C B DALTON, Sworn In For The State, 32nd To Testify

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C. B. Dalton, 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)
C. B. Dalton, chain-gang veteran and self-confessed thief, testified he visited the National Pencil Company 3–5 times—all before Christmas 1912.

Introduced by Daisy Hopkins (quit June 1912).
Frank’s office: 2–3 times, ladies present (sometimes 2+), evenings.
Basement: Once with Hopkins—cot, stretcher near trash pile.
Conley: Gave quarters, saw him multiple Saturdays.
Drinks: Coca-Cola, beer in office.

Cross-examination

Convictions:
1894 Walton Co.: Chain-gang for stealing hammer/plow with Dalton cousins.
1899: Cotton theft.
Gwinnett Co.: Corn theft—acquitted.
1906?: Liquor sales—uncertain.

Last visit: Saturday 1913—Frank absent.
No writing by ladies; office bright, no curtains.

Re-direct

18–20 years since trouble—drunk during 1894 crimes.
Hopkins knew Frank—told Dalton.

Dalton’s chain-gang rap sheet, vague dates, and missing Frank on his last visit turned the State’s “immoral factory” witness into defense gold.
A convicted thief’s basement cot became comic proof of nothing.

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