No such word as gratitude in the world of politics
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ROBERT GARDNER
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Daily Pilot has agreed to republish The Verdict,
the ever popular column written for many years by retired Corona del
Mar jurist and historian Robert Gardner, in exchange for donations to
the Surfrider Foundation. This particular column was originally
published Jan. 9, 1993.
The recent death of former Sheriff Jim Musick brings up memories
of the biggest political flap in pre-World War II Orange County --
the “Fools Rush In” imbroglio of the 1938 election.
For background, the big seats at stake were those of sheriff and
district attorney. Sheriff Logan Jackson was being challenged by
Santa Ana Marshall Jesse Elliot, while Dist. Atty. Bill Menton faced
a number of opponents, including Anaheim City Attorney George Holden.
Other offices were on the ballot, but these were the two big ones.
Just before the primary, an anonymous pamphlet entitled “Fools
Rush In” appeared. It discussed all the candidates but obviously was
aimed at supporting Menton and Jackson and tearing down Elliot and
Holden. It said nice things about Menton and Jackson and bad things
about Elliot and Holden. Actually, it was very well written, and it
contained some amazingly accurate evaluations of some of the
candidates. It also was highly libelous concerning some of the people
discussed.
It didn’t take long to unearth the printers of the pamphlet, who
were promptly arrested. But the big search was for the anonymous
author.
For some mysterious reason, that part of the investigation fell
into the hands of two recent USC graduates, Deputy Sheriff Jim Musick
and Deputy Dist. Atty. Bob Gardner. We had been friends from college
days. I do not know just why we were assigned this particular
investigation, but we surmise that Jackson and Menton decided we were
so young that we would be above suspicion and too dumb to identify
and locate the author of the pamphlet. If we did, and it turned out
to be someone in their political camp, they were dead.
From the writing style, Jim and I were fairly sure we knew who was
the author, a deputy in the sheriff’s office. However, our suspicions
hardly qualified as proof.
The pamphlet discussed in some detail an old Los Angeles bribery
case as its background for its basic premise that former Orange
County Dist. Atty. S.E. Kaufman was the underworld boss of Orange
County and controlled both Elliot and Holden. Kaufman knew the
charges were ridiculous and thought the whole thing was funny. Elliot
and Holden were not amused.
So, junior G-men Musick and Gardner trotted up to Los Angeles and
to the newspaper morgue of the Los Angeles Times for a bit of
detective work. And who do you think had been up there making copies
of news accounts of the old bribery trial? Our suspect, the Orange
County deputy sheriff.
Next we went to the county clerk’s office and discovered that the
same Orange County deputy sheriff had been there and had made copies
of some of the records of that old case. Interestingly enough, much
of that court record from the old Los Angeles case was quoted
verbatim in the offending pamphlet.
When we returned to Orange County with our information, Jackson
and Menton had no choice but to arrest the deputy sheriff. However,
the damage was done, and both Menton and Jackson were defeated in the
election.
And what do you think happened to the two fearless investigators,
whose efforts had ensured the elections of Elliot and Holden? Well,
newly elected Sheriff Elliot promptly fired Musick and newly elected
Dist. Atty. Holden dealt the same fate to Gardner. Now that’s
gratitude.
Oh, well, after Jim and I returned to Orange County after World
War II, Jim Musick defeated Jess Elliot for Sheriff and shortly
thereafter I became a Superior Court judge. I seriously doubt that
either of those things would have happened had we stayed in our
respective jobs. I liked being a deputy D.A., and Jim liked being a
deputy sheriff. We probably would have stayed on and finally retired
after sufficient years in office to qualify for a certificate and
maybe a gold watch.
Jim Musick was elected sheriff six more times and set a standard
of honesty, integrity and efficiency that is the standard for all
public officials in Orange County. This county benefited greatly from
that, which at the time appeared to be a great injustice to a fine
young man.
But I still think it was a dirty trick for Elliot and Holden to
give us the shaft, when we were so instrumental in getting them
elected. I must say that Jim Musick and I learned a valuable lesson,
though -- there’s no such word as gratitude in the world of politics.
* ROBERT GARDNER, a Corona del Mar resident, is a retired judge
and a longtime observer of life in Newport Beach.
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