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Robert E Crowe

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Name
  
Robert Crowe


Died
  
January 18, 1958

Robert Emmett Crowe (January 22, 1879 - January 18, 1958) was a Chicago lawyer and politician, who is best known as the prosecutor in the 1924 Leopold and Loeb murder case. He was 45 at the time and it would shape his career.

A product of Chicago public schools, Crowe graduated from Yale with a law degree in 1901. With the help of Big Bill Thompson, he was elected a Circuit Court judge in 1916. Three years later, Crowe achieved a level of fame and notoriety by imposing the death penalty on Thomas Fitzgerald who had pleaded guilty to the murder of 6 year-old Janet Dolly Wilkinson. The following year, with Thompson's continued backing, he was elected state's attorney.

In 1924, he prosecuted Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb for the premeditated murder of Bobby Franks, squaring off against defender Clarence Darrow.

References

Robert E. Crowe Wikipedia