went    by. The next    day,    the deadlock    continued.  The Tulsa   Tribune
said    that    though  the government’s    case    was strong, bets    around
Guthrie  were    “five   to  one     for     a   hung    jury.”  After   five    days    of
deliberations,  the judge   called  the parties into    the courtroom.  He
asked   the jurors, “Is there   any possibility of  an  agreement   on  a
verdict?”
The foreman rose    and said,   “There  is  none.”
The judge   asked   if  the government  had any remarks,    and St.
Lewis    stood.  His     face    was     red,    his     voice   trembling.  “There  are
some    good    men on  the jury    and some    that    are not good,”  he  said.
He  added   that    he  had been    informed    that    at  least   one,    if  not more,
members of  the panel   had been    bribed.
The  judge   considered  this,   then    ordered     that    the     jury    be
dismissed   and the defendants  held    for further trial.
White   was stunned.    More    than    a   year    of  his work,   more    than
three   years   of  the bureau’s    work,   had reached an  impasse.    The jury
was also    hung    when    Bryan   Burkhart    was tried   for the murder  of
Anna    Brown.  It  seemed  impossible  to  find    twelve  white   men who
would   convict one of  their   own for murdering   American    Indians.
The  Osage   were    outraged,   and     there   were    murmurings  about
taking  justice into    their   own hands.  White   suddenly    had to  deploy
agents  to  protect Hale,   this    man whom    he  so  desperately wanted
to  bring   to  justice.
