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William King Hale

William King Hale (December 24, 1874 – August 15, 1962) was an American political boss and crime boss in Osage County, Oklahoma who was among the convicted perpetrators of the Osage Indian murders. He made a fortune through cattle ranching, murder, and insurance fraud.

William King Hale
Hale in 1922
Born(1874-12-24)December 24, 1874
DiedAugust 15, 1962(1962-08-15) (aged 87)
Burial placeWichita, Kansas
OccupationCattleman
Known forBeing the ringleader of the Osage Indian murders
Political partyDemocratic
Criminal statusParoled (1947)
RelativesErnest Burkhart (nephew)
Conviction(s)First degree murder (18 U.S.C. § 452)
Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment (1929)

Born in Hunt County, Texas, Hale worked as a cowboy in Texas and Indian Territory before settling in what would become Osage County around 1900. By the 1920's, he had amassed substantial influence in the county when he ordered the contract killings of the family of Ernest Burkhart's Osage wife in a conspiracy to gain control of their headrights. He was convicted for the murder of Henry Roan in October 1929, sentenced to life in prison, and released on parole in July 1947. Hale died in Arizona in 1962.

His role in the killings is a major focus of David Grann's 2017 book Killers of the Flower Moon. Robert De Niro portrayed him in Martin Scorsese's 2023 film adaptation of the book.

Early life edit

William Hale was born in Hunt County, Texas on December 24, 1874.[1][a] His mother died when he was three years old. At age sixteen he began working as a cowboy in West Texas, and by 18 was running cattle on the Kiowa-Comanche reservation in Indian Territory.[3][1] At the turn of the 20th century, he settled in the Osage Nation (then Oklahoma Territory, now Osage County, Oklahoma), and by 1900 his wife had joined him where they lived in a tent and raised cattle.[4] By 1905, he moved to Gray Horse, an Osage town, to manage a ranch, and by 1907 he partnered with local bankers to buy his own ranch.[1] Hale was reportedly uneducated, but amassed a fortune through insurance fraud and unfair trade with the native Osage people. Tom White, the FBI special agent in charge of investigating Hale, wrote in a 1932 memo to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover:

Eventually (Hale) became a millionaire, who dominated local politics and seemingly could not be punished for any of the many crimes ...His method of building up power and prestige was... by means of gifts and favors.

He proclaimed himself "King of the Osage", owned a controlling interest of the Fairfax bank, and a part interest in the town's general store and funeral home;[5] He also served as a reserve deputy sheriff for Fairfax.[6] In addition, he owned a 5,000-acre (20 km2) ranch (and leased another 45,000 acres (180 km2) from Osage landowners).[2]

Murders edit

 
1926 newspaper illustration of Henry Roan, Rita Smith, and William Vaughn

Hale and his nephews, Ernest and Bryan Burkhart, conspired to kill several[b] Osage people for their Osage headrights after Ernest married Mollie Kyle, a native Osage:

  • In May 1921, Hale hired Kelsie Morrison to kill Mollie's sister Anna Brown. Morrison later confessed to the murder saying Hale had hired him in exchange for forgiving a $600 debt Morrison owed. Half of Anna's headrights were inherited by her mother Lizzie Q, who died exactly sixty days later. Her other heirs were Mollie, Reta Smith, and Grace Bigheart.[4]
  • A cousin, Charles Whitehorn, was shot and killed a few weeks later.[8]
  • In March 1922, Anna Sanford died under mysterious circumstances after marrying Tom McCoy. After Sanford's death, McCoy married Hale’s niece.[4]
  • In 1923, George Bigheart was taken to Oklahoma City for treatment after drinking poisoned whiskey. Hale and Ernest took Bigheart to the hospital where he asked to see his attorney William Vaughn. Vaughn was killed on the railroad right-of-way outside Pawhuska, Oklahoma the next day after consulting with Bigheart. Bigheart later died as well.[4]
  • In February 1923, another cousin, Henry Roan, was found shot dead in his car.[8] Hale held a $25,000 life insurance policy on Roan. Hale referred to Roan as a "good friend" and served as a pallbearer at his funeral.[9] Hale was later convicted for the murder of Roan.[4]
  • In March 1923, Reta Smith, her husband, and a housekeeper were killed when the Smiths' home was bombed. Mollie inherited Reta's headrights.[8][4]

