1920
Paid $1,500 to Clear Jack Dempsey, Wife Confesses to a Federal Jury
LOS ANGELES, Cal. — A statement to the Federal Grand Jury in this city, making an investigation into the charges that she had been "induced" to leave the country in order to avoid testifying in the slacker cases against Jack Dempsey, her ex-husband, Mrs. Jack Dempsey, or Maxine Wayne, as she is better known, made a clean breast of the transaction, in which it was said she was paid a sum of money to repudiate her first statement involving Dempsey in the slacker charges.
Mrs. Dempsey said she was given $1,500 in cash in Los Angeles. It is claimed by the Department of Justice investigators that she later received other substantial sums.
Arrangements were being made, she said, to send her out of the country when the Department of Justice operatives blocked the scheme. Offers to pay her money to leave, said to have been in telegrams sent to her over fictitious signatures, will be substantiated, it was claimed by the messages themselves. They were seized by the Government. Letters written by Dempsey with reference to his draft status also are in possession of the Government.
Mrs. Dempsey frankly stated her earnings had helped to support Dempsey before he became the world's champion heavyweight.
Julius E. Gardner, who was arrested at San Diego, is involved in the plans to get Mrs. Dempsey out of the country, according to the Federal authorities.
Tuesday, May 1, 2007
Paid $1,500 to Clear Jack Dempsey, Wife Confesses
Labels:
1920,
boxing,
court-proceedings,
dodging,
draft,
Jack-Dempsey,
military,
World-War-I
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