding
of the bloody shirt and the key in the barn
room and remarked that the number on the
tag attached to the key was the same as the
number of the room in which "Old Shakespeare"
had been murdered. When Mr.
Damon came home he was informed of
what had been found and the next day
when he came to the city he took one
of his employees and went around to the
saloon-hotel where the murder was done
and sitting down at a table ordered some
cigars. From the table they studied the
keys to tha other rooms of the hotel hanging
on the keyboard and saw they
were like the one found at Cranford.
While they were smoking a man came
downstairs from the hotel and laying a
key down on the bar went out. Damon
and his employee walked to the bar
and ordered some beer and while there
compared the key just laid down with
the one they had brought with them, and
found that the two were exactly alike.
Mr. Damon says that his familiarity
with type enables him to say the number
31 on his key was stamped on the brass
tag with the same die which had made
the numbers on the tag attached to the
other key and the numbers also on the
rest of the keys hanging up. The two
men left the hotel and for reasons already
mentioned Mr. Damon refrained
from coming forward and informing the authorities
of what he had found out. He did
tell his discoveries, however, to a friend,
John Lee, the well-known contractor, and it
was partly on Mr. Lee's advice, he says,
that he kept his information to himself
after that. An affidavit by Mr. Lee saying
that Mr. Damon told him of this ten
years ago has been sent with Mr. Damon's
to Gov. Odell, and there is among the papers
also an affidavit by Mr. Damon's employee,
Charles Brennan, corroborating Mr. Damon.
Brennan works for Mr. Damon as a truckman.
After making his affidavit Mr. Damon
went home and asked his wife if she could
swear to the number which the key her
maId found had borne, and she replied
that she could and that the key was up
in her jewel box, where it had been ever
since it was found. So the key was produced
and that too was sent on to Albany,
yesterday. The "1" of the "31" didn't
make a good mark when it was first stamped
on the brass tag, and a second impression
had to be made. The first blur and the
correction are both clear now.
Ever since the trial and conviction of
"Frenchy" there has been a widespread
conviction in this town that the Algerian
was "railroaded" to prison as a means to
stop the public clamor that some one should
be punished for the murder. "Frenchy"
has become insane in his imprisonment
and is now in the hospital for the criminal
insane at Matteawan, where Gov. Odell
saw him not long ago.
One of the points made by the police at
the time thay captured "Frenchy" and
identified him as the man who had done
the crime was the alleged discovery of "a
trail of blood" which led from the walls of
the room in which the body wes found
directly to the depraved Algerian. One
of the affidavits just sent to Gov.
Odell is that of Jacob A. Riis, who declares
that he was the first person from Police
Headquarters to enter the room after the
report of the finding of the body was made,
and that there were no spots of blood about
the room. F.C. Barber, who is now city
editor of one of the city papers was at
time a reporter for an evening paper and
was left at the scene of the murder, after
the other reporters had gone for the express
purpose of looking around the room
more carefully than they had the opportunity
to do in their hurry. He has
made an affidavit, which has been sent to
the Governor, saying also that there
no blood spots as the police declared
later they had found. H. Biebinich,
a clerk In one of the city departments, makes
affidavit that in an Eighth avenue place of
refreshment he had heard two men some time
after the murder declare that the alleged
blood spots spoken of by the police were
smears made on the walls by certain reporters
for the sake of doing duty as "clues."
Robert G. Butler of the editorial force
of one of the New York papers has made
an affidavit in which he nays Mr. Riis
and another reporter, W.J. Chamberlin,
told him at the time of the excitement over
the murder, that there were no blood spots
in the room, and he says that he told this
to Frederick House, who defended "Frenchy"
on his trial, but that Mr House did not
utilize the information in his trial of the
case. Another newspaper man, F.F.
Coleman, in his affidavit says that Dr W.
T. Jenkins told him that he had found in
"Shakespeare's" stomach evidence in the
condition of the food there that the woman
had eaten about an hour and a half before
she died, as it is known that "Shakespeare"
did eat, whereas "Frenchy" did not come
to the hotel until several hours after she
was known to have eaten this food. Mr.