Mollie later suffered symptoms of poisoning.[8] Mollie fell ill, but later discovered the poisoning and recovered when she moved away. She divorced Ernest afterward, and their children inherited Mollie's estate.[5] Hale's full plan is suspected to have involved the unrealized murders of Mollie, Ernest, and their children, leaving the Kile-Burkhart estate solely to Hale.[10]

Investigations edit

 
Political cartoon depicting Mollie Burkhart and William Hale from the Enid Morning News Sunday edition on February 7, 1926

Hale was a segregationist and an influential member of the Democratic Party in Osage County.[11] He had considerable influence over the local Osage County prosecutor. During his election campaign, the prosecutor sought Hale's endorsement and after receiving it won every precinct near Hale's ranch. Hale used this connection to confer with local investigators during the initial investigation of Anna Brown's murder.[12] After Henry Roan's body was discovered, Hale accompanied the deputy and marshal to the ravine it was discovered in to recover the body.[13] Additionally, in 1921, Hale hired a private investigator to look into the murders. The investigator would later reveal to federal agents that he was hired to manufacture evidence and witnesses to "shape an alibi" for Hale and his accomplices, and not to solve the murders.[14] A Bureau of Investigation (BOI)[c] report eventually concluded the chief of Ponca City Police, chief of Fairfax Police, Osage County prosecutor, and local Office of Indian Affairs agent were all under Hale's influence and would not be able to assist the investigation.[15]

The Osage Nation Tribal Council requested the Bureau of Investigation to examine the murders. The Bureau sent undercover agents to investigate.[7] Investigators initially had trouble finding witnesses with Dick Gregg, a former member of the Al Spencer gang, being the only living witness. Gregg told investigators Hale had attempted to hire the Al Spencer gang to kill Bill and Reta Smith, but Spencer, the leader of the gang, had declined because killing a woman was "not my style." Gregg pointed investigators to Al Spencer, Henry Grammer, and Curley Johnson as having more information, but the three men were already dead. Eventually, a safecracker associated with Grammer named Asa Kirby as the bomber, but before agents could interview Kirby he was shot in a failed jewel heist. Investigators believed Hale had tipped both Kirby off of a shipment of diamonds and the store owner off as to a potential heist to orchestrate the killing. After this revelation, investigators began to believe Hale was potentially murdering witnesses, with some accusations he tampered with Grammer's car brakes and had poisoned Johnson.[16] Eventually, Burt Lawson, a man serving a prison sentence in McAlester, Oklahoma, came forward to testify he was instructed by Hale and Ernest Burkhart to plant the explosive device in the Smiths' home.[17] Hale generated additional suspicion when he brought suit to collect a life insurance policy for Henry Roan.[18] Hale had bought the life insurance policy in 1921; after his first application had been denied, he reapplied to a second life insurance company with a note signed by Roan certifying that Roan owed Hale $25,000 and was approved. When obtaining the required doctor's evaluation for the policy, Hale was asked by the doctor "Bill, what are you going to do, kill this Indian?" to which he responded "Hell yes."[19]

Agents were also tipped off when they realized the order and methods of the murders appeared to be done in a particular fashion to maximize Mollie's inheritance. For example, Anna Brown was murdered first after her divorce to insure that her inheritance went to family instead of their former partner, and Reta and Bill Smith were killed simultaneously in a bombing to trigger a simultaneous death clause in their will.[20]

Arrest and conviction edit

 
William Hale in 1926 (second from the left) and John Ramsey (third from left) flanked by two U.S. marshals

A warrant for Hale and Ernest's arrest was issued on January 4, 1926 for the murders of Bill and Reta Smith. Ernest was apprehended immediately, but Hale could not be found. According to David Grann, Hale later turned himself in wearing "a perfectly pressed suit, shoes shined to a gleam, a felt hat, and an overcoat with his diamond-studded Masonic lodge pin fastened to the lapel." Hale maintained his innocence, so federal agents focused on interrogating Ernest; he broke and turned state's evidence after being confronted with outlaw Blackie Thompson (who had been in state custody for murdering a police officer) willing to testify that Ernest tried to hire him to do the killings.[21] When confronted with Ernest's testimony, Hale maintained his innocence.[22]

