S L ROSSER, Sworn In For The State, 33rd To Testify

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S. L. Rosser, witness for the State, at the Trial of Leo Frank in the Fulton County Superior Court of Atlanta, Georgia, in 1913 (Testimony Portion From July 28 - August 21, 1913; Closing Arguments August 21-25, 1913)
City policeman S. L. Rosser testified that on April 28 he visited Mrs. Arthur White—no mention of a negro at the factory. On May 6–7, she volunteered she saw a negro by the elevator on April 26.
Rosser searched the factory with a flashlight; no club by the elevator. The chips matched those from the metal-room floor.
On cross-examination, Rosser confirmed:

No prior inquiry—Mrs. White offered the negro story unprompted on the second visit.

Rosser’s late-breaking “negro” claim—10 days after the murder—and missing club gutted Mrs. White’s credibility and the State’s “blood-stained weapon”.
A policeman’s flashlight turned the prosecution’s star sighting into suspicious afterthought.

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