Fort Lawton case tainted legacies of soldiers, lawyer

Barbara Stewart was happy when she heard that the Army had overturned her husband's conviction in what is believed to be the only case in which black men have been tried for a lynching.

She is not sure he would have had the same reaction.

"Nobody is ever happy who is wrongly accused," said Stewart, 70, of Austin.

Les Stewart had been found guilty of participating in a 1944 riot at Fort Lawton, an Army camp in Seattle, that led to the lynching of an Italian prisoner of war. He was one of 28 men convicted of the 43 who stood trial. All of the defendants were black.

The court-martial derailed the lives of the 43 soldiers — 12 of whom were from Texas. And an official review of the case has now tarnished the image of the late Leon Jaworski, a Texas icon.

The case was largely forgotten until the 2005 publication of the book "On American Soil," in which Seattle-based writer Jack Hamann recounted the riot and subsequent court-martial.

As a result of the book, Congress ordered a review of the case by the Army's Board for Correction of Military Records. In October, the board said the court-martial had been unjust and recommended that the convictions be overturned.

Jaworski, whose role as Watergate special prosecutor earned him a reputation for toughness and honesty, was chief prosecutor in the Fort Lawton case. In that capacity, the review concluded, he intentionally withheld evidence from the defense that might have cleared the accused soldiers.

Relatives of the soldiers, nearly all of whom are now dead, said the men seldom discussed the case during their lifetimes. Jaworski, too, was reticent on the subject, according to his grandson, Robert Draper.

In an oral history at Baylor University, Jaworski touched on the Fort Lawton case only briefly, even though it had helped launch his career, Draper said.

"He refers to it in maybe two sentences, and he said it was an unfortunate case. He clearly didn't make an effort to beat his chest about it," Draper said.

Draper said he believes his grandfather's actions were less a result of maliciousness than simply being on the wrong side of history.

"I do believe Leon Jaworski is a real hero," he said. "This case was not one of his finest moments."

Today, the handful of defendants' relatives who were interviewed said they had no bitterness toward Jaworski. The defendants had managed to get on with their lives, they said.

"He must have been good," Vera Baker said, referring to Jaworski's achievements. "I guess we all make mistakes."

"You never push"

Baker's cousin, Arthur Hurks, of Houston, was accused of being a ringleader in the riot and was charged with murder in the death of the Italian prisoner, Guglielmo Olivotto.

Hurks was acquitted of that charge in the subsequent court-martial but was found guilty of rioting and sentenced to 12 years of hard labor. He served two years before being transferred to a rehabilitation center.

He returned to Houston but came to live his last eight months with Baker in Baton Rouge, La., after receiving a diagnosis of metastatic prostate cancer.

"He was very silent on it," Baker said. "If we tried to talk about it, he would just turn away. And there are some things you never push."

According to Hamann, the trial of the Fort Lawton defendants was the largest and longest of any Army court-martial of World War II and the only instance in which black men were ever tried for a lynching.

The Aug. 14, 1944, riot grew out of a crosscurrent of tensions, according to Hamann. Some white soldiers and civilians resented the presence of black soldiers. There was a feeling among soldiers of both races that the treatment of Italian POWs had been too lenient, and black soldiers felt that the Italians were granted some privileges that they themselves were denied.

A rumor that a black soldier had been struck on the head by a group of Italian soldiers led to an attack on Italian POW barracks by African Americans. A few hours later, Olivotto's body was found hanging from a steel cable on a bluff near the scene of the riot.

The black units involved in the riot were heavily populated with rural Southerners, but others were from Northern cities, chiefly Chicago. There was tension between the two groups, Hamann said.

Such tensions, no matter how trivial, may have led to false accusations, even by members of the same unit, he said. For example, one of the accusers of Hurks, a popular student at Houston's Yates High School, attended archrival Wheatley High.

As a result, men who may not even have been present at the place where the rioting occurred — such as Stewart — were identified as rioters. And some of the actions of those who were present were bizarrely twisted by their accusers.

One of the Texans, John Hamilton, was one of the evening's heroes, rescuing a white officer and taking him to safety. Yet Hamilton was charged with rioting and subsequently convicted.

Evidence withheld

In any case, the 43 men were represented by only two defense lawyers, who were given less than two weeks to prepare for the trial. Jaworski, moreover, knew something the defense lawyers didn't.

An inspector general's report immediately after the riot concluded that the murder investigation had been sloppy, that crucial evidence had been destroyed or lost and that there were indications that a white military-police officer may have been responsible for the lynching.

Although required to share such evidence with the defense team, Jaworski never did so. When the defense lawyers learned of the report, the court-martial judges backed the prosecutor's refusal to turn it over.

Hamann said that only Jaworski knew his own motives, but the author believes that the prosecutor understood that a successful outcome would bolster his chances to participate in the high-profile war-crime trials in Europe.

"The case had become an international incident, and the White House and the Pentagon and the State Department were all concerned about the outcome," Hamann said. "He knew they wanted a conviction, and maybe that entered into it."

That explanation angers Jaworski's grandson.

"It presupposes that a man of Leon Jaworski's abilities and ambition would not have attained greater things if it had not been for this case," Draper said.

After winning the Fort Lawton convictions, Jaworski was picked for a prominent role in the war-crime trials. He later was appointed an investigator for the Warren Commission's report on the death of President Kennedy. He served as president of the American Bar Association and as special prosecutor in the Watergate case.

He died in 1982, long before Hamann's book uncovered his actions in the Fort Lawton case.

Camille Kea, Hurks' granddaughter, said last week she knew nothing of Jaworski's actions but blamed the case for turmoil in her family.

"I do feel that if he had not been in jail, if he had been around, my grandparents would not have divorced," she said.

Kea, 31, a public-relations consultant in Alameda, Calif., remembers her grandfather as a strong-willed but friendly man who had a lot of character.

"He liked jazz," she said. "He drove a little white Cadillac. He was cool — not in the sense of being icy — but in the sense of 'with it.' "

What she doesn't know is what he thought of his wrongful conviction.

"He would never talk about it. Never, no," Kea said. "What I heard about the case, I heard from my grandmother, and she said they were very trying and very traumatic times."

The Army review recommended that relatives receive "all back pay and allowances due."

The only such payment so far has been to one of only two surviving defendants. That man received $725. Some members of Congress are trying to obtain a larger payment.

Some defendants' families are unaware that they may be entitled to a payment, Hamann said, and others have been slow to apply.

Silent dignity

Some of the relatives remain angry.

"I don't know why they did what they did to my husband," Stewart said, "but racism might have had something to do with it."

According to Hamann's book, when Les Stewart returned home after serving in Korea, his train was stopped at the Texas line, where he and the other black soldiers were ordered back to a car reserved for African Americans.

He always particularly resented the charge that black people, who long had been victims of lynching, would have lynched a white man.

But most relatives of the defendants said the men dealt with the injustice with silent dignity.

Baker said her cousin, Hurks, died broke. She paid for his funeral but said she can't afford a gravestone.

Though Baker said her cousin never expressed bitterness over the trial, he refused to return to Seattle, even though he had relatives there.

She believes he would have been pleased by the case's outcome.

"It was a long time being overturned," Baker said. "But at least he got cleared."