The Department of Justice wanted Hale to be tried in federal court, fearing his potential influence over Oklahoma state courts; however, a federal judge ruled the killing, which took place on an unalienated allotment, fell under the jurisdiction of Oklahoma courts. Hale legal counsel included former attorney general of Oklahoma Sargent Prentiss Freeling.[23] The case was moved to state court and his first hearing was March 12. According to David Grann, he recited a poem to his supporters in the courtroom saying

Judge Not! The clouds of seeming guilt may dim thy brother's fame

For Fate may throw suspicion's shade upon the brightest name.[24]

While under trial in 1926, Hale sold his ranch to the Drummond family and the Mullendores family. The ranch land was later broken up and sold to smaller ranchers.[25]

Trials edit

Hale was tried alongside John Ramsey in July 1926 for the murder of Henry Roan in federal court (after the United States Supreme Court case United States v. Ramsey (1926) held that federal courts had jurisdiction) in Guthrie, Oklahoma.[26] By the time of their first trial, Ernest Burkhart had been sentenced to life imprisonment in Oklahoma courts.[4] The jury began deliberations on August 20 and five days later Hale and Ramsey's first trial resulted in a hung jury.[27] After the first trial, several witnesses were indicted, tried, and convicted for taking bribes or giving threatened testimony. Hale and Ramsey's second trial was scheduled for late October.[28] The trial was transferred to Oklahoma City. Ernest testified that Hale paid Ramsey a new Ford and $500 to kill Roan. Hale denied the allegations and claimed to be in Fort Worth at a livestock show during the bombing at the Smiths' house and that he had no reason to want Roan dead.[4] Jury deliberations began on October 28, and the next morning the jury found them both guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced them to life in prison.[29] Hale appealed and was retried. The case was retried in federal court in Guthrie, Oklahoma, but ended in another hung jury. The next trial in Oklahoma City resulted in another guilty sentence, this time for 99 years. Hale appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and a new trial was ordered. Hale was tried a final time in federal court at Pawhuska, Oklahoma.[4]

Leavenworth Penitentiary edit

He was convicted in federal court on October 29, 1929, for the murder of Henry Roan and sent to the Leavenworth Penitentiary in Kansas.[7] The warden during his stay was Tom White, the man who had headed the investigation into the Osage Indian murders.[30] There he worked in the tuberculosis ward and on a prison farm.[31] During his sentence he never admitted to the murders, and a psychological evaluator noted "he has put behind him any feeling of shame or repentance he may have had."[32]

Parole and death edit

Hale was sentenced to life in prison but was paroled on July 31, 1947.[4] During a visit, Hale's relatives said he once remarked, "If that damn Ernest had kept his mouth shut we'd be rich today."[5] He moved to Phoenix, Arizona around 1950 and died in a nursing home there on August 15, 1962.[33] He was buried in Wichita, Kansas.[10]

