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  1. D. C. Stephenson Trial (1925) In 1925, the Indiana KKK was the largest state branch in the Klan's "Invisible Empire." The conviction in November of that year of D. C. Stephenson, the powerful grand dragon of the Indiana Klan, for the murder of Madge Oberholtzer led to a dramatic decline in the organization's membership and political influence ...

  2. 20. Aug. 2017 · The Dragon & the Lady: The murder that brought down the Ku Klux Klan. D.C. Stephenson believed he was untouchable. The 33-year-old pushed his way through a crowd of assembled reporters on his way to the Marion County Jail, repeating only that he had nothing to say. He and two associates, Earl Klinck and Earl Gentry, were searched and then ...

  3. Grand Dragon of Ku Klux Klan. (Aug. 21, 1891-June 28, 1966). Born in Houston, Texas, Stephenson moved with his family to Maysville, Oklahoma, in 1901. He was active in the Socialist Party in Oklahoma and served briefly in the U.S. Army during World War I. After moving to Evansville, Indiana, in 1920, he became involved in Democratic politics.

  4. D. C. Stephenson mezarı . David Curtis Stephenson (d. 21 Ağustos 1891; Houston, Teksas – ö. 28 Haziran 1966; Jonesborough, Tennessee) Amerikalı örgüt lideri, cinayet ve tecavüzden hüküm giymiş mahkûm. Sayfa en son 04.57, 29 N ...

  5. D. C. Stephenson Trial (1925) by Douglas O. Linder (2010) In 1925, the Indiana KKK was the largest state branch in the Klan's "Invisible Empire." The conviction in November of that year of D. C. Stephenson, the powerful Grand Dragon of the Indiana Klan, for the murder of Madge Oberholtzer led to a dramatic decline in the organization's ...

  6. The trial of D.C. Stephenson for the murder of Madge Oberholtzer opens in Noblesville, Indiana before Judge Will Sparks. October 30, 1925. Judge Sparks rules that Oberholtzer's dying declaration will be admitted into evidence. November 5, 1925. The defense begins to present its case. November 14, 1925.

  7. 20. Feb. 2014 · Except once. In November 1925, D.C. Stephenson was on trial for murder and the chief witness against him was the murder victim herself, who on her deathbed had dictated her account.