Coleman says that Dr. Jenkins expressed
his willingness to go on the stand to testify
to this, that he, Coleman, wrote to Mr.
House informing him of this fact. Dr.
Jenkins was not questioned as to this reported
finding of his, however. Mr. Coleman
says that Mr. House sunsequently
acknowledged to him that he had received
the letter.
----end
New York Sun, June 02, 1901, Page 1, Column 1
Shakespeare Murder Key
Found in a Housewife's Jewel Box at Cranford, N.J.
Another attempt to secure the liberation
of "Frenchy," otherwise the Algerian
Ameer Ben Ali, who was sent to prison
for life as the murderer of "Old Shakespeare"
in the East River Hotel, is now
being carried forward by persons actuated
only by the desire for what they belleve
to be justice. This is the third attempt
to secure the pardon of the Algerian.
Eight affidavits were sent to the Governor
at Albany yesterday by Lawyer
Ovide Robillard. An effort was made to
induce Gov. Black to pardon "Frenchy,"
but the Governor did not feel called upon
to act. When Gov. Roosevelt was asked
to grant a pardon to the Algerian he declined
on the ground that there was no
evidence to show that "Frenchy" was not
guilty. This objection of Gov. Roosevelt's
is met in the papers sent to Albany
by Mr. RoblDard, as the prisoner's friends
--who are altogether unknown to the prlsoner
himself--have been fortunate enough to
secure evidence that "Frenchy" did not
commit the murder and evidence that
another man, a Dane, did kill "Old Shakespeare."
As tangible evidence they have
the key to the room where the murder was
committed, which the murderer carried
away with him on the night of the murder
and which has been missing, so far as the
authorities are concerned, for ten years,
but the whereabouts of which during that
time is not known.
The key comes to light through George
Damon, a dealer in printers' materials at
44 Beckman street, who lives at Cranford,
N. J., with the history of its finding and
retention at his home on account of an
unwillingness to face the publicity of coming
forward with it at that time, a belief
that "Frenchy" was of a character such
that he should be In jail anyway, and a
fear of the big, ugly Dane who, Mr. Damon
believes, committed the murder.
Mr. Damon says that about a month
before the murder of "Old Shakespeare"
on April 23, 1891, having some grading to
do at his place in New Jersey, he went to
Castle Garden and hired a big foreigner
whom he knew only as Frank and whom he
took to be a Dane. After the grading was
finished the Dane was retained as an assistant
about the stable and grounds. Mr.
Damon's regular man being partly incapacitated
by reason of an accident, On
the morning of April 24, about 8 o'clock,
Damon went out to his stable and, not seeing
the Dane about, asked his other man where
Frank was. His man told him that the
Dane was upstairs asleep, that be had been
out all night and had come home very
ugly, and that Mr. Damon would be likely
to have trouble if he disturbed him. Mr.
Damon therefore didn't disturb him, but
came to the city as usual about 8 o'clock.
Between five and ten days later, Mr.
Damon say [sic], Frank left his employ abruptly.
He disappeared in the night and Mr.
Damon has never heard of him since. When he
came to Mr. Damon's he brought with him
only a small bundle of clothes. When he
went away he took this with him. When
Mrs. Damon sent one of her maid servants
to the barn to clean out the room Frank
had occupied the girl found there a bloody
shirt and a brass key, the only articles
the Dane had left in the room. The key was
attached to a brass tag on which was
stamped the number 31. This was the
number of the room in which "Shakespeare"
was murdered, and the key to which
had been taken away by the man who occupied
the room with her. The newspapers
had told all about the missing key. THE
SUN had published a picture of another
key belonging to the same hotel just like
the missing one.
The maid told Mrs. Damon of the finding
of the bloody shirt and the key in the barn
room and remarked that the number on the
tag attached to the key was the same as the
number of the room in which "Old Shakespeare"
had been murdered. When Mr.
Damon came home he was informed of
what had been found and the next day
when he came to the city he took one
of his employees and went around to the
saloon-hotel where the murder was done
and sitting down at a table ordered some
cigars. From the table they studied the
keys to tha other rooms of the hotel hanging
on the keyboard and saw they
were like the one found at Cranford.