Legacy edit

In media edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Jason Christian of This Land Press identifies his birthplace as Greenville, and David Grann gives Campbell in Killers of the Flower Moon.[2][3]
  2. ^ While Hale was only convicted for the murder of Henry Roan, his involvement in other murders is widely accepted by historians.[7][8][4]
  3. ^ Later renamed the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Grove 2002, p. 66-67.
  2. ^ a b Christian, Jason (August 14, 2013). "Terror's Legacy". This Land Press. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  3. ^ a b Grann 2017, p. 128.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Fixicio, Donald (2012). The Invasion of Indian Country in the Twentieth Century: American Capitalism and Tribal Natural Resources (2nd ed.). University Press of Colorado. pp. 39–47. ISBN 9781607321491. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c Howell, Melissa (January 12, 2014). . NewsOK. Archived from the original on March 24, 2016.
  6. ^ Grann 2017, p. 27.
  7. ^ a b c d May, Jon D. "Osage Murders". okhistory.org. The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d e Jacobson, Stephanie (November 18, 2022). "Oil, Greed, and the Osage Murders". HeinOnline Blog. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  9. ^ Grann 2017, p. 82-84.
  10. ^ a b Hayes, Jana (September 14, 2023). "'Reign of Terror' in Oklahoma: the harrowing history behind a string of Osage murders". The Oklahoman. Retrieved September 15, 2023.
  11. ^ Grove 2002, p. 68.
  12. ^ Grann 2017, p. 35.
  13. ^ Grann 2017, p. 83.
  14. ^ Grann 2017, p. 135-136.
  15. ^ Grann 2017, p. 165.
  16. ^ Grann 2017, p. 173-176.
  17. ^ Grann 2017, p. 179-181.
  18. ^ "Indian Insurance Case May Involve Murders". Tulsa Daily World. May 27, 1925. p. 4. Retrieved July 22, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ Grann 2017, p. 157-160.
  20. ^ Grann 2017, p. 162.
  21. ^ Grann 2017, p. 185-189.
  22. ^ Grann 2017, p. 195.
  23. ^ Grann 2017, p. 198-202.
  24. ^ Grann 2017, p. 202-203.
  25. ^ Adams-Heard, Rachel (September 19, 2022). "Transcript 'In Trust' Episode Four: The Guardianship". Bloomberg News. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
  26. ^ Grann 2017, p. 212.
  27. ^ Grann 2017, p. 216.
  28. ^ Grann 2017, p. 217-218.
  29. ^ Grann 2017, p. 219.
  30. ^ Rife, Katie (July 17, 2023). "Killers of the Flower Moon: The true story behind Scorsese's film". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  31. ^ Grann 2017, p. 226.
  32. ^ Grann 2017, p. 227.
  33. ^ "William K. Hale". Arizona Republic. August 17, 1962. p. 27. Retrieved August 16, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  34. ^ a b Buchanan, Kyle (May 22, 2023). "How Scorsese, DiCaprio and De Niro Made 'Killers of the Flower Moon'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 15, 2023.

References edit

Books

External links edit

  • FBI Pressroom: Murder and Mayhem in the Osage Hills
  • Freedom of Information Act documents on the Osage Indian Murders
  • Morrison v State Appellate Court ruling

