penalty.
The  assembled   prosecution     team    was     formidable.     It  included
two high-ranking    officials   in  the Justice Department, as  well    as  a
young,  newly   appointed   U.S.    attorney,   Roy St. Lewis,  and a   local
attorney    named   John    Leahy,  who was married to  an  Osage   woman
and  who     had     been    hired   by  the     Tribal  Council     to  assist  in  the
various trials.
Hale    was aided   by  his own array   of  lawyers—some    of  the “ablest
legal   talent  of  Oklahoma,”  as  one newspaper   put it. Among   them
was  Sargent     Prentiss    Freeling,   a   former  Oklahoma    attorney
general  and     a   staunch     advocate    of  states’     rights.     He  had     often
traveled     around  the     region  giving  a   lecture     titled  “The    Trial   of
Jesus    Christ from     a   Lawyer’s    Standpoint,”    warning,    “When   a
small-natured   man indulges    to  the extent  of  his ability in  villainy
and goes    as  far as  his contemptible    nature  will    permit, he  then
employs some    disreputable    lawyer  to  assist  him.”   To  defend  John
Ramsey,  Roan’s  alleged     shooter,    Hale    hired   an  attorney    named
Jim Springer,   who was known   as  a   fixer.  Under   Springer’s  counsel,
Ramsey  quickly recanted    his confession, insisting,  “I  never   killed
anyone.”    Ernest  Burkhart    told    White   that    Hale    had earlier assured
Ramsey  “not    to  worry,  that    he—Hale—was on  the inside  and had
everything  fixed   from    the road-overseer   to  the Governor.”