While they were smoking a man came
downstairs from the hotel and laying a
key down on the bar went out. Damon
and his employee walked to the bar
and ordered some beer and while there
compared the key just laid down with
the one they had brought with them, and
found that the two were exactly alike.
Mr. Damon says that his familiarity
with type enables him to say the number
31 on his key was stamped on the brass
tag with the same die which had made
the numbers on the tag attached to the
other key and the numbers also on the
rest of the keys hanging up. The two
men left the hotel and for reasons already
mentioned Mr. Damon refrained
from coming forward and informing the authorities
of what he had found out. He did
tell his discoveries, however, to a friend,
John Lee, the well-known contractor, and it
was partly on Mr. Lee's advice, he says,
that he kept his information to himself
after that. An affidavit by Mr. Lee saying
that Mr. Damon told him of this ten
years ago has been sent with Mr. Damon's
to Gov. Odell, and there is among the papers
also an affidavit by Mr. Damon's employee,
Charles Brennan, corroborating Mr. Damon.
Brennan works for Mr. Damon as a truckman.
After making his affidavit Mr. Damon
went home and asked his wife if she could
swear to the number which the key her
maId found had borne, and she replied
that she could and that the key was up
in her jewel box, where it had been ever
since it was found. So the key was produced
and that too was sent on to Albany,
yesterday. The "1" of the "31" didn't
make a good mark when it was first stamped
on the brass tag, and a second impression
had to be made. The first blur and the
correction are both clear now.
Ever since the trial and conviction of
"Frenchy" there has been a widespread
conviction in this town that the Algerian
was "railroaded" to prison as a means to
stop the public clamor that some one should
be punished for the murder. "Frenchy"
has become insane in his imprisonment
and is now in the hospital for the criminal
insane at Matteawan, where Gov. Odell
saw him not long ago.
One of the points made by the police at
the time thay captured "Frenchy" and
identified him as the man who had done
the crime was the alleged discovery of "a
trail of blood" which led from the walls of
the room in which the body wes found
directly to the depraved Algerian. One
of the affidavits just sent to Gov.
Odell is that of Jacob A. Riis, who declares
that he was the first person from Police
Headquarters to enter the room after the
report of the finding of the body was made,
and that there were no spots of blood about
the room. F.C. Barber, who is now city
editor of one of the city papers was at
time a reporter for an evening paper and
was left at the scene of the murder, after
the other reporters had gone for the express
purpose of looking around the room
more carefully than they had the opportunity
to do in their hurry. He has
made an affidavit, which has been sent to
the Governor, saying also that there
no blood spots as the police declared
later they had found. H. Biebinich,
a clerk In one of the city departments, makes
affidavit that in an Eighth avenue place of
refreshment he had heard two men some time
after the murder declare that the alleged
blood spots spoken of by the police were
smears made on the walls by certain reporters
for the sake of doing duty as "clues."
Robert G. Butler of the editorial force
of one of the New York papers has made
an affidavit in which he nays Mr. Riis
and another reporter, W.J. Chamberlin,
told him at the time of the excitement over
the murder, that there were no blood spots
in the room, and he says that he told this
to Frederick House, who defended "Frenchy"
on his trial, but that Mr House did not
utilize the information in his trial of the
case. Another newspaper man, F.F.
Coleman, in his affidavit says that Dr W.
T. Jenkins told him that he had found in
"Shakespeare's" stomach evidence in the
condition of the food there that the woman
had eaten about an hour and a half before
she died, as it is known that "Shakespeare"
did eat, whereas "Frenchy" did not come
to the hotel until several hours after she
was known to have eaten this food. Mr.
Coleman says that Dr. Jenkins expressed
his willingness to go on the stand to testify
to this, that he, Coleman, wrote to Mr.
House informing him of this fact. Dr.
Jenkins was not questioned as to this reported
finding of his, however. Mr. Coleman
says that Mr. House sunsequently
acknowledged to him that he had received
the letter.
----end
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