editors: laura berman ,dn gorus contributing editor: Sunday magazine inside: page four-books page five-hanging page six-geo wary long Number 18 Page Three Februar 16, 1975 FEATURES .J Death by quiet tow a nightm~ hanging: A shares in Irish riddle It should have been a routine driving arrest, but within four hours,20-year-oldJackWhiteherse was found hanging in his cell in the Shiawassee County Jail. The death stunned the town of Owosso. Its aftermath raised severe questions about the administration of justice. By DAN BIDDLE ON THE EVENING of May 20, 1974, a 20-year-old factory worker named Jack Lesten White- herse was driving his father's Ford to a grocery store in Owosso, Mich- igan. He cruised up Corunna Ave- nue on the south side of the small, rural town, looking straight into the glare of the sunset over Owos- so's aged Grand Trunk Railway depot. The dusklight may have blinded him for a moment, or he may have taken enough methaquaalone tab- lets to get him high and hamper his perception. Or he may simply have been exhausted from his day's work as a press operator and fork lift driver at the Genesee Stamping Plant. For whatever reason, J a c k Whiteherse stopped concentrating long enough to let the Ford slam into the car in front of him as he reached the intersection of Corun- na and Washington Streets. THE OWOSSO police arrested him for drunk driving and booked him for driving under the influ- ence of drugs after a breathalyzer test showed he hadn't been drink- ing. Everyone who spoke to him that evening said the stocky, blond- haired Owosso native was still in good spirits after his accident and arrest. But less than four hours later, Jack Whiteherse was found hanged to death from the cross bar of his cell in the Shiawassee County jail. The noose was his own red flan- nel shirt. NEARLY ALL the 17,000 people who live in Owosso, which is 21 miles north of Flint, are farm- ers and factory workers. Very few of them are wealthy; for 150 years, life in Owosso and the tiny neigh- boring hamlet of Corunna has mainly consisted of earning a wage, growing produce, or raising a family. "The Whiteherse thing was a pretty emotional ordeal for the whole town," Owosso barber Karl Manke reflected last week in the middle of a razor cut. Manke, something of an idol to the town's young people, sports long hair and live here 35 years, you see each other every day, you go to the same churches, you have the same problems . . . something like this comes along, it shakes people." IN MAY, 1974, the death of Jack Whiteherse exploded like a thunderclap over the county. The sheriff and his men refused to ex- plain the apparent suicide, and in the absence of credible official in- formation, word quickly that Whiteherse's death from rough treatment by spread resulted the po- No proof has yet sur- face the d to indicate that sheriff's deputies murdered Jack White- herse ... But even as- suming the best of mo- tives, the evidence of the Shiawasee County Sheriff's Department's shoddy, negligent en- forcement of the law lice. For two nights, hundreds of young people and many adults marched through the streets of Owosso and Corunna, demanding a full accounting of the death. On the second night, May 23, an angry crowd of 400 gathered before the jailhouse in Corunna and chanted, "We want justice." They threw a few rocks and bottles at the drab concrete jail building, and wouldn't disperse until 50 riot-equipped of- ficers from Flint's Tactical Unit arrived. In all, police arrested two dozen young people in both nights of demonstrations. The fury of the protests was an odd memorial for Jack Whiteherse. His friends and relatives said he was a hapoy young man with a carefree, optimistic outlook and an ever-present smile. He was al- ready engaged to be married to Laura Ebe, a 16-year-old blond girl whom he showered with pre- sents, cards, and affection. "[ REMEMBER that Jack was dif- ferent from most because he always came to work with a smile on his face," said one of his for- mer supervisors at the Genesee plant. He had once been known for that M a y evening overwhelming. iS boasts an almost legendary his- tory of bringing subculture trapp- ings to the town. The young peo- ple come to his shop more to talk than get haircuts. "An awful lot of people were quite frustrated - the older peo- ple were mad, they backed the kids," he recalled. "You know, you hell-raising, but Rick Hudson, a friend from high school said, "Jack was no greaser. . . he was no red- neck. He