william, king, hale, other, people, named, william, hale, william, hale, disambiguation, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, october, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, december, 18. For other people named William Hale see William Hale disambiguation This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message William King Hale December 24 1874 August 15 1962 was an American political boss and crime boss in Osage County Oklahoma who was among the convicted perpetrators of the Osage Indian murders He made a fortune through cattle ranching murder and insurance fraud William King HaleHale in 1922Born 1874 12 24 December 24 1874Hunt County Texas U S a DiedAugust 15 1962 1962 08 15 aged 87 Phoenix Arizona U S Burial placeWichita KansasOccupationCattlemanKnown forBeing the ringleader of the Osage Indian murdersPolitical partyDemocraticCriminal statusParoled 1947 RelativesErnest Burkhart nephew Conviction s First degree murder 18 U S C 452 Criminal penaltyLife imprisonment 1929 Born in Hunt County Texas Hale worked as a cowboy in Texas and Indian Territory before settling in what would become Osage County around 1900 By the 1920 s he had amassed substantial influence in the county when he ordered the contract killings of the family of Ernest Burkhart s Osage wife in a conspiracy to gain control of their headrights He was convicted for the murder of Henry Roan in October 1929 sentenced to life in prison and released on parole in July 1947 Hale died in Arizona in 1962 His role in the killings is a major focus of David Grann s 2017 book Killers of the Flower Moon Robert De Niro portrayed him in Martin Scorsese s 2023 film adaptation of the book Contents 1 Early life 2 Murders 2 1 Investigations 2 2 Arrest and conviction 2 2 1 Trials 2 2 2 Leavenworth Penitentiary 3 Parole and death 4 Legacy 4 1 In media 5 Notes 6 Citations 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editWilliam Hale was born in Hunt County Texas on December 24 1874 1 a His mother died when he was three years old At age sixteen he began working as a cowboy in West Texas and by 18 was running cattle on the Kiowa Comanche reservation in Indian Territory 3 1 At the turn of the 20th century he settled in the Osage Nation then Oklahoma Territory now Osage County Oklahoma and by 1900 his wife had joined him where they lived in a tent and raised cattle 4 By 1905 he moved to Gray Horse an Osage town to manage a ranch and by 1907 he partnered with local bankers to buy his own ranch 1 Hale was reportedly uneducated but amassed a fortune through insurance fraud and unfair trade with the native Osage people Tom White the FBI special agent in charge of investigating Hale wrote in a 1932 memo to FBI Director J Edgar Hoover Eventually Hale became a millionaire who dominated local politics and seemingly could not be punished for any of the many crimes His method of building up power and prestige was by means of gifts and favors He proclaimed himself King of the Osage owned a controlling interest of the Fairfax bank and a part interest in the town s general store and funeral home 5 He also served as a reserve deputy sheriff for Fairfax 6 In addition he owned a 5 000 acre 20 km2 ranch and leased another 45 000 acres 180 km2 from Osage landowners 2 Murders editMain article Osage Indian murders nbsp 1926 newspaper illustration of Henry Roan Rita Smith and William VaughnHale and his nephews Ernest and Bryan Burkhart conspired to kill several b Osage people for their Osage headrights after Ernest married Mollie Kyle a native Osage In May 1921 Hale hired Kelsie Morrison to kill Mollie s sister Anna Brown Morrison later confessed to the murder saying Hale had hired him in exchange for forgiving a 600 debt Morrison owed Half of Anna s headrights were inherited by her mother Lizzie Q who died exactly sixty days later Her other heirs were Mollie Reta Smith and Grace Bigheart 4 A cousin Charles Whitehorn was shot and killed a few weeks later 8 In March 1922 Anna Sanford died under mysterious circumstances after marrying Tom McCoy After Sanford s death McCoy married Hale s niece 4 In 1923 George Bigheart was taken to Oklahoma City for treatment after drinking poisoned whiskey Hale and Ernest took Bigheart to the hospital where he asked to see his attorney William Vaughn Vaughn was killed on the railroad right of way outside Pawhuska Oklahoma the next day after consulting with Bigheart Bigheart later died as well 4 In February 1923 another cousin Henry Roan was found shot dead in his car 8 Hale held a 25 000 life insurance policy on Roan Hale referred to Roan as a good friend and served as a pallbearer at his funeral 9 Hale was later convicted for the murder of Roan 4 In March 1923 Reta Smith her husband and a housekeeper were killed when the Smiths home was bombed Mollie inherited Reta s headrights 8 4 Mollie later suffered symptoms of poisoning 8 Mollie fell ill but later discovered the poisoning and recovered when she moved away She divorced Ernest afterward and their children inherited Mollie s estate 5 Hale s full plan is suspected to have involved the unrealized murders of Mollie Ernest and their children leaving the Kile Burkhart estate solely to Hale 10 Investigations edit nbsp Political cartoon depicting Mollie Burkhart