TrustedTracker5097
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FORSYTHE v. STATE | 12 Ohio Misc. 99 (1967) | iomisc99196 | Leagle.com
Very long article. Appeal gives more random info/clues about this case.
"August 13, 1957—The following front page article was carried in the Lima News in part: "Both Inspector Grady and Chief Miller seemed optimistic about their chances of proving Forsythe did shoot Connors * * *. `As we figure it, he had 25 hours to hide the body * * * he is familiar with Indiana' * * *."
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Two Of My Favorite Mouthpieces
Flamboyant defense lawyer Ernie Navarre... Navarre took on the case of Ralph Forsythe, himself a colorful criminal who had just returned to Lima after serving a prison term. It was a town where you could go into the pool halls downtown and bet on baseball, football or horse racing...Forsythe was a big figure in local gambling. The Lima police treated him as though he were the modern reincarnation of Al Capone and so did the local newspaper....During an all-night poker game, Forsythe got into an argument with one of the other players. Forsythe pulled a gun from under the table. He shot the other man dead.
All the other players in the game fled, leaving Forsythe with his victim.
Forsythe reacted with great coolness. He picked up the dead man and dragged him to his car. Forsythe drove the body to the tip of southern Ohio where he buried it.
The body was never found. Forsythe was charged
Navarre arranged for me to interview Forsythe in his cell.
( NOTE to myself or anyone else interested. Can we find this interview?)
The interview made a great Sunday piece...
I never doubted his guilt for an instant.
"Don't miss today's testimony," Navarre told me about two weeks after the trial got under way. "Something interesting's going to happen."
"You saw Ralph Forsythe with a gun in his hand."
"Yes."
"You say you saw him fire the gun."
"Yes sir, I did."
Navarre walked to the evidence table and picked up the gun. He brought it back to the witness stand.
"Is this the gun?"
"Yes, it most certainly is. I'd never forget it."
Navarre smiled.
"Am I now about the same distance from you as Ralph Forsythe was that night?"
"Yes sir."
"And did he point the gun just like this?"
"Yes, he did." Now the witness looked uneasy.
Navarre raised the pistol and pointed it directly toward the witness's face.
"Yes. That's about right."
Navarre pulled the trigger. He fired the pistol directly at the witness's face. The witness gasped in terror.
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(I didn't realize LE had the gun) ???
Item from another article, I've not provided a link (and snipped only a small part) as names of private citizens are noted so it may be against TOS to post.
"Toward 10 p.m. that humid August evening, while Conner, Forsythe and three other men were sitting around the kitchen table drinking, Forsythe accused Conner of stealing a gun...he shot Conner in the head, according to the three other men, who, understandably, fled...
...no one immediately notified police and the witness who did finally come forward, Larue “Tex” Arrington, did so only after stopping at the nearby Pioneer Bar for a double shot...
Police were skeptical of the drunken Arrington’s story
— the other two men didn’t talk until the following day —
and didn’t get around to checking it out until the morning of Aug. 11, 1957, the day after the incident.
Neither Forsythe nor his wife was to be found, and there was no sign of Conner.
There was blood and a bullet hole in the kitchen wall."
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So blood evidence, a gun, alternate body locations (probably just theories) and strong evidence of organized crime... either theory, that of MR. Bones being Conner, or Mr Bones not being Conner can be pursued...
Lima Police. Can they assist with providing Conner's DNA?
Can we all take a moment to appreciate the fact that a defense attorney pointed a gun at a witness in the middle of a courtroom and FIRED it? I know it was only loaded with blanks, but still. Talk about courtroom drama...