The Dillinger Dossier

The Dillinger Dossier ISBN 978-0913204160 is a book created by Jay Robert Nash about the events of July 22, 1934, based on police records, as being a shooting which resulted in the fatal wounding of a double of John Dillinger. The book was published in 1983 by December Press, and was expansion and update of Nash's earlier book Dillinger: Dead or Alive.[1][2]

Nash's theory of Dillinger's escape

In The Dillinger Dossier, author Jay Robert Nash maintains that Dillinger escaped death at the Biograph Theater simply by not being there. In his stead was a "Jimmy Lawrence", a local Chicago petty criminal whose appearance was similar to Dillinger's. Nash uses evidence to show that Chicago Police officer Martin Zarkovich was instrumental in this plot. Nash theorizes that the plot unraveled when the body was found to have fingerprints that didn't match Dillinger's (the fingerprint card was missing from the Cook County Morgue for over three decades), it was too tall, the eye color was wrong, and it possessed a rheumatic heart. The F.B.I., a relatively new agency whose agents were only recently permitted to carry guns or make arrests, would have fallen under heavy scrutiny, this being the third innocent man killed in pursuit of Dillinger, and would have gone to great lengths to ensure a cover up.

In shooting the Dillinger stand in, F.B.I. agents were stationed on the roof of the theater and fired downward, causing the open cuts on the face which were described through the media as "scars resulting from inept plastic surgery". The first words from Dillinger's father upon identifying the body were, "that's not my boy." The body was buried under five feet of concrete and steel, making exhumation less likely. Nash produced fingerprints and photos of Dillinger as he would appear in 1960 that were allegedly sent to Melvin Purvis just prior to his 1960 alleged suicide (more probably an accident). Nash alleged Dillinger was living and working in California as a machinist, under what would have been an early form of the witness protection program.[3]

Challenging Nash's theory

References

  1. "The Dillinger Dossier Paperback – October, 1983". Amazon. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  2. "Dillinger: Dead or Alive? Hardcover – 1970". Amazon. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  3. Jay Robert Nash (1969). The Dillinger Dossier. New York: M Evans and Company.
  4. Weeks, Patrick H., M.D., "The Big House of Mystery," p. 148-149
  5. Cromie/Pinkston, p. 258
  6. Girardin/Helmer, p. 314
  7. Cromie/Pinkston, p. 259
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