URSCHEL KIDNAPPING. On July 22, 1933, using his trademark machine gun,
George "Machine Gun" Kelly, along with Albert L. Bates, interrupted a
bridge game at Charles F. Urschel's residence in Oklahoma City, abducting
Urschel and his guest Walter Jarrett at gunpoint while their wives helplessly
watched. This began a startling kidnapping case that evoked the new Lindbergh
kidnapping laws, led to twenty-one convictions, coined a new name for Federal
Bureau of Investigation agents, and culminated in one of the first filmed
trials.
The widower Urschel, oilman Tom Slick's brother-in-law and a trustee to his
estate, had married Berenice Slick, Slick's widow and combined their fortunes,
creating one of the wealthiest couples in Oklahoma City. A criminal of relative
obscurity, Kelly, born George Kelly Barnes in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1895,
married Kathryn Thorne in 1930. Kathryn has been credited for creating Kelly's
underworld persona, because she bought him his first Thompson sub-machine gun
and dubbed him "Machine Gun." Before the Urschel kidnapping George
Kelly's blossoming career mainly consisted of bootlegging and bank robbery.
Kelly's kidnapping partner, Albert Bates, had a long criminal career of burglary
and bank robbery.
After kidnapping Urschel, the criminals took him to a farmhouse in Paradise,
Texas, and held him there for over a week. The kidnappers released Urschel on
July 30, after a representative for the family paid $200,000 in documented
bills. During his captivity, Urschel, although blindfolded most of the time,
memorized many details about his location, including the passing of an airplane
overhead at the same times everyday. This and other information that the FBI had
garnered helped locate the hideout.
Because of the media's recent attention of the Lindbergh kidnapping and his
agencies floundering reputation, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover took special
interest in this case. The Lindbergh Law defined kidnapping as a federal offense
punishable by death, and Hoover wanted to impress the public in the first
high-profile crime regulated by the new law. Many reported that Berenice Urschel
talked to the FBI director the night of the abduction. Hoover pulled one of his
best agents, Gus Jones, off of the Kansas City Massacre investigation and made
the kidnapping an agency priority.
When the FBI raided the farmhouse in Paradise, they arrested the owners,
Robert and Ora Shannon, and Harvey Bailey, who was using the farm as a
safe-house after committing a bank robbery in Kingfisher, Oklahoma, with Kelly's
machine gun. Bailey also had some of the Urschel money in his possession.
Through the continuing investigation seven persons were tried and convicted by a
jury in Oklahoma City in September and October of 1933 including Bates, who was
arrested in Denver. Two of these felons, Edward Berman and Clifford Skelly,
received sentences for "money changing" or exchanging the tainted
bills for a clean, spendable currency. During the trial the Kelly's penned
letters threatening Urschel, his family, witnesses, the prosecuting attorney,
and the judge. On September 26, 1933, FBI agents captured George and Kathryn
Kelly in Memphis, Tennessee. The FBI claimed that Kelly cried, "Don't
Shoot, G-men," thus coining the name by which the government agency was
known for years afterwards.
The FBI flew the Kellys into Oklahoma City to stand trial days before U.S...
Judge Edgar S. Vaught sentenced the other defendants. The judge sentenced Bates,
Bailey, and Ora and Robert Shannon to life in prison for their roles in the
kidnapping. The press believed that George and Kathryn Kelly would plead guilty,
but they both entered a not guilty plea. On October 12, 1933, Judge Vaught
decreed both George and Kathryn guilty and sentenced them to life in prison. In
a packed courtroom with newsreel cameras recording the action, the trial joined
the likes of the Lindbergh kidnapping trial of Bruno Hauptmann and the John
Scopes trial as major judicial events that were filmed.
Although "Machine Gun" Kelly claimed he would be out of prison by
Christmas, he served time in Leavenworth until October 1934 when he was
transferred to Alcatraz. He returned to Leavenworth in 1951 and died in prison
on July 18, 1954. Albert Bates died in Alcatraz on July 4, 1948. In June 1958
Kathryn Kelly and Ora Shannon were released from prison. The courts convicted
twenty-one people in relation to the kidnapping over all, including a jailer and
an accomplice in Texas who helped Bailey escape from the Dallas "escape
proof" jail before the trial. Police captured Bailey in Ardmore hours
later. Many claim the FBI over inflated Kelly's reputation in order to bolster
public support for their fight against crime.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: E. E. Kirkpatrick, Crimes' Paradise (San Antonio,
Tex.: The Naylor Company, 1934). E. E. Kirkpatrick, Voices from Alcatraz
(San Antonio, Tex.: The Naylor Company, 1947). Federal Bureau of Investigation,
George "Machine Gun" Kelly (Barnes)--Summary (Washington, D.C., 1984).
Larry O'Dell
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