Whittaker Chambers (Photo: Wikipedia) |
The Alger Hiss case has served as
a shibboleth for both the Left and Right, seemingly intractable, fought with
religious fervor even 60 years after its advent. After reading Two Foolish Men we believe that Hiss has
been decisively vindicated, but at considerable loss to both him and his
adversary Whittaker Chambers.
Moore portrays the adversaries as two scorpions locked in a battle which one is destined to lose. He
convincingly argues that the conflict was about a friendship gone very bad –
about two men who backed the other into corners without face saving exits.
The predicate of the affair was a
broken relationship between Chambers and Hiss who met in 1934 when Chambers
presented himself to Hiss at the State Department as a reporter named George
Crosley. Discovering that they both lost brothers who were in their 20s to
suicide, thus sharing a common bond, Hiss invited Chambers and his wife home for
dinner. Hiss also discovered that Chambers, a new arrival in Washington, DC and in need of work, offered him lodging and other assistance until he
could get back on his feet.
Little did Hiss know that
Chambers would become a freeloader for the next two years, and little did he
know that Chambers was at the height of his homosexual indulgences. Chambers was
attracted to Hiss in a sexual way which prompted him to strike up the
friendship in the first place. However, Hiss’ patience grew thin with Chambers’ financial
derelictions to the point where he abruptly terminated their friendship and
threw him out of his subleased apartment.
While Hiss’ perturbation is quite
understandable, he would have served his future better had he handled his rift with Chambers with a bit more tact
and delicacy. Chambers would most likely not have nurtured a festering scorn
which would erupt in revenge some 10 years later before the House Un American Committee
where he called Hiss a Communist.
Hiss had indeed forgotten about
the incident even to the point of not recognizing Chambers. When he heard that
had been maligned, Hiss demanded that he be given the opportunity to defend
himself. This reaction, then, begins Moore’s defense of Hiss. A guilty man
would not have risked perjury – certainly not a man of Hiss’ sterling
character. If Hiss had been guilty, he simply would need only to maintain
silence, and if compelled to testify, plead the Fifth Amendment. There was
nothing more than Hiss’ word of accusation against him – not nearly enough to make a case
of anything.
Yet the story only begins there.
In spite of a bevy of Ivy League lawyers – and Hiss was one – Hiss’ defense
failed to make note of the most damning contradiction in the case – a contradiction
which would have dismissed the case entirely. In all of the testimony of Hiss
and Chambers, it was evident that Hiss only knew George Crosley – an innocuous
freelance writer living in and around Washington. Hiss never knew Whitaker
Chambers, and certainly not his alter ego Carl who was the Communist Chambers.
Yes, Chambers was quite a
raconteur as Moore tells it – a man capable of telling a tall tale with
his listeners eating out of his hand. Not only was Chambers known as Whitaker, Carl,
and George Crosley, but also as David Breen and Lloyd Cantwell. Sybil would be
jealous.
Hiss never knew the subversive Carl
who held Marx classes and pilfered documents from the State Department – a task
as easy as taking candy from a baby in the early post war State Department.
These documents formed the basis of the famous Baltimore documents which Moore
demonstrates to have been copied by Mr Chambers himself – after he left the
Communist party in 1937.
Moore discusses the famous
Woodstock typewriter, showing that the one presented in court was planted
evidence found by Hiss himself and produced by the FBI as court evidence. It
turned out that this typewriter was not Hiss’ based upon the serial number and
other factors of provenance. But it was the typewriter which convicted him.
The crushing blow against Hiss came
from Ramos C. Feehan, an FBI laboratory specialist who claimed an expertise in
typography. Using this voodoo science, he presented 10 images of 10 letters
from the typewriter allegedly used for creating copies of the stolen Baltimore
documents, and a comparable set from known copies of letters made on the Hiss
Woodstock typewriter, known as the standard documents. By showing the unique characteristics of the letters on the documents, he “proved” that
the two sets of documents were created from the same typewriter, thus
implicating the typist – Mrs Hiss – in the espionage.
Unfortunately Hiss’ extremely well
credentialed but slow of wit lawyers did not challenge these so-called forensic
findings. Subsequently many folks did, pointing out that the typewriters are
not finger prints and thus more than 1 typewriter can produce similar, if not
identical, graphological impressions. In addition, the the chain of custody on
the alleged Hiss typewriter was non-existent, meaning that the typewriter could
have been altered over time to produce a bogus comparison with the standard
documents from the Hisses.
Finally, Moore notes that the FBI withheld
key exculpatory information from the court and Hiss’ legal team which explained
the origins of the fake typewriter and Chambers’ confession that Hiss knew
George Crosley – not Carl or Whitaker Chambers.
In the second trial, Hiss was
convicted of perjury and spent close to 4 years in jail for a crime he didn’t
commit. Chambers, of course, would write Witness in which he contradicted his
court testimony, but would become a best seller, and cult classic for the Right.
Unfortunately its sum and substance was a pack of lies.
Hiss failed to overturn his
conviction, even with new evidence. The campaign to vindicate him is not
finished. The most just result would be a full legal exoneration of Hiss, and a
stripping of the Medal of Freedom Medal from Chambers.
We have sampled only a few of the
evidences Moore presents in defense of Hiss, and even then only skimmed the
arguments. To fully understand the depth of Moore’s vindication, you must read
it for yourself. Best of all, it is free and online.
Reference
Two Foolish Men, William Howard Moore, 1986 ?
Copyright 2013 Tony Bonn. All rights reserved.
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