and William Hale from the Enid Morning News Sunday edition on February 7 1926Hale was a segregationist and an influential member of the Democratic Party in Osage County 11 He had considerable influence over the local Osage County prosecutor During his election campaign the prosecutor sought Hale s endorsement and after receiving it won every precinct near Hale s ranch Hale used this connection to confer with local investigators during the initial investigation of Anna Brown s murder 12 After Henry Roan s body was discovered Hale accompanied the deputy and marshal to the ravine it was discovered in to recover the body 13 Additionally in 1921 Hale hired a private investigator to look into the murders The investigator would later reveal to federal agents that he was hired to manufacture evidence and witnesses to shape an alibi for Hale and his accomplices and not to solve the murders 14 A Bureau of Investigation BOI c report eventually concluded the chief of Ponca City Police chief of Fairfax Police Osage County prosecutor and local Office of Indian Affairs agent were all under Hale s influence and would not be able to assist the investigation 15 The Osage Nation Tribal Council requested the Bureau of Investigation to examine the murders The Bureau sent undercover agents to investigate 7 Investigators initially had trouble finding witnesses with Dick Gregg a former member of the Al Spencer gang being the only living witness Gregg told investigators Hale had attempted to hire the Al Spencer gang to kill Bill and Reta Smith but Spencer the leader of the gang had declined because killing a woman was not my style Gregg pointed investigators to Al Spencer Henry Grammer and Curley Johnson as having more information but the three men were already dead Eventually a safecracker associated with Grammer named Asa Kirby as the bomber but before agents could interview Kirby he was shot in a failed jewel heist Investigators believed Hale had tipped both Kirby off of a shipment of diamonds and the store owner off as to a potential heist to orchestrate the killing After this revelation investigators began to believe Hale was potentially murdering witnesses with some accusations he tampered with Grammer s car brakes and had poisoned Johnson 16 Eventually Burt Lawson a man serving a prison sentence in McAlester Oklahoma came forward to testify he was instructed by Hale and Ernest Burkhart to plant the explosive device in the Smiths home 17 Hale generated additional suspicion when he brought suit to collect a life insurance policy for Henry Roan 18 Hale had bought the life insurance policy in 1921 after his first application had been denied he reapplied to a second life insurance company with a note signed by Roan certifying that Roan owed Hale 25 000 and was approved When obtaining the required doctor s evaluation for the policy Hale was asked by the doctor Bill what are you going to do kill this Indian to which he responded Hell yes 19 Agents were also tipped off when they realized the order and methods of the murders appeared to be done in a particular fashion to maximize Mollie s inheritance For example Anna Brown was murdered first after her divorce to insure that her inheritance went to family instead of their former partner and Reta and Bill Smith were killed simultaneously in a bombing to trigger a simultaneous death clause in their will 20 Arrest and conviction edit nbsp William Hale in 1926 second from the left and John Ramsey third from left flanked by two U S marshalsA warrant for Hale and Ernest s arrest was issued on January 4 1926 for the murders of Bill and Reta Smith Ernest was apprehended immediately but Hale could not be found According to David Grann Hale later turned himself in wearing a perfectly pressed suit shoes shined to a gleam a felt hat and an overcoat with his diamond studded Masonic lodge pin fastened to the lapel Hale maintained his innocence so federal agents focused on interrogating Ernest he broke and turned state s evidence after being confronted with outlaw Blackie Thompson who had been in state custody for murdering a police officer willing to testify that Ernest tried to hire him to do the killings 21 When confronted with Ernest s testimony Hale maintained his innocence 22 The Department of Justice wanted Hale to be tried in federal court fearing his potential influence over Oklahoma state courts however a federal judge ruled the killing which took place on an unalienated allotment fell under the jurisdiction of Oklahoma courts Hale legal counsel included former attorney general of Oklahoma Sargent Prentiss Freeling 23 The case was moved to state court and his first hearing was March 12 According to David Grann he recited a poem to his supporters in the courtroom saying Judge Not The clouds of seeming guilt may dim thy brother s fame For Fate may throw suspicion s shade upon the brightest name 24 While under trial in 1926 Hale sold his ranch to the Drummond family and the Mullendores family The ranch land was later broken up and sold to smaller ranchers 25 Trials edit Hale was tried alongside John Ramsey in July 1926 for the murder of Henry Roan in federal court after the United States Supreme Court case United States v Ramsey 1926 held that federal courts had jurisdiction in Guthrie Oklahoma 