floor   and shelves were    stacked with    thousands   of  pages   of  FBI
documents,  autopsy reports,    wills   and last    testaments, crime   scene
photographs,     trial   transcripts,    analyses    of  forged  documents,
fingerprints,    studies     on  ballistics  and     explosives,     bank    records,
eyewitness  statements, confessions,    intercepted jailhouse   notes,
grand    jury    testimony,  logs    from    private     investigators,  and     mug
shots.  Whenever    I   obtained    a   new document,   such    as  a   copy    of  the
Hale    letter  that    Red Corn    had shown   me, I   would   label   it  and place
it  amid    the stacks  (my pitiful version of  a   Hoover  filing  system).
Despite the darkness    of  the material,   each    new discovery   gave    me
some    hope    that    I   might   be  able    to  fill    in  gaps    in  the historical
chronicles—those    spaces  where   there   seemed  to  exist   no  recorded
witnesses   or  voices, only    the silence of  the grave.
Crime   scene   photograph  of  Blackie Thompson,   who was gunned
down    in  1934    after   he  escaped from    prison Credit   70