Crooked The roaring twenties tale of a corrupt attorney general, a crusading senator, and the birth of the American political scandal

Nathan Masters

Book - 2023

"The riveting, forgotten narrative of the most corrupt attorney general in American history and the maverick senator who stopped at nothing to take him down. Many tales from the Jazz Age reek of crime and corruption. But perhaps the era's greatest political fiasco--one that resulted in a nationwide scandal, a public reckoning at the Department of Justice, the rise of J. Edgar Hoover, and an Oscar-winning film--has long been lost to the annals of history. In Crooked, Nathan Masters restores this story of murderers, con artists, secret lovers, spies, bootleggers, and corrupt politicians to its full, page-turning glory. Newly elected to the Senate on a promise to root out corruption, Burton "Boxcar Burt" Wheeler sets his si...ghts on ousting Attorney General Harry Daugherty, puppet-master behind President Harding's unlikely rise to power. Daugherty is famous for doing whatever it takes to keep his boss in power, and his cozy relations with bootleggers and other scofflaws have long spawned rumors of impropriety. But when his constant companion and trusted fixer, Jess Smith, is found dead of a gunshot wound in the apartment the two men share, Daugherty is suddenly thrust into the spotlight, exposing the rot consuming the Harding administration to a shocked public. Determined to uncover the truth in the ensuing investigation, Wheeler takes the prosecutorial reins and subpoenas a rogue's gallery of witnesses--convicted felons, shady detectives, disgraced officials--to expose the attorney general's treachery and solve the riddle of Jess Smith's suspicious death. With the muckraking senator hot on his trail, Daugherty turns to his greatest weapon, the nascent Federal Bureau of Investigation, whose eager second-in-command, J. Edgar Hoover, sees opportunity amidst the chaos. Packed with political intrigue, salacious scandal, and no shortage of lessons for our modern era of political discord, Nathan Masters' thrilling historical narrative shows how this intricate web of inconceivable crookedness set the stage for the next century of American political scandals."--

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Subjects
Genres
True crime stories
Nonfiction novels
Published
New York : Hachette Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Nathan Masters (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xi, 367 pages ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographies and index.
ISBN
9780306826139
  • Prologue: "I'll Get Daugherty"
  • 1. "Something Terrible Has Happened"
  • 2. "What a Bolshevist Really Looked Like"
  • 3. "Very Bad News"
  • 4. "Rumors of Irregularities"
  • 5. "The Hardest Blow of My Life"
  • 6. "This Teapot Dome Thing"
  • 7. "I Object!"
  • 8. "Mere Bagatelle"
  • 9. "Resolved"
  • 10. "The Least Embarrassed Person Here"
  • 11. "A Bigger Fool"
  • 12. "How Secure I Am"
  • 13. "Pull Wheeler off Daugherty"
  • 14. "If She Can Be Kept Quiet"
  • 15. "The Peculiar Nature of This Inquiry"
  • 16. "A Three-Ring Circus"
  • 17. "You Are Hereby Commanded"
  • 18. "Partners in Crime"
  • 19. "They Are Going to Get Me"
  • 20. "This Base Insinuation"
  • 21. "A Pretty Slick Fellow"
  • 22. "A Complete Master of Himself"
  • 23. "Dope to Smear Wheeler"
  • 24. "Victim of a Hostile Welcome"
  • 25. "Rid of an Unfaithful Servant"
  • 26. "One of the Darkest Pages in American History"
  • 27. "The Most Damnable Conspiracy"
  • 28. "The Straight Path of Justice"
  • 29. "We Anticipate Contempt Proceedings"
  • 30. "Young Man"
  • 31. "It Would Be Well to Suspend Judgement"
  • 32. "Take into Custody the Body of M. S. Daugherty"
  • 33. "Double Crossed"
  • 34. "He Did Not Dare"
  • 35. "Look Elsewhere for Leadership"
  • 36. "The Usual Silence"
  • 37. "He Is Asking Justice"
  • Epilogue: "The Triumph of Justice"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Select Bibliography
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

It was the first big scandal of American politics--the first to capture the attention of the entire nation and points beyond. The attorney general was ruthless Harry Daugherty, who almost single-handedly put Warren G. Harding into the White House. The senator was the idealistic Burton Wheeler, who was determined to expose the corrupt AG and remove him from power. The catalyst was the death of a man named Jess Smith, a well-known political fixer and Daugherty's close friend (and, it was rumored, lover). Smith's apparent suicide set off a chain of events that was, for many Americans, an eye-opening introduction to the dark side of politics. Although the events took place many decades ago, the story is as timely now as it ever was, and Masters brings it to pulsing life. Wheeler, Daugherty, and the various supporting players (including J. Edgar Hoover, before the world knew who he was) emerge as fully fleshed-out people, and the story is as exciting as any political thriller.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Revelations about a period of deep corruption that rocked American politics. Masters, host and producer of the public TV series Lost L.A., makes an impressive book debut with a brisk, lively history of a political scandal, "one of those Roaring Twenties spectacles…that held the entire nation spellbound." The central figures were newly elected Montana Sen. Burton Wheeler, eager to make his reputation as a crusader for public integrity, and the nation's ruthless, manipulative Attorney General, Harry Daugherty. Appointed by President Warren B. Harding, Daugherty proved a bane for Harding's successor, Calvin Coolidge, especially when Wheeler uncovered endemic fraud, bribery, and blackmail. In 1922, the Harding administration leased a Wyoming oil field known as Teapot Dome to politically connected oilmen, "in secret and without competitive bidding." Wheeler hoped that Teapot Dome "would prove to be only the first domino to fall--a prelude to an even more troubling scandal that would expose threats to impartial justice, congressional independence, and the rule of law itself." Convening a select committee, Wheeler heard evidence from an assortment of Daugherty's associates, notably the smarmy Gaston Means, who testified that he carried out "black-bag operations" for which he "collected cash--lots of it." One witness testified that he had "uncovered more than $7 million of fraud in the government's wartime aviation contracts, only to have his findings ignored by higher-ups," and "another was fired after his inquiry into Prohibition violations along the US-Mexican border implicated a federal prosecutor." Drawing on extensive archival research, Masters creates a tense narrative peopled by colorful, often unsavory characters. "Wheeler's investigation," Masters writes, "shocked the American people into caring whether the Department of Justice was actually pursuing justice--or something else entirely." The feisty senator, Masters asserts, revealed both the force of congressional investigations and the heady power of the court of public opinion. A stirring look at a shameful episode that holds distressing relevance for today. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.