arranged    it  so  that    one of  them    became  the administrator   of  Rita
Smith’s  invaluable  estate.     The     doctors     whom    investigators
suspected    of  giving  Mollie  Burkhart    poison  instead     of  insulin.
Many    of  the cases   seemed  bound   by  a   web of  silent  conspirators.
Mathis, the Big Hill    Trading Company owner   and the guardian    of
Anna    Brown   and her mother, was a   member  of  the inquest into
Brown’s murder  that    failed  to  turn    up  the bullet. He  also    managed,
on   behalf  of  Mollie’s    family,     the     team    of  private     eyes    that
conspicuously   never   cracked any of  the cases.  A   witness had told
the bureau  that    after   Henry   Roan’s  murder, Hale    was eager   to  get
the corpse  away    from    one undertaker  and delivered   to  the funeral
home     at  the     Big     Hill    Trading     Company.    The     murder  plots
depended    upon    doctors who falsified   death   certificates    and upon
undertakers who quickly and quietly buried  bodies. The guardian
whom     McAuliffe   suspected   of  killing     his     grandmother     was     a
prominent    attorney    working     for     the     tribe   who     never   interfered
with     the     criminal    networks    operating   under   his     nose.   Nor     did
bankers,     including   the     apparent    murderer    Burt,  who  were
profiting   from    the criminal    “Indian business.”  Nor did the venal
mayor   of  Fairfax—an  ally    of  Hale’s  who also    served  as  a   guardian.
Nor did countless   lawmen  and prosecutors and judges  who had a
hand    in  the blood   money.  In  1926,   the Osage   leader  Bacon   Rind
remarked,   “There  are men amongst the whites, honest  men,    but
they    are mighty  scarce.”    Garrick Bailey, a   leading anthropologist
on  Osage   culture,    said    to  me, “If Hale    had told    what    he  knew,   a
high    percentage  of  the county’s    leading citizens    would   have    been
in  prison.”    Indeed, virtually   every   element of  society was complicit
in  the murderous   system. Which   is  why just    about   any member  of
this     society     might   have    been    responsible     for     the     murder  of
McBride,    in  Washington: he  threatened  to  bring   down    not only
Hale    but a   vast    criminal    operation   that    was reaping millions    and
millions    of  dollars.
                    
                      frankie
                      (Frankie)
                      
                    
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