was a real comfortable guy to get along with." Jack played tackle for the Owos- so High Trojans before he gradu- ated in 1972. He spent hours paint- ing brightly - colored portraits and landscapes, and had won many prizes in local art shows. He had planned to drive to Flint in the last week of May for a job interview that might get him a $10-per-hour engineering position with a big firm in the city. JRONICALLY, at the time of, his death, he had halfway com- pleted a huge, dramatic canvas of Jimi Hendrix, whose own drug-re- lated death was shaded by mys- tery. The painting was to be a present for Laura. Following Whiteherse's death the county quickly agreed to con- duct an inquest - "just to satisfy the whim of the crowd," one confi- dent assistant prosecutor scoffed at the time. In the second week of June, two witnesses gave 320 pages of testimony to six coroner's jur- ors. The jury toured the Shiawas- see County jail twice and deliber- ated for only an hour and a quar- ter before reaching its conclusion: "On May 20, 1974, said Jack L. Whiteherse came to his death in tank number one of the Shiawas- see County Jail between the hours of 11 p.m. and 12 a.m. by means of hanging himself about the neck with his own shirt, around a bar above the top horizontal flat (cross) bar." RUT THE COUNTY'S brief in- quiry into its own men's ac- tions raised more questions than it answered. Some key witneses did not testifv: no action was ever taken on a slew of contradictory statements from officials under oath. While the sheriff mublicly interpreted the jury's finding as an exoneration of departmental elil't, he made only a token effort to console the dead man's narents. Now, more than eight months department's shoddy, negligent en- forcement of the law that May evening is overwhelming. THE TERSE FINDING of the in- quest into Jack's death are inadequate on several counts: * Whiteherse was charged with a narcotics offense - driving un- der the influence - but was not examined by a doctor after his ar- rest. State jail regulations require such an examination. The city and county police said they waive the rule in many minor narcotics cases. * In a second violation of jail- house law, the sheriff's deputies failed to check Whiteherse's cell between 10:30 p.m. and 12:08 a.m. on the night of his death. Regula- tions require "the inspection of in- mate quarters on an hourly basis." The deputy on duty stated he was never informed of the inspection Doily Photo by STEVE KAGAN body claimed no medical exper- tise -- hence he could not be ab- solutely certain the body wasn't still alive. * The sequence of events after finding Jack's body includes the most outlandish twist of all: Sheriff Moiles, called to the cell by his deputies, first ran back to his own quarters for his Polaroid camera, returned to the cell, and had a deputy snap a picture of the hanging body before cutting Whiteherse down. Then, he has stated, resuscitation efforts began. He describes the entire time be- tween finding the body and cut- ting it down as "a matter of sec- onds." But the jail's former switch- board- operator, who did not ap- pear at the inquest, is now ready to testify that the period in ques- tion was no less than ten minutes. Michigan's Department of Cor- rections provides all county sher- iffs with a pocket-size manual of jail regulations which carry the power of civil law. Under "inmate health and medical care," the rule book reads: E D I C A L EXAMINATIONS shall be made as follows: If an inmate is visibly ill, chronically ill, or receiving medication, he shall be examined by a licensed physician as soon as possible." The book provides no specific order on handling of persons under the in- fluence of narcotics, but correc- tions department officials say the statute is widely construed to in- clude those who are obviously high as visibly ill." In an interview less than a week after the hanging, Victor Molles, Shiawassee County's stout, crew-cut sheriff, claimed, "The man (Whiteherse) wasn't bad enough off to require hospital attention." But two witnesses to Jack's acci- dent and all the city, county and state police who dealt. with him before he entered Tank Number One said his condition was obvious. Kenneth Cach, the man whose car THE SHERIFF: Victor Moiles. rule. If he had checked Tank Num- ber One before 11:30 p.m. as re- quired, Whiteherse might have been saved: The coroner listed es- timated time of death as 11:18 p.m. 1: M ! 1 ON 0: 1 1 X OR 1: ME i I