Drunk Enough For A Fight
True Crime Historian
Richard O Jones
4.4 • 729 Ratings
🗓️ 7 May 2025
⏱️ 71 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Ad-Free Safe House Edition
Like all episodes of True Crime Historian, Episode 333 is a cautionary tale, this time about rage, when a normal businessman gets so heated about a squabble mixing family and business that he lays out his own ruin. I wouldn’t go so far as to say anyone was asking to be murdered, but... I’ll let you be the judge.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Popular.com |
| 0:03.0 | The last form of the Great Morning Organ of the GOP of Wisconsin had been sent to press as James Garrison, city editor, took his way homeward after an all-night siege of |
| 0:21.6 | repertorial hieroglyphics and stopped in at a Westwater Street restaurant. |
| 0:27.6 | Among those present were men lamenting the good old days when the reds and blues were |
| 0:33.6 | stacked mountain high on a bob-tailed flush by the bloods with crimson in their eyes, |
| 0:39.9 | and there were big rolls in their pockets. There was a sprinkling of politicians there, too. |
| 0:46.1 | The light-fingered gentry gathered about Garrison and tried to obtain tips for a bet on the |
| 0:52.5 | judicial contest between Winslow and Clemenson. |
| 0:56.4 | They pumped it a dry well for information, and as they pumped, Emil Sanger entered and |
| 1:03.3 | made this remark to a group composed of Postmaster Porth, James C. Garrison, and John R. Wolf. |
| 1:12.0 | I suppose you're all friends of Bob Luscombe, but I'm going to kill him. |
| 1:17.0 | Postmaster Porth said, Bob's a friend of mine, I think he's all right. |
| 1:21.9 | Garrison remarked, he's a dashed good fellow. |
| 1:26.0 | My card, sir, replied Sanger, handing him a bit of cardboard. |
| 1:31.4 | You will have to answer to me for that remark, sir. |
| 1:34.6 | I demand that you meet me and fight a duel. |
| 1:38.8 | The boys all laughed, and during their laughter, |
| 1:42.3 | Emile Sanger walked out. This little scene enacted in the early |
| 1:47.7 | hours of the morning, treated at the time more as a joke than of anything else. Cut a big figure in the |
| 1:55.5 | trial of Robert Luscombe, the mention in the evidence of a challenge by Sanger to a newspaper man to fight a duel, |
| 2:03.6 | has attracted a great deal of attention. |
| 2:06.6 | Sanger was not intoxicated at the time he passed his card and issued his challenge. |
... |
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