JOHN F. DOCKWEILER
District Attorney
1940-1943
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John F. Dockweiler
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The first big case for the new District Attorney
is the Bugsy Siegel murder trial.
John Dockweiler served three terms in the U.S.
Congress, from 1933 to 1939, before winning the 1940 District
Attorney's race against incumbent Buron Fitts. One of his first
responsibilities was to prepare for the prosecution of Bugsy Siegel
for a gangland murder in Hollywood. The case, which finally went to
trial in January 1942, was dismissed by the judge after the
prosecution's star witness conveniently fell to his death from a New
York hotel room window.
Dockweiler instituted reforms in the District
Attorney's Office, including a ban on office investigators working
as security guards at the Santa Anita racetrack. He created the
Bureau of Crime Research and Prevention and reorganized the Bureau
of Investigation, bringing it under civil-service regulation. This
ended the disruptive practice of treating investigators' jobs as a
matter of political patronage. Dockweiler was investigating
allegations of police brutality in Los Angeles when he died suddenly
of pneumonia in 1943.
Reprinted from FOR THE PEOPLE --
Inside the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office 1850-2000
by Michael Parrish. ISBN 1-883318-15-7