dais    behind  his desk    to  stand   on. If  Hoover  was intimidated by  the
sight   of  this    monstrous   Texan,  he  didn’t  show    it: he  told    White
that    he  needed  to  discuss a   matter  of  the utmost  urgency with
him.    It  had to  do  with    the murders of  the Osage.  White   knew    that
the sensational case    was one of  the bureau’s    first   major   homicide
investigations,  but     he  was     unfamiliar  with    its     details,    and     he
listened     as  Hoover  spoke   in  staccato    bursts—a    strategy    that
Hoover  had devised in  his youth   to  overcome    a   bad stutter.
In  the spring  of  1923,   after   the Osage   Tribal  Council had passed
the  resolution  seeking     the     Justice     Department’s    help,   the     then
director,    Burns,  had     dispatched  an  agent   from    the     bureau  to
investigate the murders,    which   by  then    totaled at  least   twenty-four
Osage.   The     agent   spent   a   few     weeks   in  Osage   County  before
concluding   that    “any    continued   investigation   is  useless.”   Other
agents  were    subsequently    dispatched  to  investigate,    all to  no  avail.
The  Osage   had     been    forced  to  finance     part    of  the     federal
investigation    with    their   own     money—an    amount  that    would
eventually   reach   $20,000,    the     equivalent  today   of  nearly
$300,000.    Despite     this    expenditure,    Hoover  had     decided,    after
assuming    command of  the bureau, to  dump    the case    back    on  state
authorities in  order   to  evade   responsibility  for the failure.    The FBI
agent   who was in  charge  of  the Oklahoma    field   office  had assured
Hoover   that    the     transfer    could   be  handled     without     any
“unfavorable     comment”    in  the     press.  Yet     that    was     before  the
bureau, Hoover’s    bureau, had blood   on  its hands.  A   few months
earlier,    agents  had persuaded   the new governor    of  Oklahoma    to
release the outlaw  Blackie Thompson,   who’d   been    captured    and
convicted   of  bank    robbery,    so  that    he  could   work    undercover  for
the  bureau  to  gather  evidence    on  the     Osage   killings.   In  field
reports,    the agents  noted   excitedly   that    their   “undercover  man”
had begun   to  work    among   “the    crooks  in  the oil fields  and get the
evidence    he  has promised    us.”    The agents  proclaimed, “We expect
