Homicide in Chicago 1870-1930
1908
Chicago has 1 million immigrants
1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911  

1908: An Accidental Anarchist (cont)


The Averbuch case captured public attention because of the heightened concern about anarchists generally, in Chicago and in the nation as a whole, and because the account of the shooting given by the Chief of Police was contradictory. The case is the subject of a book: Walter Roth and Joe Kraus, An Accidental Anarchist (San Francisco, 1998), and a scholarly article: A. James Rudin, “From Kishinev to Chicago: The Forgotten Story of Lazar Averbuch,” Midstream, vol. 18, no. 7 (Aug./Sept. 1972).

Newspaper stories immediately raised questions about the circumstances of the shooting. The victim’s sister, Olga Averbuch, was interrogated and jailed for no reason after the killing. Although there was little proof beyond a suggestion because of his ethnic identity that Averbuch might have been an anarchist, the well known champion of anarchism Emma Goldman became involved and led the police on a merry chase after they banned her from speaking in public about the case.

Harold Ickes, then a recent law school graduate, took up the cause. A Coroner’s inquest exonerated the Chief of Police and his son, leaving many puzzling circumstances, such as the disappearance of Averbuch’s body, unexplained.
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