26 By the time of their first trial Ernest Burkhart had been sentenced to life imprisonment in Oklahoma courts 4 The jury began deliberations on August 20 and five days later Hale and Ramsey s first trial resulted in a hung jury 27 After the first trial several witnesses were indicted tried and convicted for taking bribes or giving threatened testimony Hale and Ramsey s second trial was scheduled for late October 28 The trial was transferred to Oklahoma City Ernest testified that Hale paid Ramsey a new Ford and 500 to kill Roan Hale denied the allegations and claimed to be in Fort Worth at a livestock show during the bombing at the Smiths house and that he had no reason to want Roan dead 4 Jury deliberations began on October 28 and the next morning the jury found them both guilty of first degree murder and sentenced them to life in prison 29 Hale appealed and was retried The case was retried in federal court in Guthrie Oklahoma but ended in another hung jury The next trial in Oklahoma City resulted in another guilty sentence this time for 99 years Hale appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and a new trial was ordered Hale was tried a final time in federal court at Pawhuska Oklahoma 4 Leavenworth Penitentiary edit He was convicted in federal court on October 29 1929 for the murder of Henry Roan and sent to the Leavenworth Penitentiary in Kansas 7 The warden during his stay was Tom White the man who had headed the investigation into the Osage Indian murders 30 There he worked in the tuberculosis ward and on a prison farm 31 During his sentence he never admitted to the murders and a psychological evaluator noted he has put behind him any feeling of shame or repentance he may have had 32 Parole and death editHale was sentenced to life in prison but was paroled on July 31 1947 4 During a visit Hale s relatives said he once remarked If that damn Ernest had kept his mouth shut we d be rich today 5 He moved to Phoenix Arizona around 1950 and died in a nursing home there on August 15 1962 33 He was buried in Wichita Kansas 10 Legacy editIn 1925 the United States Congress passed a law to bar the inheritance of Osage headrights by non Osage people in order to curb the Osage Indian Murders 7 In media edit David Grann s 2017 book Killers of the Flower Moon reports Hale as mastermind of murders with detailed evidence 34 In the 2023 film Killers of the Flower Moon directed by Martin Scorsese Hale was portrayed by actor Robert De Niro 34 Notes edit a b Jason Christian of This Land Press identifies his birthplace as Greenville and David Grann gives Campbell in Killers of the Flower Moon 2 3 While Hale was only convicted for the murder of Henry Roan his involvement in other murders is widely accepted by historians 7 8 4 Later renamed the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Citations edit a b c Grove 2002 p 66 67 a b Christian Jason August 14 2013 Terror s Legacy This Land Press Retrieved July 22 2023 a b Grann 2017 p 128 a b c d e f g h i j k Fixicio Donald 2012 The Invasion of Indian Country in the Twentieth Century American Capitalism and Tribal Natural Resources 2nd ed University Press of Colorado pp 39 47 ISBN 9781607321491 Retrieved July 22 2023 a b c Howell Melissa January 12 2014 The Reign of Terror NewsOK Archived from the original on March 24 2016 Grann 2017 p 27 a b c d May Jon D Osage Murders okhistory org The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Retrieved July 22 2023 a b c d e Jacobson Stephanie November 18 2022 Oil Greed and the Osage Murders HeinOnline Blog Retrieved July 22 2023 Grann 2017 p 82 84 a b Hayes Jana September 14 2023 Reign of Terror in Oklahoma the harrowing history behind a string of Osage murders The Oklahoman Retrieved September 15 2023 Grove 2002 p 68 Grann 2017 p 35 Grann 2017 p 83 Grann 2017 p 135 136 Grann 2017 p 165 Grann 2017 p 173 176 Grann 2017 p 179 181 Indian Insurance Case May Involve Murders Tulsa Daily World May 27 1925 p 4 Retrieved July 22 2023 via Newspapers com Grann 2017 p 157 160 Grann 2017 p 162 Grann 2017 p 185 189 Grann 2017 p 195 Grann 2017 p 198 202 Grann 2017 p 202 203 Adams Heard Rachel September 19 2022 Transcript In Trust Episode Four The Guardianship Bloomberg News Retrieved October 11 2022 Grann 2017 p 212 Grann 2017 p 216 Grann 2017 p 217 218 Grann 2017 p 219 Rife Katie July 17 2023 Killers of the Flower Moon The true story behind Scorsese s film Entertainment Weekly Retrieved July 22 2023 Grann 2017 p 226 Grann 2017 p 227 William K Hale Arizona Republic August 17 1962 p 27 Retrieved August 16 2023 via Newspapers com a b Buchanan Kyle May 22 2023 How Scorsese DiCaprio and De Niro Made Killers of the Flower Moon The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 15 2023 References editBooks Grann David 2017 Killers of the Flower Moon Doubleday Retrieved July 23 2023 Grove Fred 2002 The Years of Fear A Western Story Five Star ISBN 9780786232727 External links editFBI Pressroom Murder and Mayhem in the Osage Hills Freedom of Information Act documents on the Osage Indian Murders Morrison v State Appellate Court ruling Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William King Hale amp oldid 1188769890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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